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'My Life Is New': Janitor Fights Back After Assault on the Night Shift

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Georgina Hernandez speaks at a hunger strike staged by the "Ya Basta" Coalition and its supporters to press Gov. Jerry Brown to sign AB 1978, which increases protection for janitors, in 2016. (Alejandra Valles)

In the #MeToo era, KQED is revisiting its groundbreaking “Rape on the Night Shift” series from 2015. Along with Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting, FRONTLINE, Univision and the Investigative Reporting Program at UC Berkeley, KQED uncovered extreme sexual abuses of janitorial workers that went unpunished by their employers.

When I first met a janitor named Georgina Hernandez, she was timid and teary-eyed. She had worked at a hotel where she cleaned the lobby and, in a lawsuit, said she was raped on the job by her supervisor. She was a single mom, supporting her children.

“When you need the job, you become a victim by not having the courage to say 'no,' ” she told me in her native Spanish. “And if you say 'no,' you are going to lose the job. I didn’t have someone to tell, or anyone I could trust.”

Georgina Hernandez (L) with investigator Vicky Hernandez (R) who works with the Maintenance Cooperation Trust Fund. Hernandez grew to trust Hernandez and eventually told her she'd been assaulted by her supervisor.
Georgina Hernandez (L) with investigator Vicky Hernandez (R), who works with the Maintenance Cooperation Trust Fund. Georgina grew to trust Vicky and eventually told her she'd been assaulted by her supervisor. (Daffodil Altan/CIR)

I met Hernandez in Los Angeles in 2015, while reporting for an investigative journalism project that started long before the #MeToo movement. "Rape on the Night Shift" exposed how immigrant janitors, working alone at night in isolated buildings, are particularly vulnerable to sexual violence. I co-reported the story with a team from Reveal, the Investigative Reporting Program at UC Berkeley, Univision and FRONTLINE.

We spent months talking with janitors and following a watchdog group of undercover investigators in Southern California. They’re former janitors who go into buildings at night to make sure workers are being paid fairly.

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Hernandez was one of the women these investigators met on the job. She cleaned a movie theater and a restaurant, scrubbing grease off the ceiling fans.

“I worked from 11 at night until 11 in the morning,” she told us. "I didn’t get overtime, I didn’t have rest breaks. I worked without stopping.”

It was another job -- cleaning a hotel lobby -- where her supervisor harassed her constantly. In a lawsuit she filed, Hernandez says he sexually assaulted her in the parking garage, where there were no security cameras.

“It was an experience that I wouldn’t wish upon any woman,” she told me back in 2015. During that interview, she could only describe what had happened to her as "sexual harassment," and she could hardly even make eye contact with me.

Today she’s a different person. When I meet up with her in early December, Hernandez is leading other women in a self-defense class in downtown L.A. They form a circle, and practice how to shout “no!” to fend off an attacker.

Georgina Hernandez makes a fist after a self-defense class held for women janitors by The Maintenance Cooperation Trust Fund. The organization plans to take this training to the buildings where the janitors work at night.
Georgina Hernandez demonstrates how to make a fist at a self-defense class held for women janitors by the Maintenance Cooperation Trust Fund. The organization plans to take this training to the buildings where the janitors work at night. (Claudio Rocha/FRONTLINE)

Hernandez has got a big grin on her face as she shows the other women how to make a fist to punch someone in the nose.

They’re practicing on large mannequins with muscled torsos dressed in red T-shirts. Hernandez is not intimidated by the menacing expressions on their plastic faces as she digs her thumbs into the mannequin’s eye sockets.

I ask her how it feels.

“Good! I’m mad!” she says, banging her fist into her palm. “I wish I could do it for real!”

Later, her dark ponytail swings back and forth as she kicks a plastic mat hard, practicing how to aim for an attacker’s testicles. Part of the exercise is learning how to say that word aloud.

Georgina Hernandez attacks a dummy at a self-defense class hosted specifically for janitors by The Maintenance Cooperation Trust Fund. The organization plans to take this training to the buildings where the janitors work at night.
A janitor attacks a dummy at a self-defense class hosted specifically for janitors by the Maintenance Cooperation Trust Fund. The organization plans to take this training to the buildings where the janitors work at night. (Claudio Rocha/FRONTLINE)

“My life is new,” she says. “I almost don’t even recognize myself. Now I’m confident in myself, I’m not afraid. Before I was afraid of my own shadow. I’m not afraid of anything anymore.”

Hernandez’s transformation, from a frightened worker who felt alone in her struggle to strong group leader willing to speak up for herself and other women, came after she met other women janitors who had also been harassed or raped on the job by their supervisors.

Some of those women had watched a Spanish-language version of our documentary “Rape on the Night Shift” at screenings sponsored by California’s janitors’ union, SEIU-United Service Workers West. After many of those screenings, women stood up and shared their own stories of abuse. Georgina became part of a larger campaign to fight back called “Ya Basta” -- “Enough is Enough.”

A billboard encouraging people to support AB 1978, which requires anti-sexual harassment training for all janitors.
A billboard encouraging people to support AB 1978, which requires anti-sexual harassment training for all janitors. (Courtesy of the Service Employees International Union-United Service Workers West)

The janitors began protesting in the streets. They put up billboards across the San Francisco Bay Area urging: “End Rape on the Night Shift.” And they organized a push for legislation that would increase protections for janitors. It was backed by Assemblywoman Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher of San Diego.

“We're talking about immigrant women, many undocumented immigrant women who, in a very personal way, need safety in their workplace,” Gonzalez Fletcher says. “And we're fighting not only the janitorial companies, but the business owners who hired those janitorial companies.”

The new law requires sexual harassment training for all janitors and their supervisors. Companies that don’t comply can’t do business in California.

“We wanted to make sure that the workers knew their rights, that supervisors knew what the law was as well,” Gonzalez Fletcher says. “We've got to continue to say, 'Who do we hold responsible? And how do we hold them responsible? And what happens for companies who don’t take allegations seriously?' ”

Georgina Hernandez was one of the janitors from across California who joined a five-day hunger strike outside the state Capitol as they waited for the AB 1978 to become law in 2016.
Georgina Hernandez was one of the janitors from across California who joined a five-day hunger strike outside the state Capitol as they waited for AB 1978 to become law in 2016. (Courtesy of Service Employees International Union-United Service Workers West)

The bill also creates a registry of janitorial companies, so the state can keep track of subcontractors and tiny fly-by-night operations.

As she lobbied for the bill, Gonzalez Fletcher got some of her colleagues in the legislative women’s caucus to wear a janitor’s uniform for a day.

Georgina Hernandez was one of the janitors from across California who joined a five-day hunger strike outside the state Capitol as they waited for the bill to become law. When they got word that Gov. Jerry Brown had in fact signed the bill, they collapsed into a giant heap, hugging one another as some wept and others shouted cries of relief.

Hernandez says she realizes that by telling her story, she has power. She helped change California law.

“I’m proud that women [janitors] are standing up now, aren’t scared,” she says. “It hurts. It makes you angry, but you have to break the silence. You can’t be embarrassed. It’s not your fault. It’s happened to lots of women. Not just one or two, but thousands are behind me, speaking up. Maybe our world as immigrant women will change.”

Lilia Garcia-Brower heads up the Maintenance Cooperation Trust Fund, a watchdog group based in Los Angeles that goes undercover to expose abuse and educate and advocate for janitors. She, too, can’t believe how much has changed for Hernandez.

“Looking at Georgina’s trajectory, it's amazing,” Garcia-Brower says. “How do we bring that to scale that experience with Georgina, the support we were able to provide? It’s all within her. But I believe that with all of these women, it's all within them. It’s just creating the opportunity for them to come forward.”

Hernandez is still working nights and early mornings as a janitor. But now she says she knows her rights, and the self-defense classes have helped her feel like she knows how to fight back. She says the idea is to take what she’s learning to the buildings where women are cleaning and train them during their meal breaks on techniques for protecting themselves.

“Once we teach one of them, it’s like a chain,” Hernandez says. “And they all learn their rights and how to defend themselves. To learn  how to stay alert if some wolf tries to get close to them.”

She wants people to know that janitors like her have been speaking up long before the #MeToo movement. She says watching women from Hollywood and the corporate world speak up about harassment has been bittersweet.

“I’m sad and angry at the same time” Hernandez says. “Those women have money, they’re powerful, they have everything in life that I don’t have. I’m proud of them for speaking up. But who listened to me? Nobody. These are important women. But I'm important, too.”

You can hear more of our update to "Rape on the Night Shift" on Reveal and watch the documentary on PBS FRONTLINE. Bernice Yeung, who co-reported this story, is the author of the forthcoming book "In a Day's Work: The Fight to End Sexual Violence Against America's Most Vulnerable Workers."

"Rape on the Night Shift" is an investigative collaboration between KQED, Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting, FRONTLINE, Univision and the Investigative Reporting Program at UC Berkeley.

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