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Newsom Signals More Protections Coming For Essential Workers

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The new program, which will rely mostly on federal money, will provide hotel rooms for agricultural workers in California who test positive or were exposed to the coronavirus so they can safely isolate.

As California鈥檚 COVID-19 cases surged past 435,000 last week, Gov. Gavin Newsom announced more protections for the state鈥檚 essential workers, including farmworkers, truck drivers, construction workers and grocery employees. But he gave few specific details and said more information would come in the next few weeks.

He noted during his daily virtual news conference that California鈥檚 essential workers are disproportionately Latino and disproportionately affected by COVID-19. Latinos account for about of the state鈥檚 COVID-19 cases, despite comprising about 39 percent of the population.

鈥淓xtinguishing COVID-19 depends on our ability to keep our essential workers safe,鈥 Newsom said. 鈥淭his is where we鈥檙e seeing the spread.鈥

With most schools unable to reopen this fall and daily new COVID-19 cases topping 12,000 on two different days this week, Newsom has for his response to the pandemic, including criticism that he reopened the state too soon. The state鈥檚 now numbers 36 counties, including California鈥檚 most heavily populated regions, with virus activity of concern to public health officials.

Newsom highlighted a new program, , which will provide hotel rooms for agricultural workers who test positive or were exposed to the virus so they can safely isolate.

The program, which will rely mostly on Federal Emergency Management FEMA aid, will first focus on the Central Valley, Central Coast and Imperial Valley regions, where many migrant farmworkers live in during the growing season. Counties will be responsible for providing additional assistance to these workers, including meals and check-in visits.

Other efforts announced today include:

  • A new that spells out what employers must do to protect their workers at various stages of reopening.
  • Faster investigation and enforcement of companies that don鈥檛 follow state guidance in protecting their employees.
  • Expansion of the state鈥檚 public awareness campaign, which promotes mask-wearing and other preventive actions, to employers and workers.

California鈥檚 migrant farmworkers are at particularly high risk during the pandemic, as many cheap motel rooms or other substandard housing during the growing season.

Some counties, including Monterey, have developed to better protect their workers, including mandatory handwashing, added bathrooms and increased distance between workers in the field.

Many agricultural workers have fallen ill despite those measures.

Data compiled by the California Institute for Rural Studies show that as of June 30, Monterey County agricultural workers were three times more likely to become infected by the virus than non-agricultural employees. To date, 972 of the county鈥檚 agricultural workers have tested positive for COVID-19.

In May, packinghouse in Ventura County tested positive. In June, the county saw in Oxnard test positive. The workers 鈥 all temporary employees brought to the United States on H-2A visas meant to address local labor shortages 鈥 slept five to a room in farmworker housing.

A similar outbreak is occurring in Santa Maria where of labor contracting company Alco Harvesting tested positive, according to Jackie Ruiz, a spokesperson for the Santa Barbara County Public Health Department.

At least at a pistachio plant in the San Joaquin Valley have fallen ill, representing about a fifth of employees there. Workers allege that their employer, Primex Farms, failed to give them protective gear, told infected workers to keep their diagnosis confidential, and were told to resign if they requested time off to quarantine.

In Napa, living in farmworker housing centers have tested positive.

鈥淲ith no visible regulatory enforcement, we are left to hear from workers directly,鈥 Noe Paramo, a rural worker advocate and Joel Diringer, a farmworker health expert, wrote in a recent . 鈥淲e need to protect our food supply and our farmworkers. Relying on California鈥檚 $50 billion agricultural industry to implement protections without state oversight, with more than 1 million farmworker families in jeopardy is insufficient. We can and must do better.鈥

CalMatters reporter Jackie Botts contributed to this story.

CalMatters.org is a nonprofit, nonpartisan media venture explaining California policies and politics.

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