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LOS ANGELES TIMES
May 20, 2008
Editorial
Female farmworkers at risk
Rape victim Olivia Tamayo won in court. But how many are silent victims?
When the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals recently
upheld an award of almost $1 million to a farmworker whose
supervisor had raped her, farmworker advocates celebrated from the
lettuce fields of California to the orange groves of Florida. According
to the sexual harassment and retaliation suit filed against Harris
Farms, a Fresno County agricultural giant, Olivia Tamayo's supervisor
raped her three times. The first attack occurred in his car when she
accepted a ride to work. The second, under a stand of almond trees. The
third, at her home while her husband was at work and her children
asleep. The company's solution, according to the suit: Reassign her to
an isolated spot in a field nearer to her attacker's house.
Tamayo's ordeal, unfortunately, is not an isolated incident. The sexual
harassment of female farmworkers has long been a dirty secret of migrant
labor. Studies are sparse, but one by the Southern Poverty Law Center
found that 90% of female farmworkers in California surveyed in 1993 said
sexual harassment was a
serious problem. Vulnerable because of their poverty, their
limited English skills and often their immigration status, these women
are easy prey. Harassers sometimes threaten to report illegal immigrants
or their relatives if victims do not remain silent, advocates say.
Women who labor in the fields quickly learn that even when the
temperature soars above 100 degrees, it is best to dress like a man --
baggy pants and oversized shirts -- and to always carry a bandanna. The
clothes are not just practical for fieldwork, they are all-purpose
concealers, women say. Bandannas fend off the sun, filter pesticides and
hide feminine features from would-be predators. Too often, however, they
are flimsy protection.
To call attention to the problem of sexual harassment, the Southern
Poverty Law Center has launched a national awareness project, displaying
decorated white bandannas in government buildings, at universities and
on clothesline exhibits in 40 cities. In California, bandannas hang in
exhibits from Salinas -- where female farmworkers refer to one work site
as the "field of panties" because of frequent sexual assaults there --
to Santa Ana. The project has received attention because of Tamayo's
victory, but in one respect, the court decision is bittersweet. Hers is
the only suit brought by a female farmworker to reach a federal jury.
That lonely statistic raises the question: How many more Olivia Tamayos
are out there?
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