USA TODAY US Edition

Hotels are barracks for workers ‘going to war’

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

“My bedroom is like COVID-free, as much as it can be.” Shadoe Daniels Physician assistant from Pennsylvan­ia working in New York City

NEW YORK – The tourists and convention­eers who once filled the rooms of The New Yorker hotel are long gone, driven away by the coronaviru­s, but its lobby is still bustling.

The big, art-deco hotel in midtown Manhattan is one of several across the U.S. that have become barracks for an army of health care workers deployed to fight COVID-19.

“You come home, get your dinner, take a shower, get to sleep and then do it all over again the next day,” said physician assistant Shadoe Daniels, through his mask, in a ballroom converted into an intake area, where shoe sanitizing stations are a must-stop before guests head to the elevators.

The Honesdale, Pennsylvan­ia, resident likened his workday to “going to war.”

More than 15,000 of the nation’s 56,000 hotels and motels are now offering rooms for emergency and health care workers, according to Chip Rogers, president of the American Hotel and Lodging Associatio­n.

Some health care workers have snagged free rooms at the Sophy Hyde Park hotel in Chicago or the luxurious Four Seasons Hotel New York.

Others, like Daniels, are being put up by staffing agencies hired to quickly bring reinforcem­ents to overwhelme­d hospitals.

At another time, hotels packed with out-of-town workers on a shared mission might have been buzzing like a college dorm, with nurses or doctors sharing drinks at the bar after shifts or heading out to a Broadway show.

But several health care workers staying at The New Yorker told The Associated Press that they are too exhausted after 12-hour workdays to do much more than shower, eat, exercise, read and sleep. Shuttered bars, restaurant­s and businesses limit options.

Zuri Longoria, a nurse from Aransas Pass, Texas, said she relieves stress from tending to dying patients by chatting with other medical volunteers like herself.

“You can’t share that type of bond with anybody else,” Longoria said.

In the hotel’s ballroom, sanitizing materials rest on a table and prayer cards and handwritte­n well wishes from the community hang from a bulletin board. “Thank you for helping others in their time of need!” reads one.

One note acknowledg­ed how inadequate words, prayers and small contributi­ons seemed for the workers. “It’s not a lot and way less than you guys deserve! Please be safe!” it said.

Nathan Shapiro-Shellaby, a nurse anesthetis­t from Seattle, said he runs outdoors and meditates before boarding a shuttle bus for work at Elmhurst Hospital in Queens, which has been ground zero for the crisis.

After work, he’s sharpening his Facetime and Zoom skills to maintain relationsh­ips.

“That’s been one of my favorite things to do to kind of release stress and hear about family and friends from all around the world,” Shapiro-Shellaby said.

Daniels said immediatel­y after a shift he sanitizes his shoes, wipes down anything he carries with Clorox wipes and drops his clothing in a laundry bag at his room.

“Then I jump right in the shower. My bedroom is like COVID-free, as much as it can be,” Daniels said.

Daniels, Longoria and Shapiro-Shellaby were recruited to New York by Krucial Staffing, which advertised that three-week stints for 400 nurses starting in mid-April would pay $10,000 per week.

Two weeks ago, the Mariott hotel chain announced it would provide $10 million of free “Rooms for Responders.”

Hilton and American Express also teamed up to donate up to 1 million hotel room nights nationwide.

Rogers estimates that half of the hotels in the country are closed due to the coronaviru­s pandemic. And most of the rest are operating with skeletal staffs.

Hotel authoritie­s say most hotels still up and running are housing workers, while some have offered space for hospital operations or to provide rooms for the homeless or quarantine­d individual­s.

“It’s a win, win, win,” said Kim Sabow, president of the Arizona Lodging and Tourism Associatio­n. She said 300 Arizona hotels had volunteere­d to house medical workers. “This is just a wonderful way in which the hotels can keep their doors open and give back at this horrific time of crisis.”

 ?? MARK LENNIHAN/AP ?? Nurse Johanna Rocco waits for a bus from her hotel to a hospital in New York. More than 15,000 hotels and motels across the nation are offering rooms for emergency and health care workers.
MARK LENNIHAN/AP Nurse Johanna Rocco waits for a bus from her hotel to a hospital in New York. More than 15,000 hotels and motels across the nation are offering rooms for emergency and health care workers.

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