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Los Angeles
Times
George Skelton
June 10 2002
SACRAMENTO -- SACRAMENTO
What's good for the goose is good for the gander. We're not talking
here about farm geese, but farm workers.
Actually, we're also talking about money and how it influences
politicians. This episode has all the markings of a classic case.
The principal difference between the goose and the gander--two distinct
groups of farm workers--is that one gives politicians money and
the other does not.
Let's begin by turning back several pages.
In 1985, government officials investigated California racetracks
and found that backstretch workers--grooms, manure shovelers--were
being cheated out of overtime pay. Horse trainers were ordered to
pay back wages.
But the horse-racing industry was a big-time player in Sacramento,
a major donor of campaign money. It pushed through legislation reclassifying
the stable hands as agriculture workers, thus effectively exempting
them from overtime pay.
Now skip ahead to 2000. The dusty, cramped, unsanitary conditions
of underpaid backstretch workers--who live on the job--have deteriorated
even further. Meanwhile, track profits have sunk to dangerous lows
because of increasing competition from Indian casinos and card clubs.
The solution: a union for the stable hands; Internet and telephone
betting for the tracks.
Bingo. That bill sails through the Legislature.
But it's vetoed by Gov. Gray Davis, who fears "a significant
expansion of gambling." The governor says, however, he'd sign
a bill if it only protected track workers "from being subjected
to dismal living and
working conditions."
Last year, labor and tracks unite again. They sponsor a bill to
permit collective bargaining--and binding arbitration if there's
an impasse--coupled, once more, with Internet and telephone wagering.
There's scarcely a no vote in the Legislature. Davis signs the
bill, explaining that a new federal law already has expanded gambling
and this measure merely protects California's interests.
But let's be honest: It's also a fact that some interests had been
betting wisely on certain politicians. The horse-racing industry
had donated at least $189,000 to Davis since he took office and
poured money all over the Legislature.
The Service Employees International Union, representing the stable
hands, had donated $1.2 million to legislative candidates during
the 2000 elections. Three days before Davis signed the bill on Aug.
13,
2001, the SEIU gave him $100,000. It added another $200,000 in December.
Return to the present.
The United Farm Workers union has been watching all this. If those
racetrack "farm workers" can get binding arbitration--a
coveted bargaining tool--why can't the real farm workers? Field
hands often face even more "dismal living and working conditions"--to
quote Davis--than do stable hands.
Good for the goose, good for the gander.
The UFW, founded by the late Cesar Chavez, believes that binding
arbitration would force growers into labor contracts. Since 1975,
when agriculture workers were given the right to unionize and collectively
bargain, there have been 428 employee elections to join the UFW
and negotiate a contract. But only 185 contracts have been signed.
The UFW blames foot-dragging growers, many negotiating in bad faith.
Some talks date back to the '70s.
The farm lobby concedes a handful of growers may be guilty, but
insists this doesn't justify punishing an entire industry with a
draconian measure that exists in no other private enterprise. Except,
of course, horse racing.
The UFW solution was dreamed up by political consultant Richie
Ross, a onetime strike organizer for Chavez. A bill by Senate leader
John Burton (D-San Francisco) was amended to simply grant all farm
workers--track
and field--the same binding arbitration rights.
The bill barely passed the Senate, 21-13. Most Democrats voted
for it, Republicans against. It's now in the Assembly, unnerving
moderate Democrats.
The centrist governor, who tries to walk both sides of the farm
fence, has sent signals he'll probably veto the bill if it passes.
But he'd rather it just disappear while he's running for reelection.
The agriculture industry is circling the wagons. "We're not
going to tolerate this," says Roy Gabriel, lobbyist for the
California Farm Bureau Federation.
"Horse racing got off-track betting as a trade-off. What do
we get?"
Good point. On the racetrack bill, employers and employees were
united because they both benefited. That's one difference.
But the other difference is that the UFW--unlike the SEIU--does
not contribute campaign money. The farm lobby does.
We'll see whether the goose and the gander are equal in the eyes
of politicians.
Copyright 2002 Los Angeles Times
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