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Assembly passes bill providing overtime pay for farmworkers
The measure faces an uncertain fate with Gov. Schwarzenegger, who has a mixed record on agricultural labor issues. He has not made up his mind on it, a spokesman said.
July 02, 2010|By Marc Lifsher, Los Angeles Times
Reporting from Sacramento – —
The state Assembly, in a historic vote Thursday, passed and sent to the governor a bill to give California farmworkers the same rights to overtime pay as millions of other hourly employees have.
People who work at one of the most difficult, dangerous and injury-prone jobs — picking vegetables, fruit and nuts — shouldn't be discriminated against when they spend more than eight hours a day in the field, argued Sen. Dean Florez, the bill's author as well as the son and grandson of Kern County farmworkers.
In a lengthy debate that covered human rights and economics, opponents countered that increasing pay would hurt the state's $36 billion-a-year agriculture industry, whose farmers sometimes operate on slim profit margins, and their employees, who probably would wind up with a pay cut.
Florez's bill passed on a 46-26 vote but faces an uncertain fate with Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger. The former movie action hero from Austria and onetime bricklayer has a mixed record on agricultural labor issues.
He has signed into law a bill to prevent field workers from being poisoned by pesticides and backed regulations to protect them against heatstroke. He also has vetoed bills opposed by agribusiness that would have made it easier for unions to organize in the fields.
"I am hopeful that the governor's experience as an immigrant who initially supported himself through manual labor will give him empathy to grasp the importance of this bill to some of California's hardest workers," said Florez, a Democrat from Shafter.
The governor, who leaves office in January, has not made up his mind on the bill, a spokesman said.
Florez, who also is being forced out by term limits after 10 years in the Legislature, hopes passage of the overtime bill will be his career capper. He said he plans to personally lobby the governor for a signature.
If that doesn't work, Florez said he would seek support from California First Lady Maria Shriver and other members of her Kennedy family. Both of Shriver's late uncles, former U.S. Sens. Robert Kennedy and Ted Kennedy, were close to Cesar Chavez, the founder of the United Farm Workers union, and they fervently supported farmworker causes.
"It's a profile-in-courage moment for the governor," said Florez, referring to "Profiles in Courage," a 1955 Pulitzer Prize-winning biography written by then U.S. Sen. John F. Kennedy, who won the presidency five years later.
http://articles.latimes.com/2010/jul/02/business/la-fi-ag-overtime-20100702
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