2021 Online Video Storytelling – Pandemic – Small Team

Link to video: https://www.propublica.org/article/did-i-mess-this-up-a-father-dying-from-coronavirus-a-distraught-daughter-and-a-midnight-rescue? As the coronavirus strikes nursing homes and assisted living facilities across the country, the truth of what is happening inside has been hidden from many residents’ families. Natasha Roland was immediately concerned for her father, Willie Roland, when the coronavirus landed in New York. He was living in the Queens Adult Care Center, an assisted living facility for people with mental illness, the frail and the elderly. She said the home’s administrator assured her the 82-year-old was safe. Then she found out the virus was running rampant through the facility.

“Two enemy forces: immigration authorities and the coronavirus” tells the story of Mississippi poultry workers who in August of 2019 were terrorized by ICE after multiple chicken plants were raided in the state. Hundreds of undocumented workers were arrested and deported. Months later, when the pandemic started, those same workers were called back to work in the plants with little protection. This video tells the story of Raul, an undocumented worker who though not arrested at the 2019 raids, was closely impacted by this event and saw friends and relatives detained. He got covid-19 when he was called to work at the plant, and felt that the company he worked for provided no information or protection. He became very ill and covid-19 had a heavy emotional toll on him. At the time of publication, in June 2020, about 90 plant workers across the country had died after contracting covid-19 while working. That number has quadrupled since then. This short documentary is part of a larger project that looks at the short, medium and long-term effects of massive immigration raids and other harsh immigration policies that were implemented during the Trump administration.

As the country began to feel the impact of COVID-19 in mid-March and fears grew that the health system could be overwhelmed and wouldn’t have the capacity to care for people, many essential workers continued to show up to work to provide important services for the rest of the country. In Homestead, Florida, one of the most important agricultural centers of the country, workers continued to harvest food in spite of the lack of protection. To make matters worse, early in the crisis, when the government provided stimulus checks to households across the country, many of these workers were excluded because they’re undocumented or on visas that made them ineligible. Through the eyes of a number of Homestead workers, this short documentary takes a look at the impact of the pandemic on the immigrant community in this area.

The coronavirus pandemic made the social inequalities that already existed in the United States even more evident and profound. The mere fact of being Latino during the coronavirus crisis has had grave consequences: Latinos have been infected at much higher rates and have suffered the most from the economic consequences of the pandemic. From New York, the first epicenter of the pandemic in the US, to Florida, the coronavirus strongly impacted areas where large communities of Latinos live. These communities have historically been more vulnerable compared to other groups. They tend to be poorer, have less access to high quality education and healthcare and be employed in what are considered “essential jobs,” putting them at higher risk of exposure. By August, for example, Hispanics in Florida made up 44% of cases, despite being 25% of the population. An analysis of the data available through September 2020 showed that Latinos face a greater challenge in this crisis with an average of 1,984 cases per 100,000 inhabitants in the US, followed by the African Americans with 1,889 cases per 100,000 inhabitants and similar socioeconomic conditions. In this project we focused on Allapattah, a neighborhood in Miami that had high levels of poverty even before the pandemic hit. The virus had a profound impact on its community, as illustrated by some of the characters we encountered: an undocumented woman who contracted covid-19 because she was unable to stop working; a father of five children who lost his job and couldn’t sleep because he didn’t know how he was going to afford the food to feed them; a small businessman who had to close part of his business losing years of work. In spite of tremendous suffering, however, the community’s commitment to solidarity and resilience is also at the very heart of Allapattah. We witnessed, and aimed to capture in this project, how the most vulnerable coped with the pandemic, including many who didn’t have the possibility to work from home, and who live paycheck by paycheck or day to day. The stress caused by the lack of financial resources also affected the mental health of many members of the community, as well as that of their children. By the time of publication of this project, 55% of Latinos had reported feeling sad, depressed or hopeless. The psychological and emotional effects of the pandemic will be long-lasting. In order to effectively capture all these testimonies and the data to contextualize them, this multimedia project includes different tools like dynamic maps, graphs, photos, text and two short documentaries. We used this array of tools to help our audience understand the magnitude and depth of the crisis faced by Latinos in Allapattah. Even though we focused on a very specific community, the stories we found in Allapattah are the reflection of the stories of millions of Latinos across the country and illustrate the universal challenges that the pandemic has created.

The coronavirus pandemic made the social inequalities that already existed in the United States even more evident and profound. The mere fact of being Latino during the coronavirus crisis has had grave consequences: Latinos have been infected at much higher rates and have suffered the most from the economic consequences of the pandemic. From New York, the first epicenter of the pandemic in the US, to Florida, the coronavirus strongly impacted areas where large communities of Latinos live. These communities have historically been more vulnerable compared to other groups. They tend to be poorer, have less access to high quality education and healthcare and be employed in what are considered “essential jobs,” putting them at higher risk of exposure. By August, for example, Hispanics in Florida made up 44% of cases, despite being 25% of the population. In this video, we take a look at the toll the pandemic has had on the mental health of Latinos in Allapattah, a neighborhood in Miami that had high levels of poverty even before the pandemic hit. The stress caused by the lack of financial resources affected many members of the community, as well as that of their children. By the time of publication of this project, 55% of Latinos had reported feeling sad, depressed or hopeless. The psychological and emotional effects of the pandemic will be long-lasting. In order to effectively capture all these testimonies and the data to contextualize them, this multimedia project includes different tools like dynamic maps, graphs, photos, text and two short documentaries. We used this array of tools to help our audience understand the magnitude and depth of the crisis faced by Latinos in Allapattah.