Recently I read the Editor’s Letter in Vegetable Grower’s
News entitled ‘The unintended effects of activism’. Any of us who are in the organic farming
world know that this publication is provided free of charge to growers because
it is subsidized by advertising and ‘informational’ pieces provided by large ag
companies ranging from seed providers to herbicides. There is often very little
‘news’ that applies to the organic industry but I still choose to skim through
it from time to time to keep on issues that are affecting larger, industrial
crop producers. This op-ed piece in particular I found completely troubling
from a human rights perspective to the point that I felt driven to write this
counter-piece.
The whole editorial revolves around the ‘battleground for a
living wage’ and the rate that producers will now have to pay to their
employees if legislation does in fact take place to raise the minimum wage from
the measly $7.25/hr to $15/hr; a move that is poised to take place in
increments over the next 6 years. Frankly, I am personally appalled that the
minimum wage nationally can still exist under $10/hr. On a recent trip to the
grocery store, I purchased cereal, cream and milk, bottled water, two frozen
pizzas and a watermelon for my children. The total at the check-out counter
came to over $60 to cover the expenses of one shitty ‘take-out’ style dinner
and maybe enough breakfasts to feed my kids for a little under a week. At the federal
minimum wage level I would have had to work nearly 10 hours (over a full 8 hour
workday) to make enough to pay for this very basic grocery trip. There would be
nothing left over to pay for our mortgage, my car, the gas to put in my car,
health insurance, and the clothes to keep my family from walking the streets
naked much less any type of free-time
activities (like taking my kids to the city pool). Fuck that.
So it angers me to see this balding, aging middle-class
white dude telling me what an atrocity it is that the ag industry will actually
have to give their farm hands a raise. Sir, have you ever worked in ag or have
you only written about it? If you have spent any time laboring on your hands
and knees in the blazing hot sun or a freezing cold November rain, you know
that your time spent working a full 8 hour day better be damn well worth more
than a couple of frozen pizzas. Which, frankly, is why you sir did not choose
farm labor as your career but instead chose the very cushy job of journalism
(As I sit here at my comfortable desk drinking my fair trade coffee w/ organic
cream…I know how hard of a struggle it can be to write some words on a piece of
paper in my pajamas).
Your letter states that the reason to avoid raising the
minimum wage is a loss of jobs, an increase in mechanization and moving
production out of the US. Sir, this has already happened. All large farms have
been working tirelessly to rid themselves of the headache of actually having
employees. Who wants to pay L&I and Federal Employment Security Taxes anyway?
And if you think that it is so overly simple to move production out of the
country, please remember that moving production actually means having some good
arable land with water and fertility resources to actually move to. These aren’t
shoe factories, they are farms!
And your argument that farmers cannot recoup costs because
they cannot set the price on goods is weak. You big farmers set the system up
this way for yourselves during the last century, now deal with the
consequences. You yourselves are no more than slaves to the industrial food
complex. Stop whining about your lot in life and organize a revolt. Start
asking to be compensated for your commodities at a fair exchange rate. Work
with each other as growers rather than against each other. Form a fucking farm
union. Remember what unions used to be good for…they used to keep ordinary
people from getting screwed by big business! Take a stand rather than
continuing to play the victim. This spineless mentality is getting so old.
And, rather than continuing to spew the dogma of the antiquated
machine known as modern agriculture, why not encourage farmers to step up and
do the right thing. Raise the minimum wage and encourage your workers to make a
living rather than remain enslaved in poverty. Farming is a highly skilled,
physically intensive job. Stop whitewashing the facts. Stop perpetuating the
myth that farm work is unskilled labor unworthy of a reasonable rate of pay.
This is a fallacy and it is offensive to those of us who have spent our lives
with our hands (our white hands) in the dirt. I am fucking sick of migrant
labor (the majority of the workforce in large ag) being treated like less than
human. When will this end? Never, without a change in attitude toward one’s
employees. Shame on you, Mr. Lee Dean for continuing to perpetuate this system
of capitalism at its worst. I hope when you are sent to hell, you will be bent
over for 8 hours, picking strawberries by hand on a 90 degree day for $58
before taxes.
1 comment:
Well said, Eron. Brava! Someone needs to tell it like it is—everything you say is the daily reality of thousands of smaller-scale farmers as well as countless immigrant laborers who toil on farms of all sizes. Low minimum wages do nothing but drag all of us down in both the short- and long-term health of our economy and nation.
—Mi Ae Lipe, author of Bounty from the Box: The CSA Farm Cookbook
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