Current:Home > reviewsJohnathan Walker:Luis Magaña Has Spent 20 Years Advocating for Farmworkers, But He’s Never Seen Anything Like This -MarketPoint
Johnathan Walker:Luis Magaña Has Spent 20 Years Advocating for Farmworkers, But He’s Never Seen Anything Like This
PredictIQ View
Date:2025-04-09 02:07:22
The Johnathan Walkerhardest harvest season Luis Magaña has known in half a century in California’s San Joaquin Valley is winding down. Produce stands are getting boarded up, fields are clearing and farmworkers are scrambling for busboy jobs and day labor.
Magaña, 65, picked and planted in the valley for nearly 30 years before becoming a full-time advocate for farmworkers 20 years ago. He knows the seasonal patterns well, or did. Every year, for example, when harvest wraps up, he organizes a Day of the Dead commemoration in Stockton, a small city ringed by agricultural lands where he and thousands of farmworkers live.
The ceremony honors workers who have died on the job during the year. In a back-breaking occupation fraught with hazards, several deaths a year—from accidents, heat strokes or heart attacks—are not uncommon.
This pandemic year, Magaña, one of California’s foremost hands-on experts on farmworkers, has no idea how many have died, even with his deep social networks. No one does. Magaña knows of at least two dozen deaths. From what he has heard from workers and others, he estimates maybe 50 workers have succumbed. Or more.
“It’s hard to know,” he said, shaking his head in dismay as he spoke. He was sitting in his office, swamped by bouquets of marigolds and other decorations for the ceremony on Nov. 1.
Many workers returned to Mexico when they got sick, Magaña said, either to die or seek medical treatment where they have greater access. Even getting a count on positive cases is impossible. Many farmworkers who got sick were too afraid to get tested. Others did not have access to testing. (In July, hundreds of farmworkers were turned away from a free testing day in downtown Stockton because the test kits ran out.)
Not to mention, most California counties do not track coronavirus cases by occupation. In the Salinas Valley, an agricultural region that does track cases by job type, farmworkers contracted the virus at three times the rate of the general population. In other agricultural counties, Latinos comprise the majority of coronavirus cases. Officials believe farmworkers represent the majority of those, since 90 percent of farmworkers are from Mexico.
In an annus horribilis all over the world, farmworkers, usually invisible, have received unusual attention as the most underpaid, unprotected “essential” workers in society. California, with up to 800,000, half the nation’s total, has even codified worker protections.
Last month, Gov. Gavin Newsom signed a law that calls for an outreach campaign to inform farmworkers on how to stay healthy and seek coronavirus-related services.The law also directs the California Division of Occupational Safety and Health to enforce the guidance and track and report workplace investigations in farm country. (Newsom also signed a second “farmworker law” that provides more courthouse access to workers living in rural communities or with limited transportation by expanding electronic filing to all state trial courts.)
And yet, Magaña tries to be hopeful, a necessary requirement for a farmworker advocate. Still, a law mandating workplace protections would have been more useful at the beginning of the season than at the end.
Tagging along with him one day as he visited farms proved his point. Every time Magaña visited the fields to hand out bandanas, hand sanitizer and pamphlets on Covid-19 protections, the workers needed them.
Given California’s enormous challenges, including mounting pandemic tolls and the most destructive wildfire season in state history, Magaña is skeptical that the new coronavirus law will be faithfully followed before a vaccine is ready. Once the pandemic is over, workers will still have to contend with megafires that are forcing a national reckoning on climate change. They are expected to get ever more destructive.
What both the coronavirus and the megafires have exposed, Magaña says, is the obvious: Farmworkers need much better protections. When wildfires forced evacuations in Sonoma County at the height of the wine grape harvest, the county agriculture commissioner gave farmworkers passes to continue picking. Workers frantically picked while fires burned nearby and their smoke loomed overhead.
Few refused to work. They needed to because the pandemic lockdowns made full-time employment harder to come by. Growers cut the amount of crops they grew and needed fewer workers. Service industry employees who lost their jobs to lockdowns turned to farm work as a last resort, so there was more competition for fewer jobs. Not to mention that in families where both parents worked the fields, the school closures forced one to quit for lack of affordable, available child care. Finally, the wildfires cut short a lot of employment when growers shut down, so any work was a lifeline.
As Magaña sees it, this has been, and remains, the worst year for farmworkers—which is saying a lot. Magaña has organized strikes, reported labor abuses, documented housing violations—the list goes on and on.
He knows too well that farmworkers are made promises in high places that are not kept. His father was a bracero, one of thousands of Mexicans hired to work in the United States during World War II. The program, which lasted until 1964, promised decent wages and housing—a good life. Instead, braceros were subjected to rampant racism, forced into overcrowded shacks and cheated out of pay, even enslaved. A few years after his family emigrated to the San Joaquin Valley in 1967, Magaña became a farmworker destined to make trouble. “I always fight for the workers,” he said.
The fight is the same. Pay workers a living wage and give them the legal status—at least half are undocumented—that they need to access health care and other protections. “They give the workers documents to show that they are essential to work,” Magaña said. “Why can’t they give documents to show they are essential to live?”
veryGood! (2283)
Related
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Kansas court upholds a man’s death sentence, ruling he wasn’t clear about wanting to remain silent
- What authors are like Colleen Hoover? Read these books next if you’re a CoHort.
- Rapper Tekashi 6ix9ine arrested by Dominican authorities on domestic violence charges
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Officials in Martinique rescue two boaters and search for three others after boat capsizes
- Is Nick Cannon Ready for Baby No. 13? He Says...
- AP Week in Pictures: Europe and Africa
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Analysis: Risk of spiraling Mideast violence grows as war in Gaza inflames tensions
Ranking
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Police charge man with killing suburban Philly neighbor after feuding over defendant’s loud snoring
- Lawyer hired to prosecute Trump in Georgia is thrust into the spotlight over affair claims
- 6 nuns have been kidnapped in Haiti while they were traveling on a bus, religious leaders say
- Civic engagement nonprofits say democracy needs support in between big elections. Do funders agree?
- 'Inside the Yellow Cocoon Shell' is a film where a big screen makes a big difference
- Guatemala’s new government makes extortion its top security priority
- Guatemala’s new government makes extortion its top security priority
Recommendation
House passes bill to add 66 new federal judgeships, but prospects murky after Biden veto threat
Former Sinn Fein leader Adams faces a lawsuit in London over bombings during the ‘Troubles’
AP Week in Pictures: North America
A Chinese and a Taiwanese comedian walk into a bar ...
NHL in ASL returns, delivering American Sign Language analysis for Deaf community at Winter Classic
Doja Cat's mother alleges son physically, verbally abused rapper in restraining order
Grand jury indicts Alec Baldwin in fatal shooting of cinematographer on movie set in New Mexico
Climate change terrifies the ski industry. Here's what could happen in a warming world.