Latino USA Episode 07
06:11
This is Maria Hinojosa. The memory of farm worker leader Cesar Chavez continues to be honored throughout the country. In Los Angeles, there's talk of naming a boulevard after him and a bill has been introduced in the state of California to make his birthday a statewide holiday. Recently, in another state, in El Paso, Texas, the city and county government declared a Cesar Chavez Day when a local supermarket chain announced it would honor the boycott of table grapes advocated by the United Farm Workers. Cesar Chavez Day in El Paso was also commemorated with a march attended by farm workers and farm worker advocates. It was an occasion, as an Angelica Luevano reports, to focus on the plight of the farm workers who picked chile in the fields of West Texas and Southern New Mexico.
07:00
Close to 3,000 gathered to pay tribute to the late Cesar Chavez, the farm labor leader who fought to better working conditions in the picking fields. And it's here near the border with Mexico, in the chile fields, where the worst working conditions prevailed, according to Carlos Marentes, president of the Border Farm Workers Union.
07:21
Farm workers in this area are still receiving wages way below the federal minimum wage. They are working on their unhealthy and unsafe working conditions, and they continue to be treated in an inhuman way by the agri business and the food industry.
07:39
Marentes indicates that the average annual income for a farm worker in this area is just over $5,000, well below the poverty line. At the same time, the chile industry has become the most prosperous in the region. In 1992, picante sauce or salsa surpassed ketchup as the most popular condiment in the US. And for the state of New Mexico, chile is the most lucrative crop. Mark Schneider, a lawyer with Texas Rural Legal Aid says that the Department of Labor for years has ignored the enforcement of minimal labor laws for the farm workers.
08:17
The sad thing is, here in El Paso, in southern New Mexico, even the minimal laws are not complied with and they're broken more than they're complied with.
08:26
Is the situation here for the farm workers worse than in any part of the country or what is the situation?
08:31
I think it's probably the worst of any place in the country because of our day hall system and that means that people are recruited one day at a time, they spend four to five hours a day in old dangerous school buses going a hundred to 120 miles away to work, picking chile in 100, 110-degree heat on a piece rate. They don't even make minimum wage for time in the fields, let alone for travel time, and the workers are made homeless. These are people who maybe have homes, but they have to sleep in the streets of El Paso so they can get a job every day.
09:05
Even the Catholic diocese of El Paso has joined in the call for better working conditions. Bishop Raymundo Peña honored Cesar Chavez and the struggle of the farm workers.
09:16
We are consciously aware of the fact that we must carry on his work. That much remains to be done in order to bring about the necessary legal and social changes that may ensure just wages for the farm worker, fair treatment in the workplace, and a life of dignity and respect that results when civil and human rights are protected.
09:45
Three years ago, over 100 workers went on strike against one of the largest chile farms in New Mexico, and as a result, a collective bargaining agreement was signed. That contract has not been renewed. Still, labor leader Carlos Marentes says the farm workers' movement is alive and as time goes on, more attention continues to be focused on the plight of the chile workers. For Latino USA, I'm Angelica Luevano in El Paso, Texas.
Latino USA Episode 14
02:17
The number of migrant workers in this country has tripled in the last 15 years. According to a study by the Migrant Legal Action Program in Washington, there are now 3 million migrant laborers in the U.S.
02:28
Some of those workers made history recently when for the first time ever, Mexican migrants in Chester County, Pennsylvania, the heart of the nation's mushroom industry, voted to unionize.
02:38
From Philadelphia, Vicky Quay reports.
02:41
Chester County mushroom growers have hired Mexican nationals to pick their crops for 25 years, and in the past, there have been several attempts to unionize these workers, but none have been successful until now.
02:53
On July 13, the State Labor Board tallied ballots the workers cast in an election held last April. The results were 124 to 101, in favor of unionization. The workers' attorney, Bill Suárez-Potts, says the results should send a warning to other growers.
03:12
They could probably save themselves a lot of grief and just the turmoil that's been caused by the events of the last few months if they were to recognize the legitimate interests and concerns of their workforces.
03:25
Potts says poor working conditions and low wages spurred the union drive. The company plans to challenge the results.
03:32
Reporting for "Latino USA," I'm Vicky Quay in Philadelphia.
Latino USA 07
06:11 - 06:59
This is Maria Hinojosa. The memory of farm worker leader Cesar Chavez continues to be honored throughout the country. In Los Angeles, there's talk of naming a boulevard after him and a bill has been introduced in the state of California to make his birthday a statewide holiday. Recently, in another state, in El Paso, Texas, the city and county government declared a Cesar Chavez Day when a local supermarket chain announced it would honor the boycott of table grapes advocated by the United Farm Workers. Cesar Chavez Day in El Paso was also commemorated with a march attended by farm workers and farm worker advocates. It was an occasion, as an Angelica Luevano reports, to focus on the plight of the farm workers who picked chile in the fields of West Texas and Southern New Mexico.
07:00 - 07:20
Close to 3,000 gathered to pay tribute to the late Cesar Chavez, the farm labor leader who fought to better working conditions in the picking fields. And it's here near the border with Mexico, in the chile fields, where the worst working conditions prevailed, according to Carlos Marentes, president of the Border Farm Workers Union.
07:21 - 07:39
Farm workers in this area are still receiving wages way below the federal minimum wage. They are working on their unhealthy and unsafe working conditions, and they continue to be treated in an inhuman way by the agri business and the food industry.
07:39 - 08:17
Marentes indicates that the average annual income for a farm worker in this area is just over $5,000, well below the poverty line. At the same time, the chile industry has become the most prosperous in the region. In 1992, picante sauce or salsa surpassed ketchup as the most popular condiment in the US. And for the state of New Mexico, chile is the most lucrative crop. Mark Schneider, a lawyer with Texas Rural Legal Aid says that the Department of Labor for years has ignored the enforcement of minimal labor laws for the farm workers.
08:17 - 08:26
The sad thing is, here in El Paso, in southern New Mexico, even the minimal laws are not complied with and they're broken more than they're complied with.
08:26 - 08:31
Is the situation here for the farm workers worse than in any part of the country or what is the situation?
08:31 - 09:05
I think it's probably the worst of any place in the country because of our day hall system and that means that people are recruited one day at a time, they spend four to five hours a day in old dangerous school buses going a hundred to 120 miles away to work, picking chile in 100, 110-degree heat on a piece rate. They don't even make minimum wage for time in the fields, let alone for travel time, and the workers are made homeless. These are people who maybe have homes, but they have to sleep in the streets of El Paso so they can get a job every day.
09:05 - 09:16
Even the Catholic diocese of El Paso has joined in the call for better working conditions. Bishop Raymundo Peña honored Cesar Chavez and the struggle of the farm workers.
09:16 - 09:45
We are consciously aware of the fact that we must carry on his work. That much remains to be done in order to bring about the necessary legal and social changes that may ensure just wages for the farm worker, fair treatment in the workplace, and a life of dignity and respect that results when civil and human rights are protected.
09:45 - 10:15
Three years ago, over 100 workers went on strike against one of the largest chile farms in New Mexico, and as a result, a collective bargaining agreement was signed. That contract has not been renewed. Still, labor leader Carlos Marentes says the farm workers' movement is alive and as time goes on, more attention continues to be focused on the plight of the chile workers. For Latino USA, I'm Angelica Luevano in El Paso, Texas.
Latino USA 14
02:17 - 02:28
The number of migrant workers in this country has tripled in the last 15 years. According to a study by the Migrant Legal Action Program in Washington, there are now 3 million migrant laborers in the U.S.
02:28 - 02:38
Some of those workers made history recently when for the first time ever, Mexican migrants in Chester County, Pennsylvania, the heart of the nation's mushroom industry, voted to unionize.
02:38 - 02:41
From Philadelphia, Vicky Quay reports.
02:41 - 02:53
Chester County mushroom growers have hired Mexican nationals to pick their crops for 25 years, and in the past, there have been several attempts to unionize these workers, but none have been successful until now.
02:53 - 03:12
On July 13, the State Labor Board tallied ballots the workers cast in an election held last April. The results were 124 to 101, in favor of unionization. The workers' attorney, Bill Suárez-Potts, says the results should send a warning to other growers.
03:12 - 03:25
They could probably save themselves a lot of grief and just the turmoil that's been caused by the events of the last few months if they were to recognize the legitimate interests and concerns of their workforces.
03:25 - 03:32
Potts says poor working conditions and low wages spurred the union drive. The company plans to challenge the results.
03:32 - 03:36
Reporting for "Latino USA," I'm Vicky Quay in Philadelphia.