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‘We’ve kept the whole damn country running’: Pandemic deepens divide between haves and have-nots in U.S. | CBC News

Byindianadmin

Mar 28, 2020
‘We’ve kept the whole damn country running’: Pandemic deepens divide between haves and have-nots in U.S. | CBC News

It’s becoming clear that poorer Americans will shoulder an unequal share of the suffering in the COVID-19 pandemic. They are less likely to get tested early, to have health coverage, to be allowed to work from home and to get paid leave.

A neighbourhood gardener defies a stay-at-home order in Los Angeles. The pandemic has deepened the divide between workers who have benefits and can work from home and others who don’t and can’t. (Richard Vogel/The Associated Press)

A deadly pandemic is about to force a reckoning upon a nation whose cherished founding creed is that all people are created equal.

It’s becoming clearer which Americans will shoulder an unequal share of the suffering from start to finish of the COVID-19 pandemic, as the United States becomes the new epicentre of it.

Poorer people are less likely to get tested early, to have health coverage, to be allowed to work from home, to get paid leave and to work or study from a video-streaming connection.

They are more likely to be packing groceries, washing buildings and encountering other people’s germs while keeping the country running.

At the very onset of the crisis, it was apparent that not everyone enjoyed the same access to screening.

Until a couple of days ago, more players in the National Basketball Association (total population: 550) tested positive than the entire populace of West Virginia (population: 1.8 million).

Wealthy athletes paid for private tests. But in one of the poorest states, a resident told CBC News it’s a no-brainer why there were zero reported cases until a few days ago: only a few dozen people had been tested.

“Because we don’t go to the doctor,” said Amy Jo Hutchison, a former preschool teacher, now a an anti-poverty activist, in West Virginia’s traditional steel-producing area.

“Because we can’t afford to go to the doctor. We don’t go to the doctor unless we think we’re going to die.”

As cases spread, the state has now promised coverage for tests and treatment for everyone. 

Amy Jo Hutchison, a poverty activist in West Virginia, says the workers keeping her state running are too scared to get medical care because they can’t afford it. (The Associated Press)

Global problem with American twist

To be clear, inequality in pandemics is a global phenomenon — it’s true in Canada today, and it was true of pandemics in the past, such as the Spanish flu, which tended to hit poor people hardest.

But this pandemic presents particular challenges in the U.S., which the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development ranks as one of the most unequal countries in the developed world.

It’s partly driven by uneven access to health care. 

Even before this crisis, nearly 10 per cent of Americans lacked it — and now, with rising joblessness, those numbers could explode, because nearly half of Americans get insurance through their jobs.

Washington lawmakers passed Friday a rescue bill that would expand unemployment insurance and provide up to $1,200 US per individual.

Everywhere in the world, pandemics have historically affected poor people hardest. In Pakistan, daily wage workers, jobless due to the coronavirus outbreak, jostled to receive free food distributed in Quetta. (Arshad Butt/The Associated Press)

Walmart announced $300 bonuses for its hourly employees, whom company vice-president Dan Bartlett credited with rising to a historic occasion, telling Fox News: “Our workforce is really on the front line of this war.”

The bonus program will cost the company $365 million, which is less than 0.1 per cent of Walmart’s $514 billion in annual revenues last year. 

Food banks, shelters struggling

Out on the street, the mere act of survival has gotten much more challenging. 

Soup kitchens that serve the homeless are struggling with disrupted supply chains, and they’re pleading for new donations. 

A Washington, D.C., organization that normally has two dozen volunteers now has a few full-time staff, and they’re working 14-hour days.

To limit transmission, the organization, Miriam’s Kitchen, has cut back on volunteers and moved its operation to new outdoor tents.

At Miriam’s Kitchen in Washington, D.C., staff prepare food for the homeless earlier this week. CEO Scott Schenkelberg said his organization is struggling to get hand sanitizer and has heard from suppliers that there’s a minimum two-week backlog. (Miriam’s Kitchen)

“I am very afraid,” said the group’s chief executive officer, Scott Schenkelberg.

I am very fearful of what the next month or two will bring.– Scott Schenkelberg, CEO of Miriam’s Kitchen

“I am very fearful of what the next month or two will bring.”

He said the homeless who rely on public restrooms won’t have the same access to cleaning products. 

His own organization is struggling to get hand sanitizer and has heard from suppliers that there’s a minimum two-week backlog.

At another non-profit across town, George Jones said he’s never seen anything like this in 24 years running his poverty-support operation, Bread for the City.

“It’s absolutely unprecedented,” Jones said. “It’s probably unprecedented for anyone who’s alive right now.” 

Some soup kitchens are reporting supply shortages. Here, marine veteran Robert McMahon carries a sack of potatoes from a New York soup kitchen for a fellow marine, who is homebound during the pandemic. (Mark Lennihan/The Associated Press)

Demand for food is surging, while supply chains are being disrupted. He said he’s been calling grocery chains and farms seeking more food.

When asked about a controversy involving Washington politicians, Hutchison bursts out laughing.

After getting secret briefings in February about the severity of the upcoming crisis, several U.S. senators sold their stocks; one senator is being sued.

She said investors currently lamenting the performance of their 401(k)s (retirement portfolios offered by companies) are living in a world different from hers: “We’re sitting around saying, ‘What’s a 401(k)?'” she said. 

WATCH | How Canadians are helping each other during the COVID-19 crisis:  

How Canadians across the country are helping each other through the COVID-19 pandemic. 3:04

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