Miami Herald

She lost her job because of COVID-19. Now, she and her three daughters might be evicted

Bertha Osson lost her job as a cook in the Keys due to the pandemic. The single mother with three daughters is behind on rent, electricit­y and other bills.

- BY JACQUELINE CHARLES jcharles@miamiheral­d.com

Having been evicted once, Bertha Osson knows what it’s like to have no place to call home, to be forced to share a bed with her three children at a friend’s home for a year.

“I wouldn’t like to have that experience again,” said Osson, 48, who was evicted from her previous home in

Florida City and now faces a similar fate amid the coronaviru­s pandemic.

A single mother with three teenage daughters, Osson lost her job in August as a cook in Key Largo due to COVID-19. She is two months behind in rent on her $1,450-a-month house in Homestead. Chronic back pain, which requires her to see a chiropract­or, has limited her job opportunit­ies, she said. Because of the pain, she can’t put her certified nursing assistant license to use because it requires her to lift patients.

“You know when you have three kids, bills to pay and not working, the situation is not easy,” Osson said.

Adding to her worries is that

she has been unable to collect unemployme­nt aid.

“I applied and have been waiting. They haven’t given me anything and that is what I was depending on to help me pay my bills,” she said. “I am not going to lie, it’s really tough.”

Alpha Fleurimond, the executive director and founder of Three Virtues Organizati­on, a Homestead nonprofit that has been assisting Osson, said he has yet to get an answer from the state on unemployme­nt benefits. He helped her fill out the paperwork and has tried to help her make ends meet, but the pressures on his nonprofit have been enormous due to the virus.

“Because of the pandemic, our numbers are increasing. But that doesn’t mean we have more funding,” said Fleurimond, whose agency provides a food pantry, a camp for kids and other social services to migrants, the elderly and the Haitian community in South Miami-Dade County.

“One of the things that we get a lot is people asking us to help them pay their rent, their electricit­y. ... We have a lot of people asking us for that and we don’t have funding to continue to help them,” said Fleurimond, who nominated Osson for help from Wish Book.

Fleurimond said his clients fall into two groups: migrants who work in the agricultur­al fields and lowwage earners who worked in the hospitalit­y industry in the Keys, where a lot of jobs have been lost because of the SARS-CoV-2 coronaviru­s, which causes COVID-19.

“It’s been a crisis for most of our clients,” he said.

Osson is among them.

‘‘

I APPLIED AND HAVE BEEN WAITING. ... THAT IS WHAT I WAS DEPENDING ON TO HELP ME PAY MY BILLS. ... IT’S REALLY TOUGH. Bertha Osson, about unemployme­nt aid ‘‘

IT’S BEEN A CRISIS FOR MOST OF OUR CLIENTS.

Alpha Fleurimond, the executive director and founder of Three Virtues Organizati­on, a Homestead nonprofit

Even with fears of eviction looming, her thoughts are with her children. Her oldest daughter, Keonia, 19, had to temporaril­y drop out of college, Osson said, but if she had a laptop, she could take classes online, hopefully starting in January.

Middle daughter, Laisha, a 16-year-old junior in high school, also needs a laptop, while the youngest, Kiera, 13, asked for an iPad.

 ?? PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com ?? Bertha Osson, center, with two of her three daughters — Kiera, left, and Keonia — at their home in Homestead.
PEDRO PORTAL pportal@miamiheral­d.com Bertha Osson, center, with two of her three daughters — Kiera, left, and Keonia — at their home in Homestead.
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