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Elirose Pierre-Louis: Tracing the Causes of Death for a Migrant Worker

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Published by bana2166- 10-12-07
news Elirose Pierre-Louis: Tracing the Causes of Death for a Migrant Worker

Elirose Pierre-Louis: Tracing the Causes of Death for a Migrant Worker
Friday, October 12, 2007; 12:00 AM
WASHINGTON -- Elirose Pierre-Louis died last month at age 56 of a heart attack. A Haitian immigrant who labored in this country legally for more than 20 years, she last worked as a tomato picker on Virginia's Eastern Shore, making $6 an hour.
Elirose suffered from high blood pressure and diabetes and couldn't afford the care she needed, according to a health worker who attended to her in her final hours. While a weak heart ultimately killed her, her circumstances likely hastened her death.
As a poor worker living in a remote rural area, she was less likely to have easy access to a health care provider. As a seasonal farmworker who worked long hours and moved on when the crops were picked, her ability to see a doctor for a regular checkup was limited.
According to the National Center for Farmworker Health, agricultural laborers have long been considered to have the worst overall medical status in the country. A 2000 report on the health of California farmworkers, sponsored by the California Endowment, found that "no group of workers in America faces greater barriers in accessing basic health services."
While some of the conditions that jeopardize the health of farmworkers are unique to a rural setting, poor pay, limited health services and substandard housing are common across a wide spectrum of jobs. Today 47 million people in the United States lack health insurance, only around 5 percent of which are farmworkers. In other words, farmworkers are not alone.
According to a new study released this week, 80.4 percent of waiters, 78.8 percent of dishwashers, 76.8 percent of day care providers and 74.7 percent of telemarketers do not have employer-sponsored health insurance or a retirement plan. These and other workers make up 22.1 percent of U.S. workers -- nearly 41 million people who hold "bad jobs," according to the study by the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington and the Center for Social Policy at the University of Massachusetts at Boston.
Public assistance programs such as food stamps, Medicaid and the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) are crucial. But some of these programs are off-limits to those who make enough money to be above the poverty line, and nearly all public assistance is unavailable to immigrants who are here illegally or have less than five years of legal status. SCHIP, the expansion of which President Bush vetoed last week, also excludes legal immigrant children who have not been here for five years.
One of the few options that poor and moderate-income workers and their families have are community health centers. These facilities often offer extended hours and bilingual social workers. Today, centers serve about 16 million people throughout the United States, according to Dan Hawkins, policy director at the National Association of Community Health Centers.
Congress is seeking to increase community health center funding by at least $200 million. But if President Bush holds firm to his promise of not signing any bill allocating more funds than his administration has requested, the centers may be left high and dry.
That would be particularly ironic considering that Bush has long defended the role of community health centers as crucial to the country's safety net. In fact, he nearly doubled funding as part of a six-year health centers initiative launched during his first year in office. That funding, however, has not kept up with the increased need for affordable basic health care services.
Care for people such as Elirose continues to be scarce. According to Hawkins, only one in four farmworkers has a health center to go to.
So like many others, Elirose had attempted to move up the ladder, so to speak, from farmworker to an employee in an urban area where the opportunity to obtain insurance would supposedly be better.
Last year she began working for a subcontractor responsible for cleaning and maintaining property at a university in Miami. But when Elirose and her fellow janitorial workers tried to unionize in order to secure more benefits than the $6.65 they were making an hour, the university canceled the contract and 100 people lost their jobs, including Elirose.
She then hit the road again and, in order to help relatives back in Haiti, returned to seasonal farm work. This time she didn't make it through the tomato harvest.
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By bana2166 on 10-12-07, 09:05 AM
news Just Work: Unjust End

Just Work: Unjust End
Posted September 28, 2007 | 12:30 PM (EST)
Read More: Elirose Pierre-Louis, Just Work, labor, Labor Unions, Nova Southeastern University, seiu, SEIU Just Work, Breaking Living Now News
On September 12, Elirose Pierre-Louis died of a heart attack at the age of 56. Eli was not only my friend, she was also the best co-worker I ever had. Her obituary might read:
Elirose Pierre-Louis, who came to the US from Haiti in 1985, worked as a seasonal field-hand and as a janitor in southern Florida. She is survived by her four sons in Haiti and in Canada.
This may not sound like anything significant. It seems that these days, there are a lot of untimely deaths we could talk about. But Eli died from an illness that could have been managed and from a working situation that should have been avoided. In my community, we know Eli died because she was poor.
I met Eli more than 20 years ago while packing tomatoes in a warehouse in Florida City. It was the kind of back-breaking, minimum-wage work that nearly every Haitian immigrant in Florida has done. It's a life of flat wages and irregular hours. Sickness means a bad day at work or facing unemployment, which rolls around at the end of the season anyway.
Eli played by all the rules: she was always on time, always positive, and always the hardest worker on the line. We jokingly called Eli "the Champion" because she kept our spirits up and always volunteered to help out a fellow worker who was sick or out of money. She talked about her sons often: one excelled in math; one volunteered at his church in Port-au-Prince, one was on his way to college, one had found a job in Canada.
Like many of our friends, Eli suffered from diabetes and high blood pressure, but she was always pushing off her own treatment for another day. It's hard to get the care one needs without health insurance, and Eli was always more concerned for her kids' welfare than her own. She was ready to sacrifice today for a better life tomorrow.
The thing is that tomorrow never came for Eli.
Three years ago, we both found steady janitorial jobs working the 6:00 p.m. to 2:30 a.m. shift at Nova Southeastern University in Davie, FL. It was still a minimum wage job without health insurance, but Eli and I were getting older and our work options were narrowing. After years of grueling work at poverty pay, we decided it was time to stand up for ourselves. That's when Eli and I started organizing with other workers to form a union.
We had our victory moment: we won the right to unite. But just as we saw opportunity knocking, the door slammed in our faces. Along with more than 100 other activist janitors, Eli and I were fired this past February from our jobs at Nova. It turns out the University would rather lose their entire staff than let us get a tiny piece of the American dream.
The rest of Eli's story gets more tragic. Unable to find other work in Miami and desperate for a job, Eli took a job tip I got from a friend in Nassawadox, Virginia, who was looking for extra farm hands. Given her health and age, Eli knew that this job would be hard, but she didn't have any other choices. She has family to support, tuitions to pay, and no one else to rely on.
On the morning of September 12, Eli became ill. Her boss on the farm called 911 for an ambulance to immediately transport her to the hospital--but Eli never made it. Thousands of miles from her family in Haiti and in Canada, hundreds of miles away from her community here in Miami, Eli died in that ambulance--alone and without a chance to say goodbye.
Eli's story is many of our stories. It is the story of a low-wage worker in America, the story of worker discrimination, the story of what happens to the uninsured when we get sick. Basically, Eli died because she was a poor, middle-aged immigrant. She died because she was living in a country that will take our work, but will turn its back on our most basic human needs.
Today, I am haunted by Eli's death. I think about how it could have been me in those tomato fields that day. I am a 66 year old Haitian man, I am a U.S. citizen, and I have spent nearly 30 years working in this country. Like Eli, I have great hope in my heart that sacrificing today will bring a greater tomorrow, but also like Eli, I have limited options.
One thing keeps me going: I'm going to do everything I can to prevent Eli's tragedy from happening to anyone else. Eli may have led an invisible life, but her death must serve as a visible reminder that we must improve the lives of low-wage workers in this country. If you work hard and provide a needed service, you deserve job security and access to health care. If employers like Nova Southeastern aren't going to provide this out of common human decency, then we must raise our voices and tell our stories.
If I could write Eli's obituary, this is what it would say:
Elirose Pierre-Louis came to the US from Haiti in 1985 to build a better future for her family. She died because, while she worked hard, she could not afford medical care. She will be missed by her 4 sons, as well as thousands of workers like her and Americans of good conscience who dedicate their lives to standing up for poor workers and fighting for the end of the rich man's disease of heartlessness and greed. She did not die in vain.
Elirose Pierre-Louis will be laid to rest at a funeral service this Saturday, September 29 at 12:00 p.m. at Notre Dame d'Haiti Catholic Church in Miami. Donations to cover funeral and related costs are being accepted through the Elirose Funeral Fund.
Joseph Louis was with Elirose Pierre-Louis when they both were fired from their janitorial jobs at Nova Southeastern University after courageously organizing to improve their wages and gain access to health care. Seven months later, Joseph is still unemployed despite his active search for work in the Miami area. In his struggle to ensure that Elirose Pierre-Louis did not die in vain, Joseph continues to speak out against Nova Southeastern University's abusive treatment of its lowest-paid workers and demand justice for all low-wage workers in America.
Just Work is a series presented by the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) to give a voice to working people to discuss their daily struggles to balance work, afford life and participate in a more just society. SEIU welcomes submissions to Just Work! Please send your story (800 words or less) to ali.jost@seiu.org.
About SEIU: The 1.9 million-member SEIU is the fastest-growing union in North America. SEIU members are winning better wages, health care, and more secure jobs for our communities, while uniting their strength with their counterparts around the world to help ensure that workers, not just corporations and CEOs, benefit from today's global economy.
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By bana2166 on 10-12-07, 09:08 AM
news In Memory of our Haitian sister Elirose Pierre-Louis

In Memory of our Haitian sister Elirose Pierre-Louis
Posted on Monday, September 24, 2007 at 02:54PM
Last week,Haitian immigrant Elirose Pierre-Louis, one of the janitors who lost her job while fighting for justice at Nova Southeastern University, lost her life to a heart attack that never should have happened.
Elirose's death is a vivid consequence of Nova's callous treatment of its former janitors. If she had not been pushed out of her job at Nova, she would have received the health insurance that she fought for.
Please join leaders within the Haitian community, faith, labor, and other community leaders for funeral services in honor of the struggle to win good jobs with health care for janitors at Nova Southeastern University—and to pay tribute to the inspiration Elirose provided for her coworkers and neighbors.
Show your support for Elirose's Family: Make a Donation
The Elirose Funeral Fund was established by Haitian and community leaders to collect donations towards covering funeral related costs- including bringing her son from haiti to Miami to lay their mother to rest.
You can help ease the burden of this most difficult time for Elirose's family by writing a check to the "elirose Funeral Fund" and sent to:
Elirose Funeral Fund, c/o SEIU Local 11
333 W. 41st Street, 9th Floor, Miami Beach, FL 33140
Elirose Remembered
"Elirose was the best coworker I ever had," -Joseph Louis Read more about what Elirose’s coworkers have to say.
"When organizers tried to bring a union to the janitors and groundskeepers at Nova, Pierre-Louis gathered her courage and joined the campaign. Many of the Nova workers were Haitian and poor. Joining the union drive was an extraordinary act of courage..." Miami Herald, by Ana Menendez, 9/19 Read More (Miami Herald)
" 'Elirose was an intelligent, honest, hardworking and proud lady,' said Marleine Bastien, executive director of Haitian Women of Miami. 'She did not ask for handouts. She did not want to be on welfare ... Although she took care of other people all of her life, she died in the end because she was a poor Haitian woman.'
Pierre-Louis, 56, migrated to the United States in 1985 and settled in Miami's Little Haiti area, according to Bastien and others who are arranging her funeral. She has four children, ages 17 to 36. Two are in Haiti and two in Canada. The Haitian Women of Miami and the SEIU have raised money for the funeral and will fly her two children from Haiti for the funeral, Bastien said." South Florida Sun Sentinel, by Alva James Johnson, 9/22, Read More (SunSentinel)
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