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Labor Day and community

As Labor Day is celebrated, we should take pause to recognize the rich history of community building via labor struggle. Ventura County provides inspiring examples of people coming closer together as they demanded fair wages and improved working conditions. On the Oxnard Plain, for example, two bitter strikes took place involving sugar beet farm laborers (betabeleros, as they would be called) during the early decades of the 20th century. In resisting a 50 percent wage cut in the thinning of sugar beets, Japanese and Mexican betabeleros united in forming the Japanese Mexican Labor Association in February 1903. After a monthlong struggle and a dramatic downtown shootout, resulting in five wounded and one fatality, growers agreed to revert to the pre-strike wage rate. The JMLA strike of 1903 is particularly significant in the history of the United States as it serves as a brilliant and unique example of intercultural labor solidarity.

During the Great Depression's nadir, in August 1933, Oxnard betabeleros and the Cannery Agricultural Worker Industrial Union again resisted the curtailing of the wage scale, this time by 12 percent. Although ultimately unsuccessful, the 1933 betabelero strike demonstrated the strength and openness of the Mexican community in drawing upon similar intercultural support from the Filipino Protective League, Ella Winter (wife of the renowned muckraking journalist Lincoln Steffens) and the National Committee for the Defense of Political Prisoners, and Al Wirrin of the American Civil Liberties Union.

Prior to the nation's entrance into World War II, a countywide citrus strike arose. Similar to the demands of the previous two disputes, workers in lemon and orange orchards and packinghouses demanded union recognition, improved working conditions and a 12 percent raise in wages. Simultaneously, families of the citrus industry in Rancho Sespe, Somis and other communities banded together in creating life-sustaining cultural events and fundraisers.

Those who found themselves displaced from citrus company housing also assembled surrogate government councils within a federal Farm Security Administration camp in Oxnard of the likes detailed in John Steinbeck's "The Grapes of Wrath." As in 1933, this strike to increase the wages of workers ended in failure. The effort for economic justice, however, presaged the post-World War II demands for equal treatment under the law. This strike, in particular, continues to live in the cultural memory of Ventura County residents as an inspiring saga of labor and community solidarity.

Recognizing the tradition of community and labor activism in Ventura County, during the fall of 1958, the Community Service Organization sent a person named Cesar Chavez to create a chapter to establish citizenship courses, voter registration drives and nonpartisan get-out-the-vote campaigns within the La Colonia barrio of Oxnard. Moreover, CSO members throughout the county came to challenge the exploitive use of bracero agricultural laborers (federally subsidized Mexican guest workers).

Chavez's experiences as a CSO organizer, being once himself a betabelero in Ventura County, and an intermittent resident, introduced him to the degrading situations that workers in fields encountered; this included but was not limited to the absence of restrooms, drinking water, the backbreaking use of the infamous el cortito (the short-handle hoe) and wages insufficient to support a family.

Indeed, the CSO's successful leveraging of Ventura County's community assets for the betterment of labor answered a question that he held: Could an effective farm workers union be created to address these issues? The answer was Si Se Puede (yes, it can be done)!

So, as many have the privilege of enjoying this three-day holiday weekend, we must commemorate the importance of community in protecting and advancing the interests of labor everywhere.

— Frank P. Barajas lives in Oxnard.

Discussions

Posted by Tom_Johnston on September 3, 2007 at 5:41 a.m. (Suggest removal)

Mr Barajas's interesting history of Labor struggle in Ventura County should serve as a reminder to many of my generation and those that follow mine.

That message is that many of those things we now today take for granted as workers were earned by actions such as Mr Barajas describes. Eight hour days, overtime, health benefits, worker's compensation, safe working conditions and much more came about because of, or were strongly influenced by organized Labor.

As we see all too often these days, there are those who would roll back this gains, often for no better reason than to improve an already profitable margin or increase CEO/Manager/Stockholder gain beyond fair compensation.

Something to think about this Labor Day.



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