Smoke and grapes

Joint UCI, NCAR project investigates wildfire effects on farmworkers

UCI’s Michael Méndez is teaming up with scientists from the National Center for Atmospheric Research to explore the disparate treatment of undocumented Latino/Latina and Indigenous migrant farmworkers during extreme wildfire events in Sonoma County.

Michael Méndez
Meet the ExpertMichael Méndez, assistant professor of urban planning and public policy

“There’s a lot of power, racial and citizenship dynamics happening here,” says Méndez, assistant professor of urban planning and public policy. “It’s an issue that’s sensitive and contentious at the same time.” He adds that Sonoma County is “a bastion of California’s high-end wine industry.”

Government officials, migrant rights advocates and other community leaders will collaborate with the research team to document how the health and safety concerns presented by increasing wildfires disproportionately impact these two low-income communities of color.

According to Méndez, one particular concern stems from the experiences of farmworkers asked to safeguard crops – wine grapes – from smoke and ash during wildfires. They’re expected to labor in dangerous conditions and enter mandatory evacuation zones considered hazardous to the general population.

“These individuals are often not provided with proper occupational health and safety standards and equipment, let alone assistance for disaster relief,” he notes. “Should they get sick from the smoke, lose their home or their job, they’re not eligible for unemployment assistance or federal disaster funds because of their immigration status. Many of them don’t have healthcare as well.”

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NCAR scientists Rebecca Hornbrook and Rebecca Buchholz will use air quality sensor networks and atmospheric chemistry models to quantify the smoke exposure that the agricultural workers experience on the job.

Michael Méndez at COP26
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Between the data mapping of where the wildfires happen, interviews with the affected workers and other key stakeholders such as employers and policymakers, and the quantitative air quality data, “I am hopeful that our study will contribute to policies that will more effectively protect vulnerable populations during environmental disasters,” Hornbrook says.

Policy change also is a goal of this project for Méndez, who hopes the results of the study will lead to broader engagement with multiple audiences, policymakers and other types of experts working in the disaster and environmental sciences.

Michael Méndez, assistant professor of urban planning and public policy.

“If you’re asking people to risk their lives, there need to be stronger mandates that these employers have to follow as these individuals go into disaster zones,” says Michael Méndez, a UCI assistant professor of urban planning and public policy who’s studying how wildfires affect undocumented Latino and Indigenous migrant farmworkers.

He states, “If you’re asking people to risk their lives, there need to be stronger mandates that these employers have to follow as these individuals go into disaster zones.”

He wants to see real-time air quality monitoring, post-exposure testing and statewide guidance for employers regarding emergency plans for dangerous labor conditions, such as the provision of N-95 masks to protect the workers, hazard pay and transportation to evacuate individuals if an area becomes too hazardous.

Méndez recognizes that undocumented Latinos and Indigenous migrants are a critical part of the economy and the local community.

“They’re not hidden, but they’re rendered invisible in the context of public policy. Political choices are being made that prioritize some lives over others.”

He wants this study to peel back the layers of contextual and structural issues and engage policymakers in thinking more critically about changes to improve the circumstances of vulnerable populations – first at the local and state levels, then nationally.

- Cara Capuano, UCI