Thursday, May 13, 2021


MANITOBA UFCW 
Grocery stores chided for poor mask enforcement

Manitoba's largest private-sector union is accusing the province and grocery store chains of “mass and catastrophic failure” for poor enforcement of the use of masks by customers, thereby putting workers at risk.

The United Food and Commercial Workers Local 832, which represents more than 9,000 Manitoba grocery store employees and 2,000 security guards at retailers, is going public for the first time during the COVID-19 pandemic.

In a May 13 letter obtained by the Free Press, the union says worker safety has not been a top priority at several stores across the province, which are owned by Loblaw, Sobeys and Red River Co-op.


The letter does not mince words, beginning with: “If I were to show up to any of your stores today with no shirt, or no shoes on, I would be escorted out of the store immediately and refused service. But if I show up with no mask, I can still freely shop and get my groceries at most of your stores.”

It continues: “Every day we receive notifications about COVID cases within your stores, and thankfully these cases are mostly individual. Our members (and your employees) are telling us that now, more than ever, customers are showing up without masks. They are a safety hazard to our members and your customers. Our members feel unsupported — some have even quit because you, as their employer, are not doing enough to ensure they are safe.”

The letter is not the only correspondence between the union and retail employers, or even the first to the province.

“It’s just the first letter that the media has received and will thus be made public,” said Jeff Traeger, president of UFCW Local 832, in an interview Thursday.

“During the entirety of the pandemic, we’ve tried our best to communicate and get answers internally about why the Pallister government or retail employers won’t enforce rules about masking among customers,” Traeger said, adding the union has sent numerous emails and letters, and has made calls on behalf of workers. It received either a one-line response or no response.

“The fact is, now we’re getting pressure for immediate action from our members because they feel completely unsafe when so many people keep showing up unmasked and are allowed to do so, with these record-high case counts and new variants emerging.”

On Thursday, Manitoba reported 560 new COVID-19 cases — its highest daily count since the pandemic began.

On average, at least a dozen people show up maskless every day at Manitoba locations of the Real Canadian Superstore, Extra Foods, No Frills, Safeway, FreshCo, Sobeys and Red River Co-op, Traeger estimated.

In some cases, such as at two Superstores in Winnipeg, that can rise to as many as 30 maskless people a day. It’s worse in communities such as Carman, Steinbach, Morden and Winkler — where “it’s so common that public-health enforcement has stopped interjecting or mandating masking measures altogether,” said Traeger.

Manitoba’s public-health orders don’t give a retail store the right to deny service to customers who don’t wear a mask.

The only mention under provincial orders close to mandating masks requires the operators of an “indoor public place” to “ensure that every person who is not wearing a mask while in the indoor public place is given a reminder to do so as soon as practicable.”

Traeger says that puts the onus on retailers. “And because government is not at all — and I mean, not all — enforcing mask measures at big-box stores, why would businesses want to lose business over a mask policy?” he said.

“Loblaw is thinking Sobeys isn’t enforcing the mask rules, and so their customer — maskless or not, making workers unsafe or not — would just walk over to Sobeys and they’d lose them. That’s terrifying for other customers, yes, but especially the workers.”

In a statement, the province said, “Manitoba takes the enforcement of public health orders very seriously and has worked with many municipalities and agencies to enforce these orders and protect the public.”

The province declined to answer specific questions about enforcement. “It would not be appropriate to discuss the operation or the frequency of enforcement visits for obvious reasons,” a provincial spokesperson wrote.

“But at the same time, we rely on the public to be aware and follow these orders because it’s the right thing to do, not because there is an enforcement presence. Our regular reporting on the number of tickets handed out shows that there is an enforcement presence and we count on Manitobans to continue to do what is best for all of us.”

Sobeys and Red River Co-op did not respond by press time.

In a statement, Loblaws, which owns Superstore, said: “We believe that everyone has a role to play in keeping one another safe. The government requires that masks be worn in all indoor public places unless they have a valid exemption, a policy with which we are both legally obligated and happy to comply with, and expect our customers to do the same. To that end, we are pleased that the vast majority of customers comply, and our teams work with local authorities in the rare cases that they don’t.”

Temur Durrani, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, Winnipeg Free Pres
Bernie Sanders urges Biden administration to keep jobless benefits flowing to gig workers on verge of losing stimulus aid in red states

insider@insider.com (Juliana Kaplan,Joseph Zeballos-Roig) 
© Provided by Business Insider Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont). Melina Mara/The Washington Post via AP, Pool

Sen. Bernie Sanders is calling on the Labor Department to continue providing PUA benefits to workers.

In 14 GOP-led states, governors are ending their participation in federal unemployment benefits.

But Sanders and other experts say Biden's Labor Department is required by law to still pay out PUA.

Sen. Bernie Sanders urged the Biden administration on Thursday to prevent the loss of jobless benefits for unemployed Americans in the 14 GOP-led states that are on the verge of ending their participation in federal unemployment benefits next month.


Governors in red states such as Georgia, Montana, and South Carolina have cited a so-called labor shortage as necessitating fewer benefits, so that unemployed residents will be compelled to return to work. As soon as next month, hundreds of thousands - if not millions - of workers will experience a sharp cut in their jobless benefits.

But Sanders is arguing that the Labor Department is mandated to provide Pandemic Unemployment Assistance (PUA) to all workers, even those in states that are moving to halt it. In a letter to Labor Secretary Marty Walsh, Sanders said "it is critical that the Department of Labor does everything in its power to ensure that jobless Americans continue to receive this aid as the law intended."

PUA is a federal pandemic-era unemployment expansion that allows more workers - including gig workers and part-time workers - to become eligible for UI benefits. Sanders and other progressive lawmakers have argued that the widespread adoption of PUA by workers shows the need to permanently reform and expand UI eligibility.

"As Secretary, you are obligated to ensure this aid gets to workers," Sanders wrote in his letter to Walsh. "To ensure that obligation is met, I urge you to commit to holding states accountable for their role in administering PUA benefits."

If states end PUA, those newly eligible workers would lose all of their benefits, not just the additional $300 a week. Also at risk are workers on long-term benefits.

Sanders is joining lawmakers like Sen. Ron Wyden and progressive think tank National Employment Law Project (NELP) in calling on the Labor Department to step in. NELP sent a letter to the Labor Department outlining potential ways to continue the distribution of PUA benefits; the Labor Department told Insider it had received the NELP's memo and was reviewing it, but did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Sanders' letter.

The action may not provide immediate aid to the unemployed - and instead spark a time-consuming legal battle with GOP-led states hostile to the federal government administering aid at the statewide level.

"A months-long process would not be surprising," Andrew Stettner, an unemployment expert at the left-leaning Century Foundation, told Insider. "We're still at the very beginning of this. There's been this shocking move by these 14 states and we're trying to push back and say they shouldn't have the authority here to end these benefits."

Stettner projected the step could provide jobless aid to at least 400,000 people on PUA in the affected states. He expressed concern that other states such as Florida and Texas may be next to terminate the federal coronavirus relief programs.

"Secretary Walsh and the Biden Administration have been doing all they can to take concrete action to prevent anyone from falling through the cracks as we know unemployment benefits have served as a vital lifeline for workers throughout the pandemic - to help them buy food, pay rent and remain healthy," Egan Reich, a Labor Department spokesperson, said in a statement to Insider.
SUPPLY & DEMAND
Amazon is hiring 75,000 workers with starting pay of more than $17 and $1,000 signing bonuses - plus another $100 for proof of vaccination

dreuter@insider.com (Dominick Reuter) 

© Photo by Martin Schutt

Amazon is hiring 75,000 people in its fulfillment and logistics network across the US and Canada.

The positions offer an average starting wage of $17 and signing bonuses of up to $1,000.

New hires who can show proof of vaccination against COVID-19 will receive a further $100 bonus.

Amazon announced Thursday that hiring is underway for more than 75,000 positions in the company's fulfillment and logistics network across the US and Canada.

The jobs offer an average starting pay of more than $17 per hour, plus signing bonuses of up to $1,000, the company said. In addition, new hires who can show proof of vaccination against COVID-19 will receive a further $100 bonus.

Amazon employees receive a number of benefits in a package that includes paid parental leave and tuition credits, on top of medical, dental, and retirement matching.

The move is likely to add further strain to an already tight job market that has workers leaving customer-facing jobs in retail and foodservice for better paying jobs elsewhere.

Miami Chef Phil Bryant singled out Amazon for causing many of his colleagues to reconsider their options, telling the Washington Post, "If I can make $17 per hour at an Amazon warehouse, but only $14 per hour as a line cook, a notoriously hot, stressful, intense job, why would I do that?"

Data from Glassdoor show that restaurant servers searched the job site for "Amazon" seven times more frequently last spring than they did before the pandemic, and that searches for warehouse jobs had tripled.


Meanwhile, Chipotle raised wages across its workforce this week, and outlined an accelerated promotion path for crew members to earn an average salary of $100,000 as restaurant managers.

Amazon says its locations with the most open roles are based in Arizona, California, Colorado, Georgia, Illinois, Kentucky, Maryland, Michigan, Minnesota, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Washington, and Wisconsin.

Candidates can apply at the company's hiring website.

McDonald's is raising wages, but 95% of its US workers will not be impacted by the change

ktaylor@businessinsider.com (Kate Taylor) 13/5/2021
 
REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson Protesters gather outside McDonald's in 2013.


McDonald's announced on Thursday it is raising workers' pay at all company-owned locations.

Just 5% of McDonald's US locations are owned by the company, meaning 95% will not be impacted.

McDonald's encouraged franchisees to make similar investments "in ways that make the most sense."

McDonald's is raising wages - but only roughly 5% of restaurants will be impacted by the change.

On Thursday, McDonald's announced that it is rolling out pay increases, averaging 10%, at all corporate-owned stores. The increases will shift minimum pay to at least $11 for crew members and at least $15 for managers.

According to the company, the changes will impact more than 36,500 employees. But, what about the rest of the chain's more than 800,000 employees?

Because McDonald's is a franchise, the corporate office only directly controls issues such as hiring, firing, and pay at the roughly 650 company-owned locations in the US. Meanwhile, franchisees dictate pay at McDonald's roughly 13,000 franchise-owned locations in the US.

McDonald's has not signaled that franchisees will be making any similar announcements, though there has been extensive discussion within the system about how best to hire and retain workers.

Read more: McDonald's franchisees blame hiring challenges on unemployment benefits and say an 'inflationary time bomb' will force them to hike Big Mac prices

"As we said in our recent System webcast, we encourage all owner/operators to make this same commitment to their restaurant teams in ways that make the most sense for their community, their people, and their long-term growth," McDonald's US president Joe Erlinger said in a message sent Thursday to US employees and franchisees seen by Insider.

Erlinger said in the message that the raises are intended to ensure restaurants are able to compete for employees, as well as recognize employees' hard work.

"Together with our franchisees, we face a challenging hiring environment, and staying ahead means we must constantly renew our commitment to offer one of the leading employment packages in the industry," Erlinger said.

Labor groups, such as the Service Employees International Union-backed Fight for $15 movement, have pushed for a $15 minimum wage and a union at all McDonald's locations. On May 19, McDonald's workers still plan to strike in 15 cities, calling for a $15 minimum wage.

"We know McDonald's can afford to raise pay to $15/hr for every single employee, not just some employees at corporate-owned and operated stores," Fight for $15 said in a statement on Thursday. "We're ready to continue our fight to win $15 for every worker across the country. "
Franchisees say 'one size doesn't fit all' on workers' pay and benefits

The board of the National Owners Association, a group of independent McDonald's franchisees, discussed recent hiring struggles in a letter on Sunday, obtained by Insider. According to the letter, McDonald's has been working with franchisees on how to offer competitive benefits, without a standardized pay raise across the system.

"We want to be the employer of first choice in our industry," the letter reads. "The proposal allows for Owner control and discretion. One size doesn't fit all."

If franchisees invest more in pay and benefits, the letter says, they can balance out the costs in two ways: reducing turnover and raising prices.

"The ability to raise prices is something new," the letter reads. "Our industry has always been competitive, and we have been in a knife fight for years regarding price. That is no longer the case. Now the winning strategy is simply being open and giving fast service. Our competitors are literally not open due to staffing shortages."

Ultimately, the NOA board posits, a "Big Mac will get more expensive." But, right now, customers do aren't phased by price increases, as long as restaurants are actually able to stay open and serve food, the board said.

Franchisees are already adding new incentives as restaurants scramble to staff stores. An organizer with Fight for $15, the SEIU-backed fast-food workers movement, shared a photo with Insider of a $500 signing bonus at a McDonald's restaurant in Fayetteville, North Carolina. Blake Casper, a franchisee in Florida, told Insider he was offering $50 for anyone who was simply willing to come in for an interview.

Casper told Insider in April that he was trying to win over workers with a number of new benefits, including referral programs and signing bonuses. He was also considering raising starting pay from $12 to $13.

"At this point, if we can't keep our drive-thrus moving, then I'll pay $50 for an interview," said Casper.

McDonald's raises minimum pay at corporate-owned stores across the US, as the battle for workers heats up
ktaylor@businessinsider.com (Kate Taylor) 17 hrs ago
© Provided by Business Insider McDonald's is raising its minimum wage at company-owned restaurants. Spencer Platt / Getty Images

McDonald's is going to start paying workers more.

The move comes as restaurants struggle to hire workers.

"Together with our franchisees, we face a challenging hiring environment," said executive Joe Erlinger.

McDonald's is raising its minimum wage in corporate-owned stores, as fast-food chains struggle to hire employees.

On Thursday, the fast-food giant announced it is rolling out pay increases at corporate-owned locations, which will shift entry level pay for crew to at least $11 to $17 per hour. The starting range for shift manager will be at least $15 to $20 per hour, based on restaurant location.

According to the company, the pay increases - which have already started and will roll out over the next several months - will boost workers' pay by an average of 10 percent. The company is aiming to hire 10,000 employees in the next three months at company-owned locations.

Ultimately, the company said average hourly pay will reach $15 per hour, using a "market-by-market approach." In a press release, the company said some restaurants have or will reach an average hourly minimum wage of $15 per hour this year, with average hourly wages expected to reach $15 an hour by 2024.

The higher pay will impact employees at corporate-owned locations, which make up roughly 5% of total US restaurants or about 650 locations. At the vast majority of locations, franchisees decide workers' wages, along with other policies related to hiring and firing.

"Together with our franchisees, we face a challenging hiring environment, and staying ahead means we must constantly renew our commitment to offer one of the leading employment packages in the industry," McDonald's US president Joe Erlinger said in a message sent to U.S. employees and franchisees seen by Insider.

"The existing programs at company-owned restaurants, and these moves, are intended to ensure our company-owned restaurants continue competing for the talent we need, while also recognizing the hard work of our crew and managers," Erlinger continued. "Simply put: putting our people first and doing the right thing for them will drive continued growth for our business."

McDonald's executives hinted that the company was considering increasing pay in a recent call with investors, when discussing what CEO Chris Kempczinski called a "very tight labor market."

"We're working through what some changes in our company-owned restaurants might look like from a wages-and-compensation perspective," said Joe Erlinger, the company's US president.

"We think the external environment is right to do this," Erlinger continued. "We think the internal environment is also right to do this. And we think it's actually a great business decision for us."

McDonald's workers recently announced plans to strike in 15 cities on May 19, demanding that employees make a minimum of $15 per hour. The fast-food giant has been a frequent target of the Service Employees International Union-backed Fight for $15 movement since 2012.

"Last year, in the middle of a global pandemic, McDonald's made $5 billion and gave billions to its shareholders - all while workers like me risked our lives to keep stores running for less than $15/hr," Hakim Dumkia, a worker in St. Louis, recently said. "I can't afford to wait any longer for a raise."

"I plan to go on strike to say to McDonald's: don't wait for politicians in Washington to pay us what we need to survive," Dumkia continued. "We supported McDonald's through the pandemic, and now you need to pay us enough to support our families and our communities."
The pressure is on for fast-food giants to raise wages

Employers across the industry are being forced to add new benefits and raise wages as restaurants struggle to hire employees. On Monday, Chipotle - which is not a franchise - announced it is raising wages to an average of $15 per hour. Starbucks announced in December that it would raise its minimum across the US to $15 per hour over the next three years.

In a recent letter to members, the board of independent McDonald's franchisee group National Owners Association wrote that McDonald's has been working with franchisees to discuss how to best retain workers.

Read more: McDonald's franchisees blame hiring challenges on unemployment benefits and say an 'inflationary time bomb' will force them to hike Big Mac prices

"We want to be the employer of first choice in our industry," reads the NOA letter, which was obtained by Insider. "The proposal allows for Owner control and discretion. One size doesn't fit all."

The NOA board wrote that higher wages would likely translate to more expensive menu items, a common practice in the restaurant industry.

"Inflation is the flip side to all of these changes," the letter said. "Price increases are happening everywhere you look and will continue as employers pass along these added costs. We will do the same. A Big Mac will get more expensive."
Read more:

McDonald's franchisees blame hiring challenges on unemployment benefits and say an 'inflationary time bomb' will force them to hike Big Mac prices

There's a simple solution for companies struggling to hire: Pay workers more

A labor shortage is forcing chains like Subway and Dunkin' to cut hours, close dining rooms, and push employees to work harder than ever



Read the original article on Business Insider

THIRD WORLD USA
Walmart sales soared, essential workers got scant protection

COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP) — Sandra Kunz had been worried for her safety while working as a cashier at a Walmart in Aurora, Colorado, during the pandemic, said her sister, Paula Spellman.

The 72-year-old had lung disease, Spellman said. She was “uncomfortable because so many people (were) coming in with coughs.”

But Kunz didn’t complain to the government agency tasked with protecting workers, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.

___

This story was produced by the Howard Center for Investigative Journalism at the University of Maryland’s Philip Merrill College of Journalism in conjunction with investigative journalists at Boston University, the University of Arkansas and Stanford University. The Howard Center is an initiative of the Scripps Howard Foundation in honor of the late news industry executive and pioneer, Roy W. Howard.

___

“Sandy’s not a complainer,” Spellman said. “She went out and just purchased her own mask and her own gloves.”

It wasn’t enough. On April 20, 2020, Kunz died from COVID-19 following an outbreak linked to the Aurora Walmart. At least 18 employees got sick and one other worker at Walmart, Lupe Aguilar, died. So did Kunz’s husband, Gustavous, who Spellman said fell ill after she did.

The Walmart where Kunz worked was one of at least 151 Walmart facilities in 10 states with available data where multiple COVID-19 illnesses were recorded, a reporting consortium led by the Howard Center for Investigative Journalism found. On average, one quarter of the company’s stores and distribution centers in those states were affected. In New Mexico, COVID-19 hit nearly every store.


Walmart, the nation’s largest private employer, provides a window into OSHA’s performance during the pandemic. Many of the retailer’s nearly 1.6 million U.S. workers are vulnerable to COVID-19 due to income disparities, racial discrimination or language barriers. They depend on OSHA to guarantee safe and healthy workplaces.

But the worker-safety system is fragmented, reporting from the University of Maryland, Boston University, the University of Arkansas and Stanford University found.

Responsibility is splintered among federal OSHA, state agencies and even local boards of health. As a result, there is little accountability for the failure of government watchdogs to keep workers safe from COVID-19.

The consortium documented that worker safety oversight rarely results in meaningful consequences for companies that aren’t protecting workers. In Massachusetts, Walmart challenged OSHA’s investigation into the death of a worker. The company cited OSHA’s pledge to “use discretion” in holding certain employers responsible for COVID-19 cases in the workplace, and wasn’t penalized.

When workers submit COVID-related complaints to OSHA, only a fraction lead to inspections, and even fewer result in a citation.

As of late March, 3% of closed COVID-19 complaints to federal OSHA offices deemed valid by the agency resulted in an inspection, 12.5% of which led to citations. The average penalty was $13,000; OSHA reduced over a third of the fines.

For Walmart, slightly fewer complaints resulted in inspections — 2.6%. No inspections led to a citation.

The Biden administration proposed an emergency temporary standard April 26 that would give OSHA greater power to enforce COVID-19 workplace-safety rules. Meanwhile, the cost of the 14-month delay since the pandemic began can be tallied in deaths and thousands of worker illnesses.


In Grants Pass, Oregon, in 2020, Walmart workers and customers filed over 24 complaints about the lack of COVID-19 safeguards with the state worker-safety agency.Yet between December and March, at least 18 people were infected in an outbreak linked to the Walmart.

Karla Holman worked customer service at that Walmart until late January and heard about cases through workplace rumors, never from her employer. Walmart “was silent about it,” Holman said.

Workers in other states also said Walmart concealed COVID-19 cases from employees.

Walmart spokesperson Scott Pope said “we communicate with associates in stores where there has been a confirmed case.’’

“Any time you operate more than 5,000 facilities across the country there is the opportunity for variance in how a recommended process is executed,” he said.

Since April 2020, OSHA has released an updated list, including company names, of complaints related to COVID-19 that the agency has deemed valid. In Colorado, approximately 98% of workplaces with reported COVID-19 outbreaks did not appear on that list as of March.

Twenty-one states have their own OSHA plans overseeing private businesses. They must meet all the federal standards but can impose stricter rules if they choose.

In those states, the rate of complaints was five times higher than in states where the federal government exclusively oversees workplace safety.

More complaints don’t guarantee more inspections. In Oregon, which is among the states with the most COVID-19 complaints for Walmart, only one complaint led to an inspection. As of March 24, at least 10 Walmart locations in the state were linked to outbreaks with over five cases, including a Hermiston distribution center linked to 124 recorded cases, the consortium found.

A study in Occupational & Environmental Medicine, a peer-reviewed journal, found that infection rates were significantly higher at a grocery retail store than the surrounding community. Moreover, it said store workers who had direct contact with customers were five times more likely to contract COVID-19 than workers who did not.

Rebecca Reindel, the AFL-CIO’s director of occupational safety and health, said the public-health response focused on “cheaper measures,” such as masks and hand sanitizer, which shifted the burden of protection onto workers themselves.

It is difficult to know the full extent of COVID-19 in Walmart stores. The company tracks, but does not publicly disclose, COVID-19 cases. Federal OSHA does not track COVID-19 outbreaks. And state agencies responsible for tracking outbreak data rarely disclose it.

When they do, state practices vary widely. Only some release names of companies with COVID-19 outbreaks, and there is no consistent definition of how many cases constitute an outbreak.

Walmart spokesperson Casey Staheli said the company instituted a range of policies, including mask requirements for associates and customers, limiting store hours and capacity, deep cleanings, screening associates’ health, installing plastic guards and implementing social distancing in all facilities.

Workers said what’s on paper often doesn’t match the real world.

Of 10 Walmart employees in five states interviewed by the Howard Center, just three said they felt safe from COVID-19 exposure at work.

Some workers said they face retaliation if they complain about safety conditions.

Lorinda Dudley was fired from a St. Albans, Vermont, Walmart in March 2020 after asking her manager for protective gear, according to a lawsuit she filed against Walmart in February. She was frightened after a customer coughed repeatedly at her checkout station.

Dudley said her manager rejected her requests, then terminated Dudley when she said she would need to buy her own protection before returning to the register. Walmart tried to block Dudley’s unemployment claim, saying she quit, Vermont Department of Labor records show.

“I just wanted to be safe,’’ Dudley said.

Walmart denies Dudley’s allegations and plans “to defend the company in court,” said Pope, Walmart’s spokesperson.

Federal OSHA has “no consistent means” to determine if violations reported by state plans are COVID-related, a U.S. Department of Labor spokesperson, who would not be quoted by name, told the Howard Center.

As a result, there is no detailed national picture of how well the agency is protecting workers during the pandemic.

OSHA’s inaction has shifted some enforcement responsibilities onto local health departments, many of which are already overwhelmed.

“It just became the theater of the absurd,’’ said Shaun McAuliffe, director of the Hopkinton, Massachusetts, Board of Health. “They were just dumping onto the local health directors. We didn’t have the time... We didn’t have the training.’’

The Department of Labor spokesperson said OSHA investigates every complaint, but has modified its approach to allow “remote inspections and informal methods of enforcement” during the pandemic.

A February report from the Department of Labor’s Office of Inspector General compared OSHA results from 2019 to 2020, finding “OSHA received 15% more complaints in 2020, but performed 50% fewer inspections.’’

In lieu of on-site workplace inspections, “OSHA calls the employer, describes the alleged hazard(s), and then follows up with a fax, email, or letter,” the report said.

Lani Eklund said her mother, Yok Yen Lee, was scared of contracting the virus. Lee, a 69-year-old Chinese immigrant, was a greeter outside the Quincy, Massachusetts, Walmart store, state workers’ compensation records show.

During the second week of April 2020, Lee wasn’t feeling well, Eklund said. On April 20, her daughter said Lee was found unresponsive in her apartment, then was rushed to the hospital and put on a ventilator. She died May 3.

OSHA records from May 7 show at least 16 other workers there also contracted COVID-19.

Walmart denied responsibility for Lee’s death and contested her family’s claim for workers’ compensation, according to state records. Pope said “there isn’t a way to scientifically show that the conditions of any facility definitively led to confirmed cases.’’

Eklund said the company settled months after her mother’s death for an amount that barely exceeded her funeral costs.

Lee’s death also triggered an on-site OSHA inspection beginning May 8, 2020 at the Quincy store, which Walmart challenged, according to OSHA inspection records obtained by the Howard Center consortium.

The records show phone interviews were “interrupted and stopped prematurely” by Walmart officials when OSHA asked questions about Lee’s death.

In response to a subpoena issued by regional OSHA investigators, Walmart cited OSHA headquarters’ own COVID-19 guidance in objecting to any investigation into whether coronavirus cases were work-related, the records show.

That guidance, part of an April OSHA enforcement memo, applied to private employers not involved in health care, emergency response nor corrections.It said the employers may face difficulty in determining whether employees with COVID-19 caught it at work, and so OSHA would exercise “enforcement discretion.”

On Dec. 30, 2020, OSHA closed its investigation of the Quincy Walmart. A Department of Labor spokesperson said “the inspection identified no violations of OSHA standards” and declined further comment. Records show no citation was issued.

In a February note to associates, John Furner, CEO and president of Walmart U.S., boasted about the company’s “amazing’’ increased sales.

“Thank you for an incredible year!” he wrote.

___

Also contributing to this story were Victoria Daniels, Gabriel Pietrorazio, Aadit Tambe, Carmen Molina Acosta, Elisa Posner, John Kwak, Nicole Noechel, Rachel Logan, Jummy Owookade and Manuela Lopez Restrepo from the University of Maryland; Jackson Ripley, Nathan Lederman and Alaina Mencinger from Boston University; Abby Zimmardi, Mary Hennigan and Rachell Sanchez-Smith from the University of Arkansas; Cade Cannedy from Stanford University.

Gracie Todd, Molly Castle Work, Natalie Drum, Nick Mcmillan, Kara Newhouse, Jazmyn Gray, Aneurin Canham Clyne, Jack Rasiel, Sahana Jayaraman And Haley Chi-sing/the Howard Center For Investigative Journalism, The Associated Press
ALBERTA
Oilsands workers decry poor conditions in COVID-19 isolation

Duration: 01:56 

COVID-19 outbreaks have hit Alberta’s oilsands hard and some workers who’ve contracted the virus say there was a lack of food and health care available to them while isolating.

MAY, 13,2021
PRIMITIVE ACCUMULATION OF CAPITAL
Strip club, bikers and drug deals at core of case over private property rights, state power

Adrian Humphreys 
POSTMEDIA

Michael Norwood was waiting for his drug trafficking trial when he died four years ago. The owner of a played-out strip club had been caught up in police raids targeting the Hells Angels but is now the centre of a legal battle of a different sort: over the government’s power to grab assets from beyond the grave

.
© Provided by National Post The Silver Dollar club in Ottawa.

Norwood’s strip club in Ottawa was called the Silver Dollar; his assets, however, were worth a million times that.

Despite his sudden death, of natural causes, the Ontario government still wants it.

Further complicating the affair, is that even before the court process to determine whether Norwood’s house and business are indeed the proceeds of his criminal activity, the properties have already been sold and the government is trying to pay out some of the money, including to his elderly mother and to a man who was shot at the strip club.

The government is leaning on the power of Ontario’s Civil Forfeiture Act, a tool that can take away a citizen’s property deemed to be the proceeds of crime.

The province’s move against Norwood’s assets and the unusual circumstances of him being dead with outstanding claims against his estate brought years of litigation and, on Wednesday, a hearing before the Court of Appeal for Ontario.

Although the root of the case flows from a world of strip clubs and drug deals, implications for property rights and the power of the state elevated the arguments in court and attracted public interest intervention.

Norwood was arrested in 2015 after an Ontario Provincial Police drug trafficking investigation targeted members and associates of the Hells Angels Motorcycle Club and a support club called 13 Crew. At the time, the public focus was on two Correctional Service of Canada employees who were among the 29 people arrested.

As part of the government’s drug prosecution against Norwood, the Silver Dollar, a strip club operating in Ottawa for decades, as well as his nearby home, were seized by the federal government. After Norwood’s death, the drug criminal charges were dropped and federal prosecutors abandoned their claim on his assets in 2017 — but before the money could be returned, the province stepped in, using its civil asset forfeiture act to take control of it.

The home was sold for $146,225 and the business for $840,216, which was paid into court under a preservation order pending the legal outcome. The province says the house and nightclub were proceeds or instruments of his drug trafficking.

The club had some notoriety, including in 2010, when a staff member shot a customer in the leg without warning when the patron got into a scuffle at the club. The gunman was convicted, but the victim sought compensation from the Silver Dollar for his injury.

A court awarded the victim $125,000 in damages. Once Norwood’s assets were seized, the victim sought his money from the government and Ontario’s Attorney General agreed. Last year, an Ontario court judge ordered the victim be paid from Norwood’s estate.

The province asked the court to also approve a $120,000 payout to Norwood’s 86-year-old mother.

Court heard from the mother’s lawyer that she gave her son money in the mid-1990s to renovate his house to make a separate unit for her to live in. That agreement, however, wasn’t put into writing until after Norwood was arrested in 2015.

The Ontario government accepted the mother’s claims, deemed her to be a legitimate owner to the value she said and, with no evidence she was aware of or participated in her son’s alleged criminal activities, approved paying her.

A lower court judge agreed, even though the owner was dead and his money had not yet been declared the proceeds of crime.

The move to make another large payment from the assets, before the money being formally declared criminal profits, has brought legal intervention. The estate appealed that decision.

Geoffrey Adair, lawyer for Norwood’s estate trustees, argued in court Wednesday that allowing the ruling to stand gives the province excessive power over private property.

“This would amount to rubber stamping decisions of the Attorney General, even if those decisions exceeded the very power the court itself,” he told court, “and allow the Attorney General to do whatever it wants.”

He said ordering the payment before establishing a criminal source goes against the intent of the act: “You shouldn’t be able to satisfy debts with the proceeds of crime,” he said.

Antonin Pribetic, representing the Ontario government, rejected Adair’s characterization.

“This is not a circumstance where the Attorney General is rubber stamping a side deal,” he said. He said that if Norwood’s assets end up not being found to be criminal proceeds, then the estate can seek to get the money back from Norwood’s mother, he said.

Concern over the power of the Civil Remedies Act prompted the Canadian Constitution Foundation to seek intervener status in the case.

“Civil forfeiture is an extremely powerful tool in the government’s tool box and because of the power of that tool there need to be limits in how it is exercised,” said Christine Van Geyn, the foundation’s litigation director.

“Civil forfeiture does not just apply to criminals, it can also be used to take the assets of individuals who have never been charged or even suspected of a crime.”

The panel of three appeal court judges reserved their decision until a later date.

• Email: ahumphreys@postmedia.com | Twitter: AD_Humphreys
AMERICA
Presidents of teachers unions call for full school reopening

The presidents of the nation's two major teachers unions called separately for a full return to in-person learning in the fall, with the leader of the American Federation of Teachers declaring Thursday that her organization was “all-in.”

© Provided by The Canadian Press

In an address on social media, Randi Weingarten said the wide availability of vaccines and a new infusion of federal education money have removed many obstacles that prevented schools from opening.

“Conditions have changed,” Weingarten said. “We can and we must reopen schools in the fall for in-person teaching, learning and support. And keep them open. Fully and safely, five days a week.”

The National Education Association issued its own statement after Weingarten’s remarks.

“NEA supports school buildings being open to students for in-person instruction in the fall,” said the group's president, Becky Pringle. “Educators will continue to lead in making sure each school has what it needs to fully reopen in a safe and just way, and to ensure the resources exist to meet the academic, social and emotional needs of all students.”


If local unions heed theses calls, it would be seen as a major stride in the effort to reopen schools. Teachers unions have been blamed for slowing the process with demands for a variety of safety measures. Teachers in some districts have refused to return until ventilations systems are updated, virus tests are given and all teachers are vaccinated.

Weingarten said vaccines have been the decisive factor in her vision for a fall reopening. President Joe Biden in March ordered states to prioritize teachers in vaccination rollouts, and by the end of that month, federal health officials said 80% of school workers had been given their first shot.

“I hear it in educators’ voices and see it in our polling results,” the union chief said. “The fear that they will bring the virus home decreases the moment educators get the shots.”

Surveys by the union find that 89% of its 1.7 million members have been fully vaccinated or want to be, she said.

Still, Weingarten isn’t suggesting a quick return to the type of schooling students knew before the pandemic. She said schools should continue with mask requirements, social distancing, contact tracing and other measures recommended by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“It’s not risk free,” Weingarten said. “But we can manage the threat by encouraging people to get vaccines and following guidance from the CDC.”

The union will continue to push for 3 feet of space between students in classrooms, which the CDC recommended in March after reducing it from 6 feet. Weingarten said schools should work over the summer to “find adequate space” to maintain smaller classes throughout the school year.

Her address came after a unanimous vote from the union's executive council approving her message for the fall.

A $1.9 trillion aid package that Biden signed in March included $123 billion to help schools reopen and recover from the pandemic. Weingarten, who endorsed Biden, wrote that his administration has been “fighting the pandemic with science, truth, transparency and, yes, money.”

“The United States will not be fully back until we are fully back in school. And my union is all in,” she said.

The CDC has been saying since February that schools can safely reopen with certain safety measures, but many of the nation’s largest districts have remained mostly or entirely online. The latest federal data found that, in March, 54% of public elementary and middle schools were offering five days a week of in-person instruction to all students.

Even in districts that have reopened, many students have opted to stay at home, including a disproportionate share of nonwhite students. Weingarten is suggesting that schools create committees of parents and teachers to tackle safety issues. That, along with continued safety measures, would help rebuild trust with families, she said.

The union is also coming out with a $5 million campaign to push for a fall reopening. The group said it will reach out to teachers, families and communities to highlight the value of getting all students back in the classroom. A local union in Pittsburgh plans to go door to door talking about safety measures in place in schools. Other local groups are helping operate vaccination clinics for students and families.

“When I tell you we’re all in,” Weingarten says, “we’re all in.”

Collin Binkley, The Associated Press
Locked out stagehands protest outside Metropolitan Opera


NEW YORK (AP) — Locked out Metropolitan Opera stagehands protested the use of nonunion shops to construct sets for the company's upcoming season, attracting a crowd of roughly 1,000 people outside Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts Thursday.
© Provided by The Canadian Press

The Met has been shuttered by the coronavirus pandemic since March 11, 2020, canceling 276 performances plus an international tour scheduled for next month, but it has announced plans to start next season in September. The company stopped pay to unionized employees on March 31 last year because of the pandemic, while continuing health benefits. The stagehands’ contract expired last July 31, and that union was locked out Dec. 8.

James J. Claffey, Jr., president of Local One of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees (IATSE), accused the Met of “using the pandemic for unreasonable and draconian cuts damaging to our families.”

The Met is having sets for Bartlett Sher’s production of Verdi’s “Rigoletto” and David McVicar’s staging of Verdi’s “Don Carlos” built at Bay Productions in Cardiff, Wales. The sets for James Robinson and Camille A. Brown’s production of Terence Blanchard’s “Fire Shut Up in My Bones,” the first opera by an African American composer scheduled for the Met, are being built at a nonunion shop in California.

Technical rehearsals for next season are scheduled to start in early August.

The crowd included workers from the company’s three large unions and also of its many smaller unions.

“We sell the tickets. We hang the lights. We design and build and paint the sets. We do the hair and makeup. We design and make the costumes, We dress the performers. We record the events for broadcast. We are the Met,” shouted Matthew D. Loeb, IATSE’s international president. “We were absolutely prepared to talk about making a deal to cover extra expenses, problems caused by the pandemic on a temporary basis, and the Met wants to use this as an opportunity to get things they could not normally get at the bargaining table.”

The Met often outsources productions, and company spokeswoman Lee Abrahamian said 39 of 79 stagings new to the Met in the past 13 years were manufactured in other shops.

Truckers honked horns as they drove by the midday rally. Speakers included Manhattan Borough President Gale A. Brewer, New York Senators Brad Hoylman and Jessica Ramos, New York Assemblywoman Linda B. Rosenthal and New York City Councilmen Mark Levine and Keith Powers.

“You are one of the cultural engines that brought 65 million tourists to New York City. They’re not coming back until you're back fairly with a contract,” Brewer said, citing NYC & Company’s record figure for visitors in 2018.

The Met’s contract with Local 802 of the American Federation of Musicians, which represents the orchestra, expires July 31, and negotiations are ongoing.

“They asked for things that would set us back 20 years,” Local 802 president Adam Krauthamer said, accusing Met general manager Peter Gelb of refusing to alter the company’s initial proposal of March 2020. “The only person who doesn’t see that his job is to reopen the arts is Peter Gelb.”

The company this week reached an agreement subject to ratification on a four-year contract starting Aug. 1 with the American Guild of Musical Artists, which represents the chorus.

“The Met is a union house and has no desire to undermine Local One or any of our other 14 unions,” the company said in a statement. “However, having lost more than $150 million in box office revenues over the past 14 months, we are facing the worst economic crisis in the 137-year history of the Met and must reduce our costs in order to survive.”

The Met says stagehands have average salaries of $185,000. Claffey said that figure was for 120-122 of the stagehands covered by contractual guarantees, one segment of the 261 employees on whose behalf the Met made benefit contributions.

The company says its proposal to Local One is for a reduction of 20%, with half the cut to be restored when the box office returns to pre-pandemic levels. The union said the management proposal represents a cut of 30%.

“In order for the Met to reopen in the fall, as scheduled, the stagehands and the other highest-paid Met union members need to accept the reality of these extraordinarily challenging times,” the company said.

Ronald Blum, The Associated Press
CANADA
Nurses working during COVID-19 pandemic ‘beyond the point of burnout’

Pia Araneta 
GLOBAL NEWS

In February, the emotional toll from the COVID-19 pandemic began to weigh heavily on Michael Gaerlan, a registered nurse working in an intensive care unit in Edmonton, Alta.

© THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette Registered nurse Jane Abas tends to a COVID-19 variant patient during the COVID-19 pandemic in Toronto on April 13, 2021.

Speaking to family members of patients on the phone, tight regulations means that he's had to say no to visitations more often than not.

“It hit me that a lot of these patients we look after often die alone, or die with only a few family members beside them,” he says. “It’s tragic.”

Read more: Registered Practical Nurses struggling with pandemic stress, workload: poll

Gaerlan works at the Royal Alexandra, one of Canada’s busiest hospitals. Currently, the province also has the worst COVID-19 outbreak in North America, with the highest active case rate per capita.

COVID-19 pandemic stress leading to nurses increasingly asking for help


“(Nurses) are beyond the point of burnout. We all just want this pandemic to be over but it feels like we’re far from it,” he says.

Nurses have been working tirelessly over the last year in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, trying to keep people out of hospitals, treat positive cases, vaccinate people and educate communities, among other things.

In comparison to the beginning of the pandemic, when healthcare workers felt the “tremendous support” from the general public in the form of convoys of honking cars or free food, Gaerlan says the everyday frustrations — and the inability to keep up with variants of concern — make it difficult to stay positive.

Video: Two Kingston nurses and a doctor launch health care podcast

Tim Guest, the president of the Canadian Nursing Association, says critical care nurses working in the ICU, in particular, are facing significant burnout right now, similar to long-term care nurses during the first wave.

“They’re demoralized. They’re exhausted. They are at the brink … from witnessing so much tragedy,” he says, adding that many nurses might exhibit post-traumatic stress disorder once the pandemic subsides.

Read more: Nurses in Ont. hospitals can now give care outside of ‘regular scope of practice’

A new survey conducted by Oraclepoll Research found that of the 2,600 registered practical nurses who belong to the Canadian Union of Public Employees, more than half of respondents said they were coping “poorly” or “extremely poorly” at work over the past year.

Just over 80 per cent reported that their workload had “increased a lot,” and over 90 per cent are worried about bringing COVID-19 home to their families.

“They don’t really like being called heroes,” Guest says. “They are faced with the same kind of public stressors that everyone else is facing and when they go to work, their families are always at the back of their minds.”

Read more: B.C. critical care nurses being redeployed to support COVID cases in Fraser Health

Gaerlan says the media missed the mark when labelling healthcare workers as the frontline, because it takes the onus away from the public.

“The frontlines are everyday people wearing masks, businesses changing their daily practices to accommodate regulations and people who are socially distancing,” he says. “Especially in the ICU, we are essentially the last line (of defence),” he adds. “There's nobody else after us.”

Like many other hospitals in Canada, the Royal Alexandra has had to expand its capacity to accommodate an excess of patients.

Gaerlan says some storage rooms have been repurposed for patient care, equipment is sometimes scarce and several patients with COVID-19 might have to be contained in a common area.

“(It’s) an efficient way of looking after patients but it’s at the cost of their dignity,” he says, adding some patients are side by side and on life support.

VIDEO
"Foreign-trained doctors face barriers to work on the frontlines of the pandemic in Canada"



Though a lack of space can be remedied, the amount of staff remains unchanged, meaning the workload has been stretched to the max for many healthcare workers.

“We’re pulling nurses from other patient care areas like surgeries,” Gaerlan says. “(But) we’re still pulling from a finite pool of nurses.”

Canada’s nurse shortage has been one documented over the past decade, but the extraneous circumstances of the pandemic have highlighted how grave the issue really is.

Read more: Nurses’ union calls Alberta finance minister hypocritical in contract talks

A study of over 550 registered practical nurses conducted by the Service Employees International Union found that 94 per cent of RPNs regularly work short-staffed, and 72 per cent believe staffing is insufficient.

Many nurses are contemplating leaving the profession once the pandemic subsides.

Ontario recently called upon other provinces to send nurses, and even requested international help from the U.S. and the Philippines.

Guest says there are enough internationally educated nurses in the country who are willing and able to help with the current crisis, but barriers to becoming a registered nurse in Canada need to be eliminated first.

“They have skills that can be used … and we need to find a better way of supporting them so we can get them in the workforce,” he adds.

Read more: ‘I couldn’t take it anymore’: Why some medical staff are calling it quits amid COVID-19

Gaerlan’s parents were both nurses in the Philippines. After immigrating to Canada, his mom took a refresher course so she could continue working in the field and she now works alongside Gaerlan at the Royal Alexandra.


“My parents are caring and loving people and I wanted to follow in their footsteps,” Gaerlan says. “Being able to say that I'm (a nurse) really empowers me.”

Video: NB Nurses Union president says system is ‘crumbling’ amid nursing staff shortages

Lianne Mantla-Look, a relief community health nurse in Yellowknife, has also been working alongside her mom as part of the COVID-19 immunization response team.

Her mom is a retired language and culture coordinator, and they have both been working hard to translate information from English to Tłı̨chÇ« for Indigenous communities in the Northwest Territories.

“There’s a lot of misinformation out there … and a lack of trust in the healthcare system,” says Mantla-Look.

Being able to provide reliable information — as she and her mom are trusted by many of the Elders in their region — and the translation of health material, in general, is a step towards decolonizing healthcare, she adds.

Many words are difficult to translate, however, considering there is no direct translation to Tłı̨chÇ«, Mantla-Look says.

“Words like Moderna, antibody and even COVID-19 … you have to completely break down one word into various different things to convey your meaning,” she adds.

One highlight for Mantla-Look has been going back to her community of BehchokÇ«̀, where she grew up, to administer vaccines.

Read more: Lost in translation: Advocates on battling language barriers amid COVID-19

She has been the only person from her community who both speaks her language fluently and works in healthcare, and so the Elders have always been proud of her, she says.

“The Elders gave me a seal of approval — calling me the nurse who gives painless needles,” she says.

Vanessa Wright, a primary care nurse practitioner at Women’s College Hospital in Toronto, also works at a refugee clinic and different shelters in the city.

When working with communities, she says it’s important to start from a place of cultural humility.

“You have to approach it with the perspective that ‘I’m not the expert, the community is the expert.’ And we try to find the model that works best for them,” she adds.

Read more: COVID-19 variant found in more Toronto homeless shelters, encampment

Wright has also been administering vaccines to undocumented workers at a refugee centre.

COVID-19 has highlighted the diversity and breadth of the nursing profession, Wright says, bridging knowledge gaps to different communities that might be at greater risk of transmission.

“Nurses are the real connecting piece across all these different silos within the (healthcare) system,” she says. “We are the backbone of the healthcare system.”

Read more: Future nurses, doctors hope COVID-19 pandemic creates better health-care system

When Wright is feeling overwhelmed or incapacitated, she says she reaches out to other nurses for support.

“I find a lot of gratitude and solace in that. … We are good at acknowledging the barriers and injustices and we find ways to bridge that,” she says. “And we listen to each other.”

— With files from Global News' Shawn Jeffords and Slav Kornik