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The UFW works hard on Capitol Hill |
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From the Los Angeles Times: LETTERS
February 3, 2006
I was surprised that in the recent series on the United Farm Workers
(Jan. 8-11), The Times did not interview any of the many legislators
with whom the UFW has worked over the years. As a result of the
UFW's work and the legislative battles it has fought, California's
farmworkers have won pesticide protections, farm labor contractor
reforms, elimination of backbreaking hand weeding, binding mediation
of labor disputes and improved healthcare.
Last year, the UFW won for California's workers the right to paid
breaks, shade and cool drinking water to recover from the effects
of working in the heat. This year, the union hopes to pass AgJobs,
a difficultly negotiated compromise with agribusiness that has the
support of a majority of U.S. senators.
I've seen the UFW organize workers, bring them to the Capitol and
overcome an army of agribusiness lobbyists and a bank vault of political
contributions. Far from abandoning California's farmworkers, the
UFW continually must meet the challenges of organizing an undocumented
and easily intimidated workforce. Yet the union has won contracts
for thousands of workers, most recently with the Gallo wine company.
Every Californian who enjoys the food the farmworkers harvest should
know that those workers have better lives because of those who carry
on the legacy of Cesar Chavez.
REP. HOWARD L. BERMAN
(D-Valley Village)
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