We often get asked why we cover our skin even in hot weather. Why do we need long pants, long sleeves and head/face coverings in 100+ weather?
Reason one: health experts advise anyone to dress in light layers to keep cool when working in the sun. (1/thread) #WeFeedYou
Even pre-covid, we covered our faces to protect ourselves from inhaled irritants and toxins. Pesticides, dust, or even crop debris such as the tiny hairs on okra vines can damage lungs. So can Valley Fever, a fungal infection caused by inhaled particles. aghealth.ucdavis.edu/news/research-…
Some crops are toxic in themselves, like tobacco. Handling fresh tobacco is hazardous — nicotine is readily absorbed through the skin and it is neurotoxic.
This is particularly dangerous to children (and yes it is legal for children to harvest tobacco). theatlantic.com/family/archive…
Many plants are “phytotoxic” which means their fresh juice is caustic to the skin when combined with sunlight. Sometimes called “celery blisters,” this painful reaction to celery, carrot and many other juices can cause extensive and permanent skin damage. medicalnewstoday.com/articles/319001
Pesticides especially haunt farm worker parents. When we get home, we don’t hug our kids until we change clothes. We cover seats in our cars, and wash our clothes separately from our children’s clothing.
We had bans on DDT in our union contract years before the EPA banned it.
In many places we work, the presence of rattlesnakes means we need to wear jeans and boots. This past week in Yakima County, WA hundreds of workers using headlamps were harvesting at night to avoid extreme heat. That’s rattlesnake country!
Wasps love fig trees.
We don’t love being stung.
Of course our work also means a lot of cuts and scrapes. Whether we’re using a machete to harvest brussel sprouts or just hand harvesting limes. (Did you know lime trees are covered in thorns?)
In conclusion, we are completely covered up at work so we aren’t cut, burned, stung, bitten, poisoned, maimed or scorched to death at the end of a workday. #WeFeedYou
If you learned something new (or feel bad about throwing away food we worked so hard to provide) you can always donate here.
Donations will help us keep doing everything we can to save lives and help each other. ufw.org/heatdonate
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We have grave concerns about the ongoing desperate struggle of farm workers in the wake of Hurricane Helene, and we are deeply afraid of the destruction headed for Florida farm workers as Hurricane Milton approaches. 1/
Helene left a path of destruction, with many migrant farm worker labor camps struggling with minimal shelter, without power or communications, relying on a system of mutual aid volunteers for the bare basics.
Volunteers continue to check on labor camps and deliver supplies.
Florida brings more than 50,000 H2A foreign guest workers to work the fields each year.
Tens of thousands of H2A and domestic seasonal workers are in Florida right now. Many are in substandard or improvised housing, without vehicles, unable to self-evacuate.
On Feb 21 in Buffalo, NY, farm workers are rallying alongside community and labor allies outside the U.S. Courthouse.
The court will be hearing New York Vegetable Growers Association v. Hochul.
At stake: Do farm workers in New York have a right to organize?
Farm workers are mostly excluded from federal labor laws. In 2019, NY passed the Farm Laborers Fair Labor Practices Act which gives farmworkers the right to unionize in NY state. Since then we’ve won certification at 5 farms so far, with more pending. theguardian.com/us-news/2023/j…
Rather than recognize their workers choice to unionize the growers banded together to sue the state and stop the law. They target the fact that many workers who want to unionize are H2A workers. They want to overturn the whole law and strip ALL NY farm workers of their rights.
Much of the USA is under heat warning. Heat is a deadly threat for farm workers, and conditions are getting worse.
There are a myriad of dangers caused by extreme heat that most people don’t consider when they open the refrigerator in their air conditioned kitchen. 1/
Even one shift of outdoor agricultural work in hot weather can be detected in bloodwork — heat strain causes acute kidney injury. https://t.co/pklc8GQtEGoem.bmj.com/content/74/6/4…
One of the symptoms of heat stress is a decline in cognitive function. This means a worker may not recognize they’re in danger before developing lethal heat stroke.
Cesar Chavez followed Dr King’s career since the 1950s Montgomery bus boycott. Whenever newspapers carried accounts of #MLK battles, the stories "would jump out of the pages at me," Cesar said. MLK reaffirmed Cesar's commitment to nonviolent struggle & inspired UFW's boycotts. 1/
Although the two never met, they corresponded. Dr. King preached that genuine equality was not possible without economic equality. "What does it profit a man to be able to eat at an integrated lunch counter if he doesn't have enough money to buy a hamburger?" #MLK declared. 2/
Only one month before his death, Dr. King joined in solidarity by sending a telegram to Cesar, who was then fasting for 25 days in Delano CA, to rededicate his farm workers' movement to the principles of nonviolence practiced by #MLK and Gandhi. 3/
As you shop and prepare your #Thanksgiving meals, we'd like you to know a little more about the work behind the ingredients and the people doing that work to put food on our tables.
Here's a thread for everyone who wants to thank a farm worker this week.
Sweet potatoes are mostly unearthed by harvesting machinery but then cleaned and sorted by hand. Here’s a video Raquel sent from Livingston, CA. #WeFeedYou