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Los Angeles
Times
September 9 2002
SACRAMENTO -- SACRAMENTO--Cold, dry statistics sprang to life and
displayed the new political reality during a recent Assembly floor
fight. These familiar statistics:
* The Latinos' share of the California population grew from 19%
to 32% between 1980 and 2000 and is projected to reach 39% by 2020.
* There were only seven Latino legislators after the 1980 election.
Today there are 26--seven in the Senate, 19 in the Assembly.
Nearly one-fourth of the Assembly now is Latino. Back 30 years
ago, only one-fortieth was.
That, of course, is handy fodder for academicians lecturing abstractly
about rising Latino political power.
On this day, however, real Latino politicians were exercising real
power.
The fight involved farm workers and growers. Some rotten-apple
growers have been stonewalling United Farm Worker negotiators for
years.
Now all growers--many very angry--are being affected by the proposed
legislative cure.
The UFW and its Capitol point man--Senate leader John Burton (D-San
Francisco)--kept coming back at session's end with new collective
bargaining proposals, hoping to pass one Gov. Gray Davis would sign.
A bill permitting binding arbitration when negotiations deadlocked
led to a second proposal for mandatory mediation. The state Agriculture
Labor Relations Board would have the final say, subject to court
appeal.
That mediation bill (SB 1156) is what the Assembly was intensely
debating Aug. 30.
I was struck by the number of Latino lawmakers who rose and spoke
passionately of their farm worker roots. Some spoke at length in
Spanish.
It's something you wouldn't have heard 15 years ago, let alone
35 when the powerful Senate leader--Democrat Hugh Burns of Fresno--carried
water for growers. Indeed, the Central Valley then was represented
in Sacramento by white men beholden to growers.
A shift began in the '70s. Fresno Democrat George Zenovich, a labor
ally, replaced Burns in the Senate and co-sponsored the bill giving
farm workers collective bargaining rights and creating the ALRB.
But few then could have envisioned today's diverse political representation
from California's farm belt.
Example: Assemblywoman Sarah Reyes (D-Fresno), 41, a former TV
reporter-anchor. She wasn't going to speak during the debate, Reyes
says, but "all these memories came back." Memories of
picking grapes at age 10 with her parents and six siblings.
"What I remember the most," she told lawmakers, "were
those early morning hours that we got up at 3 a.m. dressed like
it was the Arctic North. We went out into the field, I looked down
that long row and was told, 'Get picking.'
"As you went down the row, you took off the jacket because
it got a little warmer, you took off the sweater ... you put on
a bandanna because you want to block your head from the sun ...
"All you did was pick and look down the row, wondering if
there was ever going to be an end to the row. And when you get to
the end of the row, they go, 'There's another row.' ...
"This is an easy vote. When I decide how to vote on this,
I remember when I was 10 years old."
Assemblyman Simon Salinas (D-Salinas), 46, told of coming to California
from Mexico with his migrant worker parents, who raised 12 children.
"It's very offensive to me when people use the word 'illegal
alien,' " he said. "Come with me to Salinas, and I will
show you those hard-working 'illegal aliens.' "
The only Republican to vote for the bill was Assemblyman Robert
Pacheco, 68, of Walnut, who recalled a childhood picking cotton
and onions with his dad. "The bottom line," he said, "is
this: As a farm worker remembering my past, my roots, where I come
from, I cannot abandon that."
The bill passed the Assembly 49-27 and the Senate 25-12. The next
night, the Legislature sent Davis yet another bill (AB 2596) placing
a five-year "sunset" on the mediation measure and capping
the number of mediations at 75. Davis had proposed a three-year
"sunset" with 35 mediations.
Davis' advisors are sharply divided over whether he should sign
the legislation. Some say it's too rushed and he should delay a
year to strive for a worker-grower consensus; moreover, he shouldn't
allow the bellicose Burton to shove him around. Others argue the
proposal is close enough to his liking and growers never will be
satisfied; besides, he belongs with the union.
"If he doesn't sign the bill, he puts many of us who have
been his staunchest supporters in a very precarious position,"
says Democratic state chairman Art Torres, an ex-lawmaker who helped
push the original ALRB bill. "If he's going to get people excited
about the election, he has to give them a reason to vote."
Reyes would tell Davis this isn't about some abstract notion of
centrism. This is about real field hands trudging down row after
row as the grower stomps on their collective bargaining rights.
Copyright 2002 Los Angeles Times
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