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  • Migrant fieldworkers are losing their traditional livelihood

    San Diego Union Tribune, CA
    Jan 23 2005

    Migrant fieldworkers are losing their traditional livelihood to
    mechanized pickers, global competition
    By Diane Lindquist
    UNION-TRIBUNE STAFF WRITER


    PARLIER - For the past century, raisins in California's Central
    Valley have been harvested in exactly the same way: a monthlong
    frenzy of hand picking that required more workers than almost any
    other crop.

    Last season, many raisin growers turned to machines to do the work.
    Although they had long held out, they are now joining growers
    nationwide in embracing mechanization to fend off global competition.


    But the switch to mechanical harvesting is taking a heavy toll on the
    Mexican migrants who fill most of the state's lowest-paying farm
    jobs. With machines picking more crops, the need for field hands is
    falling sharply. Where 50 men once were needed to harvest a field of
    raisins, five now suffice.

    "I've been going all over the valley looking for work, but there
    isn't any. If I'm lucky, I get one or two days a week," said Fidel
    Rosales Rodrguez, who last spring paid smugglers $1,200 to sneak him
    from Mexico into California.

    Even legal fieldworkers say they have never experienced such a tough
    year. There were more migrants, they complain, and jobs were all but
    impossible to find.

    Mechanization portends big problems for a region strained in the past
    two decades by the arrival of impoverished rural Mexicans. They are
    widely estimated to be coming to the United States at a rate of more
    than a half million a year, with a quarter to a third of them
    entering California.

    The challenge of absorbing so many newcomers is taxing the economic
    and social well-being of the valleys that produce fruits, nuts and
    vegetables for markets worldwide.

    "We're adding a lot of poor people into what's already a pretty poor
    area. It's a dangerous path," said Philip Martin, a migration
    specialist at the University of California Davis.

    California, the setting for John Steinbeck's "The Grapes of Wrath"
    and Cesar Chavez's historic farmworker union movement, is
    experiencing the emergence of a worrisome strain of rural poverty. It
    exists alongside the relative prosperity associated with the state's
    $25.7 billion agriculture business. If, for instance, the Central
    Valley were a state, it would rank first in the nation in
    agricultural production but 48th in per-capita income.

    "People used to think California was divided between the north and
    south, but it's really between the wealthy coastal areas and the
    impoverished interior valleys," said demographer Hans Johnson of the
    Public Policy Institute of California.

    The sheer magnitude of the influx of Mexican migrants is prompting
    tension and resentment that mirror anti-immigrant feelings in other
    parts of the United States. California's agricultural valleys have
    become Balkanized as numerous ethnic groups have reshuffled into
    separate communities.

    "We risk falling into warring factions," said Assemblyman Juan
    Arambula, a former Fresno County supervisor.

    Parlier, a small farming town 20 miles southeast of Fresno that is in
    the heart of raisin country USA, typifies the dilemma that confronts
    many rural California cities.

    An unceasing arrival of migrants has transformed Parlier into one of
    the scores of communities known as "Mexican towns" that dot the
    Central Valley. Since 1990, Parlier's population has doubled to
    12,000. Every year when field hands arrive for the harvest, the city
    has 4,000 more residents for a few months.

    The community also is one of California's poorest. Unemployment
    hovers year-round at 30 percent. Per-capita income averages $5,300;
    family incomes are slightly more than $24,000.

    Some families are struggling on less than $3,000 a year, the average
    wage in Mexico.

    "We're transferring rural poverty from Mexico to rural California,"
    Martin of UC Davis said, "and we don't have a game plan to get out of
    it."

    The mechanization of the raisin harvest threatens to make the
    situation even worse. State officials believe two or three migrants
    are currently competing for each of California's 400,000 to 500,000
    seasonal farm jobs. If machines pick the raisins, agricultural
    experts say, labor demand will drop to a tenth of the 40,000 to
    50,000 workers typically hired today.

    "I'm reluctant to say we don't want any more (workers)," Arambula
    said. "But to the extent we have more people than work, we need to
    slow it down."

    The region is looking to U.S. immigration measures to control the
    flow.

    President Bush has put the issue back on his agenda, vowing that
    Congress this year will implement a guest worker program and some
    type of provision to legalize undocumented people living in the
    United States.

    Also expected is legislation that would increase border enforcement
    and impose enforceable sanctions on employers who hire undocumented
    workers.

    Any immigration reforms could greatly affect the state's farm picture
    as well as areas nationwide that have attracted large numbers of
    Mexican migrants and increasingly are coming to resemble rural
    California.

    Still, it's uncertain whether new measures would help.

    For example, the Immigration Reform and Control Act of 1986 spawned
    unintended consequences that contributed to the economic and social
    stress felt today. The legislation legalized 3 million undocumented
    immigrants, a third of them under a special agricultural provision.
    But it failed to halt illegal entries. Instead, it quickened the
    flow.

    Once legalized, Mexican men secretly brought their wives and children
    across the border to join them. Meanwhile, fresh job seekers arrived
    to replenish the ranks as the back-breaking work drove older workers
    from the fields but not necessarily from California.

    Such post-IRCA inflows have caused the population of farmworker
    communities to grow twice as fast as populations elsewhere in
    California.

    Estimates of undocumented people living in the United States
    generally vary from 9 million to 12 million, with Mexicans accounting
    for about 5.4 million of the total.

    "Every year, the numbers of undocumented immigrants flowing into the
    United States is higher than the year before," said Jeffrey Passel, a
    research specialist at the Urban Institute, a nonpartisan economic
    and social policy research group in Washington, D.C. "The number in
    the last decade is more than any other decade, and the statistics
    might be low."



    Growers in Fresno County, home of the entire U.S. raisin crop, have
    long relied on workers from Mexico to collect the dried, wrinkly
    fruit they sell as a baking ingredient and snack.

    "We couldn't have gotten the crop picked without them," said grower
    John Pabojian.

    But Pabojian has stopped hiring from among the migrants who arrive
    each season. Instead of the 100 workers he once took on for the
    monthlong process, he now has six year-round workers and a machine
    that finishes the harvest in half the time.

    The transition many of the state's 5,500 raisin growers are making is
    considered the most significant innovation in the raisin harvest
    since the industry was established in 1873. It's also happening
    faster than anyone expected. Last fall, the amount of raisin acreage
    picked by machine increased by more than 30 percent.

    Harvests of most crops raised in California are already mechanized,
    from beans to nuts and some citrus. And experts predict that machines
    will soon pick more of the fruits and vegetables now routinely picked
    by hand.

    By eliminating so many jobs, the raisin industry's mechanization is
    dramatically changing the overall job market.

    "For a very traditional industry that always has been in the lead of
    fighting for hand laborers, it's revolutionary," said Martin of UC
    Davis.

    Raisin harvesting machines were developed in the 1950s, but growers
    resisted them until economics forced the issue. They had argued that
    only humans were capable of the painstaking work of cutting grape
    clusters from vines, laying them on the ground in paper trays to dry,
    turning them once, rolling them and, once they've become raisins,
    collecting them.

    Raisin growers, like those in the sugar and tomato industries,
    invested much political capital to convince lawmakers they needed a
    guest worker program to ensure an adequate supply of cheap labor.

    And now that President Bush is promising one will be enacted, they
    are not backing off.

    "We've got to have a guest worker program," said Manuel Cu×ha Jr.,
    president of the Nisei Farmers League. The work force is rife with
    fraudulent documents, he said. With tightened homeland security laws
    and stricter enforcement, "it'll be all over" if the fields are
    raided.

    U.S. immigration agents, however, routinely have refrained from
    pursuing undocumented workers in California's agricultural valleys.
    Last summer, the Border Patrol closed its Fresno County office.

    Nevertheless, Cu×ha said, legalization would assure growers an
    adequate supply of stable, skilled laborers required for
    mechanization and, at the same time, offer workers the opportunity to
    move on to other, better-paying jobs.

    For workers, mechanization and the drop in labor demand last season
    hit without warning.

    "I've been coming here for 25 years. Back then it was the place to
    find work," said longtime field hand Simon Martnez of La Paz, in Baja
    California Sur. "This year has been the most difficult ever because
    there's been more people and a lot less jobs.

    "I have to come back next year. My family is counting on it. I have
    10 children, and I also help support my parents," he said.

    It's too early to know how the permanent job cuts will affect the
    flow of migrants from Mexico.

    "The assumption is they'll go someplace else to where there are
    jobs," said Roberto Suro, director of the Pew Hispanic Center.



    Labor issues are not driving the transition to mechanization.
    Globalization is. Producers in Chile and Turkey are sending cheaper
    raisins into an already saturated U.S. market. As a result, growers
    in Fresno County are being forced to cut costs.

    "The cause has been the basic economics of the industry," said Bert
    Mason, an agricultural economist at Fresno State University. "And
    because of that we've seen a rapid change in attitude toward
    mechanization."

    Competition has forced daunting decisions on California's raisin
    farmers, most of whom are Armenian or Japanese immigrants or
    descendants of immigrants. Many are in their 60s and 70s.

    While they once were able to make a decent living on less than 50
    acres, foreign competition and four straight years of poor crops and
    low prices have made such operations big money losers.

    Some growers have put their grapes into table wine. Others are
    shutting down. In the past two years, the amount of acreage devoted
    to raisins shrunk to 200,000 acres from 250,000. The remaining
    farmers have little choice but to mechanize.

    "I'm going to switch over," Garvin Lane said. "You've got to convert
    or get out."

    Easing the transition has been the development of harvesting
    machines, new grape varieties and planting systems. Professional
    harvesters, with their own equipment and crews, have materialized.

    Although methods vary, all allow the fruit to dry on the vine, rather
    than on trays laid out on the ground. Machines fitted with big
    brushes then advance along the rows, gently knocking the raisins into
    bins. Because the fruit never touches the ground, the quality is
    higher.

    "It's a huge challenge to learn how to do it," Mason of Fresno State
    said.

    The shift is expensive.

    A machine typically costs about $150,000. Even if growers hire a
    professional harvester, the expense of preparing for mechanization -
    planting vines, trellising and installing subsurface drip irrigation
    - can run initial costs to about $4,500 per acre, or $2,500 more per
    acre than conventional planting.

    But yields more than double, boosting returns quickly enough to repay
    the investment.

    The biggest saving is in labor costs. Field hands are paid by the
    tray, averaging 15 to 17 cents each, with workers picking an average
    of 300 trays a day. Machines can cut that expenditure by 80 percent.

    "Everybody was looking for ways to survive and cut costs, and that's
    the way they found to cut costs," said grower Sohan Samran. "Even
    though we're mechanized, labor still is our biggest expense."
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