Advocates warn of ‘disaster’ if more protections not given to migrant workers
VANCOUVER — The federal and provincial governments are facing a “potential disaster” if more protections and social-distancing guidelines aren’t extended to migrant agricultural workers, advocates say.
The warning comes days after 14 migrant workers at a Kelowna, B.C., nursery tested positive for COVID-19.
The workers all live in on-site housing, and the Interior Health said there was enough space for each resident to safely self-isolate.
Bylands Nursery, which employs the workers, said in a statement posted on its website that it has been “recognized as one of the best employers of temporary foreign workers in B.C.”