“Employment in service and manufacturing jobs where social interaction is unavoidable, including nearby warehouses and manufacturing plants, is common, as is the use of public transportation.” #COVID19
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“Ms. Chavarria, 52 years old, was scared she might get infected again when she returned to work at a nearby meatpacking plant a month later, but felt she had no choice. ‘I have to help pay rent and other bills,’ she said. ‘And we help relatives back home’ in Guatemala.”
#COVID19Show this thread
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CA was supposed to be the promised land for Latinos, both native Mex/American and immigrants. The largest economy in US with an estimated $3.1 Trillion annual economy. The world’s 5th largest economy and the meccas of high-tech.http://www.latinopublicpolicy.org/2019/03/7-maps-showing-how-conservatives-are-losing-the-war-against-california/ …
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So how did CA fail Latinos during the pandemic, and especially low-income and undocumented Latino workers who are supposed to be the pillar of the state economy?
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