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Eye-Witness to the Cruel Conditions in Tobacco Farm Labor Camps
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Brenda Loya in AFL-CIO Media Affairs sends us this from North Carolina, where she is on a fact-finding trip to witness the brutal conditions endured by tobacco workers.
We joined a diverse delegation of 25 activists, students, labor and community leaders and traveled to farm labor camps in Dudley, N.C.., to witness firsthand the appalling and abusive conditions of tobacco farm workers.
Our journey began with a visit to the Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC), where we learned about a recent report, “State of Fear: Human Rights Abuses in North Carolina’s Tobacco Industry,” that brings light to the tobacco industry’s impact on the human rights of farmworkers in the fields of North Carolina. Issued jointly by FLOC and Oxfam America, the report presented human right violations that we would later witness.
We drove 40 minutes into the country to visit labor camps where farmworkers live while they harvest tobacco to supply companies like RJ Reynolds, one of the richest corporations in U.S. agriculture—in fact, one of the largest tobacco corporations in the world, with annual profits of over $2 billion.
We what saw was never to be imagined. When the workday ends, farm workers—men, women and children—returned to grim camps, often overcrowded shacks once considered chicken coops and horse stables. They are housed in conditions that clearly violate internationally recognized living standards.
We saw mattresses that are dirty, wet from the leaky roof, or missing entirely. Workers shared stories about infestations of bedbugs, roaches and other vermin. We saw nonfunctional showers and toilets. With lack of ventilation, workers sleep in overcrowded rooms. Kitchens and access to healthy, nourishing food is non-existent. Workers endure these inhumane conditions out of fear of losing the jobs they desperately need to provide for their families—jobs with sub-poverty wages that threaten their lives on a daily basis.
It’s an appalling reality. The climate of fear is perpetuated by the tobacco industry which exploits the farmworkers, forcing them to live under conditions that no one should have to bear and denying them a voice in making changes.
Despite the odds, workers are joining together to form a union. Says FLOC President Baldemar Velasquez:
The job of unions is to organize the unorganized. Workers are workers regardless of documented status. Workers deserve to have rights; they deserve working visas with labor rights and justice. Once workers see and feel justice, a fire is ignited that cannot and will not be extinguished it.
Our delegation represented a dozen progressive labor and community organizations including the AFL-CIO, two AFL-CIO constituency groups, the Labor Council for Latin American Advancement (LCLAA) and the A. Phillip Randolph Institute (APRI) and the Hispanic National Bar Association and Duke University.
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3 Comments
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I really wish you would stop re-posting previous articles with the same damn message! I know why you do it, it looks better to have new postings that are not as critical as the previous posts!
As I said before, I would rather that tobacco would cease being grown, myself. It is a major health cost to our society, and as has been said for decades now, tobacco is more addictive than heroin.
And as I said before, this is a lot like trying to get Afghan poppy-growers to grow vegetables, it has been tried to get tobacco farms in our USA to grow vegetables which are greatly needed locally. But the transportation and wholesaling businesses are greatly against local produce and against Community-Supported Agriculture. But like the Afghan poppy growers, the tobacco farmers say they cannot make as much money growing vegitables as they can their sinister crops!
So we have a major problem in improving our public health. And a major problem in creating a SUSTAINING domestic local economic market system !!!
I agree that tabacco is an unneeded product. These workers deserve so much better than how they are trreated. There will always be a demand for these products though, so we just need to focus on making sure workers are treated fairly.
Alexandria D,
http://www.highland
So, should I walk to work or carry my lunch? These workers don’t have options. If they did, how many of them would be choosing this backbreaking work in the hot sun that tears up you hands and causes blisters. As long as tabacco is legal; as long as beer is legal; as long as exotic dancing is legal; as long as war is legal; we have an obligation to support those who find themselves engaged in those jobs. Working families are not to blame for the bad social choices we make for ourselves. They are very much the victims here.