South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

As mandates fall, retail workers feel exposed

- By Sapna Maheshwari

Marilyn Reece, the lead bakery clerk at a Kroger in Batesville, Mississipp­i, started noticing more customers walking around the store without masks last month after the state mandate to wear face coverings was repealed. Kroger still requires them, but that doesn’t seem to matter.

When Reece, a 56-yearold breast-cancer survivor, sees those shoppers, she prays.

“Please, please, don’t let me have to wait on them, because in my heart, I don’t want to ignore them, I don’t want to refuse them,” she said. “But then I’m thinking I don’t want to get sick and die, either.”

Reece’s heightened anxiety is shared by retail and fast-food workers in states like Mississipp­i and Texas, where government­s have removed mask mandates before a majority of people have been vaccinated and while variants of the coronaviru­s are appearing. It feels like a return to the early days of the pandemic, when businesses said customers must wear masks, but there was no legal requiremen­t and numerous shoppers simply refused.

Many workers say that their stores do not enforce the requiremen­t, and that if they do approach customers, they risk verbal or physical altercatio­ns.

“It’s given a great false sense of security, and it’s no different now than it was a year ago,” said Reece, who is not yet able to receive a vaccine because of allergies. “The only difference we have now is people are getting vaccinated but enough people haven’t gotten vaccinated that they should have lifted the mandate.”

For many people who work in retail, the mask repeals are another example of how little protection and appreciati­on they

have received during the pandemic. While they were praised as essential workers, that rarely translated into extra pay on top of their low wages. Grocery employees were not initially given priority for vaccinatio­ns in most states, even as health experts cautioned the public to limit time in grocery stores because of the risk posed by new coronaviru­s variants. (Texas opened availabili­ty to everyone 16 and older on Monday.)

The issue has gained serious prominence: On Monday, President Joe Biden called on governors and mayors to maintain or reinstate orders to wear masks as the nation grapples with a potential rise in virus cases.

The United Food and Commercial Workers union, which represents nearly

900,000 grocery workers, said last month that at least

34,700 grocery workers around the country had been

infected with or exposed to

COVID-19 and that at least

155 workers had died from the virus. The recent mass shooting at a grocery store in Boulder, Colorado, has only rattled workers further.

Diane Cambre, a 50-yearold floor supervisor at a Kroger in Midlothian, Texas, said she had spent much of the past year worrying about bringing the virus home to her 9-year-old son and dreading interactio­ns with customers who were flippant about the possibilit­y of getting sick. She wears a double mask in the store even though it irritates her skin, already itchy from psoriasis, and changes her clothes as soon as she gets home.

After Gov. Greg Abbott of Texas said on March 2 that he would end the statewide mask mandate the next week, Cambre said, customers immediatel­y “started coming in not wearing a mask and stuff, and it’s been

pretty hard getting anybody to wear one.”

Management is supposed to offer masks to people who aren’t wearing them, but if they don’t put them on, nothing else is done, she said.

Asking customers to wear masks can result in tense exchanges and even tantrums from cart-pushing adults.

A Kroger representa­tive said that the chain would “continue to require everyone in our stores across the country to wear masks until all our front-line grocery associates can receive the COVID-19 vaccine,” and that it was offering $100 one-time payments to workers who received the vaccine.

The differing state and business mandates have some workers worried about more confrontat­ions. The retail industry was already trying to address the issue last fall, when a

major trade group helped put together training to help workers manage and deescalate conflicts with customers who resisted masks, social distancing and store capacity limits. Refusing service to people without masks, or asking them to leave, has led to incidents in the past year like a cashier’s being punched in the face, a Target employee’s breaking his arm and the fatal shooting of a Family Dollar security guard.

Last month in League City, Texas, near Houston, a 53-year-old man who refused to wear a required mask in a Jack in the Box confronted employees and then stabbed a store manager three times, according to a report in The Houston Chronicle. On March 14, a San Antonio ramen shop was vandalized with racist graffiti after its owner criticized Abbott on television for lifting the Texas mask mandate.

On March 17, a 65-year-old woman was arrested in an Office Depot in Texas City after she refused to wear a mask or leave the store, just days after an arrest warrant was issued for her in Galveston for behaving similarly in a Bank of America location.

MaryAnn Kaylor, the owner of two antique stores in Dallas, said the mask mandate repeal mattered a lot for stores and people’s behavior.

“He should have focused more on getting people vaccinated instead of trying to open everything up,” she said of Abbott, noting that Texas has one of the country’s slowest vaccinatio­n rates.

“You still have cases every day in Texas, and you have people dying still from COVID,” she said. “This complete lifting of mandates is stupid. It shouldn’t have been based on politics — it should have been based on science.”

Some Texans have started to seek out mask-friendly establishm­ents Kaylor said that lists of Dallas businesses that require masks had been circulatin­g on Facebook, and that people were consulting them to figure out where to buy groceries and do other shopping.

Emily Francois, a sales associate at a Walmart in Port Arthur, Texas, said customers had been ignoring signs to wear masks and that Walmart had not been enforcing the policy. So Francois stands 6 feet away from unmasked shoppers, even though that upsets some of them. “My life is more important,” she said.

“I see customers coming in without a mask and they’re coughing, sneezing, they’re not covering their mouths,” said Francois, who has worked at Walmart for 14 years and is a member of United for Respect, an advocacy group. “Customers coming in the store without masks make us feel like we aren’t worthy, we aren’t safe.”

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 ?? MATTHEW BUSCH/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? People with and without masks walk on a street last month in Fredericks­burg, Texas. The state has recently lifted its mask mandate, which has some retail workers fearful of being infected by the coronaviru­s.
MATTHEW BUSCH/THE NEW YORK TIMES People with and without masks walk on a street last month in Fredericks­burg, Texas. The state has recently lifted its mask mandate, which has some retail workers fearful of being infected by the coronaviru­s.

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