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Brooks needs our support during COVID pandemic

Posted on May 7, 2020 by Vauxhall Advance

Doing the right thing can be hard. Knowing what that right thing is can be difficult, or, at the very least, very difficult to admit.

This is the ongoing personal challenge faced by everyone during the Coronavirus response.

It’s time for us to ask and answer such a question and do the right thing by showing support for people of Brooks.

The number of COVID-19 cases in that city – a 45 minute drive north of Vauxhall– are spiking.

Many are linked to the JBS beef plant, which is a lynchpin in the Alberta agriculture sector, and anecdotally, the community of new immigrants and foreign workers who staff it.

Deep concern is understandable; this hits close to home in Vauxhall. We are all trying to avoid the Coronavirus, we’ve all been to Brooks and worries about the food supply are acute.

But how can it be that, while we have raised food production workers as heroes alongside health and other essential service providers, but we are ready to turn our backs or, worse, demonize, slaughterhouse workers in Brooks?

A growing conversation debates how to best cut off travel between Brooks.

Word comes from several sources in Brooks about the problems created by “those people” (namely immigrants), and their housing conditions or lifestyles, as the “real reason” behind rapidly rising numbers.

Dr. Deena Hinshaw, who leads the Alberta COVID response, touched on the tricky issue during an update last week of a similar situation in High River. Some residents there are being denied access to banks and grocery stores because they work at the Cargill meat plant.

New reports in Calgary find that the worker’s union and Catholic charities – Filipinos are overwhelmingly devout Catholics – are rushing to fill gaps for those now banished within their own communities.

Aside from many being Canadian citizens, all are human beings.

As with all things COVID, we can’t physically rush in to help. Response must be thoughtful and safe.

Containing outbreaks is difficult work for the health professionals now determining best courses of action for Brooks and High River.

In a time when Brooks needs the help and support the most, it’s tempting to isolate ourselves even further, rather than providing cautious and courageous support in new and novel ways.

Consider that right now, there is great and growing sympathy for Fort McMurray residents who faced flooding last month, but so far not even a social media catchphrase to help the citizens of Brooks know that we’re all in this together. They need moral support as well as tangible, on the ground, real world help from government and the medical community.

We can make that decision to do our part and to do the right thing.

All of southern Alberta should stand with Brooks.

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