
 
        
         
		By Nelson A. King 
 The New York Immigration Coalition  
 (NYIC),  an  umbrella  policy  and  
 advocacy organization for more than  
 200 groups in New York State, has welcomed  
 the NY HERO Act as a “huge  
 victory” for essential workers. 
 “COVID-19 continues to have an  
 enormous impact on our immigrant  
 essential workers across the state, many  
 of them farmworkers keeping our food  
 supply lines open at great risk to themselves  
 and their families,” said Murad  
 Awawdeh, NYIC’s executive director. 
 “With  multiple  variants  and  spikes  
 in  COVID-19  cases,  New  York  cannot  
 afford to waste any time in keeping everyone  
 safe and healthy,” he added. “That  
 is why the NY HERO Act will play such  
 a vital role in the recovery of our state  
 from the pandemic and protection from  
 future airborne infectious diseases. 
 “We applaud Gov. Hochul for recognizing  
 the evolving challenges posed by  
 this pandemic and for prioritizing the  
 health and well-being of our frontline  
 workers and every New Yorker,” Awawdeh  
 continued. 
 On  Monday  Gov.  Kathy  Hochul  
 announced that the commissioner  
 of  health  has  designated  COVID-19  a  
 highly contagious communicable disease  
 that presents a serious risk of  
 harm to the public health under New  
 York State’s HERO Act, which requires  
 all employers to implement workplace  
 safety plans in the event of an airborne  
 infectious disease, helping to prevent  
 workplace infections. 
 The NY HERO Act mandates extensive  
 new workplace health and safety  
 protections in response to the COVID- 
 19 pandemic. 
 Under the law, all employers are  
 required to adopt a workplace safety  
 plan, and implement it for all airborne  
 infectious  diseases  designated  by  the  
 New York State Department of Health. 
 Employers can adopt a model safety  
 plan as crafted by the New York State  
 Department  of  Labor,  or  develop  their  
 own  safety  plan  in  compliance  with  
 HERO Act standards. 
 “While we  continue  to  increase our  
 vaccination numbers, the fight against  
 the Delta variant is not over, and we have  
 to do everything we can to protect our  
 workers,” Governor Hochul said. “This  
 designation will ensure protections are  
 in place to keep our workers safe and  
 support our efforts to combat the virus  
 and promote health and safety.” 
 She said the HERO Act’s purpose is  
 to ensure  that businesses are prepared  
 with protocols and resources to protect  
 their employees and the public from the  
 spread  of  airborne  infectious  diseases,  
 like COVID’s Delta variant. 
 New York State Attorney General, Letitia James, speaks during a news conference, to announce criminal justice  
 reform in New York City, U.S., May 21, 2021.   REUTERS/Brendan McDermid, File 
 James continues fight to protect  
 access to abortion services 
 Caribbean Life, SEPTEMBER 10-16, 2021 3  
 By Nelson A. King 
 New  York  Attorney  General,  Letitia  
 James, as part of a coalition of 21 attorneys  
 general, on Wednesday continued  
 her national fight to protect access to  
 reproductive health care. 
 In an amicus brief filed in the US  
 Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit  
 in Planned Parenthood South Atlantic v.  
 Wilson, James and the coalition argued  
 that  South  Carolina’s  “fetal  heartbeat”  
 abortion  regulations  are  unconstitutional  
 and  jeopardize  access  to  health  
 care as a whole. 
 Additionally,  the  coalition  argued  
 that  the  collective  impact  of  numerous  
 states across the country enacting  
 laws restricting or eliminating access  
 to abortion services harms health care  
 nationwide. 
 The coalition urged the Fourth Circuit  
 to uphold a lower court’s ruling  
 blocking the law. 
 “With more and more states passing  
 restrictive abortion laws, the constitutional  
 right  to  access  safe  and  legal  
 abortions is at great risk,” James said.  
 “The unlawful efforts by South Carolina  
 and other states to deny individuals  
 their constitutionally-guaranteed rights  
 through ‘heartbeat’ laws will not go  
 unchallenged. 
 “I  will  always  do  everything  within  
 my power to protect our bodies and our  
 choices,” she added. 
 In February 2021, South Carolina  
 passed the South Carolina Fetal Heartbeat  
 and  Protection  from  Abortion  
 Act, which prohibits abortions upon  
 the detection of an embryonic or fetal  
 heartbeat, effectively banning abortion  
 after six weeks. 
 Immediately following the passage  
 of the Act, Planned Parenthood South  
 Atlantic filed suit seeking a preliminary  
 injunction, which the federal district  
 court granted. South Carolina appealed  
 that injunction to the Fourth Circuit. 
 In  its  amicus  brief,  the  coalition  
 argues  that  access  to  safe  and  legal  
 abortion is an essential component of  
 reproductive health care and restrictive  
 abortion laws, like the South Carolina  
 Fetal Heartbeat and Protection from  
 Abortion Act, lead to worse health outcomes  
 for women. 
 The coalition also argues that laws  
 banning abortion after the detection of  
 a fetal heartbeat have harmful spillover  
 effects on miscarriage treatment and  
 other health care needs. 
 Further, the coalition maintains that  
 the restrictions the act places on women  
 could threaten residents of neighboring  
 states as well as those states’ health care  
 systems. 
 Joining Attorney General James and  
 in filing Wednesday’s amicus brief were  
 the attorneys general of Virginia, California, 
  Colorado, Connecticut, Hawaii,  
 Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, 
   Michigan,  Minnesota,  Nevada,  
 New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Pennsylvania, 
  Rhode Island, Vermont, Washington  
 and the District of Columbia. 
 Wednesday’s action is just the latest  
 in  a  long  list  of  measures  James  has  
 taken to protect access to reproductive  
 freedom since taking office. 
 In July 2021, she co-led a coalition  
 of 11 attorneys general in submitting a  
 comment letter to the US Department  
 of Health and Human Services, voicing  
 their support of a new, proposed rule  
 that would protect abortion coverage  
 nationwide. 
 In June 2021, Attorney General James  
 led a coalition of attorneys general in  
 submitting testimony to the congressional  
 record supporting passage of the  
 Women’s Health Protection Act. 
 The act would protect the constitutional  
 right  to  access  an  abortion  by  
 prohibiting unnecessary restrictions —  
 passed at the state level — that undermine  
 the availability and safety of health  
 care services. 
 Earlier, in June 2021, James and a coalition  
 of attorneys general helped score a  
 major victory in the case Reproductive  
 Health Services v. Parson, after the US  
 Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit  
 affirmed a preliminary injunction  
 enjoining a Missouri law that, among  
 other things, banned abortions after as  
 early as eight weeks into pregnancy. 
 In January 2020, Attorney General  
 James and the coalition filed an amicus  
 brief in the case, challenging the constitutionality  
 of  several,  recently-enacted  
 abortion bans in the state of Missouri. 
 In  April  2021,  James  secured  an  
 agreement that ended the harassing and  
 obstructive behavior of two anti-choice  
 protesters at a Planned Parenthood location  
 in New York City. 
 On  numerous  occasions,  the  two  
 defendants threatened patients, escorts,  
 and health center staff entering the  
 facility. 
 The agreement came as a result of a  
 February 2021 lawsuit Attorney General  
 James filed against the two anti-choice  
 protestors for repeated violations of federal, 
  state and local clinic access laws. 
 NY HERO Act  
 ‘huge victory’ for  
 essential workers:  
 NY Immigration  
 Coalition