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DESCRIPTION:More than nine workers have died at the Livingston Foster Farm plant who 
 should have been protected from Covid-19.\n\nIn March and April of this 
 year, workers, families, community organization, and worker advocates were 
 calling on Foster Farms and other companies to protect their workers with 
 social distancing, testing and tracing. \n\nThe company refused to inform 
 workers in the plant about the dangers of the virus and how to protect them 
 in the different languages, although this is the law in 
 California.\n\nFoster Farms workers have also been coerced by bosses to 
 work when sick, and have been forced to use their sick pay instead of being 
 paid by the company for its failure to protect them. This is also 
 illegal.\n\nWorkers, family members, and community groups also called on 
 Cal-OSHA to do their job and make sure that protection rules were enforced 
 by Cal-OSHA which has less than 200 inspectors for 18 million workers and 
 most are not bi-lingual. There are only a handful of inspectors of Central 
 Valley for tens of thousands of workers at many agricultural industrial 
 operations.\n\nGovernor Gavin Newsom has instituted a State furlough of 2 
 days off a month which means that Cal-OSHA in- spectors are only working 18 
 days a month in the midst of the biggest pandemic in 100 years.\n\nFoster 
 Farms continues to push production and profits over the lives of the 
 workers. They should be criminally prosecuted for failing to protect the 
 lives of the workers and workers comp fraud by the Merced District Attorney 
 and State Attorney General Xavier Becerra.\n\nToday, the workers are dead 
 and hundreds of workers and their families as well as thousands in the 
 community are infected with the deadly virus. \n\nMost of these frontline 
 workers are LatinX, Punjabi Sikh immigrants and their lives apparently of 
 little value. This is part and parcel of systemic racism especially for 
 frontline workers.\nWhile Governor Newsom visited Big Basin to see the 
 destruction of the trees during the fires, he was not in- terested in 
 visiting Livingston to comfort the families of the dead workers. Apparently 
 trees are more important that worker lives for the governor.\nThis is a 
 continuing life and death EMERGENCY!\nWe demand:\n\n1-The emergency hiring 
 of 1,000 Cal-OSHA inspectors\nwith proper pay and benefits to keep 
 them.\n\n2-Rank and file health and safety committees at the plant with the 
 power to shutdown the jobs if workers do not have safe 
 conditions.\n\n3-Full healthcare coverage and sick pay for workers and 
 their families who have become sick and contaminated by the 
 company.\n\n4-Criminal prosecution of the Foster Farm executives by the 
 Merced County District Attorney & State Attorney General of Foster Farm and 
 other companies for the deaths of the workers and workers comp fraud for 
 refusing to provide workers compensation.\n\nThe virus has infected workers 
 and entire communities in Central Valley. It is time to stand up for the 
 workers, their families, communities and the people of Central Valley and 
 California\nThere will also be a caravan from the Bay Area to support the 
 workers and their families.\n\nInitiated by Central Valley vs Covid 
 Coalition\nEndorsed by\nCommittee To Stop Police Murders & End Systemic 
 Racism\nPSL-Answer\nUnited Front Committee For A Workers 
 Party\n\ncentralvalleyvscovid(at)gmail.com\n\nAdditional media:\n\nThe 
 Foster Farms Covid-19 Deaths & The Community With Deep Singh of The Jakara 
 Movement\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TYWZbkdnQd\n\nCovid, Death & 
 Capitalist Crimes In California's Central 
 Valley\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cdhVkIoRWNo&t=11s\nhttps://soundcloud.com/workweek-radio\n\nThe 
 Covid Pandemic & Central Valley Agricultural 
 Workers\nhttps://youtu.be/wUp42Eqb7R8\n\nWorkers, Liability, The Hero's Act 
  and Health and Safety On The Job With UFCW Local 7 President Kim 
 Cordova\nhttps://youtu.be/ezmEDOiR9s0\n\nWith No Safety, Covid Killing 
 Colorado JBS Workers & \nMemorial With UFCW Local 7 President Kim 
 Cordova\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I5kTkTdQLpg\n\nUFCW 7 Memorial For 
 6 JBS Greely, Colorado Workers Who Did Died From 
 Covid\nhttps://www.facebook.com/572982989459766/videos/2875360759256585/?eid=ARB7Kpk3vssOExInbEyCJVx6tLPM7xbOBWPd4W87zE4GRdcpGGK_HclbTWQSPbkqPiGtrhdvdpMyWSFI\n\nThe 
 Death March, Slavery, Meat Plant Workers & 
 Covid-19\nhttps://youtu.be/zZkwe4kkYMQ\n\nInvestigation: Counties With 
 Meatpacking Plants Report Twice the National Average Rate of COVID-19 
 Infections\nhttps://www.ewg.org/news-and-analysis/2020/05/ewg-map-counties-meatpacking-plants-report-twice-national-average-rate\n\n\nCalifornia 
 Foster Farms Livingston Factory  was supposed to close Saturday. What 
 happened 
 instead\nhttps://www.mercedsunstar.com/news/article245357940.html\nBY SHAWN 
 JANSEN\nAUGUST 29, 2020 06:43 PM , UPDATED AUGUST 31, 2020 08:35 
 AM\nGovernor Gavin Newsom said August 28, 2020, that Californians can 
 expect this week new reopening guidance for counties that show improvement 
 in their coronavirus infection rates and other measures, including testing 
 rates. BY CALIFORNIA GOVERNOR\nFoster Farms’ chicken plant in Livingston 
 had its coronavirus-forced shutdown delayed again, this time until Tuesday, 
 Sept. 1, according to the Merced County Department of Public Health.\nThe 
 plant was given a 48-hour deadline on Thursday to shut down due to an 
 outbreak of COVID-19 cases at the plant, a brief reprieve that had followed 
 a phone call with the U.S. Department of Agriculture.\nBut the county 
 revised the order Saturday after discussions a day earlier with the 
 company. The plant will be permitted to operate until Tuesday night, then 
 will close for six days until Monday, Sept. 7.\nFoster Farms, in a 
 statement the company released on Saturday evening, confirmed the closure 
 will take place Tuesday.\n“We agree that the best approach to ensuring 
 the future safety of our Livingston plant workers is to begin anew with a 
 clean slate,” Foster Farms said in the statement.\n\n\nLCLAA Sacramento 
 Demands Full Staffing Of CalOSHA: CalOSHA is understaffed, and this 
 emergency stimulus package plan must immediately include hiring of 1,000 
 inspectors, and 500 educators in the realm of work safety relating to 
 COVID-19, to oversee each class of Essential Workers for a safe and healthy 
 work place.  \n\nLABOR COUNCIL FOR LATIN AMERICAN 
 ADVANCEMENT\n\nhttps://www.facebook.com/lclaasacramento/photos/pcb.3050575948326472/3050575251659875/?type=3&theater\n\n“El 
 Consejo Sindical para el Progreso de los Latino Americanos”\n\n“La Voz 
 Unida” AFL-CIO and CHANGE TO WIN\n\nApril 9, 2020\n\nHonorable Governor 
 Newsom of the State of California Dear Governor Newsom,\n\nThe Labor 
 Council for Latin American Advancement (LCLAA) AFL-CIO, and Change to Win, 
 Sacramento La Voz Unida Chapter is a National Latino labor constituency 
 group of over 1.5 million. The Sacramento Chapter is long standing for over 
 20 years. We write to you Governor with serious matters regarding the most 
 underpaid and unprotected workers in California and Mexico; 
 farmworkers.\n\nThe working people in our nation are faced with deciding 
 which basic human right their families will have to prioritize. With 
 massive layoffs and reduction of hours across sectors, essential workers’ 
 families will be faced with some critical decisions, for example: paying 
 rent, paying mortgages, buying food, paying for electricity, paying for 
 clean water, paying for childcare, paying for healthcare, and paying for 
 Wifi for online schooling, just to mention a few.\n\nCalifornia, the fifth 
 largest economy in the world, should be the leading champion on protecting 
 all workers regardless of status. LCLAA stands in solidarity with all 
 workers, and we support all essential workers, such as farmworkers, grocery 
 workers, security officers and janitors that are facing huge layoffs and 
 reduction of hours throughout the state and are amongst the lowest waged 
 workers faced with having to live paycheck to paycheck and work multiple 
 jobs because the living cost is too high. Now with COVID-19 and more 
 workers being displaced or loss of jobs, families affected could result in 
 an increase in homeless population in California. We stand with workers and 
 organized labor on a global level.\n\npage1image3792736.png\nToday we want 
 to highlight the most vulnerable of workers: Farmworkers, healthcare 
 workers, supermarket workers, and distribution workers, and everyone right 
 now who is working during the COVID-19 epidemic that are categorized by the 
 federal government as Essential Workers.\n\nWe are extremely concerned and 
 encourage you Governor and the Senate and the Assembly, who have the 
 authority by executive order and by emergency special session to make these 
 demands a reality during this Pandemic. It’s a matter of life and death. 
 It has been estimated that more Essential workers will get sick and or die 
 due to Coronavirus, that also puts their immediate family members in 
 danger. Many essential workers are more likely to contract COVID-19 due to 
 working at their jobs site that requires direct contact with the public, 
 need emergency healthcare, and protective supplies to function without 
 contaminating their immediate family members. Essential Workers face new 
 hazards with COVID-19, and its imperative that with the expectancy to work, 
 there should also be the expectancy for health and labor protections of all 
 workers, especially Essential Workers right now.\n\nHere are our 
 demands:\n\nWe are the 5th largest economy in the world, and sell 
 agricultural food to the world. There are over 2.4 million farmworkers in 
 the USA, and it’s estimated half are the undocumented, many who were 
 forced to migrate into the USA due to NAFTA, now NAFTA2.0/USMCA. In Trumps 
 recent economic stimulus package, Congress earmarked $9.5 billion for the 
 Department of Agriculture and $14 billion in loans for the agricultural 
 industry, but none of this money is identified and or directed at 
 farmworkers harvesting food for families across the Nation to eat. We are 
 demanding that Farmworkers benefit from a California stimulus package for 
 loss of wages, and from being excluded from Healthcare coverage. Per the 
 federal government’s Essential Critical Infrastructure, the Farmworker/s 
 is an Essential Worker. The loss of farmworkers, and not including 
 farmworkers in the federal Emergency Stimulus package could hurt 
 California’s economy and possibly create food shortages.\n\nWe urge you 
 to take action and implement a California “Emergency Stimulus package” 
 to cover ALL California workers that include farmworkers who should also be 
 given Hazard-Pay during this COVID-19 pandemic, in addition to safety 
 supplies like anti-bacterial soap for hand washing, extra bathrooms, safety 
 protective attire-clothing, and safety boots/foot wear. When visiting the 
 grocery market one must ask, how did these vegetable get here? Who packaged 
 them? Who put the label on these boxes, packages, and or tied bundles of 
 produce together? Who is working while being chemically prayed over to 
 bring food to the table? It is farmworkers who work rain or shine and 
 through Pandemics. We must protect farmworkers now!\n\nWhen workers are 
 taken care of, the consumer is taken care of. Consumers are eating the food 
 that farmworkers are picking, and when farmworker families are healthy and 
 taken care of, the consumer and their families are taken care of too - with 
 clean food and water, healthy workers, our California economy will 
 flourish.\n\nCalifornia must also implement measures for possible future 
 pandemics and put aside a budget and surplus of emergency equipment that 
 would save Californians. Preventative measures are imperative for a strong 
 California economy. We must create Universal Healthcare that would carry 
 workers and families today in California. This is an emergency, and we 
 cannot wait 2 years for Healthcare for All. Right now we need everyone 
 covered in California that includes all workers, immigrants, Asylum 
 seekers, everyone, and visitors. Especially that right now President Trump 
 refused to approve the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Obama 
 Care) that would allow millions of citizens to enroll into affordable 
 healthcare coverage during this COVID-10 Pandemic.\n\nThe immigration 
 crisis is deplorable! The passing of NAFTA 2.O along with foreign policies 
 continue the forced migration legacy creating poverty, separation of 
 families, and fuels the immigration private prisons industry. COVID-19 
 cases are increasing inside these detention centers that function as 
 concentration camps; while on the outside people are getting emergency 
 medical healthcare, while immigrants, native indigenous people, asylum 
 seekers forced to migrate get no proper, or medical care; they get nothing. 
 Reports have indicated that people are not getting soap, personal hygiene 
 toiletries, medication, assistance from medical personal, and being 
 psychologically tortured everyday through freezer rooms, lights on 24 hrs, 
 placed in over populated spaces/rooms with walls and chained link fences, 
 separation of newly born babies and children bussed out into different 
 states, in addition to children and women being lost inside the system and 
 can not be found; its outrageously inhumane. Governor we are demanding that 
 ALL concentration camps, managed by counties, and or private prisons, etc 
 operating in California today are closed immediately !\n\nGovernor CalOSHA 
 is understaffed, and this emergency stimulus package plan must immediately 
 include hiring of 1,000 inspectors, and 500 educators in the realm of work 
 safety relating to COVID-19, to oversee each class of Essential Workers for 
 a safe and healthy work place.\n\nCalOSHA is not doing enough about 
 overseeing protections of farmworkers during this pandemic. Currently there 
 are 128 CalOSHA inspectors for the entire state of California. This is not 
 enough CalOSHA inspectors to oversee the entirety of California’s 
 workforce. CalOSHA is NOT proactive enough in providing safety information, 
 training, or outreach to workers. Nor is CalOsha overseeing the health and 
 welfare labor protections for nurses, who all across the US are making 
 public social media pleas for training and medical supplies such as: masks, 
 respirators, and body protective wear. Today many workers are walking off 
 their jobs due to traces of COVID-19 being identified at their jobs sites, 
 without any safety precautions, training, or outreach on how to perform 
 duties without becoming infected by the 
 Coronavirus.\n\npage3image3798976.png\nWe also demand protections for 
 farmworkers harvesting fruits and vegetables from Mexico. We are a 
 neighboring state to Mexico and must have stronger labor relations. The 
 farmworkers of San Quintin, BC, Mexico, who harvest the Driscoll berries, 
 along with many other farmworkers who harvest other produce also package, 
 transport, and assemble are hired by US corporations through the NAFTA2.0/ 
 USMCA agreement. The Mexican farmworkers are already under paid, and many 
 live without general amenities like running water, electricity and no child 
 care. We must build stronger labor policies that are fair and protect 
 workers tied through the NAFTA 2.0/ USMCA agreement for the best interest 
 of workers and their families in California and Mexico.\n\nWe are also very 
 concerned with the percentage of Mexican workers being laid off like GM 
 Mexican workers, agriculture workers and thousands of workers affected by 
 COVID-19 that impact California and US economy. Mexican workers are 
 producing medical equipment for the USA, and our concern is for workers on 
 both sides; USA and Mexico firing of workers that will cause food, medical, 
 car parts, etc shortages. If we do not take emergency action on these 
 demands, these impacts will no doubt affect California’s economy and the 
 Nation with product coming to a stop out of Mexico into California and USA. 
 The solution is to implement a “California Emergency Stimulus Package” 
 that covers everything mentioned above, build stronger labor relations with 
 Mexico, and to enforce a tax on the wealthiest of Californians, 
 corporations, and oil companies.\n\nWe thank you for all you have done to 
 put California first, and proud of your fast action to combat COVID-19. 
 Let's go all the way, let's get a “California Emergency Stimulus 
 Package” that further protects farmworkers and people who were left out 
 of the federal governments stimulus package.\n\nSincerely,\n\nDesirée 
 Bates Rojas\n\nPresident \nSacramento Labor Council for Latin American 
 Advancement Sacramento Chapter AFL-CIO, and Change To 
 Win\n\npage4image1691840.png\n \npage4image1682896.png\nSACRAMENTO CHAPTER 
 OFFICERS\n\nDESIRÉE ROJAS President CSEA SEIU Local 1000\n\nFRANCISCO R. 
 GARCIA\n\n1st Vice President Local 49/Unite Here\n\n& Stationary Engineers 
 Local 39\n\nAL ROJAS\n\n2nd Vice President SEIU Local 1000\n\nFATIMA 
 GARCIA\n\nSecretary SEIU USWW\n\nWALTER GARCIA KAWAMOTO Treasurer Los Rios 
 College Federation of Teachers, AFT Local 2279\n\nEXECUTIVE 
 BOARD\n\nGABRIEL TORRES\n\nLos Rios College Federation of Teachers, AFT 
 Local 2279\n\nRODOLFO RODRIGUEZ\n\nUAW Local 2865\n\nP.O. Box 4388 Davis, 
 California 95616 Fed. ID#: 41-2151778\n\n\n\n\n\nFormer Cal/OSHA Inspector 
 Garrett Brown On Cal/OSHA  &  COVID-19 Pandemic \nOSHA Inspections 
 Abandoned  By Gavin Newsom and 
 Trump\nhttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qBB5dODG6aI\nCovid-19: Workers' 
 Lives at Risk (part 1)\n\nhttp://insidecalosha.org\nSUBSCRIBE\nSpeak Out 
 Now Online Townhall • Sat. April 4, 2020\nPart 1: presentation by Garrett 
 Brown, a workplace health and safety professional with extensive experience 
 in the developing world. He recently retired after over 20 years as a field 
 inspector for Cal/OSHA. Earlier in life, Brown was a journalist in Chicago, 
 and a union organizer in Alabama and Georgia. \n\nLink to Part 2: 
 https://youtu.be/EyuI7x4ciC8 \nLink to Part 3:  
 https://youtu.be/crmnxAh5TPg\n\nhttps://speakoutsocialists.org/\nhttps://www.facebook.com/speakoutsoci...\nhttps://twitter.com/revsocialists\nhttps://www.instagram.com/revsocialists/\n\nDear 
 Colleagues: As Cal/OSHA holds its first public Advisory Committee in more 
 than a year tomorrow, I wanted to pass along the information that indicates 
 how much work newly appointed Cal/OSHA Chief Doug Parker and California 
 Labor Secretary Julie Su have in front of them. \n \nIn November 2019, 
 there are a total of 46 vacant field compliance officer positions in 
 Cal/OSHA, for a vacancy rate of 18.5%. This is the highest vacancy rate 
 since September 2017, more than two years ago. \n \nRegion I (San Francisco 
 Bay Area) is riddled with 18 CSHO vacancies, including 3 of 7 positions in 
 San Francisco, 6 of 11 positions in Fremont, and 3 positions in both 
 Oakland and American Canyon. \n \nThere are District Offices in other 
 regions that also have 3 compliance safety and health officer (CSHO) 
 vacancies—which hobbles the offices’ ability to respond to worker 
 complaints and injury incidents – Santa Ana, Van Nuys and the High Hazard 
 Unit (HHU).  \n \nIn additional to a lack of field inspectors, there are 
 critical vacancies in management positions that undermine the Division’s 
 ability to protect California workers. These include:\n \nTwo Regional 
 Manager positions – Region III/Santa Ana and Region VI managing the HHU 
 and the Labor Enforcement Task Force unit (LETF);\nFour District Manager 
 positions – Sacramento, Santa Ana, San Bernardino, and the Santa Ana 
 office of LETF;\nTwo of the three District Offices of the Mining & 
 Tunneling Unit do not have managers; and \nFive of 16 Senior Safety 
 Engineer positions in the Enforcement District Offices are vacant. \n 
 \nMoreover, several District Offices with large numbers of field inspectors 
 are without a manager – Sacramento (13 CSHOs), San Bernardino (11 CSHOs) 
 and Santa Ana (9 CSHOs). \n \nIt is also worth noting that the Department 
 of Industrial Relations (DIR - parent agency for Cal/OSHA) is still without 
 a Director – 10 months after the inauguration of Governor Gavin Newsom. 
 This raises the question of Governor Newsom’s commitment to workers’ 
 rights – wage & hour and workers compensation, as well as health and 
 safety – and Labor Secretary Julie Su’s ability to fill out her 
 leadership team.  \n \nClearly one of the priorities for Chief Doug Parker 
 is filling these vacancies and providing direction to a Cal/OSHA that has 
 been drifting in limbo for months. Hiring at Cal/OSHA has been limited 
 since the beginning of the year because of the restrictions placed on DIR 
 and DOSH by the California Department of Human Resources. These 
 restrictions were instituted after two reports by the State Personnel Board 
 and the California State Auditor documented nepotism and retaliation 
 against whistle-blowers by then DIR Director Christine Baker, who abruptly 
 retired in 2018.  \n \nI wish the news was better….\n \nGarrett Brown \n 
 \n \n\nDOSH Bilingual Pay Sum Chart - Nov 2019.pdf\n\n\n\n\nFrom: Garrett 
 Brown \nSubject: [PWA] Indefinite hiring freeze at Calif Dept of Industrial 
 Relations threatens Cal/OSHA, Labor Commissioner and Workers Comp\nDate: 
 May 16, 2019 at 3:20:44 PM PDT\nTo: PWA list serve \nReply-To: 
 garrettdbrown@comcast.net\n\nDear Colleagues:  An indefinite moratorium on 
 hiring and other personnel actions at California’s Department of 
 Industrial Relations – details in the attached alert – threatens 
 immediate and lasting damage to already weakened worker protections 
 agencies at DIR.  Affected are all the worker protection divisions of DIR 
 – Cal/OSHA (DOSH), the Labor Commission (DLSE), Workers Comp (DWC) and 
 Apprentice Standards (DAS).\n \nThis means the state’s 19 million-plus 
 workers will suffer more job injuries, more wage theft, more delays in 
 workers compensation and the erosion of prevailing wage protections in 
 public works programs getting underway throughout the state. These agencies 
 are already suffering from widespread vacancies at all levels, and the lack 
 of permanent leaders at DIR, Cal/OSHA and the Labor Commissioner’s 
 office. \n \nThe personnel crisis at DIR can be addressed before the 
 agencies deteriorate further – but immediate action is needed by Governor 
 Gavin Newson to fill the vacancies in the leadership positions at DIR and 
 to order the California Dept of Human Resources (CalHR)  to prioritize 
 hiring to fill the vacancies as soon as possible. \n \nThe history of CalHR 
 indicates that only action by the Governor will jolt it into action and end 
 the freeze that is undermining worker protections in California. \n \nBest, 
 Garrett Brown \n\n\n\nFed-OSHA Relaxes Enforcement – Will 
 Cal/OSHA?\nhttps://www.cal-osha.com/article/fed-osha-relaxes-enforcement-will-cal-osha/\nVol: 
 47 | No: 27 | Published on: May 1, 2020\nThe Federal Occupational Safety 
 and Health Administration is giving is compliance safety and health 
 officers (CSHOs) discretion on whether to forego citations during an 
 inspection. The discretion is for certain instances when there are 
 considerations related to the COVID-19 virus. Fed-OSHA issued the new 
 directive in light of “difficulties complying with OSHA standards due to 
 the ongoing health emergency.”\nThe question in California is whether 
 Cal/OSHA’s Division of Occupational Safety and Health is following suit. 
 And if so why, and if not, why not?\nHere’s what Fed-OSHA is doing, and 
 the reasons behind it.\nWidespread business closures, restrictions on 
 travel, limits on group sizes, facility visitor prohibitions and 
 shelter-in-place orders “may limit the availability of employees, 
 consultants or contractors who normally provide training, auditing, 
 equipment inspections, testing” and other essential safety and industrial 
 hygiene services, the Feds say.\nThe American College of Occupational and 
 Environmental Medicine, for instance, has recommended that occupational 
 spirometry (lung function testing) be suspended over fears that it could 
 spread droplets containing COVID-19. And the Council for Accreditation in 
 Occupational Hearing Conservation has recommended suspending audiometric 
 evaluations to minimize risks to healthcare workers and preserve personal 
 protective equipment.\nOSHA inspectors will assess an employer’s efforts 
 to comply with recurring audits, reviews, training or assessments, as well 
 as the employer’s good-faith efforts to comply with the applicable 
 standard and ensure that employees have not been exposed to hazards “from 
 tasks, processes or equipment for which they were not prepared or 
 trained.”\nGood-faith efforts include the use of virtual training or 
 remote communication. Alternative protections include engineering or 
 administrative controls, and whether the employer took steps to reschedule 
 the required annual activity as soon as possible.\nHere are some of the 
 testing or training operations that could be affected during the crisis and 
 for which Fed-OSHA will consider inspector discretion:\nAnnual audiograms. 
 Some employers contract with mobile audiometric testing services, and such 
 services could be delayed or cancelled due to social distancing protocols. 
 OSHA says it will not cite employers for failing to conduct annual 
 audiograms, “provided the employer considered alternative options,” 
 implemented interim alternative protective measures and has shown a 
 good-faith effort to reschedule mobile tests as soon as possible.\nProcess 
 safety management requirements, such as process hazard analysis 
 revalidation, review of operating procedures and refresher training. For 
 instance, employers with ammonia refrigeration processes that are due to be 
 revalidated might not be able to have consultants travel to the 
 employer’s location. OSHA says it will not cite employers for failing to 
 meet the five-year requirement for conducting a PHA revalidation, as long 
 as the employer has considered alternative compliance options, has 
 implemented interim protective measures if possible, and shows a good-faith 
 effort to reschedule the revalidation.\nRespirator fit-testing and 
 refresher training. For instance, a manufacturer using spray booths to 
 apply finishing coats, which requires respirators, has scheduled annual 
 refresher training, but is unable to complete it because of consultant 
 travel restrictions. The same caveats apply as above.\nConstruction crane 
 or derrick operator certification: If a recertification or relicensing is 
 not possible due to travel restrictions or social distancing protocols, 
 OSHA is not citing employers for allowing the operator to work with an 
 expired certification, with the same protocols.\nMedical evaluations: 
 Employer may be required to conduct a medical evaluation for pulmonary 
 function, for instance, to determine if employees are cleared to wear 
 respirators. But because ACOEM has recommended suspension of spirometry 
 testing, the agency will not cite employers for their inability to have the 
 tests done. Again, they must implement interim alternative protective 
 measures and make a good-faith effort to reschedule the spirometry when the 
 suspension is lifted.\n\nWHERE IS 
 OSHA?\nhttps://progressivereform.org/cpr-blog/where-osha/?fbclid=IwAR07L7FkMZl9XZM27y7heUv_5PE_L621QFSv4r8MTFAm7ST7Vvms8HCvoDA\n\n\nKatie 
 Tracy Bio \nApril 20, 2020\nAs the coronavirus pandemic wears on, reports 
 abound of essential frontline workers laboring without such basic 
 protective gear as masks, gloves, soap, or water; with improper distancing 
 between workstations and coworkers; and in workplaces alongside infected 
 colleagues. So far, nearly 4,000 workers have filed complaints with the 
 federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), raising 
 concerns about health and safety conditions inside the workplace. Yet the 
 agency has been largely absent at a time it is most needed.\n\nShamefully, 
 as COVID-19 illnesses rise in slaughterhouses, grocery stores, hospitals, 
 and other worksites across the nation, the agency has chosen to go against 
 its very mission of protecting America’s workers, ignoring callsto adopt 
 emergency standards and rolling back its enforcement efforts.\n\nSince 
 early March, unions, advocates, and workers have called on OSHA to take 
 immediate action to adopt an emergency temporary standard and subsequent 
 permanent standard to protect frontline workers from infectious diseases 
 like COVID-19. Such an effort was underway during the Obama administration 
 in response to the H1N1 flu pandemic, but Trump’s OSHA removed the 
 rulemaking from the agenda in 2017. Such a rule would guarantee all 
 essential workers a standard level of protection from coronavirus now and 
 other infectious diseases long into the future. But instead of following up 
 on these calls, the agency has declined to start working on a standard or 
 take any other actions at all.\n\nEven without an infectious disease 
 standard, OSHA acknowledges that it has the authority to cite violations of 
 its standards on personal protective equipment, sanitation, bloodborne 
 pathogens, and hazardous substances, as well as to cite employers for 
 violating their general duty to protect workers from known hazards in the 
 workplace. Still, when workers have contacted OSHA to file complaints, the 
 agency has claimed it’s unable to help. In one case, the Milwaukee 
 Journal Sentinel reports, an OSHA official told an attorney representing 
 the family of a deceased Walmart employee that it had no jurisdiction to 
 inspect the work-related fatality, saying, “OSHA does not have any 
 jurisdiction on enforcing anything related to COVID-19 at this 
 time.”\n\nFollowing up the anecdotal reports of OSHA missing in action, 
 the agency released several guidance documents related to its enforcement 
 policy during the coronavirus outbreak, all of which make it abundantly 
 clear that it won’t be doing much at all. Rather than holding employers 
 accountable for safeguarding workers from COVID-19, OSHA is just letting 
 employers off the hook, a virtual invitation to unscrupulous employers to 
 risk their employees’ health.\n\nThe agency’s April 13 “Interim 
 Enforcement Response Plan” states that when OSHA receives a worker 
 complaint related to COVID-19, it will consider it an “informal 
 complaint” instead of a “formal" one. Under normal circumstances, 
 formal complaints are more likely to prompt inspections, and informal 
 complaints generally trigger a letter from OSHA to the employer about the 
 complaint, which requires the employer to respond.\n\nNow that complaints 
 are on the rise and workers are desperate for help from OSHA, however, the 
 agency has decided all complaints outside of the health care industry will 
 be handled informally. OSHA will send a letter notifying the company of the 
 complaint and encouraging employers to ask sick employees to stay home, 
 accommodate telework, emphasize hygiene etiquette, perform cleaning, and 
 stay apprised of government advisories. Take note that the letter simply 
 encourages employers to do these things. No action is required of them, not 
 even so much as a reply to the letter.\n\nUnder the new guidance, the only 
 time OSHA may conduct an inspection is if there has been a fatality or 
 imminent danger exposure in a high-risk setting, like health care workers 
 intubating COVID-19 patients. All other inspections, including when an 
 employer reports an in-patient hospitalization, will be conducted using 
 OSHA’s “rapid response investigation” procedures, which is a 
 dressed-up way of saying that the employer inspects itself and reports its 
 findings to the agency.\n\nIn a separate guidance document released April 
 10, “Enforcement Guidance for Recording Cases of Coronavirus Disease 
 2019,” OSHA excuses employers from recording COVID-19 illnesses under its 
 recordkeeping regulations. Typically, employers would be required to record 
 a confirmed COVID-19 case contracted at work. Instead of enforcing the 
 recordkeeping regulations, the guidance tells employers (except in health 
 care, emergency response, and correctional institutions) that they do not 
 need to worry about recording the COVID-19 case if they are “having 
 difficulty making determinations about whether workers who contracted 
 COVID-19 did so due to exposures at work.” The purpose of letting 
 employers off the hook in this way, according to OSHA, is to “provide 
 certainty to the regulated community.”\n\nOSHA is not only acting against 
 the interests of workers exposed to COVID-19, it leaves the agency without 
 critical data for later evaluation of employers’ response to the pandemic 
 so that it can help recommend improvements to prevent the spread of future 
 infectious diseases. Moreover, if an employer can choose not to record a 
 COVID-19 case because it “had difficulty” deciding whether it was 
 work-related, the employer will also be able to avoid reporting to OSHA if 
 the worker is later hospitalized, thereby avoiding a “rapid response 
 investigation.”\n\nOSHA issued yet another guidance document on April 16, 
 “Discretion in Enforcement when Considering an Employer’s Good Faith 
 Efforts,” and yet again, the agency is letting employers off the hook. 
 The guidance says that inspectors will take into “strong consideration in 
 determining whether to cite a violation” whether an employer acted in 
 “good faith” to comply with OSHA standards related to training, audit, 
 assessment, inspection, or testing requirements.\n\nIn a nod to workers, 
 OSHA has also reminded employers that they cannot retaliate against 
 employees who raise concerns about health and safety in the workplace. Yet 
 the OSH Act’s whistleblower protections are notoriously weak and outdated 
 and offer little recourse for workers. And OSHA has not announced any 
 efforts to ramp up the program or fast-track investigations during this 
 time.\n\nUnder the current whistleblower provisions, workers have a mere 30 
 days to file a complaint, investigations take nearly a year, the agency 
 cannot preliminarily reinstate employees, and there is no option for 
 workers to pursue a case independently. According to Business Insurance, in 
 March, OSHA received 386 complaints of retaliation for raising concerns 
 about COVID-19, many of which fall under the scope of the OSH Act’s 
 whistleblower protections. Unfortunately, many of these workers will not 
 see a positive outcome in their cases, and those who do will not see 
 recourse for many months.\n\nIn fairness to OSHA, the reasons given for its 
 latest enforcement guidance aren’t beyond all reason – the agency needs 
 to prioritize its very limited resources during a crisis (which are due to 
 political abuse unrelated to the coronavirus), and it needs to prioritize 
 the safety of its own staff and inspectors. Even with that in mind, 
 however, the decisions it has made are disastrous for workers on the front 
 lines and completely contrary to its mission to protect America’s 
 workers.\n\nImagine for a moment that OSHA was a vigorous agency that took 
 seriously its charge to protect the nation's workers. Such an OSHA would 
 not issue guidance that amounts to a series of escape hatches for 
 employers. Rather, it would aggressively seek to ensure the health and 
 safety of workers by requiring employers – now more than ever – to do 
 what was necessary to protect their workers. That OSHA would make clear 
 that the burden is on employers to ensure a safe workplace, not on workers 
 to avoid hazards on the job. That would include:\n\nAdopting an emergency 
 temporary standard and subsequent permanent standard that protects all 
 frontline workers from exposure to infectious diseases, including 
 coronavirus\nRequiring employers in all industries to make a 
 work-relatedness determination and record all confirmed COVID-19 cases in 
 their OSHA logs\nResponding to all complaints it receives as quickly as 
 possible and requiring employers to respond to all letters the agency sends 
 regarding informal complaints\nEnforcing violations of its existing 
 standards related to protective gear, sanitation, bloodborne pathogens, and 
 hazardous chemicals, and ramping up citations using its general duty clause 
 authority\nBolstering the whistleblower protection program immediately by 
 adopting recommendations that do not require legislative action and by 
 completing investigations within 90 days\nEncouraging employers to 
 temporarily close operations if it cannot comply with health and safety 
 standards to prevent the spread of coronavirus\nProviding leadership and 
 resources to states that operate their own occupational safety and health 
 programs in lieu of federal OSHA\nEducating employers, the federal 
 government, and local governments about the need to institute widespread 
 testing of employees and ensure sufficient protective gear prior to 
 reopening businesses shutdown under shelter-in-place orders\nMessage Sent 
 To Newsom & Top State Officials To Protect CA Workers From 
 Covid-19\n\nToday Worksafe and 70+ labor & community organizations 
 throughout California are sending an urgent message to Governor Newsom & 
 top state officials: Listen to California Workers! \n\n●  Achieve Full 
 Staffing of Cal/OSHA\nCal/OSHA is severely under-resourced making it 
 impossible to respond to hundreds of COVID-19 complaints. Their current 
 response via letter inspection leaves many workers vulnerable. Their 
 inspector vacancy rate as of March 2020 is 20.5 percent. We demand Cal/OSHA 
 achieve full staffing immediately. In the interim, Cal/OSHA should work 
 with city and county health inspectors and deputize labor advocates to 
 respond to the complaints.\n\n\n\nPlease join us on today as we take to 
 social media to share our demands and uplift stories of workers who have 
 been impacted by the COVID-19 crisis.  \n\nRead and share our coalition 
 demand letter: http://bit.ly/3e0oMub\n\nHelp us boost the message with this 
 social media toolkit: https://bit.ly/2XaG418\n\nCheck out the Press Release 
 below:\n\nFOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE\nMay 19th, 2020\n \nCalifornia Workers & 
 Advocates to Newsom: Workers Need Immediate Workplace Protections from 
 COVID-19\n\nCALIFORNIA - Today over 75 unions, worker centers, community 
 and faith-based organizations, and occupational health and safety advocacy 
 groups throughout California are uniting behind a demand letter to the 
 California Governor, calling for immediate protections for workers amidst 
 the spread of COVID-19. \n\nA social media campaign today will uplift the 
 stories of vulnerable workers who have been impacted by the current health 
 crisis. Participating organizations will highlight their demands, and call 
 on state leaders including Governor Gavin Newsom, Speaker Anthony Rendon, 
 Senator Toni Atkins, Labor Secretary Julie Su, Cal/OSHA Chief Doug Parker, 
 and others, urging them to further prioritize worker health, safety, and 
 justice during this health pandemic. \n\n“The current crisis has shown 
 the vital importance of workplace health and safety for all, and it has 
 amplified long-standing, unacceptable inequities that put the poorest and 
 most vulnerable workers on the front lines of the most dangerous jobs,” 
 says Alice Berliner of the Southern California Coalition for Occupational 
 Safety & Health.\n\n“Now as businesses and workers are transitioning to 
 return to work, California needs to ensure that worker health and safety is 
 prioritized, state agencies responsible for worker protection and 
 enforcement are well-resourced, and workers’ rights are safe-guarded. We 
 believe this crisis requires an unprecedented level of partnership and 
 focus, and we would like to work with state agencies and the many ethical 
 employers in California to ensure that our recovery is just,” says Roxana 
 Tynan, Executive Director of the LA Alliance for a New Economy.\n 
 \n“California workers urgently need Cal/OSHA to refocus on inspections 
 and enforcement, and Cal/OSHA urgently needs the staffing, tools, and 
 resources to do so. We need a strong agency to ensure that all California 
 workers can work safely and free from the hazards introduced or exacerbated 
 by the pandemic,” says Jora Trang, Worksafe's Chief of Staff & Equity. 
 “The coronavirus pandemic is the occupational health and safety disaster 
 of our lifetime. We must treat it as such, and California should lead the 
 way."\n \n"We see firsthand that in warehouses across the state, employers 
 continue breaking the law, and fail to protect workers from the spread of 
 COVID-19.  Amazon, one of the largest employers in the state, continues to 
 put workers at greater risk, and has failed to properly disinfect 
 facilities where there have been confirmed COVID cases. We need California 
 leadership to hold companies like Amazon accountable to protecting  workers 
 and send the message that no one is above the law“ says Daisy Lopez, 
 Community Organizer at Warehouse Worker Resource Center.\n\n###\n\nFor more 
 information contact:\nKathy Hoang: kathy@forworkingfamilies.org; (323) 
 524-8435 \nSheheryar Kaoosji: skaoosji@warehouseworkers.org; (213) 453-8454 
 \n\n\n-- \nMara Ortenburger, MPH\nDirector of Communications & 
 Research\nWorksafe: Safety, Health, & Justice for Workers\n1736 Franklin 
 St., Ste. 500, Oakland, CA  94612 \nwww.worksafe.org  |  Twitter  |  
 Facebook\nshe / her / hers\n\nMay 19, 2020\nTo: Governor Gavin 
 Newsom\n\nCC: Speaker Rendon, President pro Tempore Atkins, Labor Secretary 
 Su, DIR Director Hagen, Cal/OSHA Chief Parker, Labor Commissioner 
 Garcia-Brower, CDPH Director Angell, EDD Director Hilliard, Standards Board 
 Executive Officer Shupe, Special Budget ​Subcommittee​ on COVID-19 
 Response, Special Committee​ on Pandemic Emergency Response, Senate 
 Labor, Public Employment, and Retirement Committee​, Assembly Labor and 
 Employment ​Committee​, Assembly ​Committee​ on Public Safety, 
 Joint Legislative Budget ​Committee\n\nRe: Worker Health and Safety - 
 Urgent Priorities\n\nThe undersigned labor and community organizations 
 dedicated to advancing civil, human, and workers’ rights, urge you to 
 take action on the following occupational safety and health (OSH) 
 priorities. These priorities are rooted in the experience of workers facing 
 the threat of COVID-19​ in workplaces that fail to promote their health, 
 safety, and wellbeing.\n\nThrough your leadership and the commitment of the 
 workers’ rights movement over the last decade, California has taken 
 important steps to protect workers’ dignity, safety, and health. But even 
 before the pandemic struck, California had a long way to go to ensure we 
 live up to our ideals through full and timely enforcement of our laws. Now, 
 the challenges are even more stark. The lack of enforcement resources 
 leaves workers vulnerable in this crisis. ​Many workers have fallen ill 
 to COVID-19, with the death toll rising. Many more are forced to choose 
 between their health and a paycheck. These challenges are further 
 exacerbated for undocumented workers.\n\nNow as businesses and workers are 
 transitioning to return to work, California needs to ensure that worker 
 health and safety is prioritized, state agencies responsible for worker 
 protection and enforcement are well-resourced, and workers’ rights are 
 safe-guarded. We believe this crisis requires an unprecedented level of 
 partnership and focus, and we would like to work with you and the many 
 ethical employers in California to ensure that our recovery is just.\n\nIt 
 is in this spirit of partnership that we offer the following framework to 
 ensure justice and safety for workers as we move through this time of 
 danger and tackle the challenge of a recovery for all. The current crisis 
 and the challenge ahead demand that California take immediate steps:\n\nI. 
 Create a Worker Protection Response Team of State Agencies and Worker 
 Organizations\n\nCreate a Worker Protection Response Team to address 
 COVID-19 and any future crisis to revise standards and partner on joint 
 enforcement efforts. The Team should be composed of: worker organizations 
 (both unions and worker centers), worker advocacy organizations, the 
 Division of Occupational Safety and Health (Cal/OSHA), the Cal/OSHA 
 Standards Board, the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement (DLSE), the 
 California Department of Public Health, and County Departments of Public 
 Health. The Team needs to create proactive plans and guidelines that would 
 take immediate action in the advent of a crisis. Urgent issues 
 include:\n\npage1image285641376.png\n \npage1image285641648.png\n 
 \npage1image285641920.png\n \npage1image285642384.png\n 
 \npage1image285642656.png\n \npage1image285642928.png\n1\n\n●  Partner 
 with Labor\nWork with worker organizations including unions, worker 
 centers, and worker health and safety advocacy organizations to ensure 
 workers’ rights are protected.\n\n●  Support the Labor 
 Commissioner\nThe Labor Commissioner must (1) expedite and triage emergency 
 paid sick leave violations, and immigrant-based and OSH-related retaliation 
 violations; (2) institute a public and protected whistleblower process 
 specifically for COVID-19 issues; and (3) increase resources for state 
 enforcement of whistleblower rights and anti-retaliation 
 protections.\n\n●  Strengthen Cal/OSHA Enforcement\nCal/OSHA has been 
 hard to reach and physically absent amidst workplace concerns and 
 complaints. Workers desperately need open lines of communication between 
 Cal/OSHA, workers, and advocates, and there must be worker-centered 
 alternatives if physical inspections are not conducted (e.g. phone 
 interviews with workers, video inspections).\n\n●  Strengthen Cal/OSHA 
 Complaint Investigation\nCal/OSHA must (1) immediately respond to and 
 inspect COVID-19 related complaints for workers who are ​directly e​ 
 xposed to the virus or positively confirmed COVID-19 individuals; (2) 
 definitively state that Cal/OSHA will enforce their COVID-19 Guidances 
 through the Injury and Illness Prevention Program (IIPP) Standard; and (3) 
 apply a presumption of serious or willful violations where the employer has 
 not followed COVID-19 Cal/OSHA and public health guidelines.\n\n●  
 Coordinate with Departments of Public Health\nThere should be interagency 
 cooperation between county Departments of Public Health and Cal/OSHA to 
 investigate, and possibly immediately shut down, violating facilities. The 
 agencies must coordinate and enforce strict record-keeping and 
 anti-retaliation protection to prevent under-reporting and worker 
 retaliation.\n\nII. Worker Oversight of Workplace Conditions\n\nWorker 
 input and authority is the most reliable way to address occupational health 
 and safety risks. Workers’ ability to come together and communicate about 
 workplace issues and conditions is essential to ensuring that their rights 
 are protected. We demand the following protections:\n\n●  Establish 
 Worker Health and Safety Committees\nAll workplaces with at least five 
 non-supervisory employees at a single location should be required to 
 establish a Health and Safety Standards Committee composed of 
 non-supervisory workers elected by their peers and management 
 representatives. Committee members should be allotted time to meet on at 
 least a monthly basis to discuss ways to improve health and safety, voice 
 and raise concerns about employer compliance with workplace safety 
 requirements, educate the workforce, and address problems.\n\n●  
 Establish Community Partnerships to Address Complaints of OSH Violations 
 and Retaliation Establish procedures to certify and authorize worker 
 organizations, in cooperation with the DLSE and Cal/OSHA, to conduct 
 outreach, education, and training on new and existing safety standards. If 
 there is a health and safety violation or retaliation complaint filed, 
 worker\n\n2\n\norganization representatives would be able to inspect the 
 workplace and interview and educate workers in response.\n\n● Establish 
 Recovery Task Forces\nDevelop industry-specific task forces that draw 
 together state agency staff, small businesses, OSH professionals, and 
 worker organizations to develop guidelines to facilitate resumed operations 
 in full compliance with health-and-safety and wage-and-hour laws.\n\nIII. 
 Strong Paid Sick Leave and Employee Benefits\n\nWorkers and their families 
 are exposed to health hazards, with inadequate access to paid sick leave 
 and other health-related benefits of employment. We reiterate the demands 
 brought forth by the California Work and Family Coalition in their March 
 26, 2020 letter and additionally demand:\n\n●  Permanently Expand Paid 
 Sick Days\nCOVID-19 has demonstrated the need to put protections in place 
 for future health crises. Minimum permanent paid sick leave needs to be 
 increased to at least 10 paid days (80 hours), accrued at 1 hour of paid 
 sick leave for every 25 hours worked.\n\n●  Mandate Health 
 Coverage\nMandate all employers of essential businesses that employ 
 farmworkers and that have provided health coverage to continue to provide 
 health coverage or cover the costs of medical expenses during this time for 
 employees.\n\n●  Protect Worker Retention and Right to Return to 
 Work\nWorkers who have been laid off as part of a mass layoff or business 
 location closure must have the right to return to their job once the 
 location resumes operations. Workers who have been laid off due to lack of 
 work must have the first right to return to work once re-hiring commences. 
 Enact a worker retention policy to protect workers’ jobs in the event of 
 subcontracting, bankruptcy, or a change in ownership that occurs during a 
 public health crisis.\n\n●  Avoid Cuts or “Pauses” to Minimum Wage at 
 the State or Local Levels\nPlanned boosts to the state and local minimum 
 wages will lift up more than one-third of the California workforce. A 
 majority of these workers are women, workers of color, and immigrants 
 employed in sectors including retail, garment, home care and health care, 
 janitorial, child-care, transit, and grocery. These workers provide 
 essential services for all Californians. Given the stagnation of incomes 
 and wages for the bottom 20 percent of California workers and the state’s 
 soaring cost of living, the State and local jurisdictions should not 
 consider pausing or delaying these scheduled minimum wage increases and 
 should ensure that all workers are paid at least an hourly minimum 
 wage.\n\nIV. On the Job Protective Measures\n\nThe pandemic has resulted in 
 a tenuous working environment for those who have to continue to work. These 
 workers face possible exposure to the coronavirus due to poor employer 
 response. The following are essential to ensuring that workers’ health 
 and safety are prioritized at this time:\n\n3\n\n●  Include Domestic 
 Workers and Day Laborers in Worker Protections\nSupport efforts to protect 
 historically excluded workers. SB 1257, the Health and Safety for All 
 Workers Act,​ ​would remove the household domestic service exclusion 
 from the state Labor Code which currently results in the exclusion of 
 domestic workers and day laborers working in private homes from Cal/OSHA 
 protection. At present, Cal/OSHA cannot even issue emergency standards to 
 protect these workers.\n\n●  Apply and Enforce Strong Workplace 
 Protections\nWorkers need a more robust set of protections, including both 
 new legal requirements and the stepped up enforcement of existing ones. 
 This includes but is not limited to:\n\n○  Close and Clean: ​Following 
 a suspected or confirmed case of COVID-19 in the workplace, employers must 
 follow CDC guidelines and close off affected areas, up to and including the 
 whole facility, for 24 hours before beginning enhanced cleaning and 
 disinfecting, and employers must pay employees for any resulting lost work 
 time and provide employees paid time off, sick leave, or alternative work 
 arrangements to workers who must be quarantined because of recent exposure 
 to a confirmed COVID-19 CASE.\n\n○  Ease Workload and Ensure Hygiene 
 Practices: ​Permit all employees to wash their hands every 30 minutes and 
 additionally as needed. Time taken for handwashing, cleaning and sanitizing 
 work areas, and other preventative measures must not be counted against 
 performance targets and must be fully compensated. Suspend quantified 
 performance quotas, as they impede workers’ ability to follow COVID-19 
 safety rules and add to physical and mental stress.\n\n○  Employ the Most 
 Effective Hazard Controls: ​Ensure that all employers utilize the 
 hierarchy of controls to prioritize engineering controls such as shielding 
 and ventilation, and administrative controls to maintain social distancing 
 and reduce contact.\n\n○  Protection from Workplace Violence: ​Protect 
 workers from violence all across the spectrum of workplace violence.\n\n○ 
  Provide Personal Protective Equipment (PPE)​: Ensure all employers 
 provide appropriate PPE to prevent the spread of COVID-19 in the 
 workplace.\n\n○  Illness and Injury Prevention Plan (IIPP): ​Mandate 
 all employers to revise their IIPP to include a COVID-19 prevention program 
 that allows workers to report COVID-19 related health and safety concerns 
 and violations without fear of retaliation.\n\n●  Achieve Full Staffing 
 of Cal/OSHA\nCal/OSHA is severely under-resourced making it impossible to 
 respond to hundreds of COVID-19 complaints. Their current response via 
 letter inspection leaves many workers vulnerable. Their inspector vacancy 
 rate as of March 2020 is 20.5 percent. We demand Cal/OSHA achieve full 
 staffing immediately. In the interim, Cal/OSHA should work with city and 
 county health inspectors and deputize labor advocates to respond to the 
 complaints.\n\n4\n\n●  Increase and Strengthen Citations Against 
 Offending Employers\nThere are hundreds of Cal/OSHA complaints about 
 employers’ failure to implement the proper safety protocols for COVID-19. 
 Offending employers who fail to comply with Cal/OSHA, State, County, and 
 City COVID-19 guidances for Employers needs to be cited. Also, increase and 
 strengthen the Bureau of Field Enforcement’s ​citation powers along the 
 entirety of supply chains for workers experiencing violations of minimum 
 wage and overtime laws, especially of concern at this time as long shifts 
 and piece rate or quota systems can impede workers ability to follow safety 
 protocols.\n\n●  Expand the Aerosol Transmissible Disease (ATD) 
 Standard\nIn the current pandemic, the entire workforce is potentially 
 exposed to a deadly transmissible disease. The ATD Standard only applies to 
 healthcare workplaces. We demand that Cal/OSHA keep all workers safe by 
 expanding the ATD Standard to all industries, mandating workable and 
 enforceable safeguards, practices, and protections for all.\n\n●  Protect 
 the Right to Refuse\nClearly state and enforce a worker’s right to refuse 
 unsafe work that exposes them directly to the coronavirus without the 
 proper safety protocols and protections.\n\nRespectfully 
 submitted,\n\nAmalgamated Transit Union, Local 1605\nAmalgamated Transit 
 Union, Local 1756\nAmalgamated Transit Union, Local 192\nAsian Pacific 
 American Labor Alliance Alameda County (APALA) ATU Local 265\n\nBet Tzedek 
 Legal Services\nBreastfeedLA\nCalifornia Alliance for Retired 
 Americans\nCalifornia Immigrant Policy Center\nCalifornia Labor 
 Federation\nCalifornia Teamsters Public Affairs Council\nCalifornia Work & 
 Family Coalition\nCenter for Workers’ Rights\nCenter on Policy 
 Initiatives\nCentral Valley Partnership\nCentro Laboral de Graton/Graton 
 Day Labor Center\nCentro Legal de la Raza\nChinese Progressive 
 Association\nCLEAN Carwash Campaign\nClergy and Laity United for Economic 
 Justice\nCouncil on American-Islamic Relations, San Francisco Bay Area CRLA 
 Foundation\nDay Worker Center of Mountain View\nEast Bay Alliance for a 
 Sustainable Economy\nFaith in the Valley\nFriends Committee on Legislation 
 of California\nGarment Worker Center\n\nGig Workers Rising\n\nHmong 
 Innovating Politics\nInland Empire Labor Council, AFL-CIO\nInstituto de 
 Educación Popular del Sur de California\nInstituto Laboral de la 
 Raza\nJakara Movement\nJobs to Move America\nJust Transition Alliance\nLa 
 Raza Centro Legal\nLeague of Women Voters of Los Angeles\nLegal Aid at 
 Work\nLos Angeles Alliance for a New Economy\nLos Angeles Black Worker 
 Center\nLos Angeles Worker Center Network\nMaintenance Cooperation Trust 
 Fund (MCTF)\nMs. (Lola Smallwood)\nNational Council for Occupational Safety 
 and Health (National COSH) National Day Laborer Organizing 
 Network\nNational Employment Law Project\nNorth Bay Jobs with 
 Justice\nOrange County Equality Coalition\nOrganización en California de 
 Líderes Campesinas, Inc.\nPartnership for Working Families\nPhysicians for 
 Social Responsibility - Los Angeles\nPilipino Workers Center\nPublic 
 Advocates Inc.\nRestaurant Opportunities Center Los Angeles\nRestaurant 
 Opportunities Center of the Bay (ROC the Bay)\nRise Together\nSan Diego 
 Volunteer Lawyer Program, Inc.\nSanta Clara County Wage Theft 
 Coalition\nStreet Level Health Project\nUAW Local 509\nUC Merced Community 
 and Labor Center\nUCLA Labor Center\nUNITE HERE Local 2850 (Wei-Ling Huber, 
 President)\nUnited for Respect\nWarehouse Worker Resource Center\nWomen’s 
 Employment Rights Clinic\nWomen’s Voices for the Earth\nWorkers 
 United-Western States Regional Joint Board SEIU\nWorking Partnerships 
 USA\nWorksafe\n\n\n\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2020/09/20/18836790.php
SUMMARY:Stop The Murders! Justice For Foster Farms Workers, Their Families & The Community
LOCATION:Dollar General Store 323 N. Main St. Livingston, California
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2020/09/20/18836790.php
DTSTART:20200924T160000Z
DTEND:20200924T180000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
