| |
 |
12:30 - 2 p.m. in downtown L.A.
Farm worker supporters rally for historic
UFW bill at governor's L.A. office
|
|
|
|
Four days after 5,000 people rallied at the state Capitol to conclude
the farm workers' 165-mile, 10-day "March for the Governor's
Signature," more than 100 activists will rally outside Gov.
Gray Davis' Los Angeles office urging his signature on SB 1736.
That is the United Farm Workers-sponsored bill granting field laborers
mediation and arbitration to win union contracts when growers drag
out negotiations. The governor received the bill on Monday.
The demonstrators--including actors Ed Begley Jr. and Miguel Contreras,
leader of the Los Angeles County Federation of Labor, AFL-CIO--want
Gov. Davis to sign the most important farm labor bill since 1975.
That year saw passage of California's pioneering law granting farm
workers the right to organize.
Even though farm workers at 428 companies voted in secret-ballot
elections to be represented by the UFW since 1975, only 185 growers
have signed contracts with the Cesar Chavez-founded union. Thousands
of farm workers didn't win union contracts because growers dragged
out negotiations for years, sometimes decades. "What good is
the right to organize if farm workers don't get contracts?"
asks UFW President Arturo Rodriguez, who is leading the march with
union co-founder Dolores Huerta.
"SB 1736 would finally fulfill the promise of the original
1975 law establishing the farm workers' right to organize,"
Rodriguez says.
The march up Hwy. 99 during the searing heat of the Central Valley
summer was part of a UFW campaign that also includes Capitol vigils
to get the governor to approve the bill.
Who: More than 100 farm worker supporters, including actor
Ed Begley Jr. and L.A. County AFL-CIO leader Miguel Contreras.
What: Rally outside Gov. Gray Davis' Los Angeles office
urging him to sign historic legislation enabling farm workers to
win union contracts.
When: 12:30 p.m. to 2 p.m., Thursday, Aug. 29, 2002.
Where: Ronald Reagan State Office Building, 300 So. Spring
St., downtown Los Angeles.
- end -
|
|
|