The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Bus drivers call for hazard pay amid coronaviru­s pandemic

- By Christine Stuart

HARTFORD — Finding a place to pee was difficult before the coronaviru­s pandemic, but it’s even harder now for bus drivers who rallied at the state Capitol Friday for hazard pay, personal protective equipment, and workers compensati­on for presumed infection on the job.

“We move Connecticu­t,” Veronica Chavers, a driver with the Amalgamate­d Transit Union, said. “We are the ones that transfer the heroes to the hospitals.”

She said Connecticu­t bus drivers are the ones who are taking nurses and grocery store workers to work and that makes them front-line workers, too. However, they’re not getting the respect or the pay that they deserve.

She said two bus drivers have died and many more have contracted the virus or are in selfquaran­tine.

The bus drivers work for CTtransit, which is the Department of Transporta­tion subsidiary that oversees bus operations in Hartford, New Haven, Waterbury and Stamford and paratransi­t service in some parts of the state.

CTtransit declined to comment and deferred all questions to the Department of Transporta­tion.

The state of Connecticu­t was scheduled to receive $488 million from the CARES Act, the federal coronaviru­s stimulus bill, to support bus and rail transit. However, the money has not been distribute­d to Connecticu­t’s transit partners yet.

AFL-CIO President Sal Luciano said bus drivers are on the front lines and deserve to receive hazard pay.

“Your risks are amplified,” Luciano said. “Everytime an essential worker gets on your bus after treating patients, or dealing with the crowds at the grocery store you are put at risk. And because of your increased risk, the least Governor Lamont should do is compensate and protect the state’s bus drivers for risking their lives.”

The state of Connecticu­t says it has distribute­d 53,650 masks to transit providers.

Chavers said although they are only allowing people to board the buses through the rear door, the buses lack barriers to protect the drivers.

“We need our drivers to be safe,” Chavers said.

The DOT said it has requested enhanced cleanings and “masks are required on board buses.”

In addition, the DOT said they included transit operators in the category of “critical essential worker” for priority COVID-19 testing purposes.

“We continue to praise our transit operators, who we consider ‘heroes moving heroes’,” Judd Everhart, a spokesman for the Department of Transporta­tion, said. “Unlike rail, which has seen a 97 percent drop in ridership, buses continue to carry 50

percent of their previous ridership … this shows how important this service is.”Artan Martinaj, the business manager for the local ATU in Hartford, said the hardest part for him is seeing drivers using diapers because one of the drivers was suspended previously for urinating behind a bush.

“We’re fighting a war and we don’t know who is our enemy,” Martinaj said.

He said when a doctor walks into a room they know a patient is sick, but bus drivers don’t know who may or may not be carrying the coronaviru­s.

“Nobody deserves to be treated like animals,” Martinaj said.

Asked earlier in the day Friday whether drivers would be allowed to use the bathrooms at restaurant­s when they reopen for outdoor service on May 20, Paul Mounds, Gov. Ned Lamont’s chief of staff, said there’s nothing that would prohibit the restrooms from being open.

 ?? Christine Stuart / CTNewsJunk­ie.com ?? Jaroslaw Pizunski was among the bus drivers who rallied Friday in Hartford.
Christine Stuart / CTNewsJunk­ie.com Jaroslaw Pizunski was among the bus drivers who rallied Friday in Hartford.
 ?? Christine Stuart / CTMirror.org ?? Veronica Chavers was among the bus drivers who rallied Friday in Hartford.
Christine Stuart / CTMirror.org Veronica Chavers was among the bus drivers who rallied Friday in Hartford.

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