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Interfaithimmigration.org Welcome to this month s Webinar on Farm Worker Justice Call and Webinar will begin at 4:00 p.m. EST For audio, please dial – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Interfaithimmigration.org


1
Interfaithimmigration.org
  • Welcome to this months Webinar on
  • Farm Worker Justice
  • Call and Webinar will begin at 400 p.m. EST
  • For audio, please dial  
  • 1-218-936-4700 and enter access code 657758
  • The audio and visual portions are NOT linked. You
    must dial this number to hear the audio portion
    of the webinar.

2
Farmworkers and Immigration Reform
  • Farmworker Justice
  • Adrienne DerVartanian
  • Director of Immigration and Labor Rights
  • adervartanian_at_farmworkerjustice.org
  • www.farmworkerjustice.org

3
  • Farmworker Justice is a nonprofit organization
    that seeks to empower migrant and seasonal
    farmworkers to improve their living and working
    conditions, immigration status, health,
    occupational safety, and access to justice. Based
    in Washington, D.C, Farmworker Justice was
    founded in 1981. 

4
Who Are Farmworkers?
  • Majority foreign born
  • Over half are undocumented
  • Median annual income is 10,000 - 12,499
  • At least 30 earn incomes below the U.S. poverty
    line
  • Young, mostly male but also families
  • 11 are children and teenagers
  • Spanish speaking
  • Minimal formal education and low literacy even
    in Spanish
  • Excluded from overtime, NLRA protections and
    other workplace protections
  • Source U.S. Department of Labor, National
    Agricultural Workers Survey (NAWS) 2001-2002

Photo by David Bacon
5
Immigration Reform and Farmworkers
  • Ongoing efforts for immigration reform for
    decades
  • AgJOBS Compromise
  • Renewed push for guestworker-only solution
  • Desperate need for immigration reform with path
    to citizenship

6
Harsh New Guestworker Proposals
  • Multiple proposals in Congress to create
    new/revised guestworker programs
  • No path to permanent immigration status or
    citizenship
  • Sharp wage cuts and poorer working conditions
  • Reduced government oversight and access to
    justice

7
What would be the impact of these guestworker
proposals?
  • Proposals would be devastating
  • Employers could easily hire new foreign workers
    at substandard wages and avoid hiring U.S.
    farmworkers
  • Expansion to new year-round industries dairy,
    meat processing
  • Do not address majority of current workforce
    the undocumented workers and their families
  • Undocumented workers would be pushed further
    underground and become even more exploitable

8
H-2A Agricultural Guestworker Program
  • Uncapped guestworker program.
  • Employers must prove that there are no U.S.
    workers available for the job.
  • Employers must show bringing in foreign workers
    wont harm wages and working conditions of U.S.
    workers.

Photo by Earl Dotter
9
H-2A Guestworker Program
  • Use of program has almost doubled over last ten
    years
  • Complaints red tape and burdensome, BUT
    protections needed and majority of applications
    are approved.
  • FY 2011 95 applications approved.

10
H-2A Guestworker Program
  • Workers indebted
  • Non-immigrant status
  • Isolation and family separation
  • Incentives to discriminate against US workers
  • Inadequate enforcement

11
  • The farmers can take advantage of the H-2A
    workers where they cant take advantage of the
    Americansbecause we know the laws when they
    dontI think it was more or less, they didnt
    want the Americans out there.
  • -Mary Jo,
  • U.S. Farmworker

12
Our Future Guestworkers?
  • What are Americas values?
  • Are we comfortable with an entire industrys
    workerforce being guestworkers?
  • Or are we a democracy that values all workers and
    gives needed workers basic human dignity and
    rights, and an opportunity to achieve the
    American dream, including economic freedom and
    political representation?

13
How Can You Help?
  • Oppose one-sided guestworker proposals.
  • Support immigration reform with a path to
    immigration status and citizenship.
  • Support equal protections for farmworkers.

Photo by David Bacon
14
Cleo Rodriguez, Jr., Executive Director- NMSHSA
  • Head Start 101

15
The Birth of Project Head Start 1965
  • Heightened Awareness of Poverty in the United
    States
  • John F. Kennedys campaign for president
  • President Lyndon Baines Johnsons
    educational/social background
  • Sargent Shriver and the Kennedys family interest
    in children with special needs
  • Interdisciplinary Planning Committee Convened

16
The Birth of Project Head Start 1965
  • Pediatricians, Psychologists, and Early Childhood
    Specialists stressed the strong role played by
    parents in guiding and motivating their children.
  • James Colemans research held that parental
    involvement is a supplement to a childs learning
    in the classroom.
  • It was a summer catch-up program
  • Evidence showed needed more than summer and
    became year-round

17
Philosophy of Head Start
  • Bring greater degree of social competence in
    children
  • Each child is unique and individual
  • Child benefits from comprehensive services
  • Childs entire family is critical for success

18
Philosophy of Head Start
  • Foster social competence
  • Improved health/physical abilities
  • Encourage self-confidence
  • Enhance communication skills
  • Establish patterns for success
  • Enhance sense of self-worth

19
Core Values of Head Start
  • Supportive learning environment
  • Inclusive of all cultures/languages
  • Empowerment of families
  • Comprehensive
  • Respect individual developments
  • Relationships/partnerships with community
  • Shared governance (Parent Policy Council)

20
Structure of Head Start
  • Federal to local grantees
  • Local grantees have flexibility to meet the needs
    of the community
  • Local Board of Directors
  • Parent Policy Council
  • Parent Committees

21
Head Start Act
  • What is the Head Start Act?
  • This is the law that governs how each program is
    governed and operated. Every 5 years Head Start
    is reauthorized. It is during this period
    changes can occur.
  • On December 12, 2007, President Bush signed
    Public Law 110-134 "Improving Head Start for
    School Readiness Act of 2007" reauthorizing the
    Head Start program.
  • Should be reauthorized in 2012. May be delayed
    due to elections and other factors.

22
Performance Standards
  • Regulations that are issued and monitored by the
    US government for the operations of ALL Head
    Start Programs
  • Developed and revised by the Department of HHS
  • Every program is legally bound to meet all the
    standards. If not, the program is out of
    compliance

23
What is the Policy Council/Board?
  • Made of program parents and community
    representatives
  • Elected for terms
  • Approve all operations of the program
  • Oversight of program operations
  • Has legal and fiscal authority
  • Must include parents and work with Policy Council

24
Current Numbers
  • Regional Head Start 845,000 (93)
  • Migrant/Seasonal Head Start 34,000 (4)
  • Indian/Native American 23,000 (3)
  • Total Children served 2010 904,000

25
Simple Migrant Program Facts
  • 23,738 Number of families
  • 2,635- Number of classrooms
  • 78- Number of Teachers/Teacher Assistants with a
    CDA or higher
  • 75- Infants and Toddlers
  • 25 - Preschoolers

Funding History
  • 1965- 96,400,000
  • Served 561,000 children
  • 2009-7,112,786,000.00 (7.1 billion)- Serving
    904,000 children

26
Cost per child in Migrant/Seasonal Head Start
Programs

8,500.00 per child
27
Unique Characteristics of each
  • Migrant/Seasonal
  • Work requirement
  • Birth 5 years old
  • Extended hours
  • Meets the needs of family based on agricultural
    work/season
  • Provides coordinated efforts between programs and
    other migrant serving agencies for seamless
    services.

28
Chris Liu-BeersNC Council of
Churchesncfarmworkers.org
Photo Peter Eversoll www.peversoll.com
29
Distributing information
Photo Peter Eversoll www.peversoll.com
30
Collaborating with Seminaries
Photo Peter Eversoll www.peversoll.com
31
SupportingUnions
Photo Peter Eversoll www.peversoll.com
32
Participating with FANncfan.org
Photo Peter Eversoll www.peversoll.com
33
Interfaith Action of Southwest Florida
  • Interfaith Action of Southwest Florida (IA)
  • A network of people of faith and religious
    institutions that works in partnership with the
    Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) to improve
    sub-poverty wages and end modern-day slavery and
    human rights abuses in the fields.
  • IA brings the spiritual resources of diverse
    faith traditions and the moral weight of
    faith-based voices in society to our work in
    collaboration with farmworkers for justice in the
    fields.

34
Coalition of Immokalee Workers
The CIW is a community-based organization of
mainly Latino, Mayan Indian and Haitian
immigrants working in low-wage jobs throughout
the state of Florida.
From this basis we fight for, among other things
a fair wage for the work we do, more respect on
the part of our bosses and the industries where
we work, better and cheaper housing, stronger
laws and stronger enforcement against those who
would violate workers' rights, the right to
organize on our jobs without fear of retaliation,
and an end to forced labor in the fields.
35
Faith Solidarity with Workers
36
Interfaith Action at Work
  • IA facilitates education for faith communities,
    including dialogue between farmworkers and
    non-farmworker people of faith, and animates
    people of faith to take action for justice in the
    agricultural industry.
  •  IA coordinates faith-based participation in the
    CIWs Campaign for Fair Food, leveraging the
    moral, consumer, shareholder, and social power of
    faith communities to effectively call on major
    tomato purchasers to ensure fair wages and human
    rights for farmworkers.  
  • People of faith played a crucial role in bringing
    about the historic agreements between the CIW and
    Yum Brands, McDonalds, Burger King, Subway, and
    Whole Foods to directly improve the wages and
    conditions for the farmworkers who pick tomatoes
    for these companies.
  • IA also provides a wide range of logistical and
    technical assistance to the farmworkers of the
    CIW, both in Immokalee and in planning national
    tours and actions. IA is an affiliate
    of Interfaith Worker Justice and a founding
    member of the Alliance for Fair Food"   For more
    information click http//www.interfaithact.org/?q
    aboutus

37
Campaigns - Publix, Kroger, Stop and Shop
  • Publix is Florida's major supermarket chain and a
    large buyer of Florida tomatoes. Unfortunately,
    while Publix has a reputation for community
    involvement, it has yet to join the Fair Food
    program to help ensure fair wages and conditions
    for those who harvest its tomatoes.
  • As the nation's second-largest grocery chain,
    Kroger is a major purchaser of tomatoes. Yet
    despite letters from the CIW, over 80 religious,
    human rights, student, and community
    organizations that are part of the Alliance for
    Fair Food, and thousands of consumers across the
    country, Kroger has yet to improve the
    sub-poverty wages and human rights abuses faced
    by those who pick their tomatoes. You can join in
    calling on Kroger to ensure justice in its tomato
    supply chain
  • Over the past several years the CIW and over 80
    religious, human rights, student, and community
    endorsers of the Alliance for Fair Food have
    written letters to Ahold - owner of Stop Shop,
    Giant, Giant Food Stores, Martin's, Ukrop's and
    Peapod - to invite it to improve the sub-poverty
    wages and conditions faced by the farmworkers who
    harvest their tomatoes. Join in calling on Ahold
    to ensure justice in its tomato supply chain

38
Interfaith Action of Southwest Florida
39
IIC Contacts by organization
  • African American Ministers in Action Leslie
    Malachi, lmalachi_at_pfaw.org
  • American Jewish Committee Chelsea Hanson,
    hansonc_at_ajc.org
  • Bread for the World Institute Andrew Wainer,
    awainer_at_bread.org
  • Church World Service Jen Smyers,
    jsmyers_at_churchworldservice.org
  • Disciples of Christ Ken Brooker Langston,
    revkenbl_at_yahoo.com
  • The Episcopal Church Katie Conway,
    kconway_at_episcopalchurch.org
  • Franciscan Action Network Marie Lucey,
    lucey_at_franciscanaction.org
  • Friends Committee on National Legislation Ruth
    Flower, flower_at_fcnl.org
  • Hebrew Immigrant Aid Society Liza Lieberman,
    liza.lieberman_at_hias.org
  • Interfaith Worker Justice Thomas Shellabarger,
    tshellabarger_at_iwj.org
  • Irish Apostolate USA Geri Garvey,
    administrator_at_usairish.org
  • Islamic Information Center Hajar Hosseini,
    hosseini_at_islamicinformationcenter.org
  • Jesuit Refugee Service/USA, Shaina Aber,
    saber_at_jesuit.org
  • Jewish Council for Public Affairs Elyssa Koidin,
    ekoidin_at_thejcpa.org
  • Lutheran Immigration and Refugee Service Nora
    Skelly, nskelly_at_lirs.org
  • Mennonite Central Committee Tammy Alexander,
    talexander_at_mcc.org
  • Muslim Public Affairs Council Hoda Elshishtawy,
    hoda_at_mpac.org
  • Sisters of the Good Shepherd Larry Couch,
    lclobbyist_at_gsadvocacy.org
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