Blueberry lies: WSJ spearheads disingenuous effort to keep exploiting farm workers
When the government recently stepped in to protect low-paid laborers, the conservative establishment lost its mind
Topics:
Wall Street Journal,
Agriculture,
The Labor Movement,
Farm Bill,
Farmworkers, Sustainability News, Media News, Business News, Politics News
In
August 2012, the U.S. Department of Labor invoked its “hot goods”
authority and seized blueberry shipments from three Oregon farmers whose
labor contractors paid 1,300 migrant workers sub-minimum wages. Worried
the fruit would spoil, the growers agreed to pay $240,000 in back wages
and fines.
As part of the deal, they agreed not to appeal. The workers got paid, the farmers got their blueberries back and that should have been the end of the story. But instead of going after their contractors for the money, the growers, backed by the Oregon Farm Bureau, launched an aggressive campaign accusing the DOL of extortion.
The BlueberryGate backlash has been mighty: The recently-signed federal Farm Bill requires DOL to “consult” with the Department of Agriculture before invoking hot goods. Oregon lawmakers went a giant step further, introducing a bill in Congress to take away DOL’s use of hot-goods seizures for any perishable crops. Forbes is using the case to attack the nation’s bedrock labor protection: the Fair Labor Standards Act. The Wall Street Journal recently jumped into the fray, using the case to further arguments against an “overbearing regulatory state.”
On the contrary, the case shows the need for regulation, for without the DOL’s action, the pickers would have had little recourse. The industry is predominantly made up of migrant workers from Mexico, who toil in the fields for as little as 30 cents per pound of picked berries. The Oregon pickers were immigrants, mostly from Mexico, including migrant workers who came from California to work in the fields, and seasonal workers living in Oregon. It’s the rare instance that such workers can stand up for their rights. (In August, blueberry pickers in Washington walked off their jobs to protest low wages, harassment and squalid living conditions, but this is the exception to the rule.)
As part of the deal, they agreed not to appeal. The workers got paid, the farmers got their blueberries back and that should have been the end of the story. But instead of going after their contractors for the money, the growers, backed by the Oregon Farm Bureau, launched an aggressive campaign accusing the DOL of extortion.
The BlueberryGate backlash has been mighty: The recently-signed federal Farm Bill requires DOL to “consult” with the Department of Agriculture before invoking hot goods. Oregon lawmakers went a giant step further, introducing a bill in Congress to take away DOL’s use of hot-goods seizures for any perishable crops. Forbes is using the case to attack the nation’s bedrock labor protection: the Fair Labor Standards Act. The Wall Street Journal recently jumped into the fray, using the case to further arguments against an “overbearing regulatory state.”
On the contrary, the case shows the need for regulation, for without the DOL’s action, the pickers would have had little recourse. The industry is predominantly made up of migrant workers from Mexico, who toil in the fields for as little as 30 cents per pound of picked berries. The Oregon pickers were immigrants, mostly from Mexico, including migrant workers who came from California to work in the fields, and seasonal workers living in Oregon. It’s the rare instance that such workers can stand up for their rights. (In August, blueberry pickers in Washington walked off their jobs to protest low wages, harassment and squalid living conditions, but this is the exception to the rule.)
More Catherine Ruckelshaus.
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