Workers' World Today - Issue 7

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INSIDE

April 2020 Observers Call Out Trump as “Distractor-in-Chief” ... 17

Facebook Snooping... 19

What Employees Need to Know about WC ... 13

Issue #7

NYC Mayor and Health Officials Misled Public About Plans to Move COVID-19 Patients Into Nursing Home, Advocates Say

Mayor Bill de Blasio Editorial credit: Evan El-Amin / Shutterstock.com

BY A.C. THOMPSON, PROPUBLICA

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ew York City public health officials are moving patients suffering from COVID-19 into beds within a nursing home on

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Roosevelt Island that cares for hundreds of residents with a wide range of severe medical conditions, including dementia and other age-related ailments¬¬, paralysis, traumatic brain injury and profound developmental disabilities. The move comes after Mayor Bill de Blasio and city officials made a series of inaccurate and contradictory statements about their intention to use the facility to house COVID-19 patients and about their ability to protect the medically vulnerable residents of the Coler Rehabilitation and Nursing Care Center.

The decision has alarmed elected leaders and advocates for the disabled and elderly who fear the city is jeopardizing the lives of Coler residents, many of whom need assistance with even the most basic tasks. In recent days, at least two longtime nursing home residents have tested positive for COVID-19 and died as the coronavirus has torn through Coler, spreading from room to room, according to residents and advocates. Although the state has begun releasing the numbers of deaths at nursing homes, Coler is not included in that tally. City health officials have parked refrigerated trailers behind the aging brick complex to serve as a temporary morgue, but they also will not say continued on page 6

Hot Topics and News You Should Know About

Nurses Face Scores More Deaths Due to Protective Gear Shortage, Union Suit Charges

Nurses protest a lack of protective measures during the coronavirus outbreak outside the Jacobi Medical Center in The Bronx, April 17, 2020. Photo: Ben Fractenberg/THE CITY

BY GREG B. SMITH, THE CITY

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early three out of four New York nurses have been exposed to coronavirus, with hundreds testing positive, scores hospitalized and at least six killed by COVID-19, the nurses’ union charged Monday. The New York State Nurses Association, in court papers, estimated the death toll of members could reach 250 at the current rate of infection. The data emerged as the union filed separate lawcontinued on page 10

State Comptroller DiNapoli Speaks ...page 3

SCLC Urges Governors to Avoid “Tuskegee Experiment” ... 4

Tax Day is July 15; IRS Extends Filing Deadline ... 9

Labor-Related News - Nationally & Locally

VIP: Health Care Directives for Everyone ... 7

The Road to Unstoppable by Victoria Falk

New York Workers Sick With COVID19 Deserve Workers' Compensation!

N Transit Workers Get Essential Priority Access ... 15

CWE Partners Respond to COVID-19 ... 15

RWDSU Expresses Concern Over Macy’s 4th of July ...15

... page 22

ew York State is the epicenter of the COVID-19 crisis, and public officials, government employees, unions, workers' centers, and community organizations are doing everything they can to protect New Yorkers--to protect our communities. continued on page 12


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