Showing posts with label Farmworkers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Farmworkers. Show all posts

Monday, July 15, 2024

From Our Oregon Working-Class History


Oregon, 1939...

Caption
Young mother, aged twenty-two, has one little girl three years old. Merrill, Klamath County, Oregon. In mobile unit of FSA (Farm Security Administration) camp. New baby expected in December. During this year she has worked with her husband in: strawberries (Helvetia, Oregon); cherries (Salem, Oregon); beans (West Stayton, Oregon); hops (Independence, Oregon). Is now in potato camp at the end of that season. "We haven't got a cent now and we've lost our car because we've helped some people out. It seems like it's taken every cent to eat off, that and traveling around."

Source:Farm Security Administration (Dorothea Lange photographer)

Monday, July 8, 2024

Another Opportunity to Help Farm Workers - July 18 in Salem, OR

EMERGENCY BACKPACKS FOR OREGON FARM WORKERS

The Oregon Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and Oregon's Farm Worker Union PCUN invite Willamette Valley churches and ecumenical community groups to participate in "Solidarity Summer 2024," collaborating to provide 500 equipped backpacks for farm worker families in the 2024 wildfire season--July, August and September.

Join faith and labor allies to acknowledge the land, fill backpacks and share blessings with PCUN staff leading farm worker summer wildfire preparedness workshops during July & August.

Solidarity Summer 2024 Backpack Celebration & Workshop
Thursday, July 18, 2024, 1:00 P.M.--4:00 P.M.
PCUN union office, 300 Young St., Woodburn, OR 97071

Learn more
Contact Sarah Loose, Director, Oregon Synod Director of Disaster & Climate Resilience, email sarahl@oregonsynod.org.

In the mid-Willamette Valley: Ed Brandt, member, St. Mark Lutheran Social Ministry Committee, 503-917-1326, edgarbrandt74@gmail.com
Car-pooling (meet July 18 @ 12:00 P.M. noon, St. Mark Lutheran Church, 790 Marion St. NE, Salem, OR 97301).

Hear Windmill Farm Mushroom Workers Explain Their Struggle on Zoom

 

From Northwest Farm Worker Ministry:
At 4 pm Pacific time on Friday, July 12, National Farm Worker Ministry will be hosting a presentation from some of the former and current Windmill Farms employees as well as others involved in the campaign. The employees will discuss their experience of taking labor action against Windmill Farms in the face of their labor rights violations. NFWM invites you to join us in hearing their story. If interested, please fill out the google form that is linked below.

https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSee1_tp5g-GYKLxvVW0UVW8yMMFkuydbpLKwX9I_MXPc_DYFg/viewform?usp=sf_link

Sunnyside mushroom plant lawsuit split between arbitration and court

From the Farm Worker Ministry Northwest:


United Farm Workers supporters including former mushroom worker Jose Martinez (second from left), the Rev. Connie Yost (second from right) and Kim Tyskiewicz (right), UFW Regional Director rallied in support of the Ostrom/Windmill Farms mushroom workers in advance of the June 11 hearing of the lawsuit they filed in November 2023.

From the Yakima Herald-Republic, JORDAN ALLYN & JASPER KENZO SUNDEEN, Jun 13, 2024

A United Farm Workers’ lawsuit against a Sunnyside mushroom farm survived after a hearing in Yakima Superior Court.

Superior Court Judge Jared Boswell listened to arguments Tuesday from the United Farm Workers and Windmill Mushroom Farms, also called Greenwood Mushroom Sunnyside in court documents, regarding worker allegations of labor rights violations.

Boswell decided to move the worker lawsuits against the company to private arbitration and allow for UFW’s lawsuit to remain in court.

“I’m going to have both cases running on different tracks,” Boswell said.

The lawsuit, which was filed in November 2023, is the latest step in years-long worker efforts to unionize and fight for better working conditions.

“I think it's important for the workers to see that they have access to a public forum, not a private forum like arbitration,” said UFW plaintiff attorney Edgar Aguilasocho following the decision.

The defendant’s attorney, Peter Wozniak, declined to comment but argued for arbitration during the hearing. He said the plaintiffs signed a binding agreement to arbitrate all of the claims at issue.

A rally led by UFW organizers outside the Yakima County Courthouse preceded the court hearing and included members of various community advocacy groups.

Read more

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

Co-enforcement, Worker Power, and Re-thinking Labor and Social Movements (Part One)


This post is inspired by a plenary session and a workshop that I attended at the Labor Research and Action Network (LRAN) conference that was held in Portland on June 20-21.

The plenary session took up the matter of how labor can use co-enforcement strategies in Oregon. That session featured the following presenters and presentations:

• Jessica Giannettino Villatoro, Deputy Commissioner, Oregon Bureau of Labor and Industries (BOLI)
• Why the Agency Embraced Co-Enforcement, Big Changes: Laura van Enckevort, Wage and Hour Division Administrator, OR BOLI
• Transforming Day to Day Practices, Setting Sectoral Tables: Kate Suisman, Attorney, Northwest Workers' Justice Project and Liz Marquez, Policy Associate, Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste (PCUN)

• Co-enforcement in Practice:

- Adam Jeffries, Proactive Investigations and Enforcement Unit, OR BOLI
- Construction: Trampas Simmons, Special Representative and Jesus Saucedo, Organizer, Western States Regional Council of Carpenters, taking on multiple subcontracting entities
- Childcare: Nat Glitsch, Organizer, ILWU Local 5 organizing in childcare centers

Progress, Challenges and Lessons:

• Moderator: Janice Fine, Professor, Rutgers University School of Management and Labor Relations

The workshop that inspired this post dealt with defining co-enforcement, how to use co-enforcement locally, and how to use enforcement as a means for building worker power. That workshop was led by the following researchers and analysts:

• Janice Fine, Rutgers University School of Management and Labor Relations
• Jeremy Simer, Researcher, SEIU Local 49
• Janet Bauer, Research Associate, Oregon LERC
• Jillian Cruickshank, Policy Analyst, Jobs with Justice
• Tia Koonse, Legal and Policy Research Manager, UCLA Labor Center

This post is a mash-up of what I understood the speakers listed above and certain audience members to say and some of my thinking.

I think that the key underlying assumption shared by most of the speakers was that the strategic use of laws, regulations, and public institutions by unions and pro-labor and pro-worker non-profits can build worker power. There was an optimistic belief that government---the state---can be democratic and user-friendly by workers and our organizations and a more realistic assessment that pro-worker policies often pass through legislative action and rule-making processes without enough thought being given to who is going to do enforcement and what enforcement of these laws and regulations looks like. This lack of foresight and planning is not sustainable and eventually creates working-class distrust and cynicism. These understandings led most of the speakers to support strategic enforcement of laws and rules by unions and allied organizations, better and more research, and alliances between unions and likely partners.

“Co-enforcement” simply refers to unions and union-friendly organizations partnering to enforce the laws and rules that are on the books, and perhaps stretching them in practice to meet their intended purposes. The problem here is that the dominant understanding of government today is that state institutions are supposed to be neutral while workers need laws, policies and enforcement that are not neutral and that help us. It helps to remember that many local, state, and federal agencies were set up in response to working-class demands for protection and redress and that conservatives (with help from many liberals) have been successful in weakening these agencies and redirecting their missions. I think that on this point several of the speakers exaggerated the relative strength of the Progressives who were in power in the early years of the 20th century and the good work done for working-class people under the New Deal of the 1930s, downplayed or were silent on the advances we made under the Kennedy and Johnson and Nixon administrations, and did not address the austerity measures that we saw under the Carter and Clinton and Obama administrations.

Perhaps it is that in many regions of the world, including the United States, many traditional functions of government have either been taken over by corporations or abandoned. The rising corporate model is not the traditional one of reinvesting some profits in producing goods and services but of moving away from direct ownership of production and distribution and instead holding onto profits and banking them, causing a dangerous expansion of the financial sector. More companies connect consumers to services and service providers and charge fees and make profits from doing that rather than through production and distributing goods and services that they own. Under such new conditions enforcement and co-enforcement come up against special challenges.

Whether I’m right or wrong here, I agreed with the speakers who made it clear that we need to go beyond umpires and adjudicators and get into real enforcement. Oregon is unique in that we are one of only 5 states where commissioners of labor are elected. Oregon’s Bureau of Labor and Industries has a wage and hour division, a civil rights division and apprenticeship programs oversight. Workers’ comp and insurance, workplace safety and health, the Employment Department, business licensing and oversight, and the Construction Contractors Board are separate from BOLI.

Frontline state and agency staff dealing with workers’ rights and benefits need up-to-date training and support to meet today’s demand. So do union staff and members and the folks working in organizations allied with unions. Still, the problems these people face go beyond training. The will to fight hard for workers’ rights requires in the first place an understanding of the contours of class struggle and resources. Jessica Giannettino Villatoro pointed out that we have under-resourced wage and hour investigators here in Oregon handling over 200 claims a year when they should be handling 85 or fewer. They are trained in laws, policies, and enforcement, and they benefit from their contact with people working in pro-worker non-profits, but they and their non-profit activist colleagues do not learn the fundamentals of class struggle as a cohort.

Other conference speakers pointed out that complaints, by themselves, don’t empower workers or our organizations. The policy analysts, investigators and enforcement agents work in a fragmented and underfunded system that cannot bring lasting justice as it is. The system that we have now---including workplace inspections and enforcement, passing worker-friendly laws and doing good rule-making, and even union organizing and contract negotiations and grievance handling---is weak or broken. We need to think of this as one system and not as separate silos to understand what is going on around us and make real change.

When conference speakers spoke about labor winning more of our fights these days and an upsurge in the number of strikes I wondered why it doesn’t feel like we’re winning much of the time. Why are the strikes that are taking place not more politicized and why don’t they seem to be helping to give us a ride into a victory at the polls in November? Working-class cynicism is fed by weak laws and policies and under-resourced enforcement, laws and standards that hamper union enforcement, and at least 30 years of concessions-based bargaining by unions and related losses in union power.

This cynicism is not unreasonable, but many workers still maintain a fundamental but fragile hope in the system despite their pessimism. What happens when these hopes are dashed? Can unions and social movements grow quickly enough and win enough fights to disprove the cynical arguments that unions lack power and presence in worker’s lives? Will there be a more-or-less unified working-class vote in November, and which way will that vote go? Graham Trainor, President of the Oregon AFL-CIO, said in his address to the conference that one in five or one in six workers in our region are union members, that unions are winning our battles, and that “We can’t be afraid to lead with a progressive agenda.” These remarks show that the labor is making quantitative and qualitative advances. But what are the practical connections between relatively high union density and progressive politics under current conditions? How do we define winning our battles under these changing conditions? And whose progressive agenda makes the cut?

Employers know all of this and don’t have much reason to fear penalties or repercussions for their inevitable bad behavior or condemnation for intervening in the political process and the courts. They may be frustrated by sometimes having to work with so many different agencies and deal with a system that tends to be one-size-fits-all, but in the long run the faults in the system and the top-heavy nature of the system works in favor the worst actors among the employers and provides incentives for employers to cross the line.

Combining state resources that affect workers’ salaries, working conditions, and benefits under one umbrella might help create real enforcement of pro-worker and pro-labor laws and rules. It might also lead to strategic enforcement in certain areas and leave workers not covered by the decisions on strategic enforcement out in the cold. Imagine a situation where, say, farmworkers get justifiable strategic attention from state agencies, unions, and union allies but home construction workers or university workers are not included in strategic planning and enforcement. That would be divisive in the first place, but I believe that we would then see corporate money and financing go into areas of the economy where enforcement is weak or non-existent and a new crop of corporate bottom feeders arise.

Photo from Northwest Public Broadcasting


Wednesday, June 5, 2024

Familias Unidas por la Justicia and Columbia Legal Services win a court decision to force the Department of Labor to fix faulty formula that lowers H-2A wage rates.

The following post is take from The STAND, one of the best on-line labor publications around.  


PORTLAND, Ore. (June 3, 2024) — On May 24, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled on behalf of the Washington farmworkers’ union Familias Unidas por la Justicia (FUJ) and its member Ramon Torres Hernandez that the Department of Labor (DOL) has a legal duty to protect domestic farmworkers’ wages in Washington state and require agricultural employers to offer the highest wage in contracts related to the H-2A program.

This federal program allows U.S. employers to bring foreign nationals to the United States to fill temporary agricultural jobs. But H-2A workers are required to be paid a wage rate that is at least the highest applicable wage rate in effect at the time the work is performed.

The May 24 ruling overturns an order issued by federal district court judge Thomas O. Rice from Spokane and agrees with FUJ’s allegation that DOL has been rubber-stamping federal H-2A contracts with low hourly wages instead of requiring growers to offer higher prevailing wages, as outlined by federal statute.

“We are thrilled with the Ninth Circuit’s ruling because it recognizes that DOL has been failing to protect the interests of domestic farmworkers who are being pushed out of jobs by unlawful wages and working conditions in H-2A contracts,” said Andrea Schmitt, attorney from Columbia Legal Services who argued the appeal in early April. “We look forward to getting this order entered in the district court and working with DOL to protect the rights of domestic farm workers in the future.”

Here’s a video recording of that argument.


The faulty way DOL has determined and published wage data for the past 13 years has resulted in incorrect findings that have brought down wages for both H-2A and domestic farm workers. DOL admitted during the appeal that it had been following illegal policy since 2011 but had never publicly announced its policy until recently. With its ruling, the Ninth Circuit ordered Judge Rice to enter an injunction that excludes the unlawful lower wages from DOL’s annual wage survey that sets required wages for the H-2A program.

“It is shameful that DOL has been undercutting farmworker wages since 2011 and never had the courage to tell farmworker families,” said José Ramírez, the president of FUJ.

FUJ recently sued DOL a second time in federal court seeking to overturn new regulations issued by DOL in 2022 that also fail to protect farmworker wages. A preliminary injunction has been requested in that case, which was recently assigned to Judge John C. Chun in Seattle.




While the way DOL has handled wage-setting may be complicated, the impact on farmworkers is not. DOL is required by law to protect their wages. State legislation to improve parts of this system passed earlier this year, requiring future surveys to ask farmworkers directly (not just their employers) about their wages.

Washington is one of the last states in the nation that even attempts to protect local worker wages, thanks to decades of organizing. Local farmworkers in other states were long ago replaced with H-2A workers, making it easy for DOL to certify a shortage of local workers each year. This ruling is a step in the right direction toward a different future for Washington.

The farmworkers were represented in the appeal by Columbia Legal Services, Farmworker Justice, Barnard Iglitzin & Lavitt LLP, and Edward Tuddenham.

Tuesday, June 4, 2024

Two important solidarity actions with our region's farm workers

This important article from The STAND provides some needed context for the post below.


From the United Farm Workers:

Community support is crucial for the mushroom workers who filed a lawsuit against Windmill Farms, Sunnyside, Washington, last November. Please join the workers and United Farm Workers in front of the Yakima courthouse to show our support.

Date: Tuesday, June 11, 2024
Time: 2:00 p.m. RALLY in support of the workers; 3 pm hearing
Location: Yakima County Superior Court, 128 N 2nd St, Yakima, WA 98901

Summary of the Hearing:

The oral arguments will address two critical motions filed by Windmill/Greenwood:

1. Motion to Compel Arbitration: Windmill is seeking to move our case out of the public court system and into private arbitration.
2. Motion to Dismiss: Windmill has also filed a motion to dismiss our claims.

Why This Hearing Is Important

Company Violations: This case addresses violations of the Washington Little Norris-LaGuardia Act, including the unlawful terminations of prominent UFW supporters and other critical issues affecting worker rights.

Transparency: Keeping the case in the public court system ensures that the proceedings remain open and transparent, allowing for greater public scrutiny and accountability.

Justice for Workers: Dismissing the case at this stage would deny workers the opportunity to have their claims heard and adjudicated fully. We believe strongly in the merits of our case and in the importance of fighting for the rights of those who have been wronged.Solidarity: Your presence at the hearing will show solidarity with the affected workers and demonstrate to Windmill/Greenwood and the court that there is strong community support for holding the company accountable.
From the Rev. Connie Yost, President of Farm Worker Ministry Northwest and board member, National Farm Worker Ministry:

I recently had the privilege of speaking to members of the Yakima Association of Faith Communities, along with United Farm Workers activist Lorena and former Windmill employee Isela. Our goal was to raise awareness of farm worker issues, and to gather support for the Windmill Farms mushroom workers who are experiencing ongoing abuses in their workplace.

I urge all of you who are able to join us at the Yakima County Superior Courthouse at 2 pm on Tuesday, June 11 to show our solidarity and support for the workers.

Your support and action is something that is vitally needed. Farm workers too often feel all alone. Let's show them our love and support by being there for them.

Here are voices from the YAFC community:

Roger Yockey, Holy Family Catholic Church, Yakima: "Folks who are actively involved in the Yakima Association of Faith Communities can help our sisters and brothers who are farm workers by joining with them at rallies, peaceful protests to demand social and economic justice for the women and men who feed us. As a Christian, my faith speaks to me loud and clear to see what the situation is for workers, to judge what is happening, to pray, and then to act to change any unjust situation."

Marilyn Holloway, Bodhi Center of Yakima: "Whilst I have long been aware of the appalling conditions in which farm workers labor to put food on our tables, I was less aware of their efforts to unionize. I knew nothing about the Farm Worker Ministry Northwest and this organization's efforts to support the farm workers in their struggle for better working conditions and justice. I have also learned how I can support the farm workers, so now feel I can do something rather than being a helpless bystander."

The Rev. Connie Yost, introduction to the Prayer of the Farm Workers' Struggle, by Cesar Chavez

Martin Luther King Jr. spoke to the sanitation workers in Memphis just weeks before his assassination. These black workers were treated badly, forced to work in unsafe conditions for poverty wages. A worker had been crushed to death by a defective truck, and the mayor refused to discuss their wish for a union. Martin Luther King Jr. told them, and he reminds us, that All Labor Has Dignity. Today, farmworkers are in the same situation.

Let us pray the Prayer of the Farm Workers’ Struggle, by Cesar Chavez.

Read the latest news of the mushroom workers

Another Opportunity to Help Farm Workers

EMERGENCY BACKPACKS FOR OREGON FARM WORKERS

The Oregon Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and Oregon's Farm Worker Union PCUN invite Willamette Valley churches and ecumenical community groups to participate in "Solidarity Summer 2024," collaborating to provide 500 equipped backpacks for farm worker families in the 2024 wildfire season--July, August and September.

Make tax-deductible cash donations before July 1
Emergency supplies cost about $45 per backpack to protect against smoke, dehydration, dust and loss of communication in outdoor work and evacuation in an extreme wildfire event.

Give online: oregonsynod.org, text field "PCUN Solidarity" before 7/1/2024.

By mail: checks payable to "Oregon Synod," memo "PCUN Solidarity." Mail to Oregon Synod, 2800 N. Vancouver Ave., Suite 101, Portland, OR 97227, before 7/1/2024.

Solidarity Summer 2024 Backpack Celebration & Workshop
Save the Date: July 18, 2024, 1:00 P.M.--4:00 P.M.
PCUN union office, 300 Young St., Woodburn, OR 97071


Join faith and labor allies to acknowledge the land, fill backpacks and share blessings with PCUN staff leading farm worker summer wildfire preparedness workshops during July & August.

Learn more: Contact Sarah Loose, Director, Oregon Synod Director of Disaster & Climate Resilience, email sarahl@oregonsynod.org.

In the mid-Willamette Valley: Ed Brandt, member, St. Mark Lutheran Social Ministry Committee, 503-917-1326 (call / text), edgarbrandt74@gmail.com (email), for details about tax-deductible cash donations & car-pooling (meet July 18 @ 12:00 P.M. noon, St. Mark Lutheran Church, 790 Marion St. NE, Salem, OR 97301).

Wednesday, May 22, 2024

Salem-Keizer: Emergency BackPacks Needed for Oregon Farm Workers

The Oregon Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and Oregon's Farm Worker Union PCUN invite Willamette Valley churches and ecumenical community groups to participate in "Solidarity Summer 2024," collaborating to provide 500 equipped backpacks for farm worker families in the 2024 wildfire season:

July, August and September. Emergency supplies cost about $45 per backpack to protect against smoke, dehydration, dust and loss of communication in outdoor work and evacuation in an extreme wildfire event. You may make tax-deductible cash donations before July 1.  Give online:  oregonsynod.org, text field "PCUN Solidarity" or by mail: checks payable to "Oregon Synod," Mail to Oregon Synod, 2800 N. Vancouver Ave., Suite 101, Portland, OR 97227.

Solidarity Summer 2024 Backpack Celebration & Workshop -- Save the Date:  July 18, 2024, 1:00 P.M.--4:00 P.M., PCUN union office, 300 Young St., Woodburn, OR 9707.  Join faith and labor allies to acknowledge the land, fill backpacks and share blessings with PCUN staff leading farm worker summer wildfire preparedness workshops during July & August. Learn more by contacting Sarah Loose, Director, Oregon Synod Director of Disaster & Climate Resilience, email sarahl@oregonsynod.org or in the midWillamette Valley: Ed Brandt, Saint Mark member, Social Ministry Committee, 503-917-1326 (call / text), edgarbrandt74@gmail.com (email), for details about tax-deductible cash donations & car-pooling (meet July 18 @ 12:00 P.M. noon, at Saint Mark Lutheran Church). 

Editor's note: Readers are invited to read this short but challenging and radical article providing context for why the backpacks are needed.


Photo from Links.

Monday, April 15, 2024

Solidarity With Farm Workers

 

March With Farm Workers in the Skagit Valley, Washington

Sunday, April 21, 2024
Begin gathering at 9:00 am, March begins at 10:00 am
Edgewater Park
600 Behrens Millett Rd
Mount Vernon, WA 98273


From Community to Community: Dear supporters and allies,

We are one week away from this year's Marcha Campesina. We invite you to join us and show your support for Tulip and Daffodil workers through participation and donations.

This year’s Marcha will be a single purpose march, all messaging will be relevant to the tulip workers struggle for equitable wages, better working conditions, respecting seniority and no union busting.

Please respect the Marcha messaging protocols requested by the tulip workers organizing committee:We ask that you do not bring any banners, the march will be single file, we will be marching on the shoulders of rural country roads, and will not have the ability to march on the road due to heavy traffic.
We recommend you do not bring any signs, we will have plenty ready for you to carry, if you want to bring your own sign, for example expressing solidarity from your group or organization, it must be vertical on sticks, flags or cardboard that can be held up.Please do wear comfortable shoes and bring water, we will be walking a 7.5 mile loop.

Please do not bring pets, scooters, bicycles. Strollers are ok.

We appreciate anyone who can stay and support us with cleanup after we are done.
To volunteer, or for more information contact: marchacampesina87@gmail.com

Join us April 21 @ Edgewater Park, Mt Vernon
9:00am | Begin arriving
9:30am | Marchers line up, short send off ceremony
10:00am | March begins
2:00pm | March returns to Edgewater Park
2:30pm | Tacos de Azada will be served (bring cash or check to donate for food)
3:30pm | Worker declarations and other speakers
4:30pm | Closing ceremony and farewells

Healthy Workers Create Healthy Communities

This year's march continues our efforts to advance Farmworker Tribunal declarations, most critically to ensure the health and well-being of farmworkers is protected and nurtured.

C2C and the 2024 Farmworkers Tribunal judges denounce: Attempts to undermine overtime pay mandated by SB-5172 in
2021, when it has just begun to be fully implemented as of January
1, 2024.
The industrialization of agriculture that reduces workers to
machines as climate change creates more dangerous working
conditions.
Companies who dehumanize workers and retaliate against them
for taking time off to care for their families, particularly women
workers.Read more about the Tribunal Declarations and Farmworker legislative priorities here.

Other Ways Show Your Support

Buy this year's Marcha T-shirt
Marcha Campesina 2024 Commemorative T-Shirt — C2C (foodjustice.org)

Make a Donation
Donate — C2C (foodjustice.org)


















Friday, March 1, 2024

PCUN Requests Solidarity On Two Important Issues

The following comes from a longer email from PCUN (Pineros y Campesinos Unidos del Noroeste).



Oregon Worker Relief

The Oregon legislature has the opportunity to help vulnerable community members stay in their homes, keep farmworkers safe and stable during extreme heat waves and wildfire smoke, and provide no-cost immigration legal services.

Contact your legislator to support these critical funding requests HERE.

Oregon Worker Relief has been a lifeline for immigrant Oregonians through programs including the Climate Change Fund, the Home Fund, Universal Representation, and more. Our community-led approach has helped over 93,000 immigrant Oregonians through emergency relief for farmworkers who face dangerous working conditions from extreme heat and wildfire smoke, rent assistance to keep families housed, no-cost immigration legal services, and more. That is why we are asking you to urge your legislators to support Oregon Worker Relief and allow such vital work to continue.

Employment Related Day Care

We need to send a strong message to our state's leaders to use their positions' power to advocate for a budget that will meet the needs of families struggling to afford child care in this economy.

Use this link to send a message to state leaders to fund child care now.

Thursday, February 22, 2024

FARM WORKER WOMEN IN OREGON AGRICULTURE: Achievements and Gender-Based Inequities---Presentation in Salem on Sunday, March 3


Learn from and Support our Oregon Women Farm Workers in this Community Forum sponsored by PCUN, Farm Worker Ministry Northwest and the St. Mark Lutheran Church Social Ministry Committee.

Our GUEST SPEAKERS from PCUN, Oregon's Farm Worker Labor Union, will discuss FARM WORKER WOMEN IN OREGON AGRICULTURE: Achievements and Gender-Based Inequities
Guest presenters Marlina Campos and Martha Lopez of PCUN / Farmworkers and Latinx Working Families United will speak about local women advocating for justice in their workplace and community. Farm worker women face sexual harassment, health concerns, inadequate childcare, harsh working conditions and more, such as limited life expectancy.

Learn more PCUN's work for women's empowerment in the community & the Oregon Legislature and what allies can do.

Sunday Morning Forum for Church & Community
Sunday, March 3, 2024
11:15 am--12:15 pm
St. Mark Lutheran Church Lounge
790 Marion St., Salem, OR 97301

PLEASE SHARE THIS INVITATION IN YOUR NETWORKS
Information: Ed Brandt, 503-917-1326 call or text edgarbrandt74@gmail.com. Thank you!

DONATIONS WELCOME for PCUN's organizing, political advocacy, education efforts and speakers' costs www.pcun.org, click on "donate" for online donation or checks payable to PCUN, mail to PCUN, PO Box 38, Woodburn, OR 97071. Thanks also for cash or checks at the event.
+++++
Thanks for participating in this forum and celebrating Women's History Month!

Tuesday, January 23, 2024

A historic win for immigrant and agricultural workers & an ask for solidarity



The Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC), with support from the Campaign for Migrant Worker Justice (CMWJ), just concluded a two-year organizing campaign resulting in a collective bargaining agreement covering workers at an agricultural packing shed at Battleboro Produce in North Carolina! This is an unprecedented win for immigrant workers in the deep South.

The contract guarantees overtime pay, an 8% wage increase, union business paid leave, bereavement pay and more. Workers are now officially part of the Farm Labor Organizing Committee, AFL-CIO and will have union representation and a collective voice.

“We have benefits now, we have rights and representation!”-a new FLOC union member at Battleboro Produce

This is a historic victory extending union representation to a workforce that is predominately immigrant women. Our strategy and mission is to build immigrant power, fight for workers’ rights, and hold those in power accountable. This requires being both a community and labor union. By organizing the women at Battleboro Produce, we are not only strengthening workplace protections and directly increasing wages, but we are organizing households and entire communities.

Read more in-depth about the innovative methods we're using to organize immigrant workers in the deep South and how this worked at Battleboro Produce.

Thank you for your continued support in the fight for justice. Donate today to support us in building worker power.