Steady Habits: A CT Mirror Podcast
News:Politics
There are 95,000 housekeepers working in hospitals across the country -- greater than the number of doctors. Housekeepers are among the health care workers who spend the most time with patients and their families, often talking to and forming relationships with people as they clean.
Despite the crucial role they played, housekeepers reported feeling unseen and undervalued throughout the pandemic. Investigative reporter Katy Golvala tells host Ebong Udoma housekeepers feel they're being left out of essential worker benefits. You can read her story here.
Katy's story is also the first in a new initiative by the CT Mirror to be published in simultaneously in Spanish.
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See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Steady Habits Presents: In the Room with Chris Murphy
Probation, parole and commutations: The Breakdown
Linda Greenhouse analyzes the 2023 U.S. Supreme Court term
CT Mirror's 2023 Legislative Recap
A Conversation with Gov Ned Lamont
Keith Phaneuf's Big Budget Review 2023
Reporter Roundtable: The 2023 Legislative Session
Mark Pazniokas and the Politics of 2023
Growing CT's economy through science and technology
Fatal blazes highlight problems with fire inspection in Connecticut cities
Affordable housing misses out on stimulus spending in Connecticut
What does Leora Levy's primary victory mean for the Connecticut GOP?
Cash Bail in Connecticut Part 2: What can we learn from New Jersey?
Cash Bail in Connecticut Part 1: A Growing Problem
GOP Senate primary heats up in Connecticut
Bus ridership is coming back in Connecticut
Linda Greenhouse: The end of Roe and a momentous Supreme Court term
What happens to health care prices when doctors' practices are bought up
Cannabis and social equity: What can Massachusetts teach us?
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