Orlando Sentinel

Meltdown reveals bias

African Americans, Latinos, low-wage earners hit hardest during jobless surge

- By Josh Boak, Alexandra Olson and Mae Anderson

BALTIMORE — As the coronaviru­s rampaged across the U.S. economy, it slashed a cruel path of job losses, reduced hours and hardships for America’s most vulnerable workers.

The 20.5 million jobs lost in April fell disproport­ionately on African Americans, Latinos, lowwage workers and people with no college education. Friday’s jobs report from the government — the worst on record — exposed the deep seams of inequality within the world’s wealthiest nation and the threat they pose to an eventual economic recovery.

The paradox is that if the economy is to fully bounce back, those same workers will need to be restored to jobs at restaurant­s, hotels, offices, factories, warehouses, medical facilities and constructi­on sites. The flow of commerce hinges on their ability to deliver packages, cook meals, run clinics, provide public transporta­tion and clean and maintain

buildings. And their income, though typically low, supports the consumer spending that fuels most U.S. economic activity.

“This represents a huge loss for the productive capacity of the economy,” said Stephanie Aaronson, director of economic studies at the Brookings Institutio­n. “The economy is smaller and grows much less quickly when these workers are isolated from employment.”

African Americans are more likely to die from the virus. Latinos and noncollege graduates are heavily concentrat­ed in low-wage occupation­s, including jobs that have helped keep the nation fed and safe during

the pandemic. Those groups were also among the first to lose their jobs as the economy crashed at a speed unrivaled in modern American history.

For April, while the overall U.S. unemployme­nt reached 14.7%, the rate for African Americans was 16.7%. For Latinos, it was an all-time high of 18.9%. For workers with only a high school diploma, a record 17.3%. For immigrants, 16.5%.

By contrast, the unemployme­nt rate for white Americans was 14.2%. And just 8.4% of college graduates — who often enjoy the flexibilit­y to work from home — were unemployed.

Latinos likely suffered disproport­ionately from the layoffs because they are more likely to work in the leisure and hospitalit­y sectors

— at hotels, restaurant­s and bars — where job cuts have been especially brutal, noted Gbenga Ajilore, an economist at the Center for American Progress, a liberal think tank.

“This shows that when the economy recovers, we have to be intentiona­l about tackling the structural barriers that limit the employment outcomes of these groups,” Ajilore said.

The vast magnitude of the layoffs has laid bare the inequaliti­es that endured long before the viral outbreak.

President Donald Trump frequently highlighte­d the job gains achieved by minorities during his first three years in office, pointing to them as evidence that his administra­tion was bridging the nation’s wealth gap. But the pandemic has

shown that the 11-year expansion did not provide much financial cushion to these workers, many of whom are now struggling to buy food and pay their housing bills.

Among them is Erika Romero, a native of El Salvador who abruptly lost her job last month as a janitor at the Postal Square Building in Washington. Romero was left without health insurance or the ability to pay most of the monthly mortgage on the Maryland home she shares with her husband, their two daughters, her adult son and both sets of grandparen­ts.

Her husband had his daytime job reduced to three days a week, and his overnight cleaning job was cut. She has received one unemployme­nt check so far, not nearly enough to

support her substantia­l family.

“Where am I going to look for work in this epidemic?” said Romero, who lives in the United States on a temporary protected status after an earthquake struck El Salvador. “It’s just unfair.”

More than 100 members of Romero’s union have died of the coronaviru­s, and 20,000 others have lost jobs, according to the local Service Employees Internatio­nal Union, which represents 175,000 janitors, security guards, doormen and other property service workers. Many lack legal status in the United States, said Jaime Contreras, vice president of the local union.

“Those workers can’t apply for unemployme­nt,” he said. “They don’t get the stimulus money. They are

left in the dark.”

Alex Tellez was working as a bartender and server at a Chicago steakhouse when he was told by a manager in mid-March to file for unemployme­nt aid. Born in Mexico, Tellez had steadily moved up in the restaurant industry over 23 years, earning up to $60,000 year. But now he has fallen several thousand dollars into credit card debt to support his immediate and extended family.

Tellez, 43, is considerin­g a career change. He doesn’t see how the restaurant industry can survive a future with social distancing rules and precaution­s in place indefinite­ly.

“As a bartender, I can’t serve you unless you’re 1 or 2 feet away from me,” he said. “It breaks my heart that I might have to leave.”

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES/AP ?? The Pasadena Community Job Center in California helps skilled day laborers find work, but it’s closed due to the coronaviru­s outbreak.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES/AP The Pasadena Community Job Center in California helps skilled day laborers find work, but it’s closed due to the coronaviru­s outbreak.

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