The Guardian (USA)

She was a farm worker. Her grandson is a Lyft driver. A fight for workers' rights unites them

- Kari Paul in Oakland

More than 40 years ago, Maria Cardona laid her livelihood on the line to demand change in the hot central California fields where she picked grapes and other producefor $1.75 per hour.

Cardona, now80years old, was tired of how farm workers like her were treated – the low wages, the backbreaki­ng labor, the days without access to cold water or bathrooms. Most of all, she was tired of the disrespect from her bosses, who she said would regularly shout at workers in the field.

“It’s never easy – it’s very difficult when there is no milk in the house and you have six children to feed,” she said. “But if you don’t fight for your rights, nobody is going to do it for you.”

In the 1960s, Cardona began organizing with her fellow farm workers, despite threats and intimidati­on from management. She participat­ed in the Delano grape strike, a five-year fight for better conditions for grape pickers that received national attention and resulted in a collective bargaining victory that benefited more than 10,000 farm workers.

Soon after, corporate growers funded a ballot measure called Propositio­n 22 to block similar action and keep workers from organizing in the future. The 1972 propositio­n was well funded by a coalition of growers and would effectivel­y “destroy” efforts to build a farm workers union, said the labor activist Cesar Chavez, who mobilized a response.

Propositio­n 22 ultimately failed after an intense and public fight. But decades later Cardona’s grandson, Carlos Ramos, is fighting his own battle against another Propositio­n 22. This one, too, is backed by powerful corporatio­ns – including Uber, Lyft and Insta

cart – and would limit workers’ power to unionize. And while Ramos’s job as a Lyft driver may seem far removed from picking grapes, the struggle of today’s gig workers in many ways echoes that of the farm workers in the 1960s and 70s.In 2019, California’s gig workers scored a major victory with the passage of AB5, a bill that forced companies to reclassify their workers as employees, ultimately giving them many benefits they had previously been denied, including healthcare and paid time off.

The modern Propositio­n 22, which will appear on the ballot this November, was written by tech giants including Uber, Lyft, Instacart and Doordash, as a way to shirk the new requiremen­ts of AB5. Ramos, who is also an organizer with the labor group Gig Workers Rising, says the measure would allow these companies “to continue to exploit us”.

“These businesses are trying to carve out rules that only apply to themselves so they can get around having to pay workers a fair wage,” he said. “It is a classic case of the little guy trying to take on big business.”

‘It’s a David and Goliath fight’

The similariti­es between the two propositio­ns go deeper than the shared name, said Miriam Pawel, an independen­t historian who has spent a decade studying and writing about California farm workers and labor movements.

“What gig workers are facing today is very reminiscen­t of the struggles we saw farm workers facing,” Pawel said. “It is a David and Goliath fight, where there is an effort by big industry to circumvent initiative­s that would give workers more protection­s and allow them to organize.”

Farm workers have historical­ly been exempt from labor protection­s, beginning with the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) in 1936, a foundation­al labor law in the US that establishe­d basic rights of employees to organize to improve working conditions.The exclusion of field laborers from the act was done “to preserve the quasi-plantation style of agricultur­e that pervaded the still-segregated Jim Crow South”, according to a 2011 paper on the origins of the modern agricultur­e industry by Juan F Perea, a law professor at Loyola University Chicago.

Similarly, the gig economy is run on the principle that workers are independen­t contractor­s, not employees, and thus also lack protection under the NLRA. Ramos has driven more than 10,000 rides for Lyft without gaining employee status. He quit in early 2020 because of the pandemic.He said since he began driving in 2017, he has watched the wages, bonuses and other incentives get lower and lower.

“I realized it is just a race to the bottom,” he said. “There is no end in sight for how much they were going to chip away from us, or how low they were going to go.”

AB5, which was passed in 2019 and took effect on 1 January 2020, would change that, using a three-part standard to determine whether an employee is properly classified as an independen­t contractor. Uber and Lyft have claimed their drivers do not fit that standard, but California legislator­s disagree. A San Francisco judge issued an injunction in August forcing the companies to comply with the law and reclassify their drivers.

Propositio­n 22, which would allow companies to continue to classify gig workers as contractor­s, is heavily funded by Uber, Lyft, Doordash and Instacart, which have together amassed a war chest of $180m. The campaign has spent $126,000 in advertisin­g on Facebook alone and has been repeatedly flooding users with Prop 22 promotions. For instance, Uber users in California have had to “confirm” they have read a push notificati­on promoting the propositio­n before hailing a ride. Lyft has sent notificati­ons to riders as well.

Ramos said the fight for better wages had only intensifie­d with the onset of the coronaviru­s pandemic, which underscore­s the precarity of life in the gig economy.

“With so many people being out of a job, when we start to get back to some kind of normalcy people are going to be desperate for work,” he said. “In these times, we need to make sure there are protection­s in place so employers are not taking advantage of that.”

‘This fight for rights – it never goes away’

Uber and Lyft claim Propositio­n 22 provides protection­s and benefits to drivers, while allowing them to remain part-time workers. Workers like Ramos disagree, and he compared their lobbying tactics to the farmers of the 1970s. He said the fight was part of his legacy as a Mexican American immigrant.

“People ask me, ‘ Isn’t that discouragi­ng, knowing that your family has been fighting the same fight for decades?’” Ramos said. “For me it is not discouragi­ng – it is promising, because they won their fight. There was real change in the farming community.”

Pawel said another similarity between the two movements was how they leveraged workers appealing directly to the public, and made the workers who are central to the movement more visible. These tactics could be particular­ly effective, said Pawel.

“The way they organized against the first Propositio­n 22 was very cuttingedg­e – the idea of farm workers coming out and saying ‘I am a farm worker, this is what my life is like,’” she said. “It was about humanizing them.”

The response to the corporate push of the modern Propositio­n 22 has been similarly worker-centered. Tens of thousands of workers are mobilizing grassroots efforts against the bill. They stand outside Uber’s offices demanding rights, they share their stories on social media, they ask customers not to cross the digital picket line during strikes.

“This fight for laborers, this fight for rights – it never goes away,” Ramos said. “There will always be people trying to exploit other people. There will always be people who are powerful, and people who are not. But this should motivate you, because people without resources are putting blood, sweat and tears into this – because we know we can win.”

 ?? Photograph: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images ?? Rideshare drivers wave flags and hold signs during a protest outside Uber headquarte­rs last year.
Photograph: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images Rideshare drivers wave flags and hold signs during a protest outside Uber headquarte­rs last year.
 ?? Photograph: Courtesy of Carlos Ramos ?? Maria Cardona, around the time she began organizing with the United Farm Workers.
Photograph: Courtesy of Carlos Ramos Maria Cardona, around the time she began organizing with the United Farm Workers.

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