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Puzzled by Miriam Pawel's L.A. Times
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We are grateful to the hundreds of good people who know our work
and have contacted us expressing outrage at Miriam Pawel's
recent series in the Los Angeles Times. For a few, the articles
have raised concerns, and we appreciate you contacting us directly
so we can answer any questions. Please email us at UFWofamer@aol.com
and we will respond.
- Pawel's main premise - that the United Farm Workers is "failing
to organize California farm workers - is directly contradicted
by reporting from no less than 22 Los Angeles Times reporters
and two columnists between April 25, 1994 (when the current UFW
organizing drive began) and Sept. 23, 2005. These stories chronicle
substantial UFW organizing, election, strike and boycott activities
plus new union contracts and legislative victories.
Either all the stories by those L.A. Times reporters are wrong
or Pawel's stories are wrong. They both can't be right. There is
a long list of accomplishments and facts in that L.A. Times coverage
raising serious questions about Pawel's reporting. Please see
citations for just 48 of the 1994-2005 news articles and columns
by Times writers on UFW activities by subject matter with headlines,
reporters' names and dates at www.ufw.org.
- Among other things, L.A. Times stories from 1994 to 2005 chronicle:
- A string of UFW election victories and campaigns to win contracts,
with workers at 32 companies voting for the union in secret ballot
elections and dozens of important UFW contract successes, including
the largest strawberry, rose, winery and mushroom firms in California
and the nation.
- Fierce grower resistance to farm worker organizing.
- The UFW's major organizing campaign among Central Valley
table grape workers last summer that produced modest pay hikes
and a near win in the largest private-sector union election in the
nation last year, at Giummara.
- New laws and regulations aiding farm workers the UFW
won since 1999, from seat belts in farm labor vehicles and fresh
protections for farm workers cheated by farm labor contractors to
an historic binding mediation law and new pesticide protections
for farm workers. The UFW even convinced Republican Gov. Schwarzenegger
in 2005 to issue an emergency regulation to prevent further heat
deaths of farm workers and all outdoor employees.
- If Pawel was telling the full story of the UFW and the Farm
Worker Movement, her writing would have reflected it. You decide:
- Tuesday's story totaled 121 column inches. Only
5 inches contained facts or perspective provided by the UFW.
- Monday's article was 135.5 column inches. Just 8.5
inches were from the Farm Worker Movement.
- Sunday's story was 132 column inches. Only 10 inches
were from the Farm Worker Movement.
We plan to take these facts and much more to the editors of the
L.A. Times and demand the full story of the UFW, Cesar Chavez and
the Farm Worker Movement be told. We're never satisfied
with the progress we have made. But we're proud of what
we have accomplished and remain committed to overcoming the many
challenges we face. We hope you will join us. Please send your letter
to the editor of the L.A. Times if you have not already done so.
(A much more detailed refutation is being prepared and we will share
it with you.)
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