"Charity is commendable, everyone should be charitable. But Justice aims to create a social order in which, if individuals choose not to be charitable, people still don't go hungry, unschooled or sick without care. Charity depends on the vicissitudes of whim and personal wealth, justice depends on commitment instead of circumstance.
Faith-based charity provides crumbs from the table; faith-based justice offers a place at the table"
~Bill Moyers

Showing posts with label ufw. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ufw. Show all posts

Monday, June 23, 2008

Punishment after Injury? RE: María Isabel Vázquez Jiménez family.

Short as her life was, so were the news that his uncle was fired from the contractor who replaced Merced Farm Labor, the contractors who are directly responsible for her death and that I hope anyone amongst them found responsible for the inhumane conditions which prompted María Isabel Vázquez Jiménez death, gets charged at least with criminal negligence.

"Uncle of girl who died from heatstroke is fired" reads the headline of Jenny Rodríguez article, the report is also brief, Jenny tells us that it "was the same day his sister, María's mother, filed a wrongful-death lawsuit against the vineyard company and the contractor in charge when María Jiménez became ill" and also tells us that "Juan Chávez, the new contractor, fired Jiménez for missing a safety meeting that took place Wednesday", the same day that he accompanied lawyers to file the lawsuit and also spoke at a news conference.

According to el Sr. Doroteo Jiménez, Juan Chávez, the owner of "California Gold", the new farm labor contractor that replaced "Merced Farm Labor", he had asked for and had been given permission to take the day off. He was never informed there would be a mandatory safety training that day.
He returned to work afterwards and was fired at the end of the shift.

Ms. Rodríguez ends her report with this:
Dean Fryer, a spokesman for the state Labor Commission, said the firing could be illegal if proven to be retaliation. California labor code states an employee has a right to disclose and file a complaint about working conditions to labor officials.

Fryer said if that can be proved, regardless of the worker's U.S. residency status, state officials may take action.

"We would have to conduct our own investigation," Fryer said. "The employee has to come forward to us and tell us he wants (an) investigation."

Now, why does the SLC's spokesman mentions 'retaliation' as the possible cause? How does Mr. Jiménez prove it was retaliation? The standard of proof has to be a bit high in these cases, isn't?

UFW Condemns Firing of Doroteo Jiménez

"The United Farm Workers is condemning the action by farm labor contractor California Gold, its owner Juan Chávez and West Coast Grape Farming Inc. in the firing Thursday evening of Doroteo Jiménez."

Bravo UFW, I'm sure the Labor Contractors must be shrinking in fear and it will teach then not to do it again. WOW!

Not only that, the UFW also informs us that "Upon being terminated Jiménez was not given his final pay check – as required by law. As of today, he still had not been paid."

They are absolutely right on this, furthermore I can add, a termination is not effective until all the moneys due are paid in full.

Since I don't know if UFW has legal representation on Mr. Jiménez, I'll assume they don't, they can't do much more than make pronouncements, or, can they? I also ignore if he was working under what is called "employment at will" conditions, albeit the latter is besides the matter at hand, in my opinion of course!

First of all, I do know that an employer needs to have, and inform the employees, of it's "diciplinary guidelines", do they have them? Were the employees informed of it?

I understand that any rule needs three qualifiers for it to be valid: 1. needs to be known, 2. be fair and 3. be equally applied", were these three conditions met in the firing?

Secondly, Mr. Jiménez asked for and got permission to be absent, why wasn't he told there would be a safety meeting? Why wasn't he told that missing it would be a cause for termination?

Any modicum of decency would mandate in all fairness, to not discipline an employee if what I see happened, did in fact happen, or if after the event, the true facts were known, but then... to expect decency in the field of Labor Contractors who according to reports, have a dismal record on working conditions, would be tantamount to be living in Pollyanna.

See? That's why I question why Mr. Dean Fryer, the spokesman for the State Labor Commission zeroed in immediately on retaliation as the cause of the dismissal, and also why I take exception on the tepid response by the UFW's leadership who have more important matters to tend to, such as negotiating contracts to import braceros from Mexico.

And by the way, the real reason Mr. Doroteo Jiménez was diciplined was not for retaliation, but so he couldn't be an example to other workers, or as paradoxically as the case may be, as an example to other workers, as intimidation so nobody messes with their profits.

María Isabel Vázquez Jiménez life was short and her death cruel, unjust and totally preventable, I think that she would want us to help her family, still in mourning, do what is just... and right, for her, for her family, for the Farm Workers.

Or the abuses will continue.

"De Colores" == >







Aurora Grajeda
SFCA 06.22.08

Thursday, June 5, 2008

The Death of a "Criminal"

Her name was Maria Isabel Jiménez Vázquez, she was 17-year-old and pregnant and died because her employer did not give her proper access to shade and water as she pruned grape vines in 100-degree heat.

Investigators said they found multiple violations including the illegal use of child labor, multiple workers using one timecard and employees forced to purchase their own tools and equipment to harvest crops.

Inspectors visited about 50 farms Tuesday.

The death of Maria Isabel Vasquez Jimenez is now under investigation by Cal OSHA following allegations she was denied water, shade and other basic human rights while pruning grape vines in near triple-digit heat.

Hundreds of farm workers have been holding a march to the state capitol with the Jimenez family for the past few days.

United Farm Worker official Arturo Rodriguez said Jimenez's death was the 10th from heat exhaustion in the past four years.

"Maria Isabel was the youngest of the farmworkers," said Rodriguez. "She was the first woman that died as a result of this...and she was the first person who died being pregnant at the time."

Steven J. Ybarra, JD from the California Progress Report in his editorial "In Memory of Maria Isabel Jiménez Vázquez...." writes:

"Here is the question of the day - why is it that the Mexican worker is suddenly the devil incarnate in the United States?"

Many Americans today are buying the right “wingnut” lie that Mexican workers are destroying the economy. They buy off on the xenophobia put out by the wingnuts who blame the war, gas shortages, and deaths in Iraq on workers who come here to pick fruit and clean toilets at your friendly neighborhood motel.


Steven is right in both, in the question and in the answer, the minds of many people have been poisoned with a daily barrage of anti-immigrant hate speech by a large number of RightWingNuts with access to microphones and tv cameras who continuously spew hate and blame toward 'undocumented immigrants (They call them 'illegals'), prominent amongst them are, Lou Dobbs, Glenn Beck, Bill O'Reilly, et al - One of the most vicious and whose tirades of hate reflect his name, is Michael Savage, who warned U.S. politicians not to "take to the streets" to support illegal immigrant "vermin" and routinely calls these immigrant workers, criminals.

Listen to Savage's Comments











Vermin?

To what extent the RightWingNut onslaught of hate and demeaning speech against immigrants contributes to the way these humans are viewed and treated?, or in this case, mistreated, yes, they are humans beings just like you and me, in spite of what these hatemongers say and despite how employers abuse and exploit these workers.

Dr. Marcos Gutierrez in his weekdays radio program "Made in California" Regularly points out, that much as in Hitler's Germany of the 1930s, with it's dehumanizing speech against the Jews, made possible the atrocities that were to follow, so it is in these United States, that the anti-immigrant sentiment sowed in the minds of people by the media hatemongers, makes it also possible to view immigrants as less than human and thus fertilize the political ground, so draconian legislative measures can be implemented and barbaric raids conducted in a brutal manner be carried out, destroying lives, separating families, incarcerating children with their mothers, and on, and on, and on... ad infinitum.

But who was this criminal? Who was this 'lawbreaker illegal immigrant named Maria Isabel Vasquez Jimenez?

LODI, Calif. — They fell for one another in junior high school, in a village deep in Mexico's Sierra Madre range.

Within a few years, the young couple had crossed the border and found jobs pruning grapes in a California vineyard.

Maria and her friend, Florentino, had made plans: To work in this country for perhaps three years, save some money and then return to Oaxaca, get married and make a home and family there.

It wasn't long after that, that Florentino Bautista, 19, lost his pregnant fiancée when she fainted in his arms following hours of work in 100-degree heat. This week, Bautista is leading a poignant march to Sacramento to call for safer labor conditions on farms.

Two teenagers in love who traveled thousands of miles, surviving the deadly journey from the impoverished village to the fields in California in search of a better future, for them and for their families, in the case of Maria Isabel, to also help her widowed mother.


Criminals?

No, quite the contrary, Juan Hernandez makes a case that today's immigrants exhibit the traits and character which Americans admire in his book "New American Pioneers: Why Are We Afraid of Mexican Immigrants?", yes indeed, why?

Geraldo Rivera, in his book "His Panic: Why Americans Fear Hispanics in the U.S." and in his tv appearances on the subject, makes a connection between the demonizing of immigrants and the RightWingNuts in the media's antagonistic and hateful demeaning pronunciations against these workers.

No, not criminals, just workers with families to take care of.

Audio slideshow from Wednesday's funeral

United Farm Workers march to the Capitol - photo slide show

Video: Maria's fiance Florentino Bautista talks about what happened on May 14.
Video: El prometido de Maria, Florentino Bautista, habla sobre lo que paso el 14 de mayo



ARTICLES


In Memory of Maria Isabel Jiménez Vázquez and Her Unborn Child and All Farm Workers Who Have Died to Make our American Life Easier

The Short Life and Preventable Death of Maria Isabel Vasquez

Employer of farmworker who died had been fined for violations in 2006

Farm Worker Death Sparks March To Capitol

Source: NBC 11 Bay Area, CA (KNTV)

UFW March Honors Pregnant Farmworker Who Died In Vineyard

Source: NBC 4 Los Angeles (KNBC)

Farmers must share in keeping workers safe

Source: Modesto Bee

March begins to honor fallen farmworker

Source: San Jose Mercury News

Editorial: A tragedy in the farm fields is all too familiar

Source: Sacramento Bee

After worker death, state may revoke contractor's license

Source: San Jose Mercury News

March For Farm Worker Approaches Capitol

Source: NBC 3 Sacramento (KCRA)

LODI / Farmworker's on-job death spurs march to improve working conditions

Source: San Francisco Chronicle

Labor contractor in farmworker death case may lose license

Source: Sacramento Bee
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