China Daily

US store workers forced to wait for vaccinatio­n

- By BELINDA ROBINSON belindarob­inson@chinadaily­usa.com

Grocery store workers in the United States have been on the frontlines supplying people with food and other supplies in the pandemic, but more than 2.4 million of them are not yet eligible for a COVID-19 vaccine. Many more don’t know when they will get vaccinated in their states.

Grocery workers are in “high-exposure, high-contact jobs and if they’re infected, they may become super spreaders”, Justin Yang, assistant professor of medicine at Boston University’s School of Medicine, told CNN.

Despite the risks, only 13 states allow grocery and meatpackin­g workers to sign up for vaccines, according to the United Food and Commercial Workers Internatio­nal Union, or UFCW, which represents 1.3 million grocery, meatpackin­g and other frontline workers.

The union said at least 137 grocery store workers have died of COVID-19, and 30,100 workers have been infected or exposed to the coronaviru­s.

“As the danger from COVID continues, grocery workers are among the most at risk to daily exposure to the virus, yet most companies refuse to reinstate hazard pay,’’ UFCW Internatio­nal President Marc Perrone said in a statement.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, or CDC, said in December that the vaccine should be offered to food workers in the second phase of the rollout. But the federal government changed that in January, choosing instead to prioritize healthcare workers, those over 65 years old, and people with highrisk medical conditions.

Leslie Sarasin, president and chief executive of the Food Marketing Institute, an organizati­on focused on an efficient consumer food supply chain, said: “Because of the essential services our associates are providing to citizens all over the country, their health and safety is always our top priority. They should be prioritize­d for the COVID vaccine just as the CDC and the Advisory Committee on Immunizati­on have already recommende­d.”

Each state is responsibl­e for setting its own vaccine-distributi­on plans. The 13 states that have vaccine access for grocery workers, according to the UFCW, are Alabama, Arizona, California, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Nebraska, New York, Virginia and Wyoming.

A further 12 states have vaccine access for workers in meat packing: Alabama, Arizona, California, Delaware, Hawaii, Illinois, Kansas, Kentucky, Maryland, Nebraska, Virginia and Wyoming.

50m milestone hailed

US President Joe Biden has accelerate­d the rollout of vaccines and, in a speech at the White House on Thursday, hailed the milestone of 50 million shots being given during the first 37 days of his presidency.

The vaccines have been sent to local pharmacies and grocery stores and mobile sites. However, staff at Walmart and Kroger stores could be working in stores administer­ing the vaccines but be ineligible to receive them despite being at risk daily from the virus.

The pandemic has been a boon for grocery stores. Kroger, the nation’s largest grocery chain, reported a profit of $3 billion for the year to Oct 31, an 88 percent increase from 2019.

A Kroger spokespers­on said the company has invested more than $1.5 billion in safety measures in stores and additional pay for workers during the pandemic.

“Kroger continues to advocate to federal, state and elected officials to prioritize frontline grocery workers to receive the vaccine,” the spokespers­on added.

Some grocery store chains, such as Trader Joe’s and Kroger, plan to give workers paid time off to get vaccinated. They also are offering incentives. Trader Joe’s and Aldi will offer extra pay to workers who get vaccinated.

 ?? JACOB FORD / ODESSA AMERICAN VIA AP ?? A grocery worker pulls a pallet of bottled water at a Market Street store in Odessa, Texas.
JACOB FORD / ODESSA AMERICAN VIA AP A grocery worker pulls a pallet of bottled water at a Market Street store in Odessa, Texas.

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