• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

The Valley Citizen

Pursuing truth toward justice

The Valley Citizen

Pursuing truth toward justice
  • Arts
  • Education
  • Environment
  • History
  • Nature
  • Politics
  • Wit
  • About

Congressman Harder Leads Valley Corona Relief Effort

April 24, 2020 By Eric Caine 2 Comments

Congressman Josh Harder arrived in Turlock “around midnight” last Thursday, not long after pushing hard in Washington DC to assure Valley farmers received their share of financial relief from hardships imposed by the effects of the Covid-19 on the economy. Some farmers have lost food contracts with schools and seen reduced orders as the result of widespread reductions in demand from restaurants.

Prior to Harder’s bipartisan efforts, farmers had been excluded from the Small Business Administration’s Economic Injury Disaster Loan program. Harder and his colleagues in Congress, both Republicans and Democrats, made sure farmers were included in the program.

Harder was in his district to help distribute much-needed face masks and plastic visors for health care workers in San Joaquin and Stanislaus Counties.

“No health care worker anywhere should have to be afraid to go to work because they don’t have proper safety equipment,” said Harder, while at the Stanislaus County Office of Emergency Services in Modesto Friday afternoon.

Josh Harder at Stanislaus Office of Emergency Services
At Stanislaus Office of Emergency Services

Harder and his team of volunteers and staff members dropped off 10,000 masks and plastic visors in Modesto, out of a total of 30,000.

“We were going to do a 50-50 distribution,” said Harder, “but people in Stanislaus County said San Joaquin needed them more, so San Joaquin got more. I’m really proud of the way people here have stepped up, people like Gallo, who put hand sanitizers into production right away and got them into the right hands.” Modesto’s Enviro Tech Chemical Services has also produced and donated hand sanitizers in response to the crisis.

San Joaquin County has thus far had over five times the number of deaths from Covid-19 as Stanislaus County. As of Friday, 22 people had died from the virus in San Joaquin County as opposed to five deaths in Stanislaus County.

California as a whole has managed to dodge the worst effects of an invisible pestilence that has ravaged populations in Spain, Italy, New York and New Jersey. And just when it seemed as though the disease might have been confined to mostly urban areas, there’ve been new outbreaks in meat packing plants, prisons, and nursing homes all around the nation.

California almost certainly has benefitted from the leadership of Gavin Newsom and San Francisco Mayor London Breed, who shut things down and imposed social distancing far earlier than governors and mayors elsewhere, many of whom are still engaged in debates about the severity of a plague epidemiologists have said is a global threat to millions of human lives.

Josh Harder delivers visors and masks

Like Newsom and Breed, Harder prefers to move proactively rather than wait for the death toll to grow. He got the masks and visors from DonatePPE a nonprofit committed to distributing PPE during the pandemic. Last week, Harder announced a partnership between the Central Valley PPE Initiative and Print to Protect, a coalition using 3D printing to produce PPE for California counties.

“We’ve done a good job,” said Harder of people in his district, while he unloaded boxes of PPE from a rented panel truck, “but we’re not there yet. We’ve still got a lot of work to do.”

 

Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: Congressman Josh Harder, Covid-19 Stanislaus County, DonatePPE, Valley Corona relief

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Bruce Frohman says

    April 25, 2020 at 10:20 am

    Congressman Harder has been doing his best for the district since assuming office. He has been very effective.
    Unlike his predecessor, Mr. Harder has been present and available to his constituents in every year, not just during election season.
    As he gains experience, Mr. Harder will become increasingly effective as our representative in Washington. Seniority is important. We would be wise to continue sending him to Washington.
    As someone who is neither a Democrat or Republican, I see Mr. Harder as a Centrist who understands the role of government. We need politicians like Harder who are less partisan and more pragmatic.
    Harder helped Republican farmers who most likely did not and would not vote for him. If this fact does not convince someone that he operates as a non-partisan representative, what else could he do to make the case?

    Reply
  2. Al Lucchesi says

    April 25, 2020 at 4:00 pm

    Josh Hard er has demonstrated many times in his first term as 10th district congressman. that he represents all the people of the district. He the first congressman has call my telephone and let me in on a town hall meeting for corona virus. and send updates on virus as it relates to the district regularly.. That what a US congressional representative should do. congressman Harder Keep up the hard good work. thank you
    o.

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Note: Some comments may be held for moderation.

Primary Sidebar

Off The Wire

California faces catastrophic flood dangers ? and a need to invest billions in protection
California faces catastrophic flood dangers and a need to invest billions in protection
A new state plan for the Central Valley calls for spending as much as $30 billion over 30 years to prepare for the dangers.
www.latimes.com
Oakland will get millions for the ?inhumane? crisis at one huge homeless encampment. Officials say it?s not enough
Oakland will get millions for the “inhumane” crisis at one huge homeless encampment. Officials say it’s not enough
Gavin Newsom’s administration has awarded Oakland a $4.7 million grant to come up with…
www.sfchronicle.com
Alaska?s Fisheries Are Collapsing. This Congresswoman Is Taking on the Industry She Says Is to Blame.
Alaska’s Fisheries Are Collapsing. This Congresswoman Is Taking on the Industry She Says Is to Blame.
Mary Peltola won her election by campaigning on a platform to save the state’s prized fisheries. A powerful fishing lobby is standing in her way.
www.politico.com
Jimmy Carter's final foe: A parasitic worm that preyed on millions in Africa and Asia
Jimmy Carter’s final foe: A parasitic worm that preyed on millions in Africa and Asia
One of former President Carter’s biggest hopes is wiping out an infectious parasitic disease that’s plagued humans for millennia. How close is he?
www.latimes.com
Climate Extremes Threaten California?s Central Valley Songbirds - Eos
Climate Extremes Threaten California’s Central Valley Songbirds – Eos
A “nestbox highway” in California’s Central Valley is guiding songbirds to safe nesting sites and giving scientists a peek at fledgling success in a changing climate.
eos.org
Alaska Republican touts benefits of children being abused to death
Alaska Republican touts benefits of children being abused to death
Republican David Eastman suggested the death of child abuse victims could be a “cost savings” to wider society.
www.newsweek.com
Editorial: Newsom's drought order amid wet winter threatens iconic California species
Editorial: Newsom’s drought order amid wet winter threatens iconic California species
Gov. Gavin Newsom has effectively ended environmental regulations protecting California rivers and migratory fish by extending drought-year waivers.
www.latimes.com
Two-thirds of McPherson Square homeless remain on street, D.C. says
Two-thirds of McPherson Square homeless remain on street, D.C. says
As of Thursday, just two of the more than 70 residents of McPherson Square had been placed in permanent D.C. housing.
www.washingtonpost.com
More Building Won?t Make Housing Affordable
More Building Won’t Make Housing Affordable
America’s housing crisis has reached unfathomable proportions. But new construction isn’t enough to solve it.
newrepublic.com
Why YIMBYs are about to sue the daylights out of cities across the Bay Area
Why YIMBYs are about to sue the daylights out of cities across the Bay Area
Housing advocates are about to deliver a message to the Bay Area: Comply with state…
www.sfchronicle.com
At the heart of Colorado River crisis, the mighty 'Law of the River' holds sway
At the heart of Colorado River crisis, the mighty ‘Law of the River’ holds sway
At the heart of tensions over water allotments from the Colorado River is a complex set of agreements and decrees known as the ‘Law of the River.’
www.latimes.com
Biden restores roadless protection to the Tongass, North America's largest rainforest
Biden restores roadless protection to the Tongass, North America’s largest rainforest
The Tongass National Forest in Alaska, a focus of political battles over old-growth logging and road-building in forests for decades, has received new protection from the Biden administration.
theconversation.com

Find us on Facebook

The Valley Citizen
PO Box 156
Downtown Bear Postal
1509 K Street
Modesto, CA 95354

Email us at:
thevalleycitizen@sbcglobal.net

Footer

The Valley Citizen
PO Box 156
Downtown Bear Postal
1509 K Street
Modesto, CA 95354

Email us at:
thevalleycitizen@sbcglobal.net

Subscribe for Free

* indicates required

Search

• Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2023 The Valley Citizen

Dedicated to the memory of John Michael Flint. Contact us at thevalleycitizen@sbcglobal.net

Editor and publisher: Eric Caine

Website customization and maintenance by Susan Henley Design