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Food Delivery Workers Are Coronavirus First Responders — Here’s How You Can Repay Us

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In this time of crisis, delivery workers are helping to keep you going. But the truth is that we are a vulnerable and underappreciated population on the best of days.
By Wilfred Chan

 

Delivery workers have suddenly been thrust to the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic. Take New York City: With the five boroughs’8 million people being urged to stay home and its restaurants ordered closed, save for takeout and delivery, the city’s delivery workers — like me — are essentially being asked to become a kind of the first responder, filling a vital gap in the city’s infrastructure as all else grinds to a halt.

The city’s delivery workers — like me — are essentially being asked to become a kind of the first responder.

This is a dangerous undertaking. According to government data, as reported by The New York Times, couriers risk on-the-work exposure to the disease at almost the same rate as nurses, social workers, and paramedics. In the course of a full workday, we might do as many as two dozen deliveries. That means interacting with countless people, from customers to security guards to restaurant staff, not to mention surfaces like door handles, intercoms and elevator buttons in buildings all over the city.

Two weeks ago, before New York’s restaurant shut down, I delivered ramen, pizza, and burgers to a city that was already on edge. With each order, I wondered if I might be unlucky enough to meet a customer who had the virus without knowing it or enter a building where the virus was present. Of course, I had gotten an email from the service I was working for, UberEats, reminding me to wash my hands frequently. But when you’re a delivery worker, you don’t carry a sink around with you. I used my little bottle of hand sanitizer so often that I nearly ran out — and considered going home if I did.

Responding to the increasing dangers, apps like Postmates, UberEats, and DoorDash have introduced a new “contactless deliveries” feature, which allows us to make drop-offs in the building lobby, with a doorman, or outside a customer’s door. The catch is, only customers can choose this option when ordering — and some are still not aware it exists. If they don’t select it, we are still expected to hand their order to them in person, and that puts us both at risk.

A few days ago, I decided things were getting too dangerous and stopped doing deliveries. As a freelance writer, I am fortunate enough to have other kinds of work that can hopefully make up for my lost income. But most of New York City’s delivery workers don’t have the same luxury. The vast majority of New York’s couriers are immigrants and people of color, many of them middle-aged, often with limited English, who rely on delivery for income. Many are paid well below New York’s minimum wage, which means they must work grueling shifts — as long as 10 to 12 hours a day — just to scrape by. The apps can pay as little as $3 for a delivery that might take half an hour, and some customers don’t even leave a tip.

We have to ride quickly if we want to make a living wage — whether it’s a pandemic or a blizzard.

The truth is that we are a vulnerable and underappreciated population on the best of days. For one thing, Manhattan’s tight geography means the most time and cost-efficient way to do delivery is by bicycle. We have to ride quickly if we want to make a living wage — whether it’s a pandemic or a blizzard. But this makes New York’s delivery workers uniquely vulnerable. According to research by Queens College professor Do Jun Lee, half of New York City delivery workers surveyed experience aches and pain from work every week, and 1 in 6 are in pain every day. As a result, delivery workers here miss work due to injury as much as 44 times the national annual average for all jobs.

Even without a pandemic, we face death in the streets. Last year was the deadliest year on record for New York City cyclists in nearly two decades: Out of the 29 people killed, at least seven were delivery cyclists. This reflects the inadequate bike infrastructure in New York, which like most American cities, is designed first and foremost for cars. Without protected bike lanes, delivery workers and other cyclists are funneled into New York traffic where they have to compete with speeding cabs, garbage trucks and surging fleets of rideshare vehicles. Just this week, as Mayor Bill de Blasio urged New Yorkers to avoid public transit and switch to biking, cyclist injuries increased 42 percent compared to the same time in March last year.

To top it off, Lee’s research has found that half of New York’s delivery workers are robbed or assaulted at least once on the job. Yet most do not go to the police for fear of further harassment. This is with good reason. For years now, de Blasio has been leading police crack down on delivery workers for riding throttle-powered electric bikes, which he claims are dangerous without much evidence: The NYPD’s own data shows that out of 11,000 pedestrian injuries in 2018, e-bikes were involved in just nine. But this targeted campaign against workers has been ruinous: The fine for riding an e-bike, $500, could easily equal a week or two of our earnings. (Meanwhile, the paying users of Citibike’s pedal-assisted e-bikes, or Revel’s gas-powered mopeds, are free to blast around town.) That the mayor has ordered a temporary halt to the crackdown during the COVID-19 crisis only proves its absurdity.

University Of Evansville Annual Engineers Week Celebration and Awards

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Annual Engineers Week Celebration and Awards

The College of Engineering and Computer Science held its annual celebration for Engineers Week at a reception in Eykamp Hall on February 19, 2020.  Several engineering majors were announced as new inductees in the Tau Delta Kappa engineering honor society by Dr. Jared Fulcher, assistant professor of mechanical engineering.  Other engineering students were recognized by the college and the Office of Development.

Linh Trinh, a junior computer engineering major received the Paul “PR” Brown Spirit Award.  This award is presented annually to an engineering major who has been nominated by the faculty and has completed at least four semesters in good academic standing, who is an encouragement and help to his/her fellow students, and who demonstrates leadership in fostering cooperation and camaraderie among the engineering students.

Jesse Batronis, a junior mechanical engineering major received James M. Hall, Jr. Memorial Award.  This award is presented annually to a student of the junior engineering class who is considered by the faculty to be the most outstanding based on scholastic achievement, extra-curricular activities, character, responsibility, attitude, and potential for professional growth.

The Engineers Week Reception was hosted by the Dean’s Advisory Council for the College of Engineering and Computer Science.  The College is appreciative of generous donations supporting the banquet by Lead Sponsor ALCOA and Table Sponsors, Control Specialists, Inc., Embry Automation & Controls, IEEE, Lochmueller Group, PCI Skanska, and the UE Student Government Association.

 

 

YESTERYEAR: President Taft Visits Evansville

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President Taft Visits Evansville

by Pat Sides

Evansville became an even busier hub of activity after April 6, 1917, when the United States formally entered the war in Europe a few days after President Wilson urged Congress to take action against Germany.

As local men departed for Europe, women rose to the occasion by supporting such organizations as the Red Cross. While some volunteers rolled bandages or sewed clothing for soldiers in a building downtown, others worked at the Red Cross Canteen on Fulton Avenue (pictured here), which was located across from the L & N station. 

The tall man in the center of the image is former President William Howard Taft, one of several celebrities who visited the city to rally support for the war; at the far right is Mayor Benjamin Bosse.

EPD REPORT

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EPD REPORT

“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” March 23, 2020

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“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” March 23, 2020

“Right Jab And Middle Jab And Left Jab” was created because we have a couple of commenters that post on a daily basis either in our “IS IT TRUE” or “Readers Forum” columns concerning National or International issues.
The majority of our “IS IT TRUE” columns are about local or state issues, so we have decided to give our more opinionated readers exclusive access to our newly created “LEFT JAB and Middle Jab and RIGHT JAB”  column. They now have this post to exclusively discuss national or world issues that they feel passionate about.
We shall be posting the “LEFT JAB” AND “MIDDLE JAB” AND “RIGHT JAB” several times a week.  Oh, “LEFT JAB” is a liberal view, “MIDDLE JAB” is the libertarian view and the “RIGHT JAB is representative of the more conservative views. Also, any reader who would like to react to the written comments in this column is free to do so.

ADOPT A PET

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Suzy Q is a beautiful brindle Shepherd mix! She was pulled from Evansville Animal Care & Control in January when VHS had more open kennels. She is heartworm-positive, but her treatment will be covered at no extra cost to her adopters. Her adoption fee is $110 and includes her spay, microchip, vaccines, and more. Contact Vanderburgh Humane at (812) 426-2563 or adoptions@vhslifesaver.org for details!

Health Department Updates COVID-19 Case Count

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The Indiana State Department of Health (ISDH) today reported 76 new positive cases of COVID-19, bringing to 201 the number of Hoosiers diagnosed through ISDH, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and private laboratories. Four Hoosiers have died.

A total of 661 results were reported, bringing to 1,494 the number of tests reported to ISDH to date.

The new cases involve residents of Bartholomew (4), Boone (1), Delaware (1), Dubois (1), Floyd (1), Franklin (2), Grant (1), Hamilton (8), Hancock (2), Hendricks (2), Howard (1), Johnson (5), Lake (3), Madison (1), Marion (35), Monroe (1) Morgan (1), Putnam (1), Ripley (1), St. Joseph (2), Scott (1) and Tipton (1) counties. The list of counties with cases is included in the ISDH COVID-19 dashboard at https://www.in.gov/coronavirus/, which will be updated daily at 10 a.m. Cases are listed by county of residence. Private lab reporting may be delayed and will be reflected in the map and count when results are received at ISDH.

The dashboard has also been updated to remove a negative case that was incorrectly reported to ISDH as positive from Greene County and to reflect a change in residence that moves one case from Hancock County to Marion County.

Additional updates on the state’s response to the COVID-19 outbreak may be provided later today.

 

“IS IT TRUE” MARCH 22, 2020

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We hope that today’s “IS IT TRUE” will provoke honest and open dialogue concerning issues that we, as responsible citizens of this community, need to address in a rational and responsible way?

(Recently we detected an issue where our subscribers may have not been getting breaking news alerts from the City-County Observer. This notification is to let you know that starting today you have been added to receive future news alerts.  If you no longer want to receive future news alerts please opt-out by clicking the  link in your e-mail to unsubscribe)

IS IT TRUE over the last several days some of our readers sent us some “IS IT TRUE’S” comments we found interesting?  …posted below are the “IS IT TRUE’S” sent to us by some of our readers that we hope you will not only find interesting but helpful during this time?

IS IT TRUE we encourage you to post your own “IS IT TRUE’S” about your personal observations, feelings pertaining to the challenges you are experiencing concerning the Coronarvius pandemic in our comment section?

POSTED BELOW ARE THE COMMENTS SENT TO US BY OUR READERS.  WE POST THESE COMMENTS WITHOUT BIAS OR EDITING.

IS IT TRUE anyone who doesn’t believe that the Coronavirus is made up propaganda of “Fake News” need some immediate psychological intervention?

IS IT TRUE one can create their own disinfectant by adding 3 teaspoons of bleach per quart of water or by adding 5 tablespoons of bleach per gallon of water?

IS IT TRUE that there are currently 22,000 Coronavirus cases in the United States?  …that New York has about half of the cases?

IS IT TRUE so far the media rock stars concerning the dissemination of accurate and current information concerning the Coronavirus are Andrew Como the Governor of New York, Dr. Anthorty Fauci, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Disease and Vice President Mike Pence?

IS IT TRUE it took a public health crisis to bring the best and the worst out in people?

IS IT TRUE it was just announced on national television that 80 % of the people living in Madrid Spain are expected to contract the Coronavirus?

IS IT TRUE that adversity brings strength?

IS IT TRUE our medical providers and first responders are the best example of what public service is all about?

IS IT TRUE when people stay at home they may be saving a life?

IS IT TRUE we are fighting the Coronavirus war without the appropriate ammunition?  …at this point ammunition could be defined as masks, gloves, gowns, testing kits, medical supplies, ventilators, the appropriate number of hospital beds or a vaccine?

IS IT TRUE one way is to attack a famine is to make the distribution of food more important than the storage of it?

IS IT TRUE that information is power but rumors aren’t?

IS IT TRUE that it’s obvious when it comes to having complete knowledge about the Coronavius that some people know that they don’t know and some people don’t know that they don’t know?

IS IT TRUE its time that relatives and parents of millenniums demand that they begin to quarantine themselves?

IS IT TRUE many people feel that the government shouldn’t bail out the Airlines of the Cruise lines because planes and ships are considered to be worth many trillion dollars?

IS IT TRUE its time for the government to start focusing on us when it comes to granting non-refundable tax dollars to help our citizens to pay for everyday necessities?  … its time for our elected officials to realize that it costs a family of four around $1,000 a week to pay for the bare necessities?

IS IT TRUE there are major differences between a pandemic and a world war?

IS IT TRUE at this point the economy should be considered to be secondary to the health and welfare of our citizens?

IS IT TRUE get on your knees and pray for divine intervention?

IS IT TRUE when the people fear the Government we have Tyranny!  When the Government fears the people we have Liberty?

IS IT TRUE our “READERS POLLS” are non-scientific but trendy?

Today’s “Readers Poll” question is: Which media is the most effective in giving us the current updates about the Coronavirus?
Please take time and read our articles entitled “STATEHOUSE FILES, LAW ENFORCEMENT, “READERS POLL”, BIRTHDAYS, HOT JOBS”, EDUCATION, OBITUARIES and “LOCAL SPORTS”.
You now are able to subscribe to get the CCO daily.
If you would like to advertise on the CCO please contact us at City-County Observer@live.com

 

Commentary: Democracy In The Time Of Coronavirus

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Commentary: Democracy In The Time Of Coronavirus

By Mary Beth Schneider
TheStatehouseFile.com

INDIANAPOLIS — We are defined these days by numbers.

The number infected. The number dead. The number of businesses shuttered and unemployment claims filed. The number of testing kits available and number of tests completed. The number of days our children will be out of school.

Mary Beth Schneider

Most tallies, sadly, are only growing, with more sick, more dead, more unemployed.

One number, for Indiana, is shrinking: The number of days until the May 5 primary election.

Today, it remains an open question whether that election will take place that day, and whether voters will even go to the polls or instead make their choices by mail in an unheard-of expansion of absentee balloting.

The election may seem the least of our problems, and the life-and-death tragedies the world is facing in this pandemic changes our perspective on almost everything.

But in a nation of government “of the people, by the people, for the people,” the right of the people to make their choices is no trivial matter. When voters are seeing parts of government failing them, and parts of government rising to address a crisis unlike any we’ve faced before, it might be more important than ever to ensure that democracy isn’t considered a luxury we cannot afford.

This week, Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett announced that absentee ballot applications will be sent to every registered voter in Marion County. It’s an unprecedented step at a time when unprecedented steps are becoming the norm. And in a rare show of bipartisanship, Indiana Republican Party Chairman Kyle Hupfer and Indiana Democratic Party Chairman John Zody issued a joint letter asking the Indiana Election Commission to temporarily suspend the rules on who can apply for an absentee ballot to let anyone, for any reason, vote by mail.

“Maintaining the integrity of our elections and preserving a citizen’s right vote, even under difficult circumstances, is the bedrock of our republic,” they wrote.

An emergency meeting of the commission — comprised of two Republicans and two Democrats — was set for Friday, then canceled. And Gov. Eric Holcomb, in his Thursday coronavirus briefing, made no announcement, as many had expected him to do.

Asked about the primary by reporters, Holcomb said Secretary of State Connie Lawson was in ongoing discussions with Zody and Kupfer to find consensus.

“I personally support postponing the primary election,” Holcomb said. “I say this out of, first, concern for county officials that have to conduct these elections, for poll workers and voters themselves. The details have to be worked out.”

On the table: Moving the primary to June 2 or even as late as August.

So far, Democrats at least have not agreed to that, preferring instead to expand mail-in voting.

Time is running out to make a decision. Printing and mailing that many absentee applications and ballots cannot be done overnight.

Indiana doesn’t want to be Ohio, where the decision to postpone that state’s primary until June 2 was made the day before its March 17 scheduled date, after a court fight over whether the governor had the power to make that decision.

And we don’t want to be Illinois, which went ahead with its March 17 primary election only for some voters to find their polling places closed or opening late when poll workers failed to show up.

Anthony Long, a Democrat who has served on the Indiana Election Commission for decades, told me Thursday that he is glad to see Holcomb trying to reach bipartisan agreement.

Holcomb may have no choice, despite his declaration of a state of emergency. Indiana law says the primary “shall” be held on the first Tuesday in May and puts emergency powers regarding elections in the hands of the election commission, not the governor. Given that it would require a unanimous decision by the commission, it makes bipartisanship a necessity, not a nicety.

Many Democrats have started to fret that President Trump will try to postpone the November election if the pandemic is still disrupting America.

While Long said he’s not had anyone raise that concern with him, he said that’s one reason why “it’s so important that there are (bipartisan) discussions at all levels.”

“There just has to be open communication,” he said. “If either side at any time starts doing this on their own, without joint participation, then it’s a real recipe for disaster.”

We’re already in a health and economic disaster.

We don’t need a democratic one too.

FOOTNOTE: Mary Beth Schneider is an editor at TheStatehouseFile.com, a news website powered by Franklin College journalists.