The Guardian (USA)

A catastroph­ic year casts a pall of uncertaint­y across California’s agricultur­al valleys

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Nowhere are the effects of the multiple crises that hit California this year more visible than in the state’s agricultur­al valleys.

The region faced a list of challenges almost too long to comprehend: recordbrea­king heat, smog and smoke from historic wildfires resulting in air quality too poor to be outside in. High rates of Covid-19 infections and the anxiety, isolation and job losses that go with it. Tensions around a divisive election. Fears and conflict over immigratio­n policies.

In 2020, California’s Central, Eastern Coachella and Imperial valleys were no longer the outlying edges, but the center of the state’s troubles. A twoweek reporting trip in October and November revealed that not knowing the outcome of so much, not knowing where things will go from here, has created a tenor of uncertaint­y that vibrated through the small towns and across the broad fields.

Lamont, Kern county, California. Discarded shoes. The small town of Lamont has a population of 15,131, and 32.8% of residents live below the poverty level.

Buttonwill­ow, California. More than 43% of Buttonwill­ow’s 1,583 residents live below the poverty line.

Left: Taft, Kern county, California. Taft has a population of 7,294 and 24.5% of residents live below the poverty level. Like many other parts of the state, the city was under a “redflag warning” for severe fire conditions in mid-October. Right: Mendota, Fresno county, California. Mendota has a population of 11,307 and has seen more than a 1,000 cases of Covid-19. Ninety per cent of California’s 381,000 farmworker­s come from Mexico. Covid-19 has disproport­ionately affected Latino communitie­s, accounting for 58% of all cases in the state as of August.

Huron, Fresno county, California. Alleyway. Huron has a population of 7,019, with 45.7% of residents living below the poverty level. Fresno county, where Huron is located, has recorded41,460 cases of Covid-19, with 514 deaths.

Left: Tulare, Tulare county, California. Tulare has a population of 59,278 and 23.6% live below the poverty level. The city has had 2,848 cases of Covid-19. Tulare county, has had 23,662 cases of Covid-19, and 319 deaths. The unemployme­nt rate is 12.2%. Right: Avenal, Kings county, California. Avenal has a population of 9,567. The nearby Avenal state prison is the most Covid-infected facility in California. The prison has had nearly 3,000 infections, and eight deaths.

Bakersfiel­d, Kern county, California. A Trump supporter cheers on a caravan in support of Donald Trump’s re-election from an overpass of Highway 99.

Ducor, Tulare county, California. Almond plantings. Over-pumping groundwate­r for agricultur­e has caused the land to sink in parts of the central valley. The Friant-Kern canal near Ducor has lost 60% of its carrying capacity due to sinking ground.

Left: Traver, Tulare county, California. Traver has a population of 834 and has had 131 cases of Covid-19. Right: Mecca, Riverside county, California. High winds, swirling dust, and heightened fire risks throughout the fall led to warnings about power shutoffs in Mecca, which has a population of 7,174. Unemployme­nt in Riverside county is 10.4%, but 39.5% of residents live below the poverty level.

El Centro, Imperial county, California. In the early months of the pandemic, Imperial county had a positivity rate of 10.32 cases per 1,000 in population, the highest rate then recorded in California. The county has had 17,733 cases of Covid-19 and 367 deaths.

Calexico, California. Since the coronaviru­s outbreak began, 10.21% of Imperial county’s population has tested positive for Covid-19. With 21.5% of the population out of work, the county has both the highest unemployme­nt rate and the highest rates of infection in the state.

Left: Niland, Imperial county, California. A brush fire in Niland this summer killed one person, destroyed about 40 homes, and displaced 130 people. East of the Salton Sea, Niland has a population of 515, and 57.3% of people live below the poverty level. Right: El Centro, Imperial county, California. Homeless encampment.

Borrego Springs, California. Abandoned farm well. Borrego Springs is in San Diego county, which recorded a new single day Covid-19 record 1,802 cases on Thanksgivi­ng day.

Barstow, California. A man sleeps in an empty lot. Barstow has a population of 22,750 and 36.6% live below the poverty level.

Left andright: Calexico, California. Barstow, California. A rural home. Victorvill­e, California. A burned and overturned car. Victorvill­e is home to the Adelanto Ice Processing Center, where activists have regularly gathered to demand the release of detained immigrants with health conditions that make them vulnerable to Covid-19.

Left: Firebaugh, California. Firebaugh has a poverty rate of 27.7%, and its farm worker residents must continue to work picking crops despite the pandemic. The wildfires in the state exacerbate­d already tough working conditions for valley farm workers. Right: Fresno, California. A fire at a homeless encampment downtown. Fresno has a population of 961,820 and 24.1% live below the poverty level.

Ducor, California.

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 ??  ?? Terra Bella, Tulare county, California. Terra Bella has a population of 3,304. Photograph: Matt Black/Magnum/The Guardian
Terra Bella, Tulare county, California. Terra Bella has a population of 3,304. Photograph: Matt Black/Magnum/The Guardian

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