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WORKER MINISTRY

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Title: WORKER MINISTRY


1
WORKER MINISTRY
National Farm Worker Ministry
2
  • Do not take advantage of a hired man
  • who is poor and needy,
  • whether he is a brother Israelite
  • or an alien living in one of your towns.
  • Pay him his wages each day before sunset ,
    because he is poor and counting on it
    Deuteronomy 2414-15

3
Whose hands harvest the food on our table?
What are their lives like?
4
85 of our fruits and vegetables are harvested by
hand
5
The average annual income for a farm worker in
the U.S. is 11,000.
6
Farmworkers are often paid by the piece, not by
the hour.
7
In Florida tomato fields, workers earn 40 to
50 per 32 lb bucket. In order to make 50.00
they must pick 125 buckets.
8
Farm workers are not eligible for overtime pay,
despite regularly working 12-14 hour days.
Several workers have died across the U.S. as a
result of exposure to extreme heat.
9
  • Woe to him who builds his house by
    unrighteousness, and his upper rooms by
    injustice who makes his neighbor serve him for
    nothing, and does not give him his wages
  • Jeremiah 2213

10
Far too often, farm workers live in isolated
locations and have trouble accessing needed
services. Their housing is hidden behind tree
lines away from main roads.
11
  • Structurally unsound buildings
  • are not unusual

12
EXAMPLES OF FARM WORKER HOUSING
living room
Windows only in front wall
No kitchen workers must purchase their meals
from the crew leader who hires them.
13
When no mattresses are provided, workers may
sleep on small cots, on the floor or on cardboard.
14
Kitchens can be ill-equipped, not maintained,
and unsanitary
15
Lack of storage for food and for clothes
No privacy in showers
16
Inadequate laundry facilities, especially for
work clothes contaminated with pesticides.
17
Health of Farmworkers
  • Farm work is one of the most dangerous
    occupations in the country, yet few workers are
    covered by workers compensation
  • Farm workers suffer from higher rates of heat
    stress, dermatitis, influenza, respiratory
    illnesses and tuberculosis
  • Farm workers continue to die due to heat related
    illnesses.

18
Pesticides are a serious threat to the health of
farmworkers
Empty pesticide buckets just yards from
farmworker housing
19
Farmworkers Organizing
  • United Farm Workers, founded by Cesar Chavez
    Dolores HuertaCA, AZ, TX, WA, FL, PA
  • Farm Labor Organizing Committee OH, MI, NC
  • PCUNTree Planters and Farmworkers United of the
    Northwest Oregon
  • Coalition of Immokalee Workers Southwest Florida

20
Farmworkers Call for Justice
  • Farmworkers have been excluded from National
    Labor Relations Act, protecting other workers
    when they organize
  • Farmworkers must rely on uspeople of faith and
    consumers to help them leverage power
  • Recent boycott victories Taco Bell, Gallo Wine

21
  • Exodus 1249
  • There shall be one law for the native and for
    the stranger who sojourns among you.

22
  • National Farm Worker Ministry
  • An interfaith organization supporting farm
    workers as they organize for justice
  • Member organizations include nearly 40 national,
    state and local religious bodies

23
  • NFWM
  • Started in 1920s as charity outreach
  • In 1960s, Cesar Chavez challenged the church to
    support farmworker organizing for CHANGE, not
    just charity
  • Today, we mobilize churches to support
    farmworkers organizing for justice, empowerment
    and equality
  • We connect people of faith with farm workers

24
Is your faith community represented?
  • Alliance of Baptists
  • California Church IMPACT!
  • Catholic Migrant Farmworker Network
  • Central Conference of American Rabbis
  • Church of the Brethren
  • Church Women United Illinois
  • Church Women United - So. California/So. Nevada
  • Cumberland Presbyterian Church
  • Christian Church (DOC), Disciples Farm Worker
    Ministry
  • Evangelical Lutheran Church of America, Division
    for Church and Society
  • Franciscan Friars, Province of Santa Barbara
  • Franciscan Sisters of Little Falls
  • The Loretto Community
  • NFWM Florida Advisory Group
  • North Carolina Council of Churches, Farm Worker
    Ministry Committee
  • Orange County Interfaith Committee to Aid Farm
    Workers
  • Oregon Farm Worker Ministry
  • Our Lady of Victory Missionary Sisters
  • Pinellas Support Committee of the NFWM
  • Sarasota-Manatee Farm Worker Support Committee
  • School Sisters of Notre Dame, Shalom North
    America
  • Sisters of Charity, BVM
  • Sisters of Charity of Nazareth
  • Dominican Sisters of Peace
  • Sisters of St. Francis of Assisi
  • Society of the Sacred Heart
  • Southern California Ecumenical Council
  • Unitarian Universalist - Migrant Ministry
  • United Church of Christ Justice and Witness
    Ministries
  • United Methodist Church - General Board of Church
    and Society
  • United Methodist Church General Board of Global
    Ministries
  • United Methodist Church - Women's Division

25
  • Amos 521-24
  • let justice roll down like waters, and
    righteousness like an ever-flowing stream.

26
NFWM Offices
  • North Carolina
  • Florida
  • Oregon
  • Missouri
  • California

27
NFWMs Work
  • Provide truth tours, workshops and publications
    that educate the public about abuses in the
    agricultural industry

28
NFWMs Work
  • Secure endorsements from religious bodies for
    farm worker campaigns and advocate for the right
    to organize, labor agreements, and policy change.

29
NFWMs Work
  • Mobilize vital public support locally and
    nationally through support groups, an action
    alert system, demonstrations and boycotts.

30
NFWMs Work
  • Distribute resources for prayer and reflection
    throughout the year on themes related to farm
    worker justice.

31
NFWMs Work
  • Link people of faith with workers in labor camps
    to reduce farm worker isolation and build
    cross-cultural relationships.

32
Victories NFWM Has Contributed To
  • Gallo of Sonoma Campaign
  • On September 14, 2005, the United Farm Workers
    signed a contract with Gallo, securing a wage
    raise and a grievance process, as well as other
    important gains for the farm worker who pick the
    grapes used to produce their wines.

33
Victories, cont.
  • Mt. Olive Boycott
  • On September 16, 2004 an historic labor
    agreement was signed between Farm Labor
    Organizing Committee (FLOC), North Carolina
    Growers Association, and the Mt. Olive pickle
    company. This contract was signed after 5 ½
    years of boycott.

34
Victories, cont.
  • Taco Bell Boycott
  • On March 8, 2005, the Coalition of Immokalee
    Workers (CIW), representing many tomato pickers
    for Taco Bells parent company, Yum Brands,
    signed a agreement with Taco Bell to increase
    wages and help improve workers living and
    working conditions.

35
Victories, cont.
  • Following the Taco Bell agreement, CIW launches
    successful campaigns with other fast food
    companies and then food retailers and food
    service companies.
  • Coalition of Immokalee Workers sign agreements
    with McDonalds in 2007 Burger King, Subway
    Whole Foods in 2008 Bon Appétit, Compass Group
    East Coast Growers in 2009

36
Victories, cont.
  • Threemile Canyon Dairy campaign
  • July 2007 Union contract covering dairy farm
    workers at mega-dairy in Oregon
  • Followed by contracts at Willow Creek Dairy and
    Beef Northwest feedlots

37
Current Projects
  • The Agricultural Job Opportunities, Benefits and
    Security Act
  • AgJOBS would allow immigrant farm workers to earn
    the legal right to permanently stay in this
    country by continuing to work in agriculture and
    reforms the current H2A guestworker program,
    providing growers with a safe and stable
    workforce.
  • AgJOBS was reintroduced in the Senate in 2009
    however no action has yet been taken on it.
  • NFWM also supports comprehensive immigration
    reform.

38
Current Projects, cont.
  • Reynolds Tobacco, North Carolina The Farm Labor
    Organizing Committee (FLOC) is calling on
    Reynolds Tobacco to take responsibility for the
    oppressive conditions in which tobacco workers,
    from whom Reynolds profits, labor in NC. Reynolds
    is refusing to talk with FLOC.

39
Current Projects, cont.
  • Giumarra Campaign NFWM supports the UFW and the
    workers at the company of Giumarra Vineyards in
    their struggle for a union contract.

40
Current Projects, cont.
CIW Fair Food Campaign (Chipotle, Publix, Kroger,
Sodexo, Aramark) Coalition of Immokalee Workers
continues its Fair Food Campaign to increase
wages for Florida tomato pickers and establish an
industry-wide code of conduct developed with the
full participation of farm workers.
41
  • Exodus 239
  • You shall not oppress a stranger you know the
    heart of a stranger, for you were strangers in
    the land of Egypt.

42
What You Can Do
  • Pray and reflect
  • Write a letter
  • Volunteer
  • Organize locally
  • Donate
  • For more information on all current campaigns
    and action alerts, visit our website at
    www.nfwm.org

43
  • Sources
  • Public Voice for Food and Health Policy, 1989
  • National Center for Farmworker Health,
    www.ncfh.org
  • Agriculture Council of America, and Paul Lilly,
    North Carolina State University
  • National Agriculture Workers Survey, US DOL March
    2000
  • Halting Heat Death, www.kget.com (posted 7/13/06)
  • Photographs courtesy of
  • Coalition of Immokalee Workers
  • Student Action with Farmworkers
  • Derek Long
  • NFWM staff
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