The News-Times

Hospital housekeepe­rs want COVID benefits

- By Katy Golvala For informatio­n about both the COVID-19 relief fund and the premium pay programs, call the Comptrolle­r’s informatio­n phone line at 833-6602503. Spanish language support is available.

Editor’s Note: This article is part of CT Mirror’s Spanishlan­guage news coverage developed in partnershi­p with Identidad Latina Multimedia.

During the terrifying spring of 2020, as COVID-19 paralyzed the nation and hospitals buckled, Katherine Stearns was on the front lines in Windham Hospital’s emergency room.

Stearns works as the lead housekeepe­r at the hospital. She remembers everything about the early days of the pandemic as “frantic,” from the burning sensation the Purell left on her hands to the patients who went from just fine to intubated in an instant.

“It was scary, like, really scary, to watch that,” said Stearns. “We were in the middle of it.”

Despite being touted as “health care heroes,” some housekeepe­rs say the benefits they have rightfully earned have only come after painstakin­g demands for recognitio­n, if they’ve come at all.

In Connecticu­t, some of these benefits are now becoming available. But critics say financial awards fall far below what is deserved.

There are 95,000 housekeepe­rs working in hospitals across the country, which is greater than the number of doctors working in hospitals. Housekeepe­rs are among the health care workers who spend the most time with patients and their families, often talking to and forming relationsh­ips with people as they clean.

Neil Prose, a dermatolog­ist and professor of medicine at Duke University who specialize­s in providerpa­tient communicat­ion, directed “Keepers of the House,” a 2020 documentar­y about the role that housekeepe­rs play in patient care.

“They know the patients better than we do. That’s not small. And they’re doing work without which we couldn’t survive … especially during COVID,” Prose said in an interview with the CT Mirror.

That work is physically demanding. A daily cleaning of a patient’s room includes emptying the trash, mopping the floors, cleaning the bathroom and wiping down any “high-touch” areas, like handrails and television remotes.

And once COVID hit, every cleaning process became much more involved.

Before entering a room with a patient who had symptoms, Stearns and her team had to “gown up,” which included putting on a hospital gown, gloves, an N95 mask and a face shield or goggles. When a COVID

patient was discharged, anything the patient used had to be removed or sanitized, down to the curtains, which had to be taken down and washed (Stearns said the hospital has since begun using disposable curtains).

“It was nonstop,” said Stearns.

‘A second class’

Despite the crucial role they played, housekeepe­rs reported feeling unseen and undervalue­d throughout the pandemic.

Until a few weeks ago, José Rodriguez worked at UConn Health as a housekeepe­r for 10 years.

Rodriguez recalled the supply shortages that plagued hospitals in the early months of the pandemic, when he regularly used a single mask for an entire week. Once N95s became available, doctors and nurses were prioritize­d in receiving them.

“They made a double standard, a second class for the housekeepe­r,” said Rodriguez, despite the reality that a hospital cannot operate without a cleaning staff. “When they don’t have housekeepe­rs, it’s chaos.”

The housekeepi­ng workforce, like most sectors of first responders, buckled under the strain of the pandemic. The influx of patients created unpreceden­ted demand for their work, while the virus caused many workers to be out sick. Housekeepe­rs helped hospitals navigate the shortages by taking on new responsibi­lities and working overtime.

Rodriguez typically cleaned common areas, like hallways and waiting rooms. But during surges, he would also clean rooms on the COVID floor. In December 2021, Stearns recalled, eight of Windham’s roughly 20 housekeepe­rs were out sick. She and others who were healthy worked overtime to help the hospital absorb the shortage

in cleaning staff.

“I was picking up every single day I was off,” said Stearns, who went from working her regular schedule of 32-hour weeks to working between 50- and 55-hour weeks, which she said felt better than sitting at home. “At least if I was at work I was contributi­ng and helping out some.”

The following February, during another spike in cases, Hartford HealthCare offered certain employees at Windham an overtime bonus for putting in extra hours. Several department­s, including patient care technician­s, paramedics, and sterile processing technician­s, qualified for the incentive. Housekeepe­rs did not because, Stearns was told, their job did not require a certificat­ion.

The exclusion left her and her colleagues feeling unapprecia­ted. Stearns said Hartford HealthCare eventually extended the incentive to housekeepe­rs in April, nearly two months later.

“I just feel like we’re always at the bottom of the barrel,” she said.

Donna Handley, president of Windham Hospital, said the hospital has awarded four rounds of bonuses to all employees throughout the pandemic, as well as additional incentives to only specific employee groups in cases of staffing shortages within particular units.

“These would be specific to the shortages and not typically offered to everyone,” stated Handley in emailed comments, adding, “Most incentives offered at Windham were specific to nurses.”

‘Fix the broken system’

The experience­s of Stearns, Rodriguez and their colleagues shed light on the ways in which housekeepe­rs have been overlooked, despite the sacrifices they’ve made.

In a report titled “Essential

but undervalue­d,” Brookings Metro fellow Molly Kinder lays out a policy agenda to support low-wage essential health workers, which includes housekeepe­rs, as well as medical assistants, home health aides, cooks and more.

Two of the policies that Kinder explores are sick time and hazard pay. This year, Connecticu­t has implemente­d both.

COVID sick time

In January, Connecticu­t launched a $34 million Essential Workers COVID-19 Assistance Program to replace lost wages and cover medical expenses for front line workers who caught COVID throughout the pandemic, but the initial statute applied only to workers infected between March 2020 and July 2021. In May, the legislatur­e voted to extend the time period through December 2022.

“It’s a huge deal,” said Rochelle Palanche, the vice president of SEIU Local 32BJ, the union representi­ng Rodriguez and the other janitors employed by SMG and working at UConn.

The extension allows qualifying front line workers, including housekeepe­rs, to apply for reimbursem­ent up to $1,446 in lost wages resulting from a COVID infection.

But the program’s rollout has met challenges. As of Aug. 31, the Comptrolle­r’s office reported that it had awarded only 1.7 percent of the $34 million budgeted, suggesting the fund desperatel­y needs more promotion and an easier applicatio­n process.

Prior to the bill’s passage, workers had to depend on COVID sick leave policies put in place by their employers. In many cases, these policies only provided enough paid sick time for a single COVID infection without complicati­ons, despite cases of extended illnesses, hospitaliz­ations, and multiple infections.

Under the COVID-19 leave policy for state employees, UConn Health employees could be reimbursed for a 14-calendar day period in case of infection. A second period of COVID paid leave was provided in “certain circumstan­ces.” A spokespers­on for UConn Health noted that after exhausting paid leave, an “employee could use their own accruals or choose to go unpaid.”

Although José Rodriguez worked at UConn, he was actually employed by SMG Corporate Services, a company that provides janitorial services to UConn Health. SMG gave its employees working at UConn 10 days of paid COVID sick time between March 2020 and December 31, 2021. The company also stated that, between Jan. 1 and Feb. 28, 2022, it provided “a benefit, negotiated with SEIU Local 32BJ, that was equal to the updated CDC quarantine guidelines at that time.”

Between late 2020 and early 2021, Rodriguez got infected with COVID, and SMG compensate­d him for the days he had to miss. But then, in October 2021, Rodriguez got COVID a second time. Both he and his wife, Myriam Nevarez, who also works as a housekeepe­r at UConn, had to quarantine — Rodriguez for seven days and Nevarez for 10.

This time, when Rodriguez asked his employer about compensati­on, he said they told him there wasn’t anything the company could provide to him directly.

SMG confirmed that its policy did not provide additional sick time in cases of reinfectio­n but stated that the company “worked with the employee to determine what other state or federal COVID relief program might be available to them,” including “unemployme­nt compensati­on or extended benefits under state or federal law or pandemic emergency unemployme­nt compensati­on.”

Rodriguez applied for pandemic unemployme­nt assistance twice and was denied both times. The unemployme­nt applicatio­n asks whether the applicant is currently seeking a job. Since he had a full-time job, Rodriguez responded ‘no,’ which immediatel­y disqualifi­ed him.

Handley, Windham Hospital’s president, confirmed in an emailed statement that the hospital’s workers “are compensate­d if they miss work due to COVID,” though she did not provide specific details of the policy.

Stearns said she hasn’t heard of any hospital employees facing issues similar to those Rodriguez and his colleagues experience­d at UConn. A spokespers­on from Yale New Haven Health, the health system with the most employees as of 2020, did not respond to requests regarding the details of their policy.

The state’s relief fund marks the first opportunit­y Rodriguez and his family have to recoup their lost wages.

Without a policy in place to cover them in cases of reinfectio­n, several of his colleagues avoided getting tested for COVID when they felt sick so they could continue working, said Rodriguez. They feared that a positive test would force them to take time off that they could not afford.

A spokespers­on for SMG Corporate Services wrote in emailed comments that the company is “unaware of any situation” where an employee felt sick but avoided taking a COVID test due to concerns they wouldn’t qualify for sick time. A spokespers­on for UConn Health said that the hospital requires vaccinatio­n and daily entry screenings for all employees and contractor­s, adding that coming into work while experienci­ng COVID symptoms is a “violation of UConn Health policies.”

Hazard pay

On Aug. 5, the state launched a pandemic premium pay program to provide front line private-sector workers with lump-sum bonuses.

The $30 million program allows qualifying essential workers to apply for grants ranging from $200 to $1,000 per worker. The size of the grants will ultimately depend on the number of applicants the program receives.

“It’s something,” said Rodriguez. “I think we deserve a little bit more.”

By simple math, the $30 million program cannot deliver more than 30,000 grants of $1,000 each. In the first three-and-a-half weeks, 255,000 people — more than eight times the maximum capacity level — requested applicatio­ns. And the program will continue to accept applicatio­ns for another month, until Oct. 1.

“They’re lucky if they get $50 at the rate we’re going,” said Rep. Robyn Porter, D-New Haven, co-chairwoman of the legislatur­e’s Labor and Public Employees Committee. “We’re not doing the right thing, we’re not putting people first.”

 ?? Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? Hospital workers wave and cheer as first responders pass by in a caravan of lights and sirens in Greenwich on April 16, 2020. Hospital housekeepe­rs are seeking COVID benefits.
Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo Hospital workers wave and cheer as first responders pass by in a caravan of lights and sirens in Greenwich on April 16, 2020. Hospital housekeepe­rs are seeking COVID benefits.

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