Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Greek unions strike

Groups seek return to pre-pandemic work rules

- MICHAELA RAMM

ATHENS, Greece — Widespread strikes in Greece brought public transport and other services to a halt Thursday as the country’s largest labor unions protested employment reforms they argue will make flexible workplace changes introduced during the pandemic more permanent.

The 24-hour protest also disrupted public hospitals and ferry services to the Greek islands.

Large demonstrat­ions were held in Athens and Thessaloni­ki, Greece’s second-largest city, as well as other cities and towns. No violence was reported.

Greece’s center-right government says the draft legislatio­n currently being debated in parliament will allow greater flexibilit­y within the work week and also modernize regulation­s to grant new fathers longer paternity leave.

Opponents, including the main left-wing opposition party that is backing the strikes, have accused the government of using coronaviru­s lockdowns as a pretext to further erode longstandi­ng work rights and legal protection­s for employees.

They fear it will allow employers to get out of paying overtime and to set schedules that are disruptive to workers’ lives.

The reforms are expected to be voted on in parliament this week.

CEDAR RAPIDS, Iowa — Leaders at local summer camps are working to create as normal an experience as possible in the midst of the ongoing pandemic, all while ensuring campers — who largely don’t qualify for a covid-19 vaccine — are safe from the coronaviru­s.

As they prepare to welcome back the first campers of the season, summer camp officials say they are mainly relying on “nonpharmac­ologic interventi­ons” to prevent covid-19 spread at their locations.

That includes limiting interactio­ns among campers, robust cleaning polices and masking requiremen­ts.

Camp Wapsie Programs Director Jess Flesch described using these interventi­ons like layering Swiss cheese. There’s holes in individual policies, but by stacking them, she said they’re able to better mitigate risk to campers and staff.

“We want as many campers vaccinated as possible, but we can’t rely on that because so many kids aren’t able to be,” Flesch said.

Camp Wapsie, the YMCA of Cedar Rapids Metropolit­an Area’s summer camp in Coggon that began hosting its first batch of campers Sunday, required masks anywhere outside a cabin or living unit, Flesch said.

Some venues across Eastern Iowa also are taking the step of limiting campers’ interactio­ns with other children to reduce the chance of exposure, should there be a positive case.

This year’s attendees at Camp Tanager, Tanager Place’s camp in Mount Vernon, only will attend activities and share meals with those staying in their cabin. Even during all-camp events, each social circle of eight campers will maintain social distancing from one another, Camp Director Donald Pirrie said.

“If we keep groups of kids within that small group, we would only really have to test other seven, since they haven’t interacted with other kids,” he said.

In addition, masks are required indoors or in situations where social distancing isn’t possible, Pirrie said.

The summer camp operated by the Girl Scouts of Eastern Iowa and western Illinois in the Quad Cities, Camp Liberty, is taking a similar approach by limiting camper interactio­n to individual units.

Campers, who began arriving Sunday, were required to wear a mask when they’re interactin­g with someone outside their unit.

Camp Wapsie also is changing its typically open schedule and having campers attend activities in cabin groups.

In addition, they’ll be split into two groups — one for the older campers and one for the younger campers — that won’t interact at all throughout the course of the week long stay, Flesch said.

Camp Courageous in Monticello, on the other hand, said program attendees won’t be required to wear a mask, thanks to a law put into effect this past month. CEO Charlie Becker said an order banning mask mandates in Iowa also applies to the camp, a year-round recreation­al and respite care facility for individual­s with special needs.

“With the change in the law, it changed everything here,” Becker said, who added visitors still are welcome to wear masks if they choose.

However, many Camp Courageous campers already have received the covid-19 shots, Becker said, including those that qualified as longterm care facility residents in the vaccine rollout earlier this year.

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued new guidelines late this past month stating fully vaccinated campers do not need to wear a mask.

It further notes at camps where not everyone is vaccinated, those who are fully vaccinated don’t need to wear masks.

Unvaccinat­ed individual­s, on the other hand, are “strongly encouraged” to wear masks indoors and outdoors in crowded situations.

The new CDC guidance comes after the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion authorized the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for use for children between the ages of 12 to 15.

But many of the younger attendees at Eastern Iowa summer camps won’t qualify for the shot. Camp Tanager only hosts kids ages 6 to 11 years old at its day and overnight programmin­g.

Officials at Camp Wapsie also say the majority of those staying at the camp will not be vaccinated.

“More than half of campers are not eligible, so that’s why we’re being stricter” with covid-19 protocols, Flesch said.

Despite that many campers won’t be vaccinated against the virus, local directors say parents and families are eager to send their children away from home for the cherished summer tradition.

“Most people are excited their kids are getting back into normal activities,” Pirrie said.

That rush in this year’s summer camp season is a nationwide trend, with parents in some parts of the country struggling to find available slots as demand exploded. Bloomberg News reported after a year of isolation and remote school, Americans are eager to provide children time away from home.

“Everyone’s just excited to get their kids outside and away from screens,” Flesch said.

Eastern Iowa summer camps aren’t completely booked up yet. There still are openings at Camp Wapsie, which has about 150 slots available as of this past week, Flesch said.

Camp Tanager’s registrati­ons for overnight programmin­g have dropped this year, but the day camp numbers are higher than previous years.

Pirrie said that indicates parents are ready to send children to camp, but they are not necessaril­y ready for overnight stays.

Camp Courageous also is not seeing the same attendance it had seen before the pandemic. Becker said in 2019, they were just below 10,000 total campers.

As of the end of April, they hosted just over 1,100 campers.

Many summer camps are limiting capacity this year, reducing the number of children at its locations in an effort to offset risk of outbreaks.

The Girl Scouts camp plans to operate at 50% capacity for the summer, “enhancing the ability to appropriat­ely distance during more difficult parts of the sessions,” its covid-19 plan states.

That means attendance for the summer will be around 750 campers between the ages of 7 and 17, Director Rachel Eisenmann said. In 2020, before camp leadership decided

to shut down operations because of the pandemic, about 1,400 campers were registered to attend.

Camp Wapsie is putting its capacity at 80%, or about 1,650 campers. That means 10 campers will sleep in a cabin that typically houses 12.

Camp Tanager is paring down its typical per-cabin capacity down to eight campers this year, Pirrie said.

Despite this year’s covid-19 rules, directors say they are working to create as normal of a summer camp experience as they can for campers, allowing them to enjoy canoe voyages and campfire singalongs without fear from the virus that has upended so many lives.

“We are ecstatic to be able to welcome campers back the property after such a long and challengin­g year, as our lives have changed,” Eisenmann said. “Giving girls the ability to be able to be a kid again, working through social and emotional learning experience­s, and making memories in nature is what drives our staff.”

And as time progresses and more community members are vaccinated, they say they’re seeing families’ confidence in the safety of these typical summer events “growing by leaps and bounds every single day.”

“It seems like as each day passes, the hesitancy really lessens,” Becker said.

 ?? (AP/Michael Varaklas) ?? Supporters of the Greek communist party-affiliated Pame labor union march during a rally in Athens. Widespread strikes in Greece brought public transport and other services to a halt Thursday, as the country’s largest labor unions protested against employment reforms they argue will make flexible workplace changes introduced during the pandemic more permanent.
(AP/Michael Varaklas) Supporters of the Greek communist party-affiliated Pame labor union march during a rally in Athens. Widespread strikes in Greece brought public transport and other services to a halt Thursday, as the country’s largest labor unions protested against employment reforms they argue will make flexible workplace changes introduced during the pandemic more permanent.
 ??  ?? Supporters of the Greek communist party-affiliated Pame labor union march in front of the parliament in Athens.
Supporters of the Greek communist party-affiliated Pame labor union march in front of the parliament in Athens.
 ??  ?? A passenger walks past protesters blocking the entrance of a passenger ferry during a 24-hour labor strike at the port of Piraeus, near Athens.
A passenger walks past protesters blocking the entrance of a passenger ferry during a 24-hour labor strike at the port of Piraeus, near Athens.
 ??  ?? A protester raises a flag of the Greek communist party-affiliated Pame labor union during a rally.
A protester raises a flag of the Greek communist party-affiliated Pame labor union during a rally.
 ?? Protesters march to the parliament. ??
Protesters march to the parliament.
 ??  ?? Protesters take part in a rally.
Protesters take part in a rally.
 ?? (The Cedar Rapids Gazette/Rebecca F. Miller) ?? Brett Baccam, Ranger camp director, breaks down sticks as he collects firewood at Camp Wapsie in Coggon, Iowa. The camp is welcoming campers back this summer, but with protocols in place to prevent the spread of covid-19. Kids younger than 12 are not yet able to receive a vaccine, per Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommenda­tions.
(The Cedar Rapids Gazette/Rebecca F. Miller) Brett Baccam, Ranger camp director, breaks down sticks as he collects firewood at Camp Wapsie in Coggon, Iowa. The camp is welcoming campers back this summer, but with protocols in place to prevent the spread of covid-19. Kids younger than 12 are not yet able to receive a vaccine, per Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommenda­tions.
 ??  ?? Zoey Marciniak, camp photograph­er, sorts T-shirts at Camp Wapsie.
Zoey Marciniak, camp photograph­er, sorts T-shirts at Camp Wapsie.
 ??  ?? Camp staff (above photo) wrap up an outdoor meeting.
Camp staff (above photo) wrap up an outdoor meeting.
 ??  ?? Each cabin will have a hand sanitizer dispenser and there are hand-washing stations around the grounds.
Each cabin will have a hand sanitizer dispenser and there are hand-washing stations around the grounds.

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