A new documentary from the will premiere on PBS stations beginning Saturday (Jan. 14).
follows domestic workers in California as they organize for job protections during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Viewers in the greater Sacramento area can watch the broadcast at 10:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 19, on KVIE. It is also available for .
“Domestic workers lack virtually any protections from arbitrary and unsafe working conditions,” said , a professor of public health sciences and director of the Environmental Health Sciences Center. “This film highlights their struggle to achieve dignity, respect, and safe and humane working environments before and throughout the unprecedented COVID public health crisis.”
Hertz-Picciotto is the executive producer for the film. Jennifer Biddle, digital strategist at the Environmental Health Sciences Center, is the producer. , an award-winning filmmaker and journalist, directed the documentary.
Dignidad is the second film for the team. Their previous documentary, , premiered on PBS in 2019. Since then, it has been presented more than 300 times on 160 PBS stations and is currently available on ’.
Kim Alvarenga, director of the , and domestic workers Mirna Arana and Rock Delgado are featured in the new film.
Arana fled deadly gang violence in Guatemala and resettled in California. She started working as a cleaner, where she experienced wage theft, and is now an activist with . Delgado, a caregiver in Los Angeles, survived a severe bout of COVID-19 after being exposed on the job. He’s now an activist with the .
Their stories illustrate the struggles many domestic workers face in California. Domestic workers are predominantly female and people of color. Many are new immigrants. Laboring in other people’s homes often includes risks such as unsafe working conditions, exceedingly long hours, wage theft and other forms of abuse.
Exclusion from CalOSHA
The California Division of Occupational Safety and Health, known as , is responsible for related to workplace safety. In 2020, during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, the California Legislature passed Senate Bill 1257 to extend Cal/OSHA protections to domestic workers.
Gov. Gavin Newsom vetoed the bill. Newsom said: “SB 1257 would extend many employers’ obligations to private homeowners and renters, including the duty to create an injury prevention plan and the requirement to conduct outdoor heat trainings. Many individuals to whom this law would apply lack the expertise to comply with these regulations.”
Domestic workers in the state organized in response to the veto. Dignidad touches on some of the Environmental Health Sciences Center’s research findings about the vulnerabilities faced by domestic workers during the pandemic. It also chronicles domestic workers’ efforts to pass a revised version of SB 1257, reintroduced by , D-Los Angeles, as SB 321, the , which won the governor’s signature.
SB 321 did not fully bring domestic workers under Cal/OSHA standards, but it mandated the creation of an advisory committee comprising experts and public representatives to develop recommendations on protecting the occupational health and safety of domestic workers.
“It was heartening that after more than a century of having virtually no rights as workers, domestic employees are now recognized as needing occupational protections,” Hertz-Picciotto said. “While this new law does not actually guarantee those protections, it is a small first step toward that goal and toward the dignity domestic workers deserve.”
Media Resources
Media Contacts:
- Lisa Howard, ٺƵ Health, 916-752-6394, lehoward@ucdavis.edu
- Alex Mendelmar, Environmental Health Sciences Center, amendelmar@ucdavis.edu