At least 4 grocery store workers die from coronavirus. One family is suing.

Two Walmart grocery store employees and a greeter at a Giant store are among at least four supermarket workers who have died from the coronavirus in the U.S.

A Walmart spokesperson confirmed to NBC News on Tuesday that two workers at a Chicago-area store died after contracting the virus.

“We are heartbroken at the passing of two associates at our Evergreen Park store and we are mourning along with their families,” the company said in a statement.

The employees were identified in a wrongful death lawsuit filed against the company as Wando Evans, 51, and Phillip Thomas, 48.

Evans’ brother, Toney Evans, filed the suit against Walmart Inc. on Monday in a Cook County Circuit Court, claiming willful and wanton misconduct, reckless disregard and gross negligence.

The suit alleges that managers at the store in Evergreen Park, about 17 miles southwest of downtown Chicago, failed to alert workers after several employees began showing symptoms of COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus.

Walmart “had a duty to exercise reasonable care in keeping the store in a safe and healthy environment and, in particular, to protect employees, customers and other individuals within the store from contracting COVID-19 when it knew or should have known that individuals at the store were at a very high risk of infection and exposure,” the lawsuit states.

Wando Evans, an overnight stock and maintenance associate, first began experiencing symptoms in mid-March and told a store manager, “but was ignored,” the brother’s attorney, Tony Kalogerakos, said in a press release.

On March 23, the 51-year-old was sent home from work. Two days later he was found dead in his home.

Kalogerakos said that Walmart had a responsibility to notify store employees that a colleague was showing symptoms of the coronavirus, but they did not. Four days after Evans’ death, Thomas died of the virus, according to the suit.

Walmart spokeswoman Anne Hatfield said that the store has conducted a deep cleaning, and as “an extra precaution,” an outside company was brought in to further assist in disinfecting the store.

Hatfield said the company has not yet been served the lawsuit, but they “take this issue seriously.”

A greeter at a Giant Food Stores in Largo, Maryland, also died from the coronavirus. The Washington Post identified the worker as Leilani Jordan, 27.

Daniel Wolk, a spokesman for the food chain, said in a statement that the company was told by the worker’s family on Thursday that she had died.

“We can only imagine the heartache they are experiencing and have offered our support during this difficult time,” he said.

Wolk said they were made aware on March 28 that the employee was sick. She had not been at the store since March 16, “so we do not believe any other associates or customers are at risk,” he said.

“Regardless, following the guidance from health authorities, we have taken appropriate actions to keep our associates and our customers safe while we continue to provide an essential service to our communities, including additional cleaning and disinfecting of the store that took place when we learned of the associate’s diagnosis,” he said.

According to the Post, Trader Joe’s in upstate New York is closed for the next several days because an employee at its Scarsdale location died from the virus on Monday morning. The retailer could not immediately be reached for comment by NBC News on Tuesday.

A spokesperson told the Post that while the store is closed employees will continue to be paid and they will also receive an additional two days of paid leave.

Grocery store workers have been putting in grueling hours as the need for food and other essentials remain in high demand amid the pandemic.

Los Angeles City Councilman Curren Price told NBC News grocery store workers are among those on the front lines of the pandemic, and “we have to make sure they have the protections they need throughout their shifts.”

source: nbcnews.com