March 17 was the first time the San Luis Obispo County Public Health Department conducted a press briefing via Facebook Live regarding the coronavirus. It was entirely in English.
Latino Outreach Council of San Luis Obispo County CEO Jaqueline del Valle Frederick said the nonprofit is concerned that there isnāt enough direct communication in Spanish or Mixtecoāspoken by indigenous people in the Mexican states of Oaxaca, Guerrero, and Pueblaāin both the city of Santa Maria and in SLO County. The Latino Outreach Council is launching public service announcements to air on Spanish Television and radio in both SLO and Santa Barbara counties. Del Valle Frederick said the announcements will remind people to shelter in place and stay at home, and inform them about āthe precautions they need to take with regard to using masks and gloves when they go out.āĀ
SLO County spokesperson Michelle Shoresman told the Sun the county is concerned about its entire population getting the information they need to be safe.Ā
āIt is a constant challenge to keep everyone in the community informed,ā Shoresman said.
All of the countyās COVID-19 press briefings now have transcripts in Spanish at readyslo.org under the āemergency SLOā tab and they can be viewed on Facebook by changing page settings to Spanish. SLO County has also translated some documents for health care workers into Tagalog, Shoresman said, as there is a āreasonable-size population of Filipinos in the local health care workforce.ā The county is also beginning to work on some communication in Mixteco.Ā
Santa Barbara County Public Information Officer Jackie Ruiz said her county is also concerned that its non-English speakers arenāt receiving critical public health messages.
In Santa Barbara County, roughly 38 percent of the population speaks a language other than English at home, according to recent census data. Those languages include Spanish, Mixteco, and Zapotec.
Ruiz said Santa Barbara County has been doing voiceover translation in Spanish along with American Sign Language at every press conference since the conferences began on March 12.
āWe have multiple Spanish translators at the Joint Information Center every day of the week to help with the ongoing press-release and social-media translation. We are also part of a rapid response team that has helped us translate materials into many indigenous languages via video or sound files,ā Ruiz said.Ā
All coronavirus-related information is also accessible to Santa Barbara County residents in multiple languages by dialing 211.
In Santa Maria, City Councilmember Gloria Soto said the council was slow to take local action for its residents in regard to the pandemic.Ā
Soto said she got on calls with the countyās local public health officials, Santa Barbara County Board of Supervisors, and U.S. Rep. Salud Carbajal (D-Santa Barbara) to discuss how to make the Latino community understand the importance of social distancing and staying at home.Ā
āI felt the need to push back a little bit, because itās not just about telling people to stay home. Itās about understanding the unique and different communities within our county and city,ā she said.Ā
One of the cityās first steps is creating a long-term relationship with Mixteco/Indigena Community Organizing Project (MICOP), a nonprofit that unites indigenous leaders and allies to strengthen the Mixtec and indigenous immigrant community.Ā
Donna Olivera, communication coordinator for MICOP, said her position was created specifically to gather recent public health information and work with MICOP translators to create informational video and audio messages in Mixteco.Ā
āItās really difficult and I have to do the research myself and find the most important information to get out there,ā Olivera said.Ā
She said the process of getting the information out is slow as she awaits responses to questions that sheās sent to public health officials, not to mention that there are only five Mixteco translators who work for MICOP.
Mixteco isnāt a written language, so Santa Barbara County has created coronavirus-related videos in Mixteco. The Santa Maria Joint Union High School District is also sending out information in Mixteco via video format to keep parents and guardians of students informed of district updates.Ā
The public health crisis, Soto said, is really shining a light on the disparities that exist.Ā
āItās the working-class and minimum-wage earners that are most at risk. Weāre still slow enough in putting in place policies or recommendations that will help to protect them while theyāre still on the front line,ā Soto said. āItās the utmost importance that we use this crisis as an opportunity to build bridges with communities that have always been hard for us to reach.āĀ
This article appears in Apr 23-30, 2020.

