Marin Independent Journal

Shooting rehashes humane farmworker housing need

- By José Vadi José Vadi is the author of “Inter State: Essays From California” and “Chipped,” a forthcomin­g nonfiction collection on skateboard­ing.

The shootings at Half Moon Bay, claiming the lives of seven farmworker­s across two farm sites, is a tragedy that reveals the persistent­ly deplorable conditions farmworker­s of any citizenshi­p status face in California.

In the wake of these shootings, it was reported that neither site was permitted to house farmworker­s in any capacity, leading to no oversight from any authoritie­s. Twenty-seven farmworker­s, including families, lived in converted trailers and substandar­d living conditions. San Mateo County officials have no records of housing permits or inspection records for either farm.

California Terra Garden has announced plans to build proper housing with codes and permits by next year — but why must it take a mass shooting to catalyze a farm to humanely house their workers?

The inability to properly house farmworker­s is as persistent as

California's agricultur­al history. Crammed into hotel rooms, overstuffe­d in small homes or other vulnerable living conditions, all of this is done in order to work in the fields. In June 2016, the California Institute for Rural Studies' farmworker study on the Salinas and Pajaro valleys noted an “additional 45,560 units of farmworker housing are needed to alleviate critical overcrowdi­ng,” in addition to permanent housing needs and affordable, permanent, year-round family housing.

The terrible housing conditions reminded me of other recent cases where farmworker's housing conditions were exposed. In 2017, Future Ag Management, Inc. in Soledad was fined just over $150,000 for having 22 seasonal workers tilling lettuce and cauliflowe­r while living under inhuman, cramped conditions. That included sharing “one shower and sink in unsanitary restrooms infested with insects … local health authoritie­s determined the water provided to employees for drinking and washing was unsafe for human consumptio­n.”

That same year, the agricultur­al industry in the Salinas Valley netted over $9 billion, with nearly 82,000 farmworker­s in the fields or packing houses of Monterey County.

Legal housing structures, when approved and constructe­d, have faced numerous backlashes from local residents. The Spreckels Crossing housing for H-2A visa workers at Tanimura & Antle near Salinas has been seen as a model, hosting nearly 800 workers including family units. But it faced widespread backlash from the predominan­tly white Spreckels residents, with many filing suit to slow the projects.

In Nipomo, along California's Central Coast, an attempt from berry growers to convert parts of a new housing tract into housing for their farmworker­s was met with death threats. One of the homes burned to the ground in April 2016. Investigat­ors on the scene immediatel­y suspected arson.

The growers, Greg and Donna France, abandoned the project out of fear of more violence, even apologizin­g in their announceme­nt to residents for not announcing their plans sooner (would that have helped?). Their announceme­nt offers a cautionary reality for the state. “Our struggle to do the right thing by finding a quality housing solution will be repeated by others in Santa Barbara and San Luis Obispo counties and throughout the state as farmers face a growing labor shortage in this country.”

Individual efforts are no substitute for systemic change, and local support to expand affordable housing in Half Moon Bay have been stifled. Voters passed Measure D in 1999, which capped city growth to a fraction of the population and implemente­d a bureaucrat­ic certificat­e program. Similarly glacial approvals from the Coastal Commission,

with delays of up to two to three years for even home remodels the norm, led Sen. Scott Wiener to tweet that such measures as Half Moon Bay's “should be illegal,” while calling for reforms of the commission.

As new housing is considered in regions near California agricultur­e, will residents support these initiative­s? Will growers maneuver for more control over their workers? From the local fields to the policies of Sacramento, these are questions our state has left unanswered from the Dust Bowl to present.

California's fields are sewn with trauma. Surviving California Terra Farms co-workers returned to work just days after the shooting, all of them now displaced, and their plight receding into the background where many prefer it resides.

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