James S. Burke reported to work at the Harvard Union for the last time on September 6, 1984.
Nine months later, in the early morning of June 12, 1985, the former cook at the College's largest dining hall succumbed to AIDS-related tuberculosis at Boston's Beth Israel Hospital.
Though it happened eight years ago, Burke's death still haunts many of his one-time co-workers. In recent interviews with The Crimson, the workers said they are concerned that Burke may have presented a health threat to thousands of students who ate the food he prepared.
Burke died long before the Union's current management staff was in place and six years before Harvard Dining Services (HDS) Director Michael P. Berry was even appointed.
But some HDS employees said they worry about persistent hazards to students caused by what they claim are improper labor management practices at Harvard. Chief among the employees' complaints are charges that dining hall managers force them to work when they are sick. HDS administrators have denied the allegations.
Several of the workers cited the Burke case as an example of what can happen when dining hall management goes wrong.
According to his colleagues, Burke continued to prepare food while he was deathly ill. And according to one fellow cook, Burke often failed to use the required plastic gloves, even on one occasion when he had an open blister on his hand.
Burke never informed anyone at work that he was HIV-positive, several of his co-workers said, though they said he appeared gaunt and sickly in the months preceding his departure. One co-worker said Burke made repeated trips to the Harvard-affiliated medical clinic frequented by many HDS employees.
"I've seen him work sick," said the worker, speaking on condition of anonymity. "He was visibly sick."
The Union workers said that Since Berry arrived at Harvard, most workers agreed, the College's kitchens have been clean. Employees said they wash their hands and usually, though not always, wear gloves. But instances of dangerous health conditions still exist, the workers said. In one documented case at the Union, a cook was reprimanded in writing for serving underwarmed food. "[When] the internal temperature was checked, it was far below...the acceptable serving temperature," said the reprimand, which was issued by Union Manager Katherine E. D'Andria. "This represents...the possibility of endangering the health of the students that were eating that meal." And in dozens of interviews with The Crimson, workers at dining halls across the College complained of being forced to work when they are sick. "There's always a fear that you're going to be terminated because of your absences," said Janet Dean, a general service worker at the Quincy House dining hall. "I just got a written warning because I've been out seven days," Dean said. "I've got letters from the doctor, but they don't want those. They say I'm setting up a pattern." Read more in News