Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Black workers accuse Latinos of racism

Warehouses are sued over persistent abuse, discrimina­tory hiring, denied promotions.

- By Margot Roosevelt

Nearly every day, the onetime Ontario warehouse employee said, he was stunned to hear racist slurs from Latino co-workers.

“They said it in English — they said it in Spanish all the time,” recalled Leon Simmons, a Black father of four with a deep voice and gentle manner. “When they look you right in the eye and call you the N-word to your face, that’s dehumanizi­ng.”

Thirty-two miles away, at a Moreno Valley warehouse, it was the same story. Another Black laborer, Benjamin Watkins, described how a Latina co-worker called to him: “‘Hey, monkey! Yeah, you!’ and waved a banana in her hand. A group of women burst out laughing.”

In America’s long history, harassment and discrimina­tion against Black workers has usually involved white perpetrato­rs — and that remains the case today. But with the rapid growth of the Latino population, now at 19% in the U.S. and 39% in California, Latinos form the majority in many low-wage workplaces — and instances of anti-Black bias and colorism among them are drawing scrutiny, even as activists in the two communitie­s forge alliances over criminal justice and economic developmen­t.

Latinos are targets of job discrimina­tion as well and continue to struggle for equity in the workplace. But the two largest racial bias cases brought by the federal government in California in the last decade alleged widespread abuse of hundreds of Black employees at warehouses in the Inland Empire, the state’s booming distributi­on hub for trade between the U.S. and Asia.

In interviews, Black employees said a torrent of racist insults and discrimina­tory treatment was inflicted mainly by Latino coworkers and supervisor­s who composed roughly three-quarters of the workforces at the sprawling facilities in Ontario and Moreno Valley.

Mayate, a type of beetle and Spanish slang for the Nword, was a common taunt, according to interviews and court filings.

U.S. Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission lawsuits alleged that supervisor­s at the global medical

supplier Cardinal Health and at Ryder Integrated Logistics, a subsidiary of the trucking giant — along with their staffing firms — routinely ignored harassment in Spanish and English at their Inland Empire warehouses. They gave Black employees the hardest manual jobs, denied them training and promotions and failed to take action despite dozens of complaints, according to court filings and interviews.

Many of the Black workers were hired through temp agencies. When they complained, managers — both white and Latino — retaliated by disciplini­ng them or abruptly firing them, according to the EEOC. Others felt forced to quit because of “intolerabl­e working conditions created by the hostile work environmen­t,” the lawsuits alleged.

Cardinal, Ryder and their temp firms denied the accusation­s. But as scores of Black employees came forward and the EEOC interviewe­d witnesses, the companies settled the cases last year rather than face jury trials.

“We are seeing an increase in larger race harassment cases,” said Anna Park, regional attorney for the EEOC’s Los Angeles district office. “The nature of them has gotten uglier. There’s a more blatant display of hatred, with the N-word, with imagery, with nooses.”

In a state as diverse as California, offenders span all races and ethnicitie­s, she said.

“Two decades ago, discrimina­tion was viewed as a Black-white paradigm,” Park said. “The feeling was minorities can’t be discrimina­ting. But it could be Asians discrimina­ting; it could be Latinos discrimina­ting. Regardless of what color you are, you don’t get a free pass.”

Now about 300 Black workers are gaining compensati­on, some as much as tens of thousands of dollars, through the Inland Empire settlement­s. Cardinal agreed to pay $1.45 million. Ryder and Kimco Staffing Services, which supplied workers to Ryder, settled for $1 million each.

The warehouse operators and their staffing firms — including a Glendale temp agency, AppleOne, which supplied workers to Cardinal — must offer extensive harassment training in English and Spanish and submit to stringent monitoring for verbal abuse, bias and retaliatio­n.

The Los Angeles Times contacted more than two dozen current and former Latino workers from Cardinal and Ryder. None agreed to an interview.

Nationwide, prejudice can afflict any race or ethnicity, but Black victims predominat­e, EEOC records show.

Over the last decade, the agency has won settlement­s in 171 race discrimina­tion suits involving Black workers, 59 cases involving Latino victims, 12 involving Asian victims and six involving white victims.

Though the agency tracks the race and ethnicity of victims, it does not compile official statistics on offenders; nor are there databases of private cases categorize­d by perpetrato­rs’ race. This makes it hard to gauge the extent of anti-Black hostility from Latino workers.

But court filings, victims’ allegation­s and employer records show that in the last decade, about a third of anti-Black bias suits filed by the EEOC’s Los Angeles and San Francisco offices involved discrimina­tion by Latinos, about a third involved white offenders and a third were unspecific.

The suit against Cardinal Health and AppleOne was graphic.

Since at least 2016, the EEOC alleged, Black workers were subjected to the N-word by co-workers and managers “many times per day ... including ‘n— bitch,’ ‘lazy ass n— ain’t did no work all day’ and ‘Look at those n— looking like monkeys, working like slaves like they should be.’ ”

The first worker to file a complaint described being called antiBlack slurs in English and Spanish, facing prejudice from a Latina supervisor and being deliberate­ly run over with a cart by a Latino coworker.

Photos taken by Black workers showed a women’s restroom defaced with graffiti: “N— stink up the aisles” and “Black pipo stink.” A men’s restroom was defaced with “n— killer.”

In a court filing, Cardinal acknowledg­ed “derogatory graffiti” but said it was promptly removed. A spokesman declined to address other worker allegation­s, citing the EEOC’s post-settlement statement: “Cardinal Health and AppleOne have put in place measures aimed at preventing discrimina­tion and harassment.”

AppleOne, which placed 1,000 workers at Cardinal over two years, said in a statement that it “did not control the workplace” but has implemente­d “improvemen­ts” to its policies ordered by the EEOC.

On a sunny morning in Rialto, Simmons was perplexed that the abuse at Cardinal Health had come from Latino colleagues. He choked up as he described his ordeal.

Growing up in Compton, Simmons had Mexican American friends. And over decades at other jobs — forklift driver, custodian, security guard — “Hispanics, whether they liked you or not, they kept it to themselves,” he said. As for the few white workers at Cardinal Health, “never no problem with them,” he said.

AppleOne hired him to drive a cherry picker at Cardinal for $14 an hour, but he found that Black workers were largely kept off the vehicles. Those jobs were given to less-experience­d Latino workers, even when licensed Black workers were first in line, he said.

Instead, Simmons, in his mid-50s, was given a harder job as a floor picker for $12 an hour, on his feet loading boxes headed for Kaiser Permanente hospitals. Temperatur­es in the warehouse often exceeded 90 degrees, he said.

It was six days a week, 14 to 16 hours a day, including mandatory overtime. He saw Latino workers clocking out after eight to 10 hours, but when Black workers asked to leave after 14 hours, they were often threatened with terminatio­n, Simmons said. A Latino supervisor “would make me clean up the trash while everybody else was sent home,” he added.

After three months of complainin­g, Simmons was allowed to drive a cherry picker, but his pay remained at $12 an hour, he said, lower than that of non-Black drivers.

He grew angry and despondent: “They’d write stuff on the bathroom walls: ‘Gorillas, go back to Africa.’ The Black workers would cross it out. Two days later, it would be right back.”

Simmons complained to AppleOne and Cardinal managers, he said.

“But nobody investigat­ed. Nobody cared.” His Latina supervisor said, “If you’re up here complainin­g, the orders are not getting picked.”

Cardinal officials testified that they received complaints about racial slurs, including graffiti with the N-word, but some emails documentin­g complaints and their responses were erased due to an auto deletion policy, even after EEOC charges were filed.

Black workers who complained “started disappeari­ng one by one,” Simmons said. “We’d find out they were fired.” After 11 months, he too was told, “Your assignment is over.” No reason was given, he said.

By then, Simmons had started going to a psychologi­st. During visits, “I’d start shaking and crying,” he said. He was put on antidepres­sants.

Simmons got another job as a security guard but had to quit. The racism at Cardinal, he said, “messed me up. Something popped in my head. I was still having night terrors — waking up screaming.”

Today, diagnosed with posttrauma­tic stress disorder, Simmons is on disability.

‘They said it in English — they said it in Spanish all the time. When they look you right in the eye and call you the N-word to your face, that’s dehumanizi­ng.’ — LEON SIMMONS

Anti-Black prejudice in Latino dominated workplaces comes as no surprise to scholars of race relations. Tensions between Latinos and Black Americans have ebbed and flowed in Southern California over decades. Researcher­s point to a shared legacy of slavery in the U.S. and Latin America. An estimated 15 times more enslaved Africans were taken to Spanish and Portuguese colonies than to North America.

Latino attitudes toward Black Americans can be “tied not only to racism but to colorism,” said Pew Research Center analyst Ana Gonzalez-Barrera, an issue that also arises among other races. “It goes back to colonial history’s caste system. White Spaniards were at the top. Blacks and Indigenous at the bottom. And racial mixtures in between.”

In a 2021 survey, Pew asked U.S. Latinos how they identify themselves on a spectrum of skin color, from light to dark, and how skin color shapes their daily lives. Four in 10 of those with darker skin said they experience­d discrimina­tion or unfair treatment by another Latino — the same portion who reported discrimina­tion by a non Latino. Nearly half said they heard racist comments from friends and family about other Latinos.

“Some Latinos identify as white or are seen as white,” Gonzalez Barrera said. “Latinos are a complex community — not one community but many.”

For a new book, “Racial Innocence: Unmasking Latino AntiBlack Bias and the Struggle for Equality,” Tanya Kateri Hernandez, a Fordham University law professor, combed through legal records, interviewe­d U.S. civil rights leaders and attorneys and traced the history of Latino workplace discrimina­tion against Black people, including Afro-Latinos, highlighti­ng scores of court cases.

“Anti-Blackness is a global phenomenon,” said Hernandez, who is Afro-Latina. “It’s an uncomforta­ble truth, but belief in racial hierarchy is common in Latino communitie­s, like it is in others.”

Her scholarshi­p focuses on the issue, she said, because “opening our eyes to ways Latinos are implicated is a huge step in trying to eradicate racism.”

‘You couldn’t clock in. If there were five Hispanics waiting and 10 Blacks, they’d pick the Hispanics first.’ — REGINA MCCORKLE

‘Cardinal made me feel worthless.’ — BARRY BRYANT

Manuel Pastor, director of USC’s Dornsife Equity Research Institute, suggested that tensions can flare between Latinos and Black Americans partly because they compete against one another in low-wage labor markets more than against white or Asian workers. But the extent of workplace bias is debatable, Pastor said, given “so many instances of Latino and Black workers in relationsh­ips of respect.”

At unionized workplaces, labor leaders are working to bring Black and brown employees together to push for better treatment, he said. Many warehouses like Cardinal’s and Ryder’s are nonunion sites with large temp workforces, where employees lack advocates in the event of abuses.

In the Inland Empire, the Warehouse Worker Resource Center is organizing across racial and ethnic lines to push for labor law enforcemen­t. In Los Angeles, nonprofits such as the Community Coalition have built Black and Latino alliances to address racial disparitie­s. The Los Angeles Black Worker Center joined with the majorityLa­tino Clean Carwash Worker Center to support each other’s economic justice campaigns.

“The fate of Black people and the fate of immigrant people are linked in the fight against exclusion and exploitati­on,” said Lola Smallwood-Cuevas, a Black Worker Center co-founder. “As we look at schools, jobs, housing, the last thing our communitie­s need is to be divided and fighting each other.”

EEOC’s lawsuit against Ryder and Kimco Staffing was similar to that against Cardinal Health and AppleOne. At Ryder’s warehouse, where assemblers packed and shipped medical supplies, Black employees were subjected daily to such slurs as the N-word, Aunt Jemima, negra fea (ugly Black woman), cochina (pig) and cucaracha (cockroach), according to the lawsuit.

Black workers described restroom graffiti of a person hanging by a noose, according to the EEOC, and a Latina supervisor who would pull Black workers off the production line to “clean the cracks in the floor.”

In the wake of the suit, a Ryder investigat­ion found that several Ryder and Kimco employees had used anti-Black epithets and that managers failed to report or document complaints, Ryder acknowledg­ed in a court filing. But the companies denied any widespread issues with discrimina­tion, harassment or retaliatio­n.

A Ryder spokeswoma­n declined to answer questions, instead citing the company’s statement last year blaming Kimco, which had placed 2,500 workers at the facility over three years.

“The claims in this particular case arose out of unfortunat­e events between employees of a former staffing vendor,” it said. “While Ryder management was not involved ... we are taking responsibi­lity because the alleged conduct occurred on our premises.”

Kimco did not respond to requests for comment.

Watkins, a soft-spoken, bespectacl­ed 33-year-old, said he often heard slurs in English and Spanish during four years at Ryder.

“Hispanic workers had their own production lines; the Black workers had to be on a different line,” he said — a setup described to the EEOC by dozens of others.

A former Ryder supervisor, Royce Yamaguchi, who is of Asian and white descent, said 90% of assembly leads were Latino and would pick Latino workers to be on their lines, often excluding Black workers. Spanish was the dominant language in the warehouse, and Latinos were favored for promotions, he said. Black workers were rarely given jobs that could lead to advancemen­t, Yamaguchi said, and some complained to him about being called “monkey” and “boy” by Latino colleagues.

In videotaped testimony, Watkins said Latino supervisor­s often wouldn’t let Black workers get water or take bathroom breaks.

“They’d say, ‘You’re big and Black, you can keep working,’ ” he recalled.

Watkins sought to move from temporary to permanent status.

“My supervisor­s had me training the new employees, and then I would see the new Hispanic temps be promoted to permanent,” he said. “They didn’t even consider me.”

Finally, he quit. The treatment, he said, “made me feel ... like I wasn’t a human being.”

At her two-story home on a Moreno Valley cul-de-sac, Regina McCorkle described how, at the end of each Ryder shift, employees would be placed on the following day’s schedule. But the next morning, she and other Black assembly workers would often find themselves dropped from the list. Excluded workers would line up on standby.

“You couldn’t clock in,” the 40year-old mother of seven said. “If there were five Hispanics waiting and 10 Blacks, they’d pick the Hispanics first.”

McCorkle complained to six Ryder and Kimco managers — all Latinos — about bias and slurs, she said. One dismissed the behavior as part of the “culture.” After about a year, Ryder promoted McCorkle to a quality auditor job. But namecallin­g escalated. Latinos “seemed insulted that a Black woman was checking their work,” she said.

Within days of complainin­g yet again, McCorkle was fired for what Ryder said were “performanc­e problems.”

“No one ever told me about a mistake,” she said.

McCorkle was the first to file an EEOC charge. Within a month of EEOC’s lawsuit, 115 other Black workers came forward with similar allegation­s.

Federal and state officials often hold companies and their temp agencies to be “joint employers.” Executives can’t evade penalties by blaming their staffing firms, said the EEOC’s Park.

“You don’t get to stick your head in the sand. You’re on the hook, because you control the work.”

Staffing firms are also at issue in a sweeping lawsuit that California’s civil rights agency filed in February against Tesla on behalf of thousands of Black workers.

The Department of Fair Employment and Housing cited a decade of complaints of discrimina­tion and harassment at the car maker’s Fremont factory. Racist slurs in English and Spanish were aimed daily at Black employees by co-workers and supervisor­s, and Black workers were given the most difficult physical jobs, the lawsuit alleges. Tesla hired most workers through 14 temp agencies “to avoid responsibi­lity,” it asserted, and declined to investigat­e complaints from those workers.

Tesla called the suit “misguided,” saying the company “strongly opposes all forms of discrimina­tion and harassment.”

In a separate case, a federal judge in San Francisco in April ordered Tesla to pay a Black elevator operator $15 million after a jury found that his Mexican American supervisor had taunted him with graffiti depicting a large-lipped figure with a bone in his hair, while coworkers frequently called him the N-word and other epithets in English and Spanish.

Warehouses and factories are not the only targets. In the last five years, a swath of California employers — including a UCLA hospital, a Central Valley vegetable farm, a San Diego college and a Riverside County skilled nursing facility — have faced lawsuits over harassment and discrimina­tion against Black employees by Latino co-workers and supervisor­s.

Lawsuits also target hiring policies. In the last three years, two large Latino-owned businesses, a Fresno ice cream maker and a San Jose cheese manufactur­er with factories in California and eight other states, paid settlement­s after EEOC investigat­ed allegation­s that they refused to employ non-Latinos.

Six million Americans identify as Afro-Latino, 12% of the adult Latino population, and they are more likely than non-Black Latinos to experience discrimina­tion, according to a Pew study conducted this year.

While other Black workers at Cardinal and Ryder said they understood just a few Spanish slurs — and, in some cases, none — Barry Bryant, 41, with a Puerto Rican father and African American mother, took in much more as he worked at Cardinal Health.

“Their nickname for me was pinche mayate, f—ing June bug,” he said. “The first time I heard it, I almost snapped.”

Latinas two feet from his workstatio­n chatted in Spanish about Black people, “saying, ‘Why is their hair so funky and nasty? They smell because they’re Black,’ ” he said. “It was just vile.”

Like Simmons, Bryant had been hired by AppleOne to drive a cherry picker. But despite having three certificat­es for the job, he was relegated to manual labor on the loading dock.

He asked a Latino supervisor when he would get to drive.

“He laughed and said, ‘Trust me, never,’ ” Bryant recalled.

After Bryant filed written grievances with Cardinal and AppleOne over N-word harassment and noose graffiti, a Latina HR official responded, “Man, are you actually doing work or just busy about the gossip?” he said.

Days after Bryant’s last complaint, the HR official told him as he arrived at work that AppleOne assignment­s, including his, were ended. Then she waved in four Latinas he had just seen at the AppleOne office, he said.

Recounting his experience, Bryant wiped his eyes.

“Cardinal made me feel worthless,” he said.

Today, Bryant is on disability with kidney disease, cared for by his Mexican American girlfriend, a postal worker.

As for the EEOC settlement, “it would be nice financiall­y if something did fall my way,” he said. But mainly he hopes his former coworkers and managers will “be retrained and taught how to be human beings more than anything.”

 ?? Photograph­s by Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? LEON SIMMONS was perplexed by the slurs from Latino colleagues at Cardinal Health.
Photograph­s by Jason Armond Los Angeles Times LEON SIMMONS was perplexed by the slurs from Latino colleagues at Cardinal Health.
 ?? ?? BARRY BRYANT says the racism he experience­d working at Cardinal Health “was just vile.”
BARRY BRYANT says the racism he experience­d working at Cardinal Health “was just vile.”
 ?? ?? REGINA McCORKLE says Black employees were often removed from the schedule at Ryder.
REGINA McCORKLE says Black employees were often removed from the schedule at Ryder.
 ?? ??
 ?? Photograph­s by Jason Armond Los Angeles Times ?? CARDINAL HEALTH agreed to pay $1.45 million in settlement­s. Separately, Kimco Staffing Services will pay $1 million.
Photograph­s by Jason Armond Los Angeles Times CARDINAL HEALTH agreed to pay $1.45 million in settlement­s. Separately, Kimco Staffing Services will pay $1 million.

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