Lake County Record-Bee

OREGON REPORTS ON WORKPLACE OUTBREAKS

California has no such plan, letting counties handle coronaviru­s data

- By Laurence Du Sault

California and Oregon were lauded for their early response to the pandemic, with swift and broad shutdowns aimed at slowing the spread of coronaviru­s. In reopening their economies, both states imposed stringent requiremen­ts for masks and face coverings.

But eight months into the public health crisis, the neighborin­g states have made starkly different choices on tracking and reporting workplace outbreaks — decisions that shape how much the public knows about the spread of coronaviru­s as hotspots appear at meat-packing plants, stadium constructi­on sites, warehouses and other essential worksites.

Since May, Oregon has used a centralize­d tracking system, which has enabled health officials there to release weekly reports that list the names and addresses of every known business with at least 30 employees where five or more positive COVID-19 cases are identified. For outbreaks of more than 20, the Beaver State issues special daily reports.

California, in contrast, doesn’t post workplace outbreaks. The state lets its 58 counties handle coronaviru­s data, with wide variety in how each county tracks and reports workplace outbreaks. The distinctio­n has workers and public health experts worried.

“It’s fundamenta­l data that should be readily available,” said Dr. Melissa Perry, epidemiolo­gist and chair of the Environmen­tal and Occupation­al Health department at George Washington University.

Throughout the pandemic, the Golden State has advised, but did not mandate, employers to notify workers of positive cases among employees. This means millions of workers in the fifth-largest economy in the world receive less informatio­n than they could about whether it’s safe to go to work. It also means low-wage essential workers carry greater risks: A joint investigat­ion by CalMatters and The Salinas California­n for the California Divide revealed hundreds of unreported outbreaks among guest farmworker­s throughout California this summer.

While business groups say it’s not productive to publicly shame companies, public health experts say posting workplace outbreaks would be helpful in controllin­g the virus, as pandemic-fatigued residents seek to return to school and work. More than 18,000 California­ns have died from the virus with Latino and Black people infected at a significan­tly higher rate than white and Asian people. Such informatio­n, experts say, may improve scientific tracking and enable targeted responses amid a third wave of outbreaks.

What Oregonians know but California­ns don’t

Like most states, California isn’t taking the extra step to post workplace outbreaks. But a few states, including Oregon, Arkansas, New Mexico and Colorado, do disclose where workers have contracted the virus. Iowa will disclose outbreaks if 10% of a business’ employees test positive for the virus.

In Oregon, health officials made an early pivot with public support.

State health officials came under heavy criticism last spring in choosing not to disclose two outbreaks at Townsend Farms, a Portland-based fruit company. On May 28, the department made an administra­tive decision to track outbreaks statewide using lab results and data from healthcare providers. Oregon posts reports that include workplace outbreaks along with those in schools, child care facilities and senior living and care facilities.

“There was a demand for transparen­cy,” said Oregon Health Authority director Patrick Allen. “We had to shift.”

Today, Oregonians know nearly as much as their public health officials about the number of workers who have died or been infected as a result of workplace exposures. It’s 37 deaths and 8,605 cases.

California­ns don’t know. “It immediatel­y paints a patchwork quilt picture of data,” said Perry, the George Washington University epidemiolo­gist. “Very incomplete, very selective.”

The two states are very different in size and economy. Oregon has just over a tenth of California’s population, which accounts in part for the state’s low infection rate. But the state’s coronaviru­s case rate is still 1,116 per 100,000, the sixth lowest rate in the country. California’s rate is more than double that, with 2,412, according to a New York Times database.

Though it’s difficult to know if Oregon’s reporting contribute­d to a lower fatality rate, officials there believe sharing informatio­n has helped.

California resists naming and shaming

California’s reluctance was on display in Sacramento this legislativ­e cycle as lawmakers pushed for greater transparen­cy. A bill signed in September by Gov. Gavin Newsom aims to give workers timely notice, but a key requiremen­t to disclose worksite outbreaks to the public got stripped out of the final draft.

Because some counties ask businesses to self report outbreaks, local officials say they fear employers won’t participat­e if they publicly post outbreaks. Instead, when the bill takes effect Jan. 1, California will only report the total number of outbreaks by industry sector without naming employers.

“The opposition was very strong against the bill,” said Assemblyme­mber Eloise Gómez Reyes (DSan Bernardino), who authored the bill. “They were basically saying, ‘ Trust us, we’ll do the right thing.’”

Her bill, AB 685, which cited the Divide’s guest worker investigat­ion, initially required the state health department to post online the location of every outbreak. But that provision got struck out along with a $10,000 penalty for failure to notify workers in a timely fashion.

Instead of disclosing workplace outbreaks, the California Depar tment of Public Health plans to publish aggregated data by job sectors. The department, which provides “guidance documents” to local health department­s and employers, declined requests for a phone interview and said in an email statement that with regard to informatio­n about coronaviru­s at workplaces, count y health depar tments “would be the appropriat­e agency to contact regarding outbreaks.”

Business groups led by the California Chamber of Commerce call disclosure a “name and shame” tactic, noting employers aren’t always to blame for virus outbreaks. Diane O’Malley, a lawyer at Hanson Bridgett, a San Francisco- based firm which represents employers, said California’s new law is a “backdoor way of getting where Oregon is without making it so splashy.”

 ?? PHOTO BY ANDREI STANESCU VIA ISTOCK ?? Social Distancing rules meant to protect against the transmissi­on of COVID-19, in English and Spanish, displayed at the entrance to a commercial constructi­on site in Sunnyvale on May 10. California does not make workplace COVID-19 case data available to the public.
PHOTO BY ANDREI STANESCU VIA ISTOCK Social Distancing rules meant to protect against the transmissi­on of COVID-19, in English and Spanish, displayed at the entrance to a commercial constructi­on site in Sunnyvale on May 10. California does not make workplace COVID-19 case data available to the public.
 ?? PHOTO BY DAVID RODRIGUEZ — THE SALINAS CALIFORNIA­N ?? Jose Suarez, a strawberry farmworker, has been working in the strawberry fields since 2001. Suarez wears a medical face mask as he stands near rows of strawberry fields in Watsonvill­e over the summer.
PHOTO BY DAVID RODRIGUEZ — THE SALINAS CALIFORNIA­N Jose Suarez, a strawberry farmworker, has been working in the strawberry fields since 2001. Suarez wears a medical face mask as he stands near rows of strawberry fields in Watsonvill­e over the summer.

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