New York Daily News

Fear is growing in Calif.

Farmworker­s, essential to feeding the nation, at risk

- BY CUNEYT DIL AND AMY TAXIN

Salvador Calzadilla­s isn’t worried about catching coronaviru­s when he’s picking mandarin oranges in the trees in central California. But he said the mere act of getting to the groves each day puts him and his wife, also a farmworker, at risk, and there’s nothing they can do to change that.

Farmworker­s, after all, can’t work from home.

Calzadilla­s and his wife are among half a dozen workers who crowd into a car or van to get to the groves a 40-minute drive away. There, they are huddled in a group to get daily instructio­ns — without regard for social distancing, he said.

“There’s been no changes so far, everything is the same,” Calzadilla­s said. “Many of my co-workers say it’s like we’re immortal, we’re working just the same. There’s no prevention, and we keep working.”

The 31-year-old is one of many workers on farms operating in the heart of California’s farm-rich Central Valley, supplying food to much of the U.S. even as schools, restaurant­s and stores have closed down because of the virus.

More than a third of the country’s vegetables and twothirds of its fruits and nuts are grown in California, whose farms and ranches brought in nearly $50 billion in 2018, according to the state Agricultur­e Department.

Agricultur­e groups and union leaders are urging employers to take extra precaution­s to prevent the outbreak from spreading among California’s farmworker­s, who are already in short supply. Workers sidelined by illness could jeopardize crop yields and disrupt the food supply.

Some farms are heeding the call, union officials and growers say. But it can be difficult to separate workers by 6 feet as recommende­d because of the way certain crops are grown, said Dave Puglia, president of Western Growers, representi­ng family farmers in California, Arizona, Colorado and New Mexico.

And efficiency is also critical, he said, with farmers facing pressure to restock grocery shelves. “You would have to stagger the workers who are harvesting,” Puglia said. “That is a very inefficien­t and a very, very costly way to operate, and most farmers wouldn’t be able to do it. They would be losing way too much money.”

Western Growers said many members have added sanitation stations in the fields, require handwashin­g before and after work and have added extra space between workers in packing facilities.

United Farm Workers is pushing for longstandi­ng requests, including removing the need for a doctor’s note and other hurdles to getting sick pay. In a letter to the industry, the union said workers should be able to wash their hands frequently and be encouraged to stay home if they are sick.

 ??  ?? Workers keep distance from each other last week at Heringer Estates Family Vineyards in Clarksburg, Calif.
Workers keep distance from each other last week at Heringer Estates Family Vineyards in Clarksburg, Calif.

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