These
Migrant Workers Called 911 During Hurricane Florence. But No One Came To
Their Rescue.
The owner of the farm they worked on reportedly told
county officials the workers "had everything they needed."
BuzzFeed News
Reporter
Reporting From
Kinston, North Carolina
Posted on October 1,
2018, at 9:35 p.m. ET
Provided to BuzzFeed
News
Farmworkers in
Kinston, North Carolina, woke up to find their camp flooded on Sept. 15,
2018.
KINSTON, North Carolina — Hours after
Hurricane Florence made landfall in North Carolina last month, battering the
state with heavy rains and flooding, a group of migrant farmworkers woke up
to find themselves in waist-deep water.
Isolated in a migrant labor camp in rural
Jones County, far from the view of paved roads, the workers called 911 and
told emergency officials they needed to be rescued. Then they waited for
hours, watching as their mattresses, refrigerators, and other belongings
floated by in the rising floodwaters.
But unbeknownst to the workers at the time,
a county emergency management team had canceled an effort to extract them,
after the owner of the farm where the men were working called county
officials to say the laborers at the camp were “fine.”
“We were there in the rain and didn’t know
what to do,” a worker who was among those stranded at the camp, and who asked
to remain anonymous for fear of repercussions, told BuzzFeed News.
“The water started coming in, but we hoped
that it would keep flowing and go down,” he said. “Once it got higher than a
meter, we had to get out.”
Located deep in eastern North Carolina's
farming country, Jones County was among the areas hardest hit by Florence.
Bracing for the hurricane's impact, the county had declared a state of
emergency on Sept. 11, four days before Florence made landfall, and ordered
mandatory evacuations for its roughly 10,000 residents.
Men at the camp were told a hurricane was
approaching, the worker told BuzzFeed News, but many of them — including
himself — had never experienced one before. He said he was not aware of any
evacuation order.
Eric Merritt, Jones County’s emergency
management director, confirmed to BuzzFeed News that the county received the
workers' 911 calls on the morning of Sept. 15, and said that first
responders, including a swift-water rescue team, were initially dispatched to
the camp in response.
The rescue crews had trouble reaching the
location because of a road that had been blocked off by rising water, Merritt
said. In the meantime, he said, the owner of the farm where the workers were
located contacted the county to say that the group of roughly 35 to 40 men
were fine.
“We contacted a swift-water team, and by
that time the farm owner stated he made contact with [the workers] and they
were fine, that they were just in an isolated area,” Merritt said. “That they
had everything they needed as far as food and water.”
It was not clear why the farm owner, Randy
Riggs, of Riggs Brothers Farm, called off the county's rescue efforts, or why
workers at the camp stayed behind four days after the mandatory evacuation
had been issued. Riggs did not respond to multiple messages from BuzzFeed
News.
Asked why an emergency rescue would be
called off on the word of the property owner, despite firsthand requests from
the stranded workers, Merritt said he was not sure.
“He’s the actual owner and representative of
the property,” Merritt said. “In that situation we’ll use the information
from the most reliable case.”
Pressed on whether those asking to be
rescued should be considered the most reliable source, Merritt conceded, “I
guess in this case, yes."
The farmworkers weren't the only ones who
tried to arrange rescues at the camp. As they waited for help to arrive,
workers had reached out to advocates who work with the migrant community in
eastern North Carolina, and asked them to relay the situation at the camp to
officials.
Two migrant worker advocates told BuzzFeed
News they were contacted by people at the camp on the morning of Sept. 15,
and began to reach out to emergency services and other agencies, including
the North Carolina Growers Association and the US Department of Labor, in the
hopes of finding someone who could intervene to rescue the workers from the
floods.
Melissa Bailey, an outreach director for the
Kinston Community Health Center, which provides medical services to migrant
workers in the region, told BuzzFeed News she received a call from one of the
farmworkers sometime after 7 a.m. that morning. She said she then made
multiple calls to 911 between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m., telling officials the
workers at Riggs Brothers Farm needed to be rescued.
Caitlin Ryland, supervising attorney at
Legal Aid of North Carolina, said her organization was also contacted about
the situation at the flooded camp and asked to help reach county officials
who could get rescue teams to the workers.
With emergency services in Jones County
apparently unresponsive to the situation, Ryland said, she contacted the
Labor Department to see if federal authorities might be able to intervene.
In the end, it was an employee with the
North Carolina Growers Association — a trade group that contracts with farms
to provide migrant labor to North Carolina farms — who eventually picked up
the workers from the site late Saturday afternoon, and took them to a shelter
set up at a community college in a neighboring county.
Both the worker BuzzFeed News spoke to and
the NCGA said that the workers appeared to be unharmed at the time of the
rescue.
Composed of about 700 farm owners in the
state — including Riggs Brothers Farms — the NCGA coordinates the hiring of
more than 9,000 seasonal migrant workers in the state annually, and
is the biggest labor contractor in the country for the H-2A temporary agricultural
visa program, according to the Department of
Labor's Employment and Training Administration.
Before the hurricane hit, NCGA Deputy
Director Lee Wicker said, the association had reached out to farm owners to
remind them to take steps to protect their employees. “Our message to our
growers was they needed to take the necessary steps to take care of these
workers like they’re your own family,” he said.
Upon hearing about the stranded workers in
Jones County, Wicker said, the group “immediately dispatched our field reps”
to pick up the men.
“I think the grower should have done better
than he did, but thankfully we were able to get them out of there,” Wicker
told BuzzFeed News. “We’re really sorry it happened how it happened, and we
wish the grower would have taken additional steps.”
The incident underscores the perilous
position that many migrant workers across North Carolina found themselves in
as Florence battered the state last month. Despite playing a vital role in
the state's large agricultural sector, migrant workers have been largely
ignored in the aftermath of the disaster.
Many of the workers BuzzFeed News spoke to
last month said they have now found
themselves out of work and running low on money. As seasonal
workers, they are sometimes dismissed as only temporary guests, not residents
of the communities where they can spend up to 10 months a year. Relying on
the daily work provided by a temporary visa, many are also hesitant to ask
for assistance, out of fear that doing so could affect their employment or
immigration status.
Despite being encouraged to evacuate if they
were in danger, Ryland said, many laborers feared they could be retaliated
against if they left on their own, without the direction or help of a farm
owner or labor contractor. As a result, many failed to evacuate before the
storm hit, leaving themselves vulnerable to the rising floodwaters and other
weather hazards as Florence unleashed torrents of rain and wind on the state.
“A lot of migrant workers, their lives are
very dependent to their employer,” she said, including services like
transportation to church, stores, or medical attention. “Most of them have no
independent means of transportation and that can be very scary.”
|
Thursday, October 11, 2018
After-Actions: Migrant Workers Called 911 During Hurricane Florence. But No One Came To Their Rescue.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment