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ST. PETERSBURG TIMES
September 13, 2008
Florida
farmworkers exploited, even enslaved
By BILL MAXWELL
Between each December and May, Florida grows nearly the entire U.S.
crop of fresh field tomatoes for our homes, restaurants and
supermarkets. Although the tomato is essential produce, most consumers
do not know, or do not care, that many of the farm workers who harvest
the crop are exploited and otherwise mistreated.
A federal case just ending in Fort Myers, in fact, shows that too many
farm workers, especially tomato pickers, are being held as slaves. Five
Immokalee field bosses, all relatives, pleaded guilty to several charges
of enslaving Guatemalan and Mexican farm workers, forcing them to work
and brutalizing them.
The 17-count indictment alleged that for two years, ringleaders Cesar
Navarette and Geovanni Navarette kept more than a dozen men in boxes,
shacks and trucks on their property. The workers were chained, beaten
and forced to work on farms in North Carolina, South Carolina and
Florida. Incredibly, the indictment shows that the men were forced to
pay rent of $20 a week to sleep in a locked furniture van. They were
forced to urinate and defecate in a corner of the vehicle.
To keep the workers obligated to them, the Navarettes devised drug,
drink and food schemes to increase and guarantee the men's indebtedness.
A federal plea deal was entered, giving the two ringleaders 12 years and
fines from $750,000 to $1 million each. Formal sentencing is at the end
of the year.
The Coalition of Immokalee Workers conducted the initial investigation
in this case and six other successfully prosecuted cases that have freed
more than 1,000 field hands.
A major shame is that Florida's leading lawmakers, not to mention
ordinary citizens, have rarely expressed outage over such abuses, and
even fewer have raised a finger on behalf of farm workers. Former Gov.
Jeb Bush and his labor emissary openly criticized the coalition for its
work, and Gov. Charlie Crist has yet to show real interest.
Outsiders, such as former President Jimmy Carter, have had to come in
and lead the fight. Now U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) is the most
outspoken elected official in Washington to advocate for the cause of
Florida farm workers. He is a member of the Health, Education, Labor and
Pensions Committee.
Following the conviction of the Navarettes, Sanders said in a prepared
statement: ``I think most Americans would find it hard to believe that
people in our country are pleading guilty to slavery charges in the year
2008, but that is what is going on in the tomato fields of Florida.
``While slavery is, of course, the most extreme situation in the tomato
fields, the truth is that the average worker there is being ruthlessly
exploited. Tomato pickers perform backbreaking work, make very low
wages, have no benefits and virtually no labor protections.
``As a committee of the (labor committee), I intend to introduce
legislation in the very near future which will end a loophole in current
law which enables growers to avoid taking responsibility for what
happens on their fields when workers are being enslaved.''
Farm workers are and always have been excluded from U.S. fair labor
standards and are prevented from unionizing. The overwhelming majority
of farms hire contractors, or crew bosses, to employ, pay, house and
transport workers, thus freeing the growers of culpability for
wrongdoing.
About the Navarettes' case, Coalition of Immokalee Workers member
Gerardo Reyes told the Fort Myers
News-Press: ``The facts that have been reported in this case are
beyond outrageous - workers being beaten, tied to posts, and chained and
locked into trucks to prevent them from leaving their boss. How many
more workers have to be held against their will before the food industry
steps up to the plate and demands that this never - ever - occurs again
in the produce that ends up on America's tables?''
The ugly truth is that most Americans rarely think about the inhumanity
of the process responsible for the fresh, inexpensive produce on their
tables. Until consumers become sensitive to that process and to the
plight of the laborers, the abuse and exploitation, even slavery, will
continue.
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