Los Angeles Times

Grocery stores fined for lax protection­s

- BY SUHAUNA HUSSAIN

A state agency responsibl­e for protecting the health and safety of workers hit five grocery stores in Los Angeles and Culver City with coronaviru­s- related citations, it announced Wednesday.

California’s Division of Occupation­al Safety and Health, known as Cal/ OSHA, found that a Ralphs in Culver City as well as one in Sherman Oaks each failed to report a worker’s death from COVID- 19. A Food 4 Less store allowed too many customers inside, preventing workers from maintainin­g a recommende­d six feet of physical distance and putting them at risk for serious illness, the agency said.

In total, four Ralphs stores and one Food 4 Less received citations Sept. 24 for failing to protect workers from exposure to the coronaviru­s because they did not update their workplace safety plans to properly address hazards, according to a statement by California’s Department of Industrial Relations.

A Ralphs in Studio City did not install plexiglass barriers between employees and customers in the cheese department. A West Hollywood Ralphs failed to install similar barriers at eight registers. Several locations failed to provide training for their employees on how the virus spreads, how to identify signs and symptoms, and measures to avoid infection.

All f ive grocery stores cited are owned and operated by Kroger. Cal/ OSHA has proposed a total of $ 104,380 in penalties. The citations were based on inspection­s conducted over

the course of several months beginning in May.

“Grocery retail workers are on the front lines and face a higher risk of exposure to COVID- 19,” Cal/ OSHA Chief Doug Parker said in a statement. “Employers in this industry must investigat­e possible causes of employee illness and put in place the necessary measures to protect their staff.” Kroger disputed the violations, saying they constitute a “misreprese­ntation of the facts.” The Cincinnati company plans to appeal Cal/ OSHA’s decision.

“Many of the citations date back to the early onset of the coronaviru­s pandemic, before Cal/ OSHA even provided guidelines for worker safety,” Kroger spokeswoma­n Vanessa Rosales said in an email. “To be clear, the safety of our associates and customers is our top priority. Since March, we have proactivel­y invested more than $ 1 billion to both reward our associates and to safeguard them and our customers through the implementa­tion of dozens of safety measures. The company’s total COVID- 19 incident rate continues to track meaning

fully below the rate in the surroundin­g communitie­s where we operate.”

In May grocery workers f iled complaints through UFCW Local 770, according to a statement by the union. The union said Jackie Mayoral, a worker at a Ralphs on Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood, was infected with the coronaviru­s in April and pushed for more safety measures inside the store.

More than 20 of the 158 employees at that location tested positive for the coronaviru­s. After the outbreak, Kroger said it would offer testing for its frontline workers.

Rachel Campos, an employee at the store, said she became concerned about store conditions back in April. The store was crowded and the company wasn’t providing workers with personal protective equipment such as masks or enough cleaning materials to wipe down shopping carts and other surfaces, she said.

In mid- April Campos, 52, called local public health authoritie­s to report the issues but said she was told the department could not do anything immediatel­y to address her concerns. Campos stopped going to work that month and hasn’t returned because she’s worried about her elderly parents’ safety.

“I’m actually really glad [ Ralphs was] cited. Maybe this will make them understand that this is serious — this is very important,” Campos said.

UFCW Local 770 representa­tive Kathy Finn said workers have described Ralphs and Food 4 Less as notably lax in enforcing coronaviru­s safety measures, among grocers that are unionized in the region.

Stores with deaths or large outbreaks get pegged as hotbeds of infections, but nonunion stores that may have even fewer safety measures in place might be f lying under the radar because there is less informatio­n available and employees are less likely to speak up because they fear for their jobs, Finn said.

The L. A. County Board of Supervisor­s recently passed a motion to consider creating public health councils composed of workers who would report noncomplia­nce. Such councils might provide a more prompt and secure way for employees to get their concerns addressed, Finn said.

Grocers aren’t the only companies receiving coronaviru­s- related citations. In early September, Cal/ OSHA saddled an L. A. company with its largest f ine to date for coronaviru­s health violations, announcing more than $ 200,000 in penalties each for frozen food manufactur­er Overhill Farms and its temporary employment agency.

The agency issued its f irst f ines for coronaviru­s safety violations Sept. 4.

 ?? KENT NISHIMURA Los Angeles Times ?? GROCERY store workers and others hold a social distancing rally at a Ralphs in Hollywood in May.
KENT NISHIMURA Los Angeles Times GROCERY store workers and others hold a social distancing rally at a Ralphs in Hollywood in May.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States