4A | WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 2020 | APPEAL TRIBUNE K1 Salud Continued from Page 1A Once the grapes are ready, said Salud Event Coordinator Stephanie Buchan- an, “the work doesn’t stop.” “There is no work from home option for agricultural workers. They have no choice but to be out and be around oth- ers to continue to bring in income, to keep their housing, to put food on the ta- ble.” COVID-19 risks for agricultural workers Multiple coronavirus infection clus- ters in Oregon have been linked to agri- cultural and food-processing worksites. Among the state’s largest include one among workers harvesting fruit at Townsend Farms sites in Cornelius and Fairview, another at Newport’s Pacific Seafood plants, and a third at Lamb Weston, a potato processor in Hermis- ton. Vineyard workers, said Salud nurse Leda Garside, “have an advantage from other agricultural crops in that they are able to maintain social distancing at worksites.” But in the close quarters of indoor processing spaces, sorting and bottling lines included, she said “it’s a little more dicey.” A factor that confounds contact trac- ing, agricultural workers don’t stick to one crop at one worksite. Someone who might be picking grapes come August is likely picking blueberries now, or work- ing at a nursery, then harvesting or- chard fruit or Christmas trees. Even if ag workers wear masks and can maintain distance at work, many rely on shared, sometimes employer- provided housing and transportation where it is difficult to maintain recom- mended distancing. Asuncion Martinez-Vasquez, a farmworker, listens as Erica Sanchez-Lerma reads results from a cholesterol and lipid test at Bethel Heights Vineyard. Agriculture impact of COVID-19 Agricultural communities across the US have been hard-hit by coronavirus, with major outbreaks associated with agricultural and processing operations in South Dakota, Florida, North Carolina and Washington. Hispanic and Latinx people, the ma- jority demographic of Oregon’s agricul- tural workforce, have been dispropor- tionately impacted by coronavirus. Of the state’s 12,406 positive cases, Hispanic people experienced 4,923 of them. That’s 37 percent of total infec- tions, despite representing only 13 per- cent of Oregon’s population. In response to the pandemic, OSHA, Oregon’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration, issued tempor- ary rules requiring increased field san- itation measures and more stringent regulations of agricultural worker hous- ing and transportation. The agency re- quired farm employers to secure addi- tional field sanitation units; hand- washing stations and portable rest- rooms. In May, Governor Brown’s office, in collaboration with several state agen- cies, created the Food Security and Farmworker Safety Project, a $30 mil- lion fund to increase coronavirus pro- tections for agricultural workers during peak harvest season. Masks and 5,000 gallons of hand sanitizer were distrib- uted at no cost, and millions in funds di- rected toward increasing safety in ag worker housing and transportation. These initiatives are focused on pre- vention. Salud, which focuses on the wine industry, and similar mobile clin- ics operated by Virginia Garcia Memori- al Health Center, are working to address disparities in access to testing and care. “The ag worker community was be- ing hit particularly hard,” Buchanan said. “We knew that there were barriers to access before COVID, and they were amplified with the pandemic.” Clinics adapt, prepare During her Salud appointment at Be- thel Heights Vineyard in the Eola-Amity Hills, Asuncion Martinez-Vasquez sat down at a table under glittering chande- liers in a space normally reserved for private tastings. In Spanish, physician assistant Lilian Navarro-Reynolds talked Martinez through her blood glu- cose and cholesterol screening. Out on the winery’s deck, Garside waved over a patient from intake while Patty Robleto administered a COVID test in the tasting room. With many area wineries open to guests exclusively on weekends and by appointment, Salud’s staff — clad in masks, face shields, gowns and gloves — have lefttheir mobile clinic vans for winery tasting rooms. The move was necessary, explained Garside, to ensure staff and patients could maintain safe physical distances. Since gaining access to testing equipment in May, Salud’s staff have screened more than 400 people for the virus. So far, the organization is seeing a 3.6 percent positive rate. It was higher when they first began testing in May, said Garside, but has since dropped; “having ongoing education and commu- nication is helping.” Salud’s COVID-19 testing is volun- tary, not mandated by business owners, and 88 percent of patients have elected to be tested. For ag workers, being tested repre- Luis Campos Flores listens to instructions from Patty Robleto, with ¡Salud! Services, before receiving a COVID-19 test at Bethel Heights Vineyard near Salem, Oregon, on Tuesday, July 7, 2020. PHOTOS BY BRIAN HAYES / STATESMAN JOURNAL Lillian Navarro-Reynolds, PA, with ¡Salud! Services, prepares a COVID-19 nasal swab at Bethel Heights Vineyard near Salem, Oregon, on Tuesday, July 7, 2020. Luis Campos Flores grimaces while receiving a COVID-19 screening at Bethel Heights Vineyard near Salem, Oregon, on Tuesday, July 7, 2020. Patty Robleto, with ¡Salud! Services, pricks Luis Campos Flores's finger to test lipid and cholesterol at Bethel Heights Vineyard near Salem, Oregon, on Tuesday, July 7, 2020. The ¡Salud! Mobile health clinic truck is parked at Bethel Heights Vineyard near Salem, Oregon, on July. The clinic offers COVID-19 testing, information, outreach and other medical services to farmworkers. sents some personal risk. Salud is re- quired to report positive tests to state health officials and to their employer. Workers risk being removed from work, and associated financial losses that ac- company quarantining. Still, said Garside, “When we give test results it helps, whether negative or positive. They share the experience -- the test, it’s not as horrible as people de- scribe it -- with other workers and with family members.” Garside hopes that by testing work- ers now, following up via text message, and providing ongoing support to those who test positive, will normalize testing and preventative practices to help work- ers in the industry’s busy months ahead. “Harvest is coming and with that is an influx of people into the Valley,” Gar- side said. The wine harvest depends on “interns, seasonal workers. We’re look- ing at how we gear up to help the indus- try safely get through what is go-time for them.” Martinez-Vasquez, a full-time work- er at Bethel Heights, said she isn’t afraid of COVID because of the precautions put in place at the winery, the commit- ment to wearing masks and social dis- tancing. “Growers have to make every effort to protect these workers,” Garside said, “because without the workers there’s no agriculture. They’re essential. They’re not disposable. Everybody needs to make a great effort to prevent this from spreading.” Emily Teel is the Food & Drink Editor at the Statesman Journal. Contact her at eteel@statesmanjournal.com, Face- book, or Twitter. See what she’s cooking and where she’s eating this week on In- stagram: @emily_teel