Remembering the Food Workers We’ve Lost to COVID-19 Part 3
The third part in a series honoring the food and agriculture workers who lost their lives to the virus.
The COVID-19 pandemic has taken an incalculable toll on the food industry workers of America, from restaurant servers and meat plant workers to the farmworkers who toil in fields. According to research from the University of California, San Francisco, food industry workers’ risk of dying went up by 40 percent from March to October 2020. For Latinx workers, deaths increased by 60 percent in the sector.
In this six-part series, we’re honoring the lives of those we have lost to COVID-19. This week, we have tributes to an up-and-coming chef, a jewelry-loving hospital food worker and a meatpacker who was devoted to his family.
Luis Dominguez was the heart of every kitchen he worked in.
The Mexico-born chef was an integral part of Dallas’ culinary scene, with a 20-year career “that spanned restaurants in nearly every neighborhood in town,” according to the Dallas Observer.
When Dominguez and his cousin first came to Dallas from Veracruz two decades ago, he found a job washing dishes at the Wyndham Hotel. He later went on to work at Tillman’s, Hattie’s, Chicken Scratch and Smoke, where he collaborated with James Beard Award-winning chef and owner Tim Byres. Dominguez added Southwestern and Mexican spices and flavors to Byres’ barbecue dishes that would become specialties at the restaurant and stayed at Smoke for nearly 10 years, until it closed in 2018.
“He was always one of the happiest and [most] motivated persons,” says Jerry de la Riva, who worked with Dominguez at several restaurants in Dallas. They first met in the kitchen at Tillman’s and quickly graduated from coworkers to best friends. “He was always happy, always joking, even when he was stressed out,” he says.
When Dominguez contracted COVID-19 last summer, he was working as the executive sous chef at HG Sply Co. After spending 18 days in the hospital following complications from the virus, he died on July 22, at the age of 38.
Of his many culinary talents, the rising chef had an unmatched palate, says de la Riva. “I cannot find anyone else but him with that palate,” he says. “He could identify exactly what every recipe needed.”
Dominguez is survived by his wife, Consuelo, his parents, Jesus Dominguez Mata and Josefa Garrido Andrade, and siblings Jesus and Jessica Dominguez.
“I wish he could be alive to see everything he’s done being recognized,” says de la Riva.
Marie Deus loved to accessorize with jewelry. If someone told her they liked the necklace or bracelet she was wearing, she’d take it off and tell the person to keep it. She was just that generous. Plus, she had plenty of other options at home.
Late last March, Deus called out of work sick, something she rarely did. The sneezing and coughing she was experiencing were just bad allergies, she told her sister. A longtime germaphobe, Deus always kept hand sanitizer, napkins and masks in her purse—long before the pandemic caused millions of Americans to do the same. “She was very freaky about germs,” says her younger sister Yolanda Desir. “It’s one of the reasons we thought she’d be the last person to get COVID.”
The sisters grew up in Haiti, where they always found time to play with their cousins. When their parents died at a young age, Deus made sure to look after her only sister. “She always took care of me like I was her daughter,” says Desir.
When she was in her 20s, Deus emigrated to the US to study to become a dental hygienist, and she later worked as a nursing assistant. Last spring, she was working as a food services worker at Brigham and Women’s Faulkner Hospital in Boston, where she helped prepare and deliver meals to patients and where it is believed she caught the virus.
By April, Deus had been hospitalized and later tested positive, as did her adult son, who battled the virus at home. Desir took care of her sick nephew and called the hospital daily to check in on her sister, hoping for good news. “I kept thinking ‘please resuscitate her for Easter.’” On April 22, Deus became the hospital’s first employee to die from COVID-19.
At the time of her death, the sisters were working to buy a house together, where they planned to live with their shared families. But the house felt strange without her sister, and Desir opted for a different one instead. Still, memories of her sister are all around.
“She was such a fun-loving person,” says Desir. “She wanted to see all the positive in people. And she always tried to feed everyone.”
Jose Andrade-Garcia was just weeks away from retiring from his job as a meatpacking worker when he contracted COVID-19 last April. Although he was experiencing flu-like symptoms, he was afraid he’d lose his job or affect his pending retirement, so he reported to work at JBS Swift & Co. in Marshalltown, Iowa, where he had worked for 20 years.
According to Alejandra Andrade, the youngest of his six children, the facility did not offer masks or personal protective gear to her father. In April 2020, the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) of Iowa filed an OSHA complaint about the facility’s unsafe working conditions in cutting, processing, break and dressing rooms. JBS was one of the three major meat producers to close US locations due to outbreaks. According to the Washington Post, the company did not mandate the use of masks until April 13.
Andrade-Garcia was hospitalized on April 17. He died on a ventilator a few weeks later, on May 15. He was 62. After his death, his family expressed anger toward JBS for not enforcing social distancing protocols sooner.
An immigrant from Mexico, Andrade-Garcia came to the States to work and send money home for his family. He eventually returned to get his wife and their five children and bring them to Iowa, where the couple had another daughter, Alejandra.
“He was an amazing father,” says Andrade. “He always taught us to work for our stuff. If we wanted something or needed a car, he told us to go work for it.”
Nearly a year after his death, his family gathered to celebrate what would have been his 63rd birthday on April 22. “We remember him every day,” says Andrade. “We remember everything that he taught us.”
Follow us
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
Want to republish a Modern Farmer story?
We are happy for Modern Farmer stories to be shared, and encourage you to republish our articles for your audience. When doing so, we ask that you follow these guidelines:
Please credit us and our writers
For the author byline, please use “Author Name, Modern Farmer.” At the top of our stories, if on the web, please include this text and link: “This story was originally published by Modern Farmer.”
Please make sure to include a link back to either our home page or the article URL.
At the bottom of the story, please include the following text:
“Modern Farmer is a nonprofit initiative dedicated to raising awareness and catalyzing action at the intersection of food, agriculture, and society. Read more at <link>Modern Farmer</link>.”
Use our widget
We’d like to be able to track our stories, so we ask that if you republish our content, you do so using our widget (located on the left hand side of the article). The HTML code has a built-in tracker that tells us the data and domain where the story was published, as well as view counts.
Check the image requirements
It’s your responsibility to confirm you're licensed to republish images in our articles. Some images, such as those from commercial providers, don't allow their images to be republished without permission or payment. Copyright terms are generally listed in the image caption and attribution. You are welcome to omit our images or substitute with your own. Charts and interactive graphics follow the same rules.
Don’t change too much. Or, ask us first.
Articles must be republished in their entirety. It’s okay to change references to time (“today” to “yesterday”) or location (“Iowa City, IA” to “here”). But please keep everything else the same.
If you feel strongly that a more material edit needs to be made, get in touch with us at [email protected]. We’re happy to discuss it with the original author, but we must have prior approval for changes before publication.
Special cases
Extracts. You may run the first few lines or paragraphs of the article and then say: “Read the full article at Modern Farmer” with a link back to the original article.
Quotes. You may quote authors provided you include a link back to the article URL.
Translations. These require writer approval. To inquire about translation of a Modern Farmer article, contact us at [email protected]
Signed consent / copyright release forms. These are not required, provided you are following these guidelines.
Print. Articles can be republished in print under these same rules, with the exception that you do not need to include the links.
Tag us
When sharing the story on social media, please tag us using the following: - Twitter (@ModFarm) - Facebook (@ModernFarmerMedia) - Instagram (@modfarm)
Use our content respectfully
Modern Farmer is a nonprofit and as such we share our content for free and in good faith in order to reach new audiences. Respectfully,
No selling ads against our stories. It’s okay to put our stories on pages with ads.
Don’t republish our material wholesale, or automatically; you need to select stories to be republished individually.
You have no rights to sell, license, syndicate, or otherwise represent yourself as the authorized owner of our material to any third parties. This means that you cannot actively publish or submit our work for syndication to third party platforms or apps like Apple News or Google News. We understand that publishers cannot fully control when certain third parties automatically summarize or crawl content from publishers’ own sites.
Keep in touch
We want to hear from you if you love Modern Farmer content, have a collaboration idea, or anything else to share. As a nonprofit outlet, we work in service of our community and are always open to comments, feedback, and ideas. Contact us at [email protected].by Shelby Vittek, Modern Farmer
May 7, 2021
Modern Farmer Weekly
Solutions Hub
Innovations, ideas and inspiration. Actionable solutions for a resilient food system.
ExploreExplore other topics
Share With Us
We want to hear from Modern Farmer readers who have thoughtful commentary, actionable solutions, or helpful ideas to share.
SubmitNecessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. This category only includes cookies that ensures basic functionalities and security features of the website. These cookies do not store any personal information.
Any cookies that may not be particularly necessary for the website to function and are used specifically to collect user personal data via analytics, ads, other embedded contents are termed as non-necessary cookies.