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About Street roots. (Portland, OR) 1998-current | View Entire Issue (Aug. 3, 2018)
Street Roots • Aug. 3-9, 2018 News Page 4 BMIll The hands that feed us ' ■ How farmworkers, nationally and in Oregon, are faring in an era of immigration crack-downs, housing insecurity, rising temperatures and uncertainty Western, panelists and speakers discussed how America’s farmworkers are living in a constant state of fear under ramped-up t the height of a sweltering immigration enforcement, while at the afternoon in late July, more same time continuing to face economic than a hundred people hardship and housing difficulties that have descended from a caravan of persisted in their communities for decades. air-conditioned Blue Star Farmworkers’ very existence is crucial to ■buses onto Oregon Sen. meeting one of humanity’s most basic Chuck Thomsen’s (R-Hood River) Hood needs for survival, but throughout U.S, River Valley orchard. They were there to history, they’ve received fewer rights, tour several rows of modest labor housing ■wuryu tf yutirivm to nestled in a grove o f pear trees o n t h e ^ J hazardous working conditions than people senator’s family farm. in most other occupations. The housing wasn’t impressive, but it While American workers have benefited wasn’t dilapidated either. Closer to the size from overtime pay and minimum wage laws of tool sheds than typical American homes, under the Fair Labor Standards Act, for 80 some of the tiny single-story housing units years, farmworkers have continued to be had satellite dishes protruding from their excluded. The agricultural industry is also roofs and flowers planted at their stoops. Children’s toys and other evidence of family exempt from child labor laws. It’s only in Oregon’s fields that children life dotted the courtyard, along with as young as 9 can work legally, even when barbecues, bicycles and laundry suspended the farm is not from makeshift owned by their clotheslines strung guardians. Other from one exterior wall states set the to another. We aeed le elevate the ©co minimum work age “We wouldn’t be attinie situati©» fo r farm work in agriculture where we are today ers I» this c© m tryr or else between 10 and 16, without migrant labor according to the we'*e aet g ©lag to h a w a fri» from Mexico,” ILS. Department of Thomsen told the ©altaral w o rke rs". . Labor. group. Despite massive His employees had ~ ARTURO RODRIGUEZ U N IT E D F A R M W O R K E R S labor movements no idea the tour was and attempts to coming through that organize day, he said, so what farmworkers, only they were seeing was piecemeal improvements to their living and unstaged. He encouraged his guests to ask working conditions have been made the farmworkers to see inside their homes through the years. As visitors wandered around snapping But America’s age-old practice of photos with smartphones and chatting devaluing and exploiting this labor force has among themselves, Thomsen’s employees taken its toll, and now farmers are paying and their children dodged between them, the price. going about their business. With the decline in immigration from Thomsen had invited the enclave of Latin America and the increase in job government officials, growers, farmworker opportunities away from fields and advocates and housing professionals to his orchards, far fewer laborers are seeking property as part of CASA of Oregon’s what’s readily acknowledged as grueling annual Farmworker Housing Conference. work for low pay on American farms. The nonprofit was founded three decades “We need to elevate the economic ago to address the housing needs of situation for farmworkers in this country, or Oregon’s farmworkers. • Earlier that day at the Hood River Best BY EM ILY GREEN SENIO R STAFF REPORTER /v See FARMWORKERS, page 5