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Farm workers leave 'Salad Bowl' empty

Illegal immigrant Ray Martinez pays taxes, shops at local stores and works 12-hour days in this rich farming region known as America's Salad Bowl, where about 75 percent of the nation's lettuce grows.
/ Source: Reuters

Illegal immigrant Ray Martinez pays taxes, shops at local stores and works 12-hour days in this rich farming region known as America's Salad Bowl, where about 75 percent of the nation's lettuce grows.

Like thousands of his fellow farm workers in California's Salinas Valley — some here legally, but most not — Martinez stayed home on Monday as part of a nationwide boycott to demand a path to citizenship for illegal immigrants and to protest legislation that could brand them as felons.

"This will hopefully give us the opportunity to get legal status," said Martinez, a 26-year-old Mexican who does back-breaking labor on an organic farm for under $7 an hour.

"We pay taxes and do important jobs that others don't want to do," he said.

The U.S. Labor Department estimates that about 53 percent of the nation's agricultural workers lack legal documents — though laborers and union organizers say that number is closer to 80 percent in the Salinas Valley.

The United Farm Workers union has long tried to organize workers in the region made famous in John Steinbeck novels. Only 60 miles long by 5 miles wide, the region grows lettuce and broccoli year round, making its $3.4 billion farm economy an important source of food for the nation.

"You see the vegetables in the shops. Who is going to pick them?" asked Jose Hernandez, who has legal status and works on a mushroom farm. "If the companies say they need papers, who is going to work the jobs? Nobody."

On weekdays motorists driving down Highway 101 can see groups of workers hunched over in fields, wearing colorful bandannas to shield them from the hot California sun.

But early on Monday fields were empty and rows of produce unattended as workers heeded calls to stay home.

Union vice president Efren Barajas called the day a success so far. He said cooperation from employers was key.

"This will show we are together and that this issue needs to be resolved," Barajas said in a grocery parking lot. "About a week ago I didn't know if this would happen."

The issue also marks a rare occasion where growers and the union agree. Jim Bogart, a spokesman for the Grower-Shipper Association, agreed the overwhelmingly Latino workforce fills critical jobs nobody else wants.

"If those people were suddenly unavailable it would have a devastating impact," he said.

Paid for what they pick, workers can earn around the state minimum wage of $6.75 per hour, allowing them to send crucial remittances to their families in Mexico.

A recent study by the American Farm Bureau Federation said a crackdown on illegal labor could cause production losses in U.S. agriculture of $5 billion to $9 billion in the first one to three years and up to $12 billion over four or more years.

"We just want to take care of our families," said Jose Antonio Salinas, who came from Mexico 24 years ago without documents and now works legally on an area farm. "We should have the same respect other people have."