Marysville Appeal-Democrat

California must protect its essential workers before it can conquer COVID-19

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

SAN FRANCISCO – Five months into the pandemic, it’s becoming increasing­ly clear that California is not going to conquer the coronaviru­s until it dramatical­ly improves safety measures for essential workers at the epicenter of the health crisis.

From farming communitie­s to urban centers and suburbs, workers in retail, manufactur­ing, agricultur­e and logistics are bearing the brunt of COVID-19 outbreaks, and state and local officials are struggling to control the infections even as the outlook in more prosperous communitie­s has improved.

A growing number of officials and health experts say it’s critical now for California to act more aggressive­ly, including pushing for masks and social distancing measures inside workplaces as well as cracking down much harder on employers who don’t follow the rules.

But that is only part of the problem. Some low-wage workers are reluctant to call in sick because they need the money and are afraid to report safety violations for fear of being fired. To deal with that, the state might need to provide additional disability pay to those who become ill and a process to aid workers who face retaliatio­n for speaking out.

It’s a particular challenge because many of these industries were ripe for worker exploitati­on before the pandemic. Some workers lack legal residency and are fearful of working with authoritie­s and crossing their bosses. But experts say California has no hope of fully reopening the economy unless it can get worker infections under control.

“What we’re talking about are low-wage workers – workers that don’t themselves have enough protection,” said

Dr. Kirsten BibbinsDom­ingo, chair of UC San Francisco’s Department of Epidemiolo­gy and Biostatist­ics. “They need protection of wages in order to be off of work ... and they need protection­s to be able to come back to work.”

She and others acknowledg­e it’s going to be difficult. Some of these workers are hired by middle men instead of big corporatio­ns, and building trust in government action is going to be essential.

“If we as a state – and then the counties most heavily affected – are going to get these sectors under control, we’re going to have to deal with the messiness of this,” Bibbins-domingo said. “We call these essential workers because the sectors they’re working in are essential to the California economy.

And it’s essential, therefore, that we figure out” how to protect them.

Latinos in California are being infected and dying from the coronaviru­s at rates significan­tly higher than white residents, driven by job and housing conditions that continuall­y bring them into contact with others, facilitati­ng the spread of COVID-19. While Latinos – the state’s largest ethnic group – make up 39% of California’s population, they make up 56% of all coronaviru­s cases and 46% of deaths.

Some of the state’s largest outbreaks have occurred at factories, food processing plants, and housing complexes for agricultur­al workers, both in cities and in agricultur­al communitie­s.

There is a potential model for this fight in nursing homes, where many California­ns who died from the virus were infected. If officials have been able to figure out how to reduce the spread there through widespread adoption of masks and improved infection control procedures, they can probably protect low-income essential workers, experts said.

“If you can cut this in a hospital or a nursing home, almost certainly you can handle it somewhere else. That’s a no brainer,” said Dr. Shruti Gohil, associate medical director of epidemiolo­gy and infection prevention at UC Irvine.

With coronaviru­s raging in Latino communitie­s in the Central Valley, Gov. Gavin Newsom on Monday announced $52 million in additional aid aimed at education, testing and tracing. But many say much more must be done.

“Under this pandemic we were unprepared ... and too many farmworker­s and essential workers are at risk,” said state Assemblyma­n Robert Rivas (D-hollister), whose grandfathe­r was a farmworker. “That needs to change.”

Rivas has pushed a relief package of five bills for farmworker­s since March.

 ?? Getty Images/tns ?? In this file photo, farm laborers with Fresh Harvest wash their hands before work on April 28 in Greenfield. They practice social distancing, and receive masks, gloves, hair nets and aprons.
Getty Images/tns In this file photo, farm laborers with Fresh Harvest wash their hands before work on April 28 in Greenfield. They practice social distancing, and receive masks, gloves, hair nets and aprons.

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