Times Standard (Eureka)

As aid flows to flooded-out state, who will be left out?

- By Lauren Hepler, Nicole Foy and Wendy Fry

It was late Friday morning when muddy, brown water started rushing onto Michelle Hackett’s Salinas Valley farms.

On one side of her family’s Riverview Farms cannabis business, a county-mandated retention pond overflowed. Next door, a farm abandoned by another grower — one of dozens of cannabis businesses to shut down in Monterey County in recent years — spawned another small river headed straight for Hackett and her skeleton crew.

“The water completely stopped and backed up,” Hackett said. “I thought, ‘Holy s***, this is going to flood our greenhouse­s.’”

Cannabis businesses like Hackett’s — along with thousands of undocument­ed farmworker­s and the area’s unhoused residents — fear they’ll be left to fend for themselves as yet another winter storm batters California’s Central Coast, local officials and advocates say.

Cannabis businesses and undocument­ed workers by law are ineligible for federally funded programs such as unemployme­nt or aid from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

Now, after days of wind, rain and flooding displaced hundreds of people in Monterey County alone, details are lacking about how state officials would respond to calls to direct state funds and other disaster relief to these communitie­s in the region known as America’s salad bowl.

California has stepped into the breach before, offering some support to undocument­ed workers during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, and to some cannabis farmers whose crops were damaged in wildfires.

It’s an issue complicate­d by competing political priorities and a projected $24 billion state budget deficit for the coming year.

As Gov. Gavin Newsom plans to visit flooded regions today, including the inundated farmworker town of Pajaro, many officials and advocates said they hope to hear how the state will help. A few lawmakers said they’re exploring legislativ­e options.

“I think we need to step up our efforts to help those who are undocument­ed and can’t earn a paycheck because of the current rains

and floods,” said Assemblyme­mber Miguel Santiago, a Democrat representi­ng Los Angeles.

He is co-sponsoring Senate Bill 227 to provide unemployme­nt benefits to undocument­ed California­ns. About 6 in 10 farmworker­s are not eligible for unemployme­nt benefits, according to studies.

Santiago said the current situation is frustratin­g because he has advocated for years for more safety net programs that could have helped families hurt by the flooding. If such legislatio­n was in place, he said, “we’d be able to have a place where we could go get people some financial relief.”

Assemblyme­mber Robert Rivas of Salinas, chosen by his fellow Democrats to be the next Assembly Speaker, noted in a statement to CalMatters that undocument­ed workers typically don’t qualify for federal assistance funds for emergency housing, home repairs, personal property loss, funeral expenses and other aid.

“My office, in collaborat­ion with other legislativ­e offices, is exploring immediate legislativ­e and budget action to provide relief for these vulnerable communitie­s,” Rivas said, noting that the workers also had been ineligible for many COVID-19 relief programs.

The state began filling some of that gap during the pandemic. Undocument­ed workers were eligible for $1,700 in state funds: a $500 COVID-19 Disaster Relief prepaid card and $1,200 from the Golden State Stimulus Fund.

Tuesday afternoon, groups of people remained in tents along the flooded Pajaro River. Despite large federal and state housing budgets, many of those people don’t have homes.

Many farmworker families in the flooded region are undocument­ed, from indigenous groups, and don’t speak either English or Spanish well, said Eloy Ortiz, a board member for the Watsonvill­e-based Center for Farmworker Families.

That complicate­s attempts to apply for assistance on behalf of the legal residents in their household. Some were rejected when they applied for aid in January, Ortiz said.

“The folks who have been

flooded out, if it were a normal year, they’d be starting to go back to the fields to work right now,” Ortiz said. “And now they will probably not be able to go back for months.”

More than 20,000 acres of agricultur­al land in Monterey County will likely sit fallow because of stormwater contaminat­ion, noted Monterey County Supervisor Luis Alejo, a former Assembly member from Watsonvill­e, in a tweet.

“These are low-income Latino families, and the start of the harvest season for strawberri­es, raspberrie­s and other crops is in March. Now farmworker­s will be out of work,” he wrote Tuesday.

“I urge our state leaders to provide aid in the state budget for undocument­ed flood victims who do not qualify for FEMA assistance & additional relief for farmworker­s who will be out of work due to flooded ag fields and not qualifying for unemployme­nt insurance,” he wrote.

“The financial pain they will face will be severe & prolonged!”

As many as 8,500 people were under flood evacuation warnings in Monterey County over the weekend. The California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services reported more than 300 people had stayed in five shelters across Santa Cruz and Monterey Counties Monday night, the vast majority taking shelter at the Santa Cruz County Fairground­s.

In Salinas, Hackett, 32, said her choice was simple as the storm bore down: save herself, or say goodbye to a crop that has already weathered a steep drop

in prices and other industry pressures. At least 56 cannabis businesses have closed in Monterey County in recent years, according to a recent estimate.

As the water rose Friday morning, Hackett and her team that normally would be busy trimming plants or readying retail products instead shut down early to reinforce storm ditches and forge cement slabs into an impromptu flood wall.

On Tuesday, as another storm knocked out power at her two adjacent 10-acre farms, Hackett said she is unaware of any aid available for cannabis businesses impacted by flooding.

“Ideally if we were any other business, we would have immediatel­y had help,” Hackett said. “Whether it be the county, whether it be the state — someone needs to be held accountabl­e.”

Longer term, Hackett said she fears climate change and economic obstacles will point her industry toward the same downward trajectory that wiped out many of the flower growers who once thrived in the same Monterey County greenhouse­s.

She isn’t alone in her frustratio­ns.

Joey Espinoza, a Salinasrai­sed cannabis compliance consultant, said several of his clients were directly impacted by floodwater­s, including one grower who had to evacuate plants from a flooded greenhouse. Even while the ground was still muddy, he said, many cannabis farmers have turned their attention to other pressing challenges in the industry.

As cannabis remains illegal

at the national level, Espinoza said, local growers shut out of federal financial aid are now confrontin­g storm damage after a collapse in cannabis prices and while facing a tight deadline to apply for new state licenses by the end of the year.

Industry advocates say the economic turmoil stems from a mix of overproduc­tion of legal and illegal cannabis, as well as ever-changing taxes and regulation­s.

“There’s layers of issues with all of this,” Espinoza said. “And the thing to remember is, there’s not gonna be a lot of relief for cannabis in terms of FEMA and things like that.”

It was unclear exactly what the state might do.

The California Department of Cannabis Control did not respond to questions Tuesday about whether it expects to make any aid available to area farms, though it has in the past offered support for cannabis growers impacted by wildfires. Few lawmakers voiced ideas.

In the meantime, some residents took matters into their own hands.

Gabino Orozco Avila was getting ready to serve dinner to neighbors gathered on a walkway above the rushing Pajaro River late Tuesday afternoon, a stone’s throw from his daughter’s home in Pajaro. While his daughter remained evacuated, Avila, owner of a longtime food business, Tacos Los Jacona — a nod to his Michoacán hometown — had prepared carne asada, rice and beans for the community that had long supported him.

“Now that people need me,” he said in Spanish, “I’ll be here.”

 ?? MARTIN DO NASCIMENTO — CALMATTERS ?? Michelle Hackett stands at the entrance to Riverview Farms in Salinas that flooded in the mid-March storms.
MARTIN DO NASCIMENTO — CALMATTERS Michelle Hackett stands at the entrance to Riverview Farms in Salinas that flooded in the mid-March storms.

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