Hundreds of migrant workers among B.C. wildfire evacuees. What do they face? | 24CA News

Health
Published 22.08.2023
Hundreds of migrant workers among B.C. wildfire evacuees. What do they face?  | 24CA News

Hundreds of migrant staff are amongst these evacuated from farms threatened by the wildfires in British Columbia’s Interior, placing pressure on already crowded housing items and elevating issues about unsafe working circumstances amid the smoky air, advocates say.

Byron Cruz, a member of the Migrant Rights Network, has been co-ordinating evacuation and reduction efforts in B.C. He stated an estimated 600 migrant staff have already been evacuated within the Okanagan area. Another 80 have been hoping to fly again house as their seasonal work got here to an finish however have been unable to take action with airports being shut.

“Some of them had to leave their farms right away and they were sent to these houses that are overcrowded,” Cruz stated. “There is a scarcity of meals in some circumstances, totally different organizations have been round bringing meals to the employees as a result of it’s actually arduous for them to buy groceries.

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“Who is responsible for accommodation? Workers are in overcrowded homes, in homes that were already precarious.”

Ariela Friedmann, spokesperson for the B.C.-based non-profit MOSAIC (Multi-lingual Orientation Service Association for Immigrant Communities), stated their group was working with agricultural staff and migrant staff evacuated throughout the province amid the fires.

Nine staff have been rescued from the realm of Sorrento, which is on the shore of Shuswap Lake in a area beset by flames and topic to evacuations over latest days.

This included 5 momentary overseas staff (TFWs) and 4 Canadians. MOSAIC stated they regarded “physically well to the eye” however “were quite overtaken by the experience they lived as they had to drive through fire on both sides of the road during the evacuation.”


Click to play video: 'B.C. wildfires: Extraordinary efforts and sacrifices praised'

B.C. wildfires: Extraordinary efforts and sacrifices praised


MOSAIC stated that in Kelowna, 160 feminine TFWs have been evacuated to Big White, a ski resort about 60 kilometres southeast of the town.

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A big employer in Kelowna relocated most of its staff, lots of whom are heading house now that the season is coming to an finish. However, the employer has sought help for 40 of its overseas staff. On one other farm, 30 staff from El Salvador ran out of cash for meals after they needed to lengthen their keep until aircraft ticket costs got here down, the group stated, and activists on the bottom had to supply them meals packets.


Click to play video: 'B.C. wildfires: Air quality warning for much of the province'

B.C. wildfires: Air high quality warning for a lot of the province


Cruz stated in lots of elements of B.C., whereas there aren’t any fires, air high quality has plummeted to harmful ranges.

“Air pollution is very bad in some places,” he stated. “Some workers are refusing to do unsafe work.”

Friedmann stated within the Southern Interior village of Keremeos, “workers are asking if they have to go back to work in the smoky conditions.”

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“WorkSafeBC has been contacted and their officer will be going to the farms to talk to both employers and workers,” she stated. “WorkSafeBC guidelines have been sent to all local partners and employers.”

WorkSafeBC informed Global News that employers had a accountability to guard their staff amid wildfires and smoke.

“As it relates to wildfires and air quality, employers must eliminate or minimize smoke exposure to workers, and provide workspaces with cleaner air as the most effective means of protections,” Yesenia Dhott, WorkSafeBC spokesperson, informed Global News.

Cruz stated that whereas law enforcement officials have been visiting farms to verify staff are made conscious of the evacuation orders, there was a better must translate authorities orders into totally different languages, similar to Spanish.

“Some of the workers speak English, but (lack of) communication is a concern,” he stated.


Click to play video: 'Kelowna wildfire lookahead'

Kelowna wildfire lookahead


He stated staff additionally want solutions round compensation for days of labor missed.

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“I will say in order of priority, (the demands of workers) will be access to accommodation with dignity, like proper accommodation. Second one is the translation of the orders provided by the federal and provincial government,” he stated. “And the third is also compensation. They need answers about who will be compensating them for these days that they cannot work.”

Friedmann stated, “Lost wages during natural disaster are a concern because during the BC Floods it was practically impossible for TFWs to access EI which is discounted from them regularly.”

“Employers are also usually exempt from paying lost wages during natural disasters; this can cause pressure on the TFWs to work in the haze and dangerous conditions, which can affect their health.”

More than 27,000 British Columbians have been displaced from their properties by wildfires, with one other 35,000 on standby to go away at a second’s discover.

It’s the worst wildfire season within the province’s historical past, with greater than 1.7 million hectares burned, an space thrice better than the dimensions of Prince Edward Island. That comes amid the worst wildfire season within the nation’s historical past as nicely.

— with information from Global News’ Elizabeth McSheffrey

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