Los Angeles Times

Farmworker overtime bill delayed

- By Jazmine Ulloa jazmine.ulloa@latimes.com

SACRAMENTO — Tensions f lared at the state Capitol on Thursday after the Assembly abruptly adjourned without taking up its most anticipate­d piece of legislatio­n of the day: a bill that would expand overtime pay for thousands of California farmworker­s.

Another showdown over AB 1066, a bill authored by Assemblywo­man Lorena Gonzalez (D-San Diego), had been expected in the lower house after a similar proposal died in June four votes short of the majority it needed to pass.

But lawmakers said they would wait until Monday to keep working with members to garner the support. The lack of action Thursday suggested they were having trouble mustering the votes needed for it to pass.

Leaders with the United Farm Workers union initially exchanged terse words with Assemblyma­n Eduardo Garcia (D-Coachella) outside the chambers over the decision to wait.

“We are on the same team,” Garcia assured them, as labor leaders said dozens of farmworker­s had given up their time and wages to be at the Capitol for the vote. “At the end of the day we are all trying to make sure this happens. We are going to get the 41 votes.”

Gonzalez later met privately with more than 10 members of the labor coalition, as dozens of farmworker­s waited outside, singing songs and chanting for about an hour, “Sí, Se Puede” and “Overtime.”

Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon (D-Paramount) then addressed the crowd, assuring farmworker­s that legislator­s would take up the issue next week.

“I will do everything in my power to make sure this passes next week,” Rendon said. “In this building we talk about how California is ahead of the game. We talk about how California is ahead of the world. But we are not as long as we are not paying farmworker­s overtime.”

On their respective house floors, Rendon and Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de León have given passionate speeches, urging lawmakers to support the legislatio­n.

The United Farm Workers, which sponsored it, argues that the legislatio­n addresses an injustice farmworker­s have lived with since they were first exempted from federal minimum wage and overtime standards nearly eight decades ago.

But prominent business groups, led by the California Farm Bureau Federation and a coalition of agricultur­al producers, have thrown their political weight against it, saying the legislatio­n saddles farmers and growers with higher costs.

The proposal would roll out new rules for overtime in 2019, lowering the current 10hour-day threshold for overtime by half an hour each year until it reaches the standard eight-hour day by 2022. It also would phase in a 40-hour standard workweek for the first time.

Before the vote, nearly 250 farmworker­s gathered on the south steps of the Capitol. They came from the Central Valley and Napa and Sonoma counties, where they harvest grapes and tree fruit, and the Central Coast, where they fill baskets of strawberri­es, vegetables and mushrooms.

UFW President Arturo Rodríguez said the workers had sacrificed a day’s wages to lobby in support of the bill.

Sylvia Huerta, 70, said she and her two friends woke up at 3 a.m. to feed their children and board the bus to Sacramento at the crack of dawn. They have worked in the fields for more than 20 years, picking lettuce and broccoli, she said, and rarely if ever receive any overtime under the state’s limited laws.

“It is hard on women like us, mothers and workers,” she said.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? FARMWORKER­S and their supporters rally outside the office of Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon after the Assembly failed to vote on an overtime bill.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press FARMWORKER­S and their supporters rally outside the office of Assembly Speaker Anthony Rendon after the Assembly failed to vote on an overtime bill.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States