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Undocumented Workers Face COVID-19 Risk

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All Michigan Voters to Receive Absentee Ballot Applications

Millions of Michigan residents will receive applications in their mailboxes for absentee voting, state officials announced Tuesday. Michigan, a crucial swing state, has 7.7 million registered voters, 1.3 million of whom are on the permanent absentee ballot list. The applications will allow residents to take part in elections later this year without voting in person, state Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, a Democrat, said in a statement. “No Michigander has to choose between their health and their right to vote,” said Benson. “Voting by mail is easy, convenient, safe, and secure, and every voter in Michigan has the right to do it.” The application asks people if they’re a U.S. citizen and a qualified voter. Applicants can choose whether to receive an absentee ballot for the August 4 state election, the…

Undocumented Workers Face COVID-19 Risk

Undocumented migrant workers face a major risk of COVID-19 infection and could produce disease clusters, union-commissioned research warns.

There are between 60,000 and 100,000 undocumented migrants estimated to be in Australia, with many working fruit picking and other farm labour jobs.

The United Workers’ Union commissioned University of Adelaide associate professor Joanna Howe and the University of Melbourne’s Ankur Singh to examine virus risks for undocumented horticulture workers.

Their report found undocumented workers are prone to high infection risk and generating clusters.

“Undocumented workers have precarious living and work conditions,” the report said.

“These put at risk Australia’s initial success in controlling COVID-19 infection, hamper infection control protocols and pose measurable risk to the Australian population.”

Associate Professor Howe and Dr Singh found overcrowded accommodation, farm work and sharing essential facilities made it hard for undocumented workers to physically distance.

“Risk of identification, detention and deportation renders them unlikely to opt for testing and assist in contact tracing – crucial elements of infection control,” the report said.

It points to Singapore as an example of how low-paid overseas workers can spread the virus.

But Singapore’s migrant workforce is housed in different conditions to Australia.

Almost 200,000 workers live in 43 mega-dormitories, exacerbating a major infection spike which accounted for the bulk of the country’s second wave.

The union’s farms director Jannette Armstrong said the report showed why a visa amnesty was needed.

“This research shines a light on the high-risks during the COVID-19 pandemic for these workers,” she said.

“Giving undocumented workers visa legitimacy will minimise exploitation and ensure their work rights can be upheld and enforced.”

The federal government has rejected calls for a broad-reaching amnesty, arguing it would undermine the integrity of Australia’s visa programs.

By Matt Coughlan

 

Focus News: Undocumented Workers Face COVID-19 Risk

Chinese Mom Sentenced for Bribery After Paying $400,000 to Get Son Into UCLA

A woman who paid $400,000 to get her son into the University of California, Los Angeles as a fake soccer recruit was sentenced for bribery. Xiaoning Sui, 48, was ordered to pay a $250,000 fine for bribing her son’s way into UCLA, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts said Monday in a statement. She was also sentenced to time served for the five months she spent in a Spanish prison. Sui, a Chinese national living in Canada, was arrested in September 2019 in Spain by local authorities over mail fraud charges. She agreed to plead guilty in February to one count of federal programs bribery to prevent further detainment in the European country. Douglas P. Woodlock, the district judge presiding over the case, said Sui deserved the…