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Credit: (AP Photo/John Minchillo)
File photo: A nurse at work during the early days of the pandemic. As the novel coronavirus began to spread last year, workers in health care, retail, warehouses and in other occupations raised concerns.
Cecelia Gilligan Leto often fields calls from workers concerned for their safety while they do their jobs.
As project director for the New Jersey Work Environment Council, Leto has trained people in workplace safety for years. So, when the novel coronavirus began to spread last year, workers in health care, retail, warehouses and in other occupations turned to her.
“You had this invisible thing come into the workplace; people just didn’t know what to do with it, and there was a lot to learn in the beginning,’’ she said. “COVID was a new hazard, and in February and March those calls kept coming in and the people were fearful, and they were scared.”
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Updated Mar 01, 2021;
Posted Mar 01, 2021
A lunch guest of Care and Share Meals at the Trinity First Hope Center in Millville helps himself to some to-go selections, Tuesday, Feb. 16, 2021.Al Amrhein | For NJ Advance Media
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Cindi Cooke remembers the day last March when Gov. Phil Murphy announced his statewide stay-at-home order and closed all non-essential businesses.
“I received that very first night a phone call from a homeless gentleman and he was panicked,” the Millville resident recalls.
He had been kicked out of the place where he was staying because of coronavirus fears and needed help. Cooke met up with him and provided dinner.
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