An online training module that was required for those returning to the University of Miami鈥檚 campus for the fall semester included a section on the school鈥檚 stringent protocols for cleaning and disinfecting.
The video shows people cleaning in head-to-toe personal protective equipment: one wearing a gown and gloves, wiping a table; another in a hazmat suit waving a spray wand.
Student activists discovered that the clips were stock footage.
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The people who actually clean the university鈥檚 facilities are provided with much less protective gear, according to a janitor and the union that represents the hourly subcontracted workers.
The janitor, Antonio Vento, said he and his colleagues receive face shields, gloves and surgical masks 鈥 although some have complained they鈥檙e not getting a fresh mask every day.
鈥淚 feel very, very important,鈥 Vento told SA国际传谋, in Spanish. 鈥淲e have been on the front lines here, fighting against COVID to ensure that students and workers feel safe. 鈥 It is important, but it is also dangerous.鈥
Vento said he is 鈥減ractically in quarantine鈥 after work when he goes home, where he lives with his wife and father. Right away, he takes off his clothes and shoes and takes a hot shower. Then, he wears a mask and stays in only one part of his house. He sleeps on a cot, separate from his wife.
鈥淲e talk a lot among workers about all the things we have to do to support our family,鈥 he said.
Through their union, SEIU 32BJ, the janitors have been asking for gowns and N95 masks in addition to gloves and face shields for those who clean the common areas of quarantined floors in campus dormitories. They also want hazmat suits for those who are fumigating areas suspected to be contaminated with COVID-19.
The university has reported nearly 300 cases of COVID-19 among students and employees since the start of the fall semester, according to a public online . Dozens of students who have tested positive or come into contact with infected people have been isolated in on-campus housing.
University of Miami president Julio Frenk is a global public health expert. Previously, he has served as a top official in the World Health Organization, Mexico's health secretary and dean of Harvard University's T.H. Chan School of Public Health. The Chronicle of Higher Education Frenk's 2017 earnings from the university as $1.5 million.
A university spokeswoman would not comment on the decision to include the misleading stock footage in the online training video or answer questions about the janitors鈥 equipment, instead referring SA国际传谋 to the facilities contractor, ABM.
鈥淲e talk a lot among workers about all the things we have to do to support our family."Antonio Vento, a janitor at the University of Miami
A representative for ABM would not provide an interview, respond to specific questions about the equipment available to janitors or comment on the claims from Vento and his union about working conditions.
An emailed statement from ABM said the company鈥檚 450-plus employees at the University of Miami have the supplies they need to stay safe, according to standards from the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
鈥淲e have been and will continue to ensure that our team members are informed, properly trained and provided the Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) and supplies needed, based on guidance from OSHA [and] the CDC 鈥 to stay safe while performing their work,鈥 according to the company鈥檚 statement.
鈥淣othing is more important to ABM, especially during the pandemic, then the safety of those we serve and our team members,鈥 the statement said.
The company appears to be prohibiting employees from speaking out about their working conditions. English and Spanish-language flyers distributed to UM janitors 鈥 pictures of which were obtained by SA国际传谋 鈥 instruct ABM employees on how to handle inquiries from journalists: 鈥淏e polite, but do not answer any questions,鈥 and 鈥渟imply state, 鈥楢BM Corporate Communications will respond to your questions.鈥欌
Student activists who have rallied on behalf of subcontracted workers organized a 鈥渄ie-in鈥 protest on campus last week. In Spanish, workers and students chanted: 鈥淵es, we can!鈥 and 鈥淛ustice!鈥
鈥淲hat we've been trying to do is show active solidarity with those who have been sort of forgotten by campus leadership,鈥 said Esteban Wood, a UM senior and co-founder of a group called UMESA, UMiami Employee Student Alliance. He said his mother previously worked as a janitor for ABM.
Wood said he sees the working conditions for subcontracted employees as a racial justice issue. The janitors are mostly immigrant women of color, according to the union.
鈥淚f you're going to be relying on the backs of mostly minority women to maintain the campus,鈥 Wood said, 鈥渢hen you're going to have to show them some respect.鈥
SA国际传谋 Sundial producer Leslie Ovalle contributed to this story.