http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2010000191_apwaunionpush1stldwritethru.htmlOriginally published October 4, 2009 at 12:06 PM | Page modified October 4, 2009 at 5:14 PM
In Wash. state, farm workers push for unionization
Margarito Martinez says he was fired from the Eastern Washington dairy that employed him for more than a year because he tried to unionize the company. Nine co-workers say the same thing: They were let go for their affiliations to the budding union.
By SHANNON DININNY and MANUEL VALDES
Associated Press Writers
PASCO, Wash. —
Margarito Martinez says he was fired from the Eastern Washington dairy that employed him for more than a year because he tried to unionize the company. Nine co-workers say the same thing: They were let go for their affiliations to the budding union.
The owners of Ruby Ridge Dairy, though, say only two workers were fired, one for safety violations and the other for incompetence. The others quit, they said. The dairy owners don't want the union involved in the dispute, but say they're willing to do whatever the workers want as long as there's a vote.
This summer, the United Farm Workers of America, the nation's biggest farm worker union, filed suit on the workers' behalf - the latest action from a union looking to increase its ranks among the tens of thousands of farm workers in Northwest agriculture.
"Many still are afraid that if they join, they'll be fired. But many people welcomed the union," Martinez, 56, said in Spanish. "We worked without lunch breaks and breaks. They didn't pay for all the hours worked. You worked 10 hours, you'd get paid 8, 9.5. It's not fair."
The union already represents 150 vineyard workers at the region's largest winery, plus 250 workers at a Boardman, Ore. dairy that marked the first unionized agricultural operation in Oregon. This summer, the union reached agreement with Beef Northwest to represent about 100 workers at cattle feeding yards in two states.
The union says membership has quadrupled to about 600 workers in the Northwest. Nationwide, the union says about 27,000 people have worked at least one day under a UFW contract. The federal government, however, estimates the union's membership at more than 5,000.
FULL story at link.