Get Involved
United Farm Workers
PO Box 62
Keene, CA 93531
(with other offices in CA, TX, FL, AZ, and DC)
euranday@ufwmail.com
The United Farm Workers is a union with roots in farm labor
organizing going back to the late 1950s. Founded by Dolores Huerta and
Cesar Chavez, the UFW has successfully fought for labor rights for
farmworkers in grape, strawberry, apple, citrus, date, almond,
mushroom, vegetable, and flower industries. They won the first genuine
collective bargaining agreement between farm workers and growers in
the history of the continental United States in 1966. Their many
achievements also include the first union contracts requiring rest
periods, clean drinking water, hand washing facilities, protective
clothing against pesticide exposure, banning pesticide straying while
workers are in the fields, and outlawing DDT and other dangerous
pesticides.
Their website has information about their current labor struggles,
boycotts against grape, strawberry, and mushroom companies, action
alerts on guestworker legislation, an informative listserve,
farmworker history, their Spanish-language radio stations, and a
listing of companies that sell union-produced wine, flowers,
vegetables and fruits.
Northwest
Treeplanters and Farmworkers United/PCUN
300 Young Street
Woodburn, OR 97071
(503) 982-0243 tel
(503) 982-1031 fax
farmworkerunion@pcun.org
PCUN (Pineiros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste) is Oregon's union of
farmworkers, nursery and reforestation workers, and Oregon's largest
Latino organization with over 4,500 members. Agriculture in Oregon is
a three billion dollar business and Oregon ranks among the top three
states nationally in the production of at least 13 commodities
(including berries, grass seed, pears, cherries, hops, mint, onions,
cauliflower, and Christmas trees). PCUN's many projects include field
organizing and public education for farmworker labor rights, a project
to stop pesticide poisoning, a women's project, English classes, and
the development of farmworker-controlled housing.
PCUN is currently promoting a boycott of NORPAC Foods, a grower owned
food processor with revenues of $260 million a year. The NORPAC member
growers have steadfastly refused to negotiate with farmworkers
employed on their farms, much less recognize the union of the
farmworkers' choosing. The boycott's goal is achieve collective
bargaining agreements for farmworkers employed on NORPAC member
farms. For an action kit on how to get your school or other
institution to stop purchasing NORPAC products, contact Rebecca
Saldana at
rjsaldana@writeme.com
Farm Labor
Organizing Committee, AFL-CIO
1221 Broadway Street
Toledo, OH 43609
(419) 243-3456 tel
FLOC is a union of migrant and seasonal farmworkers in the Midwest,
founded in 1967 by Baldemar Velásquez. FLOC and its supporters in
the religious community, organized labor, and local volunteer
committees around the country carried on an eight-year strike and
boycott against Campbell Soup. In 1986, FLOC signed historic contracts
with Campbell Soup and Vlasic and their tomato and pickle growers in
Ohio and Michigan, and later with Heinz, Green Bay, and Aunt Jane's
corporations and their pickle growers in the same region.
Focusing new efforts on North Caroline, FLOC officially launched a
boycott of Mt. Olive Pickles on St Patrick's Day in 1999. The union's
efforts are geared to force company officials to bargain a contract to
improve wages and conditions for the estimated 5,000 migrant
farmworkers who harvest its cucumbers in eastern North Carolina. For
more information about how to support the Mt. Olive Pickle Boycott,
contact
floc@topaz.iupui.edu.
International Brotherhood of Teamsters Local 890
207 Sanborn Road
Salinas, CA 93905
(831) 424-5743 tel
(831) 424-2091 fax
Teamsters Local 890 was founded in 1943, and currently represents over
12,000 workers throughout Central and Southern California and
Southwestern Arizona, primarily in food processing. Their membership
also includes vegetable field workers, as well as workers in
construction, freight, retail delivery and sales, UPS, and the laundry
industry. As their membership is nearly half female and overwhelmingly
Latino, they also work to help their members become citizens through
The Citizenship Project.
In February 2000, Local 890 initiated a boycott of Basic Vegetable and
its parent company, Basic American Foods. Basic's dried vegetable
products (potatoes, beans, and spices) are used in schools, hospitals,
jails and other large facilities across the country. Students have
shown solidarity by passing Boycott Basic Resolutions through their
student government, residence halls associations and by approaching
their campus administrators and requesting that these products be
removed from campus cafeterias and dormitories. For information on how
to support the boycott, email
ibt890@pacbell.net.
Coalition
of Immokalee Workers
P.O. Box 603
Immokalee, FL, 34143
(941) 657-8311 tel
(941) 657-5055 fax
The CIW is a community-based worker organization whose members are
largely Mexican, Guatemalan, Haitian immigrants as well as
African-Americans working in low-wage jobs throughout the Southwest
Florida region. Southwest Florida is the state's most important center
for agricultural production, and Immokalee is the state's largest
farmworker community. As such, the majority of the members are
farmworkers who spend 8-9 months of the year here in Southwest Florida
then travel north on the season during the summer months.
The CIW is currently struggling for a living wage for tomato pickers
whose produce is purchased by corporations such as Taco Bell and
Burger King. For information on how to support the union's efforts
write CoaImmWkr@aol.com.