Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Storm flooding compounds misery for California farms and workers

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

The sun was shining again recently when Fidencio Velasquez visited what used to be 90 acres of prime Ventura County strawberry fields.

He pointed to a 40-foot storage container that Santa Clara River floodwater­s had swept off a neighborin­g farm and deposited before him. Overturned tractors and fertilizer bins were strewn about like toys, while the deep channels between crop rows were filled with mud. A harvesting machine was damaged beyond repair. Metal pipes, hoses and trash littered the farm’s outskirts. “It’s a total loss,” he said. Velasquez, a supervisor at Santa Clara Farms in Ventura, estimates that the expense of cleaning up and replacing damaged crops, machinery and equipment could run upwardof $900,000. In the meantime, 150 of his employees would be out of work for weeks.

Throughout California, farms that have struggled to cope with years of severe drought have now been dealt additional misery by a series of deadly atmospheri­c rivers that have devastated operations, even while helping to fill dwindling reservoirs. In many cases, the losses are being felt most sharply by the thousands of farmworker­s who have suddenly found themselves unemployed or working fewer hours in dangerous conditions while also dealing with damage to their own homes and vehicles.

The flooding is just the latest in a continuing series of environmen­tal crises that have affected farmworker­s in recent years, including laboring in extreme heat, inhaling harmful wildfire smoke or losing work due to drought. Last year, approximat­ely 12,000 agricultur­al jobs were lost when California’s irrigated farmland shrank by 752,000 acres, or nearly 10%.

“We have compoundin­g and cascading disasters from extreme storms, flooding, wildfires, heat waves and drought that are all impacting farmworker­s,” said Michael Méndez, assistant professor of environmen­tal planning and policy at UC Irvine. “This is just a part of the larger history of disproport­ionate impacts that this population is experienci­ng.”

Méndez said farmworker­s are especially vulnerable to extreme climate events because they are low-income; most are immigrants without legal status, which makes them ineligible for unemployme­nt benefits and health insurance; and because state and local government­s weren’t doing enough to protect a vital workforce.

They “have not provided enough resources, disaster planning, preparedne­ss, translatio­n services for these communitie­s before a disaster happens,” he said. So when disasters do strike, “the experience­s are amplified because resources are often not targeted, or they’re withheld from these communitie­s.”

For Ventura farmworker­s like Octavio Diaz, January is traditiona­lly a time of year when work on strawberry fields begins to pick up. That is not the case this year

“It was raining almost every day and you couldn’t work, so we lost hours,” said the 37-year-old. “And there aren’t many places where we can work right now — most of the strawberri­es were ruined.”

Since December, Diaz and his wife have lost about $3,000 in income from reduced work. Rather than the usual five-day, 35-hour workweeks picking fruit, they’re lucky if they even get one. Their monthly trips to food distributi­ons have increased from once or twice to four or five, he said.

When they do get called to work, fields can be hazardous. Diaz injured his right leg about a month ago trying to pull it out from deep, sticky mud. It still hurts, he said, but he takes what little work is available.

“I kept working after I hurt my leg because we sustain ourselves by working in the farms,” said Diaz, who has six children. “We don’t have other sources of income. You have to work to be able to support your family.”

In Ventura and across California, farmworker­s have been contending with flooded homes, damaged cars and reduced or lost work hours since a series of atmospheri­c river storms pummeled the state. Many have been relying more on food giveaways to offset financial losses, and those who are working are sometimes doing so in flooded or muddy fields.

“Many of the farmworker­s are in a Catch-22,” said Antonio De Loera-brust, communicat­ions director for the United Farm Workers union. “You either work in unsafe conditions or you’re losing work.”

In recent weeks, UFW has tweeted videos showing the effects of winter storms across the state. In Madera County, almond orchards were saturated with rain that made them impassable for farmworker­s and tractors. In Monterey County, flooded vegetable fields prevented a worker from using a tractor.

In Lamont, near Bakersfiel­d, hundreds of farmworker­s lined up for a food distributi­on last week. The union said they served 450 families — 100 more than usual — with many saying they hadn’t worked for weeks because of rain.

In the Central Valley, Norma Roman, 42, worked only three days last week out of the usual five pruning mandarin and almond trees. The week before that, “we didn’t work even one day.”

When they work, she and her husband each make about $110 daily. They put their income toward more than $1,300 in monthly rent, utility bills and internet service for her 11-yearold son, who needs it for schoolwork.

“The impact for me is that I’m not making money for the bills that I have,” Roman said. “You have to pay the rent and no one is going to wait for you. The little that we’ve worked, we’ve had to save as much as we can.”

Rocio Molina, who works in Kern County, said she has found employment only intermitte­ntly over the past weeks. On a recent Monday, she arrived to prune grapes at 7 a.m. but was sent home two hours later because it started to rain. The next day she couldn’t work because of a storm’s aftermath. That week, she worked only three full days, she said.

“It’s an impact financiall­y,” said Molina, 48. “If there’s no work, there’s no money for the bills, the rent, food. The money isn’t enough … the most important thing is to pay the rent so we don’t get evicted.”

She considers herself lucky — other farmworker­s she knows worked only one day last week because a pistachio field flooded. Molina said she plans on going to UFW food giveaways to help offset the loss of income.

“We haven’t seen an impact like this recently,” Molina said. “It’s been a long time since it’s rained this hard.”

The agricultur­e industry is still assessing the toll of recent storms and warns that the upcoming farming season could be delayed as a result.

In Monterey County, officials estimate agricultur­e losses of at least $50 million. Between 25,000 to 35,000 acres of farming land were “seriously impacted” by floods, said county spokespers­on Nicholas Pasculli. Crops, equipment, irrigation systems and well pumps were also lost.

Though most farm fields are idle this time of the year, some newly planted crops were flooded, said Norm Groot, executive director of the Monterey

County Farm Bureau. Some planting schedules could be delayed due to food testing requiremen­ts “to ensure that there are no pathogens in fields after a flood event.” That could be a 30- to 60-day process, which would affect earlier plantings in February.

A traditiona­l growing season in the county requires up to 46,000 farmworker­s to tend fields, and an additional 2,500 work in processing facilities.

Back in Ventura County, officials say it could take weeks to calculate agricultur­e losses.

As of Friday, only 18% of agricultur­al operations had reported their damages, totaling approximat­ely $8.4 million in crop, livestock and infrastruc­ture loss, and cost of repair and debris removal, said Korinne Bell, Ventura County’s chief deputy agricultur­al commission­er. Those numbers are expected to be “exponentia­lly higher” in the coming days and weeks.

“Many people have said that they really aren’t able to assess the damage until the waters recede, literally,” Bell said. “Because of the mud, it’s been difficult to even access some of the areas that have been most impacted.”

The storms took a similar toll in Northern California.

Belinda Hernandeza­rriaga, founder and executive director of the San Mateo County organizati­on Ayudando Latinos a Soñar, said many farmworker­s lost cars and other belongings due to flooding. Some have had to stay in hotels after their houses were flooded, and the number of people who arrived at their first food pantry since the storms nearly doubled.

It’s a disaster that comes on the heels of inflation and the pandemic, Hernandeza­rriaga said.

“This has been another big hit that no one was prepared for. Economical­ly, financiall­y, it’s just another wave of injury to what has already been years of accumulate­d stress,” she said.

A farmworker lost his belongings after his residence flooded. He wound up in the hospital with heart issues soon after, Hernandeza­rriaga said, “because it just provoked a lot of anxiety and stress that he was already feeling.”

“It just brings to light the physical and emotional trauma that these disasters are having when families are low-income and don’t have the foundation­s to so easily be able to rebuild their lives without support,” she said.

 ?? Los Angeles Times/tns ?? Juan Carlos, 38, owner of American Berry Farm in Ventura, stands beside a 20-acre strawberry field that was recently flooded when the nearby Santa Clara River overflowed amid heavy rains.
Los Angeles Times/tns Juan Carlos, 38, owner of American Berry Farm in Ventura, stands beside a 20-acre strawberry field that was recently flooded when the nearby Santa Clara River overflowed amid heavy rains.
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