California attorney general promises improved farmworker protection

Wednesday, October 27, 2021
FRESNO, Calif. (KFSN) -- California's new attorney general is promising better protection for farmworkers, who make up nearly 20 percent of the San Joaquin Valley workforce.

This state's farmworkers feed the world, but they often don't feel they get the corresponding credit.
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"We're coming through a pandemic where often we've been told about the importance of essential workers, but as a worker told me, more often than not we've been treated as though we're expendable," said Naindeep Singh, executive director of the Jakara Movement.

Bonta says he wants to change that.

He spent an hour listening to concerns from Central Valley ag labor leaders in northwest Fresno Wednesday, acknowledging repeated comments about non-existent enforcement of laws meant to keep farmworkers safe.

"We want to earn your trust," Bonta told them. "The laws on the books should be the laws in the field. I was really moved by the stories that were being told about lack of enforcement of heat laws and regulations that are there to protect workers."



An Action News investigation earlier this year found Cal-OSHA conducted physical inspections after only about 8% of complaints, which the agency attributed, in part, to a shortage of workplace safety inspectors during the pandemic.
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Bonta took office six months ago and recently established a worker rights and fair labor section, where attorneys are assigned to address built-in business practices undermining working conditions.

Asked for specifics about improving enforcement, he said he's at the listening stage, but promised improvement will come.

Labor leader Armando Elenes said that's a must, and it will benefit every grower.

"It's not just going after everybody," said Elenes, the United Farm Workers secretary-treasurer. "It's really trying to make sure everybody has a level playing field and that the worker at the bottom is not the one getting the brunt of it and being used."

Action News asked Elenes what success would look like as far as improved enforcement. He said improvement would be if he came back to a large field or orchard in about a year and it took him more than an hour to find a safety violation.
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