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As Planting Season Nears, Farm Workers Want Vaccines Now

As Planting Season Nears, Farm Workers Want Vaccines Now

By Ellen Abbott

Farm workers in New York state are one of the populations waiting for the state to deem them eligible to receive the coronavirus vaccine. There’s growing concern that COVID could impact the food supply if those workers don’t get a shot.

Danielle Volles and her family own a dairy farm with 3,500 cows in southern Onondaga County. She is disappointed her employees and others who work in agriculture, can’t get shots yet.

"We were really thinking we were going to be in this rollout, and to not be in the rollout is kind of a slap in the face," Volles said.

The situation becomes more dire, she said, with central New York’s short growing season coming up. Hundreds of migrant workers have already started coming to the region for seasonal farm jobs. Volles said as they work in fields, barns and greenhouses, there is a chance of spreading the coronavirus, in a business that can’t shut down for things like quarantines. She believes it’s almost too late.

"Two months ago was the time,” Volles said. “Now, this is very challenging.”

She’s reached out to local lawmakers asking for help. She said she could get 150 dairy workers within a ten-mile radius alone, for a vaccine clinic in her neck of the woods. But they need the Cuomo administration to okay it. Onondaga County Executive Ryan McMahon said he’s heard the concern, and wants the state to include farm workers on the vaccine eligibility list.

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Border View Farms is a mid-sized family farm that sits on the Ohio-Michigan border. My name is Nathan. I make and edit all of the videos posted here. I farm with my dad, Mark and uncle, Phil. We also have a part-time employee, Brock. My dad started the farm in 1980. Since then we have grown the operation from just a couple hundred acres to over 3,000. Watch my 500th video for a history of our farm I filmed with my dad.

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