‘It’s like we are just a piece of garbage’: Laid-off Philly workers face life without health insurance
Days after Mayor
Davis, 52, a concierge supervisor at the
But a few weeks later, after reading her layoff letter closely, she realized her situation was even worse than she had thought. Hersha had cut her health insurance on the same day she was laid off.
“We’re losing our jobs," Davis said. "That’s a big thing. And to turn around and you can’t go to the clinic because you don’t have health insurance? It’s just like we’re a piece of garbage. They just threw us to the curb.”
As the coronavirus rages through
”With the number of people losing their jobs, there’s little doubt that the number of people uninsured is increasing right now, at the exact time when some of them will need health care the most, if they become infected and seriously ill," said
It’s hard to quantify how many are losing their health coverage, as many hourly workers don’t get health benefits through their job because it’s too expensive or their employers don’t offer it. In 2017, only 28% of full-time workers making below the federal poverty level got health insurance through their employers, according to a
Airport workers won predictable schedules, higher wages. Can they win affordable health care, too?And the loss of these workers’ health-care benefits could have an impact on slowing the spread of COVID-19.
”The big concern is that people might wait until they get very, very sick before going to the hospital, and the possibility that they could have exposed more people along the way increases,” the foundation’s
Some companies, including
But some workers, including
Why Philly workers are fighting for a local coronavirus relief fundWilson, 55, was happy to move to an OTG restaurant three years ago because she was able to get a consistent 40-hour schedule each week, as well as health insurance. She was making
“If I took sick right now, I couldn’t go to the doctor," she said, “because I don’t have any money and I’m not working."
OTG did not respond to a request for comment.
“I don’t know what OTG is thinking about their workers," Wilson said, “but this is not right.”
For Davis, a mother of five grown daughters who lives in
“The first thing they’re going to ask is, do you have health insurance?” she said.
Large health-insurance companies have said they will cover the cost of testing, but experts say that there are many ways to get hit with surprise bills, including the cost of a visit to the ER where you might get tested.
An even bigger concern for Davis is her youngest daughter, who gave birth last year.
Davis, who was making almost
Through a spokesperson, Hersha -- Davis’ employer -- said it had to reduce its pre-pandemic staffing levels by 90% and hoped to hire the workers back “when business volumes resume.”
“Our associates have always been -- and will remain -- our top priority,” the company said in a statement.
Davis, though, remained stunned.
“Do you treat your people like that, who have been so loyal to you?” she said. “You say we’re a family. Do you throw your family out like trash?”
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