Farm workers struggle
with Pictsweet
by Leah C. Wells*, February 2002
A simple issue of justice
The workers at the Pictsweet mushroom farm want
justice in their workplace. They want decent wages and health
benefits, retirement plans, and, most of all, respect. And through
the tireless efforts of individual workers, through their personal
sacrifice and through the unobtrusive facilitation by the skilled
UFW organizers, the mushroom workers and surrounding community
are using their collective strength to win a contract.
The concept of a union for farm workers centers
on grassroots organizing and the power of communities to create
positive social change. Thanks to the tireless work of the nonviolent
leader Cesar Chavez, California farm workers' rights to organize
are legally protected through the Agriculture Labor Relations
Act. The traditional hierarchical system of the "powerful
few" over the "powerless many" relies on the assumption
that the many workers will not organize, link arms and work together
to exercise their rights. However, the workers have continued
to speak truthfully about their hardships at the hands of Pictsweet
management. Nonviolence requires that its practitioners understand
the transformative power of human suffering. In this respect,
the workers are well versed.
In a presentation to a high school in Ventura County,
Jose Patiña outlined the wishes of the workers and the
tactics they are using to persuade the management at Pictsweet
to negotiate with them. Delegations of workers routinely visit
the offices of supermarkets and restaurants that still purchase
Pictsweet mushrooms. Their main purposes are to personalize the
issue - showing the management of those establishments the mistreatment
of the workers and of the unjust practices - and to convince them
to boycott the Pictsweet mushrooms until the company agrees to
negotiate for a fair contract and fair working conditions. The
organizers have enlisted the help of college MEChA groups statewide
in their latest lobbying efforts as well, encouraging them to
distribute flyers at restaurants in California still buying Pictsweet
mushrooms.
The workers not only attempt to educate the buyers,
but to raise the consciousness of the public as well. Labor Day
weekend saw community-wide support for the mushroom workers in
a three-mile march through downtown Ventura to the Pictsweet plant.
A few months prior, workers stood in front of the government center
with signs and puppets at rush hour to publicize the fact that
Pizza Hut still purchases Pictsweet mushrooms. And even progressives
in Hollywood have taken up their cause as activists Martin Sheen
and Mike Farrell have endorsed the workers' struggle.
¿Que queremos?
The workers want a contract and a raise. All of
the nearly 250 workers at the Ventura mushroom farm have been
working without a contract for nearly fourteen years. This means
that they cannot leverage collective bargaining power to gain
the desired improvements in wages and working conditions. While
the struggle for a contract has financially impacted the workers
and their families, the workers realize that the long-term goal
is a raise - more than the last 3-cent raise they received from
Pictsweet after an increase of workload. Jose Luis Luna says,
"We have not had a significant wage increase in years. The
cost of living has gone up several times and we are still making
the same money. I support two minor children and myself on my
salary."
The workers want a pension plan. There are no 401K
plans for Pictsweet workers. There are no retirement benefits
for dedicated employees who have spent more than twenty years
working for this company and, regrettably, the workers have nothing
to show for their labor when they retire. The director of human
resources reports that he encourages workers to invest a portion
of their money in savings accounts for their own retirement, but
there is no guarantee that any or all of the workers in fact do
this. Moreover, because of increased economic hardships as a result
of inflation and no adjusted salary increases, the workers often
find themselves in already financially precarious situations before
having to set aside some money for retirement.
The workers want a decent medical plan. The working
conditions at Pictsweet are often precarious: working in pitch
black darkness; climbing slippery fifteen-foot tall mushroom beds;
and, during the rainy season in California, sometimes working
barefoot in water up to their knees in a room with exposed electrical
outlets. In violation of fire codes, the buildings where the mushrooms
grow have only one fire exit from the second floor. The hats that
the workers wear in the dark sheds where the mushrooms grow have
inadequate light bulbs, causing severe eyestrain, yet there is
no vision plan in their medical benefits.
Workers' complaints about on-the-job injuries often
fall on deaf ears at Pictsweet, where the management challenges
their claims, asserting that their injuries happened elsewhere
and thus are not covered by workers' compensation. In addition,
the existing medical plan is outrageously expensive for the farm
workers' families. Workers pay on average $13 per week for medical
coverage for themselves, their spouses and their children - and
yet the individual annual deductible for office visits, not including
prescriptions, is a staggering $150 for each member of the family!
In March of this year, a compost fire began as
a result of the buildup of discarded compost and hay. The fire's
origins? Rather than reduce productivity to accommodate the decline
in business as a result of the boycott, Pictsweet maintained the
same level of production and opted to throw out their packaged,
unused mushrooms. When the fire started and thick pungent smoke
contaminated the air, the community throughout Ventura County
was immediately informed of the health risks posed by the toxins
released in the air. However, the local Pictsweet management did
not address the health risks with their employees until nearly
a week later after UFW organizer Jessica Arciniega met with plant
manager Ruben Franco. Only then did Pictsweet hand out facemasks
for their workers.
The press release by the Ventura County Public
Health Department on March 15, 2001 read as follows: "County
health officials recommend that healthy adults and children in
areas affected by smoke avoid strenuous outdoor activity and remain
indoors as much as possible…levels of the particulates in
the smoke may be high enough that the potential exists for even
healthy people to be affected. [Smoke] may pose a special risk
to adults and children with asthma, emphysema, chronic bronchitis,
or other respiratory diseases and heart disease."
Yet the workers were forced to continue working
in enclosed buildings where huge fans pumped in thick smoke -
unaware of the health risks posed. They were not told by management
until the sixth day that their health was jeopardized by working
as the fire continued to burn. Moreover, they were not allowed
medical leave with pay for illness sustained during this time!
Because the Pictsweet workers have no contract, they are at the
mercy of their supervisors. Any complaint could be construed as
insubordination.
Finally, the workers want respect and a voice at
work. There is no partnership at Pictsweet between management
and labor. Supervisors routinely condescend to the pro-UFW workers.
The supervisors give preferential treatment to the anti-union
workers who have family members in management and encourage the
contras, those workers who oppose UFW representation, by offering
promotions and financial rewards for their complicity in maintaining
the status quo at the farm. The pro-UFW workers want a system
of arbitration so that they have a safe and reasonable forum to
address their grievances with the company.
"It has been hard working for this company,
but what can we do, we need to work. It hurts to know that we
don't matter. We give our lives to the company only to learn that
they don't think very much of us. We're people who feel and think
and have families who need us and love us," explains Baudelio
Aguayo. "We're not animals that nobody wants. All we ask
for is a little human compassion and respect."
These disciplined workers are not only working
for their benefit, but for the good of all the workers there.
Both pro- and anti-UFW workers alike work in the same conditions.
The pro-union faction, a decisive majority of the workers, struggle
to create a sustainably just environment for the entire laboring
workforce.
Firsthand visit
The management at Pictsweet in Ventura is not wholly
to blame - they are merely mid-level executors of policies set
by those in the corporate office who value profits over people.
When I toured the Pictsweet farm at the behest of management there,
I had the opportunity to talk with grower Greg Tuttle, intimately
inspect working conditions at the farm, and inquire about the
status of negotiations with the workers.
During my visit I saw the close proximity of the
fire to the buildings where the workers were forced to endure
stifling poor air quality while the fire burned. I saw how the
boycott has impacted the productivity: what used to be a room
filled floor-to-ceiling with packages of mushrooms had been reduced
to one stack of mushrooms less than four feet tall. And I saw
no more than ten anti-union workers in white "No UFW"
t-shirts at the farm, corroborating the fact that two-thirds of
the workers support UFW representation.
In a meeting with Mr. Olmos, head of human resources
at the Ventura Pictsweet plant, I learned that the company feels
it has been involved in negotiations with the workers for nearly
two years, in spite of claims by the workers and UFW organizers
that the company has maintained stoic unresponsiveness to workers'
pleas for mediated talks. However, these alleged "negotiations"
have not produced better working conditions for any of the workers,
and have not provided for a significant wage increase nor recognition
of Union representation - charges which the company cannot deny.
In fact, the office atmosphere where I spoke with
Mr. Olmos was palpably uncomfortable, him shifting in his chair
and clearing his throat as if to indicate the legitimacy of the
questions I was raising about resolving the discrepancies between
the workers and management. Those in power at the Ventura Pictsweet
branch, and those in located at the parent company United Foods,
Inc. headquarters in Bells, TN, seem undaunted by the unmistakably
devastating economic impact the consumer boycott is having on
their business, already having closed one plant in Oregon and
drastically scaled back production at the Ventura plant. They
seem unmoved by the stamina and vigor exhibited by the workers
who, in the words of Gandhi, are seeking through their nonviolent
campaign not "to bring their opponents to their knees, but
to their senses."
In a recent major legal victory in mid-January,
an administrative judge with the Agricultural Labor Relations
Board found Pictsweet guilty of illegally firing mushroom worker
Fidel Andrade. Judge Douglas Gallop outlined Pictsweet's continued
mistreatment of its workers who support UFW representation in
a 31-page decision, highlighting the animosity shown toward pro-union
workers and demanding that Mr. Andrade be given back his job with
seniority and pay all lost wages and other benefits. Additionally,
Pictsweet must post notices about workers' rights and allow the
workers access to ALRB representatives who can answer the workers'
questions without Pictsweet officials present.
UFW organizer Jessica Arciniega believes that "the
judge's ruling has benefited the workers more than anything in
once again validating and reaffirming what workers have known
and been experiencing throughout this campaign - that Pictsweet
is very anti-union and has been violating workers' rights. This
translates into everyday by workers knowing that if they stand
up for their rights, and provide the evidence that is necessary,
the law can work in their favor." One legal victory does
not win the battle, however, as Ms. Arciniega points out: "The
success of this campaign is dependent on so much more - boycott
and solidarity within our communities." To those who impede
the negotiations process, these words, written in 1969 by Cesar
Chavez to the President of California Grape and Tree Fruit League,
Mr. E.L. Barr, provide a compelling admonition:
"You must understand - I must make you understand
- that our membership and the hopes and aspirations of the hundreds
of thousands of the poor and dispossessed that have been raised
on our account are, above all, human beings, no better and no
worse than any other cross-section of human society; we are not
saints because we are poor, but by the same measure neither are
we immoral. We are men and women who have suffered and endured
much, and not only because of our abject poverty but because we
have been kept poor. The colors of our skins, the languages of
our cultural and native origins, the lack of formal education,
the exclusion from the democratic process, the numbers of our
men slain in recent wars - all these burdens generation after
generation have sought to demoralize us, to break our human spirit.
But God knows that we are not beasts of burden, agricultural implements
or rented slaves; we are men."
*Leah C. Wells serves
as the Peace Education Coordinator for the Nuclear Age Peace Foundation
and teaches nonviolence in two high schools.
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