USP 515 Session 7 Notes

October 5th and 7th
Session Seven: Health Justice: Case Study of Covid 19
In this session we will examine how the Covid 19 pandemic has further exposed social and environmental injustices in the United States. We will focus on what students learned through Assignment #1.

ASSIGNED READING FOR SESSION SEVEN

  1. Undocumented U.S. Immigrants and Covid-19 by Kathleen R. Page et al. 
    • “USCIS encourages all those, including aliens, with symptoms that resemble Coronavirus Disease 2019 (Covid-19) (fever, cough, shortness of breath) to seek necessary medical treatment or preventive services. Such treatment or preventive services will not negatively affect any alien
      as part of a future Public Charge analysis.”
    • Under the Trump administration, immigrants have faced relentless attacks — tightening of the public charge rule, threats to the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, raids by Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), asylum restrictions, and separation of families at the border — so immigrants are justifiably scared.
    • Covid-19 has exposed weaknesses in the U.S. health system. The country faces shortages of personal protective equipment, tests, and ventilators.
    • The Affordable Care Act excludes undocumented immigrants from eligibility for coverage, and an estimated 7.1 million undocumented
      immigrants lack health insurance.
    • As the country has adopted a suppression strategy, people have been asked to stay home as much as possible. The profound economic impact of these measures will be especially harsh for undocumented immigrants, many of whom work in service industries such as restaurants and hotels, or in the informal economy.
    • The $1 trillion economic relief package, which includes paid-leave benefits and direct cash for Americans, will not reach most undocumented immigrants or their families.
    • The disenrollment of immigrant families from SNAP over
      the past year takes on new meaning in light of the economic crisis resulting from Covid-19. With children home from school, the U.S. Department of Agriculture Food and Nutrition Service has relaxed guidelines to enable summer food service and national school lunch programs to serve meals in noncongregate settings, but children of immigrants who disenrolled in SNAP will not receive these services.
    • Immigrants are part of our national fabric. Undocumented immigrants make vital contributions to the economy. Many have low-wage essential jobs as home health aides and will be helping our vulnerable elders.
  2. The Black New Deal
    • Across the country, Black People are being infected and dying at disportionate rates from COVID-19. In order to respond effectively to the needs of the Black community our elected officials, health experts, advocates and organizers must take a look at the ways in which the descendants of slaves, Black, African and African-Americans are most impacted by this virus through a racial and class lens.
    • This is a state of emergency for Black people that demands immediate action equal to those enacted in the presence of such a declaration.
    •  Demands
      • Publish desegregated data by race and zip code to properly track spread and to inform allocation of resources.
      • No person, company or entity should be allowed to profit off of a pandemic. Nor should the city of Oakland direct COVID disaster funding towards ongoing development plans without being informed
        by relevant data to support those decisions as being a science based response to the pandemic.
      • No government can place a demand on a people without incurring responsibility for the costs those demands will exact free masks for all, testing, retesting, contact tracing and healthcare, internet access, etc.
      • Reparations for Black people, who as a demographic are is proportionately affected in this moment as a result of historic structural, institutional, and systemic racism
    • Testing, public health, and patient rights
      • To have free, full, accessible testing and retesting sites, both walk-up and drive-through, in East and West Oakland and at encampments throughout Oakland.
      • Supply 500,000 reusable face masks and 500,000 bottles of hand sanitizer to the African American community.
      • Give anyone of African or African American ancestry priority status for testing, the same as medical personnel, first responders, and essential workers.
      • Black maternal health and birth workers’ rights are prioritized to offer greater safety and better outcomes for Black mothers and babies.
      • Better resource the already culturally competent and accessible clinics in East and West Oakland, with funds to enable them to buy tests and offer unlimited testing.
      • Data is collected and that the race of all people impacted and the outcomes of their interaction with COVID 19 such as hospitalization, ventilation, or death, are recorded and desegregated by zip code.
      • Ventilation and other care for COVID 19 not be denied due to anti-Blackness.
      • Systemic racism be addressed, through both short and long term solutions, as a root cause of the disproportionate impact of COVID 19 on Black people.
      • Alameda County to scale up their overall testing capacity, as more testing sites are needed countywide, including in many hospitals such as Highland Hospital.
      • All people are entitled to free masks, testing, contact tracing, and care – especially people who are currently incarcerated, living in congregate living situations, and newly released and entering into a living situation with family and/or other people.
      • Consistent best practices put in place, monitored, and enforced in all congregant living spaces that house vulnerable minority populations in danger of being infected by staff or one another, mass death due to lack of intentional care should be considered as a threat to life.
      • An end to all permits regarding potential pollutants in opportunity zones, closures for non-essential businesses that impact the environment, and concrete action on factors contributing to a toxic environment in Oakland.
      • Free healthcare and access to testing, including antibody testing, for all people.
      • Testing and a policy concerning containment at transitional homes.
      • Specific, relevant and community-led mental health resources for Black people to be made free, accessible and available to all, including grief support for people who have endured loss due to COVID
        19 and beyond.
    • Education and Families
      • A moratorium on school closures and co-locations in Oakland.
      • Universal passage of all students during this time due to lack of technology equity and redistribution of resources to ensure that all students have access to what they need.
      • Measures to increase access to the internet including buses with wifi in neighborhoods to provide internet access and making internet a public utility to ensure access for all.
      • Shelter, housing protections, and healthcare for all students and their families.
      • No criminalization of youth in Oakland related to COVID 19 precautions such as wearing a mask, etc.
      • Investment in community schools once students return, with wraparound services such as health clinics, nurses, mental health services, food for students and families.
      • Divest in school police departments altogether and invest instead in health services, arts and culture programming, and student supports.
      • Recognize the difficulty of distance learning for many students and create accessible resources. All students should have equal access.
      • Hold a fair vote for the school board that is open to youth.
      • Have a community oversight body that is chosen by community members to oversee a holistic transition back to school.
      • Create meaningful programs to offer mental health support for youth in their respective community.
      • Retention of and protections for Black Educators, including a right to return to jobs.
    • Support for Black Workers and Small Business Owners
      • Protection, security of employment rights and immediate paid sick days for all essential service workers, the majority of whom are Black people.
      • Personal protective equipment for all frontline workers and financial compensation for the risk that essential frontline workers are taking.
      • Mandatory free testing and retesting for all frontline workers and protection and paid time off for people who are self-isolating, parenting children or caring for others.
      • Overall support for the livelihood of Black people during this time.
      • Additional protection and support for rebuilding for Black businesses to ensure their survival, including
        a dedicated fund that is low-barrier and without application process.
      • Deferral of current payments and taxes for Black businesses and forgiveness of debts.
      • Requirement of the city to contract specifically with Black businesses in order to provide much-needed income.
      • Small businesses with fewer than 500 employees to receive no interest loans, reimbursements, and debt forgiveness.
      • Right to return requirement to combat systemic racism for all employees.
      • Community oversight body to ensure that “return to normal” does not usher in a new era of even more violent capitalism and greater dispossession for Black people and businesses.
      • Transparency around the cruise ship that docked in Oakland and the impacts on the workers, as well as free healthcare and testing for all workers who were exposed and their families. And any other major events that jeopardize the health and safety of workers, and communities the right to know.
      • The ability to declare and receive compensation for a standby for health and safety.
      • Right to return for workers who are laid off and right to stay for workers who do not want to leave their jobs. And right to return to those who elect to protect their health in a pandemic.
      • Protection for Black union leaders.
      • Congress should create a supplementary direct assistance program for the self-employed and microbusinesses to help cover the cost of lost business, paid sick leave, individual health care costs, and fixed expenses.
      • Self-employed Americans depend on critical e-commerce infrastructure, including financial services, shipping, and Internet connectivity. The federal government should ensure that these essential services remain fully operational, even as the public and private sectors take greater measures to contain the spread of the virus.
      • PPES mandatory for all Frontline and essential workers. State/County/City should make them available to employers at cost. Currently they have to get them at retail this is an additional cost they can afford.
      • Employers should receive subsidies as an incentive to protect their workers.
      • Unemployment Insurance rates should not increase because of COVID layoffs; rates should stay flat.
      • Workers compensation insurance should be covered for employers so that they do not take a hit when workers are out sick with COVID 19.
      • Congress should expand Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) by increasing the income threshold (which is dependent on a number of factors), including younger and childless workers, and eliminating the
        marriage penalty. Lawmakers should also allow it to be calculated and administered on a quarterly basis instead of annually, which would better support individuals struggling to manage short-term
        income volatility.
      • The City of Oakland and the County of Alameda should help facilitate a local Small Business Relief fund. The fund will be Hosted by The California Endowment, the Small Business Relief Fund to
        provide immediate support to struggling self-employed and small business owners. TCE will partner with Opportunity Fund, California’s largest nonprofit microlender, to ensure critical capital remains available to these entities throughout this crisis.
      • Six-month income replacement program conditioned upon full and continued employment of all restaurant staff, payment of rents to landlords, and ongoing payables to suppliers.
      • Provide rent abatement for the duration of the administrative closure followed by percentage rent through 2020 for tenants. This must be coupled with mortgage forgiveness for landlords.
      • Suspend state sales and payroll tax through end of year. Permit deferral of utility payments until reopening. Mandate that fees charged by third-party delivery platforms to our local restaurants be
        capped at a maximum 10% of the order.
      • Require business loss insurance to cover COVID-19 closures for hospitality businesses. The Governor must declare that the pandemic has caused physical loss and damage.
      • Suspend the payment of all insurance premiums (and, protect against a spike in premium related to COVID-19), utility payments, fines and provide cure periods to businesses for violations that do not
        pose an immediate hazard to the public and workers. All taxes, fees, premiums and fines must be suspended indefinitely until a thorough and thoughtful strategy can be implemented to address these
        payments.
      • Add flexibility to the definition of small business to allow small to mid-size restaurants to apply for aid.
      • Establish an on-call pool of African American restaurants to provide food and beverages throughout all city departments for all events, functions, meetings, etc. This list is not exhaustive.
      • City/County should contract with Oakland based businesses for office supplies, cleaning supplies, paper, vehicles, etc. This list is not exhaustive.
      • Corporate accountability- no more subsidies, no more tax breaks! Corporations, real estate investors, developers must pay their fair share to fund public resources we rely on like public health, affordable
        housing, etc.
      • Create a pool of funding to support the programming of CBOs, cultural institutions, direct service nonprofits, and artists whose services are essential to the cultural preservation and artistic health of
        marginalized communities
    • Public Safety/Criminal Justice Reform:
      • Decarceration for the safety of all people, including those inside prisons who are incarcerated and also
        for the workers inside jails.
        Mandatory testing for all people inside jails to prevent community spread.
        Re-entry resources for people who are released, including financial support, identification, food,
        housing, MediCal and funds for family members who house and care for newly released people.
        The removal of barriers resulting from a criminal record in accessing key essential human necessities.
        End the militarization of police.
        No national guard or military enforcement.
        No further criminalization, fines or arrest of Black people based on the COVID 19 mandates, including
        orders on masks, travel, etc. especially for unhoused people who are disproportionately targeted and
        impacted.
        All law enforcement must immediately cease profiling Black people, including health authority,
        housing authority, Oakland Police Department, sheriffs, BART and other transit police.
        End all requirements that people meet with parole officers, attend court, and other appointments. End
        all penalties related to this.
        Stop criminal enforcement and divert funds to invest in public health workers, education and
        distribution of resources.
        Cease police use of pandemic to conduct raids.
        No expansion of the surveillance state.
        No increased surveillance in connection to slow streets project.
        No use of disaster funds by City to implement non COVID19 data to implement non essential
        programming connected to non essential development/gentrification.
    • Housing
      • Access to hotel rooms and vacant units for all unhoused residents who want them now.
        A humane, dignified, harm reduction approach to non-infected residents in housing or hotels, to allow
        for the same shelter-in-place guidance and guidelines as the general public.
        Provide safe and secure off or onsite storage for all belongings of unhoused residents while sheltering
        in hotels or spaces.
        Access to jobs for hotel workers on a voluntary basis, to work in hotels providing housing and a right
        to return for all of the hotel’s usual workers once business returns to normal.
        No over-policing of people who are unhoused and sheltering in hotels.
        Resources for new mothers and babies in sheltering spaces, including diapers, wipes, and other
        essentials.
        Debt forgiveness of back rent for renters who cannot pay rent or utilities during this time.
        Personal protective equipment, training, testing, and paid sick leave for all people working in
        transitional housing and shelters. Protections for residents and workers.
        The return of buildings to the people once developers default, abandon it or leave it vacant.
        The use of private hotels, closed schools, the Henry J. Kaiser Convention Center and the Coliseum to
        provide housing for those who need it.
        Rent and mortgage moratorium and forgiveness across the board for the length of time necessary not to
        experience massive evictions.
        No evictions citywide.
        Stop all sweeps of houseless settlements and provide bathrooms, showers, hand washing stations, soap,
        drinking water, laundry vouchers, dumpsters, vermin abatement, and cleaning supplies.
    • Transportation
      • Protections for transit drivers including partitions between driver and passengers, space for physical
        distancing, paid sick leave, and personal protective equipment.
        Disclosure of COVID 19 positive status for emergency services drivers who are transporting someone
        who has COVID 19.
        AC Transit must implement safety guidelines for drivers and passengers.
        Guaranteed free public transportation for frontline workers, including BART.
        Protection and funds for families of transportation workers and mandatory free testing and retesting for
        all transportation workers.
    • Other Resources
      • Stop all nonessential construction in marginalized high-risk communities.
      • Transparency on the use of COVID disaster funding in Oakland.
      • The City of Oakland’s Department of Race and Equity must activate itself around the disparity of this moment and be given additional resources and staff to do so.
      • City of Oakland shall Fully implement the ordinance establishing the Department of Race & Equity and increase staffing with an additional 7 FTE and requisite funding for the Department of Race and Equity.
      • Prioritizing community projects- City and County staff time and resources should go to community projects first (affordable housing, small business support, etc) and private profit-driven projects and proposals last.
      • Food access- ensure all Black people have access to healthy and fresh food even when the market drives up food prices in the crisis.
      • Diversify the boards and commissions that inform and govern city decisions to ensure Black folks are part of decision making.
      • Ensure pedestrian safety and traffic calming measures in East and West Oakland neighborhoods so that Black children and youth can walk, play and bike outside without fear of injury or fatality. Without the isolation or criminalization through enforcement of communities, with impacted communities at the table to be part of any plans.
    • Long Term Demands
      • Reparations, which include: debt forgiveness, free education, free healthcare, enforcement of CA Slavery Era Insurance Registry & similar local slavery era disclosure ordinances including mandatory reporting, imposition of maximum fines & penalties, mandatory fund contribution from companies that have disclosed already, and distribution of funds to Black-led organizations serving Black populations. Possibly even expand law to include profiteers from the housing/financial crisis and carceral systems.
      • Healthcare
        • Access to long term mental health care, funding of culturally competent free clinics, cooperatives, community programming centered around healing and facilitation of individual and group agency.
        • Environment – cessation of environmentally compromising projects  placed in black and brown communities, united and systematic planning, and immediate remediation of toxic neighborhoods.
      • Food Security
        • Create neighborhood food banks.
        • Fund urban farms.
        • Fund urban gardening.
        • Utilize public land to grow food for distribution.
        • Plant edible plants in marginalized neighborhoods.
        • Tax property owners for boarded “unavailable” housing discouraging vacancies to raise prices or to divest neighborhoods for speculators.
      • Education:
        • No more privatization of public schools serving Black communities.
        • Fully functioning state of the art facilities with the appropriate technology.
        • Culturally relevant curriculum.
        • No sale of school land to private developers.
        • Community oversight.
        • Staff should reflect student body recruitment and incentivize to become educators.
        • Find out of school community based enrichment.
        • College fund.
        • Professional/craft/trade training.
        • No police in schools.
      • Housing
        • Land trust for Black people in East and West Oakland. Utilizing eminent domain over vacant or underutilized properties to create a land trust for housing and economic development for Black people. This would be a form of reparations for many things but specifically for the use of eminent domain to displace Black residents from Oakland and ongoing gentrification etc.
        • Toxic-free communities, immediate repudiation, right to be housed elsewhere during remediation with funds to relocate with right to return/right of first refusal at the previous rate.
        • Equitable neighborhood services including cleaning and access to parks.
      • Criminal Justice Reform
        • Alameda County must increase diversion programs that keep people out of cages and allow them to successfully thrive.
        • End cash money bail.
        • No late night releases out of Santa Rita jail.
        • An audit of the Santa Rita jail by an impartial party.
        • Redistribute recidivism funds to culturally competent programming invested in education, job training, and service to those incarcerated.
        • Remove all police from schools and redistribute those funds to student materials and needs.
      • Public Safety
        • The Oakland Police Commission should have the autonomy to function without interference from city leadership. The citizens of Oakland have agreed with the establishment of the concept of the Police Commission in order to create proper and impartial oversight for OPD.
        • The city of Oakland must create and implement a response to mental health crisis, interpersonal violence and substance abuse that does not lead with law enforcement.
        • The city of Oakland must redefine public safety to include jobs, housing, education, clean streets, mental health and access to food, water and clean air.
        • The Oakland Police Department must be transparent and honest about incidents of Use of Force which still disproportionately impact Black Oaklanders.
      • Transportation
        • Provide free transportation to unhoused/displaced persons with a means to access health care and other human needs.
        • Provide free transportation to all low-income community members.
  3. Environmental Justice’s Role in the COVID-19 Crisis
    • Ibram X. Kendi, Director of the Antiracist Research and Policy Center at American University, has led the call for states, counties, and labs to report racial demographics of the people being tested for, infected with, hospitalized with, or killed by the virus.
      • “Sometimes racial data tells us something we don’t know. Other times we need racial data to confirm something we already seem to know,” says Kendi.
    • For decades, researchers, and activists have documented the racial disparities that cause the underlying conditions leaving communities of color vulnerable. These systems show patterns of discriminatory practices that are all too apparent to be coincidental.
    • Lubna Ahmed, director of environmental health at WE ACT for Environmental Justice, stated, “In public health, it’s often said that your ZIP code is more indicative of your health outcomes than your genetic code.”
    • The placement of coal plants, waste incinerators, refineries, landfills, bus depots, and other sites in communities of color has long emitted toxic pollutants into the water and particulate matter into the air. Air pollutants enter through the lung and go into the bloodstream and are linked to cardiovascular and pulmonary disease, chronic health issues that increase chances of contracting severe cases of COVID-19. The Harvard study also points out bad indoor air quality and poor ventilation are prevalent in low-income housing.
    • We must apply a historic lens and complete demographic data on virus cases when allocating resources and supporting communities. We need to ensure there are not just emergency supplies provided, but also an inspection of how underlying conditions are created and can be fixed. We need leaders that understand these inequities and fight to change systems. To create justice, marginalized communities must have decision-making roles in regards to their health, homes, and futures.
  4. Essential Workers Denied Compensation For Job-Related COVID-19
    • several front-line workers addressed lawmakers Wednesday, calling for the state to enact a more robust set of protections for essential workers who believe they contracted the novel coronavirus while doing their job.
    • Rogers and workers’ advocates, including the AFL-CIO and the National Employment Law Project, want legislators to make the state’s coronavirus workers’ compensation laws presumptive.
      • That would mean if an essential worker got sick with COVID, it would be on the employer to prove that it wasn’t the job that got the worker sick — not on the employee to prove that the job did get them sick.
    • Joe Brennan from the Connecticut Business and Industry Association said a broad-brush presumptive provision could punish cash-strapped employers who made the decision to stay open for the public good.
      • “We’re not going to be able to accept the fact that every single employee that’s determined to be ‘essential’ … that anybody that gets COVID is going to be a workers’ comp case. I think that’s going to be extremely problematic for the system,” Brennan said.
  5. Exposure By Patrick Skahill
    • ?
  6. Connecting the Dots Between Environmental Injustice and the Coronavirus By Kathrine Bagley
    • Low-income and minority communities have been hit hardest by covid
    • structural inequalities are a major driver of why we see these different social and environmental conditions in communities of color.
    • You see these different patterns of land uses, whether it be transportation networks, large highways where you have a lot of traffic, or industrial activity.
    • There’s a recent Harvard study that shows that with long-term exposure to PM2.5 [fine particulate air pollution], there’s an association with higher mortality rates for individuals who had a Covid-19 infection. We have a pattern in this country, where communities of color and low-income communities host more of these [heavily polluting] land uses. I think that has played a major role in why we see the disparate impacts of Covid-19 as it relates to morbidity and mortality rates.
    • higher levels of air pollution were linked to an 8-percent rise in the Covid-19 death rate
    • “We have a lot of communities that are basically sacrifice zones because they are dumping grounds for polluting facilities.”
    • PM2.5 itself causes asthma, heart disease, stroke. It elevates blood pressure. It increases infant mortality rates. It can cause birth defects. It can cause low-birth-weight births. It also can cause diabetes, cancer, premature mortality. That’s PM2.5 by itself.
    • these [Trump administration] rollbacks that’s really problematic for communities impacted by environmental injustice.
  7. Coronavirus is not just a health crisis — it’s an environmental justice crisis By Yvette Cabrera
    • “Nothing would be more tragic than to stop at this point” -MLK
    • The COVID-19 pandemic is not just a health crisis, it’s an environmental justice crisis.
    • The environmental movement should reckon with the
      disproportionate effects of environmental contamination
    • as skyrocketing unemployment is predicted to increase poverty rates and widen racial disparities, these same communities find themselves in the crosshairs of COVID-19. In Chicago, African Americans represent 60 percent of the city’s COVID-19-related deaths, despite only comprising 30 percent of the city’s population. African Americans in states such as Michigan, Illinois, and Louisiana have also been disproportionately killed by COVID-19 — and early data suggest the disparity could be widest in the South.
    • Decades ago, sociologist and civil rights activist W.E.B. DuBois zeroed in on how social and environmental conditions led to health disparities between black and whites, and he offered solutions that addressed the physical environment.
    • COVID-19 is one more chapter in this saga, and we’re seeing that the severity of outcomes is related to a person’s environment. Public health researchers and advocates are concerned that those who live in polluted neighborhoods will fare the worst. It’s why residents are pleading for
      stronger air pollution regulations in San Bernardino, California, and why residents of Louisiana’s St. James Parish are battling yet another plastics plant.
  8. A State-by-state look at Coronavirus in Prisons – The Marshall Project
    • Coronavirus infection rates are extremely high in prisons compared to the outside population
      • 545 basis points for California prisons versus 130 for San Francisco and 208 for California
      • 1598 for NJ prisons versus 229 for NJ
    • Death rates are also extremely high
      • 27 basis points death rate for NJ prisoners versus 18 for general NJ public

 

Other Notes

  • Structural determinants of health
    • Rich people can buy better health
    • Health outcomes mirror marginalization
  • Sacrifice zones
    • The place where the LULUs are
  • True cost accounting
    • Incorporating the cost of externalities into the cost of goods and services
  • Economic blackmail
    • Sometimes communities and individuals are forced to choose short-term needs over long-term needs
  • Synergistic effects
    • The combined effects of different kinds of pollution harming the human body.
  • New deal
    • The idea that the federal government should intervene in a period of crisis
  • Teach-in on abolishing the police on campus
    • Articulated policy decisions around policing as decisions rather than the broader cultural perspective that this is the only default based on assumptions from neoliberalism
    • I brought up Title IX and the need to represent the needs of students rather than just the institution by bringing real crisis counsellors on to campus instead of relying on academic counsellors
    • I brought up the antifascist work we did at rainbow with the IWW
    • I brought up the playa rangers and Moxie’s involvement with High Rock doing similar work at bars and clubs in the city
    • We talked about butterfly brigades and responding to the exoneration of Dan White by burning cop cars
  • Capitalist response to covid
    • President calls it a Chinese threat to the economy
    • Government was very late in providing testing
      • Tried to oppose testing
    • Some employees classified as essential.
      • Furloughs not provided
      • Enormous job losses
      • Loss of income and benefits
      • Government pitted cities and states against each other
        • Stole PPE from companies, countries, etc
    • Increases income inequality
    • Increases insecurity
      • Rise in domestic violence, suicide, crime, mental health crises, etc.
    • Evictions and rise in homelessness
    • Overcrowded housing
    • Government does not provide healthcare to fill the lost benefits due to job losses
    • Pharmaceutical industry being subsidized
    • Government giving misinformation due to political interests
      • Fake treatments pitched at the pulpit and then not taken when he got sick
    • Economic growth prioritized over people’s lives
    • Social inequalities increased in educational arena
    • Technology gap
      • BIPOC students disadvantaged in online classes because of a lack of access to computers and the internet
  • Socialist response to covid
    • EU works with WHO to understand covid
      • Quickly develops and deploys testing
    • Government backed furloughs
      • Jobs guaranteed
      • Salary guaranteed
      • Sick leave guaranteed
      • Benefits guaranteed
      • Housing protected
        • Eviction ban
        • Rent assistance
    • Government provided widespread testing
    • Schools were able to remain open because of masks and testing

HOMEWORK ASSIGNMENT – DUE October 12th

For Session Eight, find a song that focuses on an environmental issue and bring the lyrics to the song to class. Be able to access the song so we can listen to it in class.