Authors: Kevin Bales,Ron. Soodalter
Tags: #University of California Press
farmworkers, but with only two wage and hours inspectors for the entire
Southwest Florida region—which includes tens of thousands of farm-
workers, as well as other types of laborers—there is little hope of help
there either.7 For years, the local inspector for that section of Florida
generally spoke only English—in the midst of workers who did not—and
spent more time in the grower’s office than in the fields, where he might
witness firsthand the treatment of the pickers. With the law on their side,
the crew leaders and the growers hold all the cards.
With conditions so dismal, and the pay so low, why would anyone
come to Immokalee to work? Or to nearby towns like Lake Placid,
Wimauma, or LaBelle? There is simply no real choice: wherever a
worker goes to pick America’s crops, he meets similar conditions. With
the trend toward consolidation and expansion of agribusinesses, it has
become increasingly difficult to find work on the old-style family-owned
farms of twenty-five years ago. Instead, the small farms are being gob-
bled up by huge companies. Competing with each other and with for-
eign suppliers, these megagrowers are themselves being caught in a
cost/price squeeze. On the one hand, they face constantly rising costs of
gasoline, pesticides, fertilizer, and a couple dozen other items necessary
for production. On the other hand, the buyers—fast-food giants such as
MacDonald’s, Subway, Taco Bell, and Burger King, and market corpo-
rations like Shop Rite, Wal-Mart, and Costco—are dictating the prices
they are willing to pay for tomatoes and other crops. The buyers have
turned their corporate backs on the small growers who supplied them
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faithfully for years. In the words of one worker advocate, the buyers
“each have a purchasing company, looking to buy high volume at the
lowest possible price. They are price
setters,
not price
takers.
”8 Rather
than purchase from several smaller growers, as in the past, these
megabuyers have decided to work with the largest suppliers, who can
provide ready, uniform, year-round supplies of product. Only the huge
agribusinesses, such as Gargiulo, Pacific, Nobles Collier, and the Six L’s,
can meet the demanding production requirements while weathering the
rising costs and the squeeze on their profit margin. Size counts: even
with the cost/price pressure they manage to make a tremendous amount
of money, and they are growing exponentially.
As large as these agribusinesses are, they pale in the shadow of the
companies that supply their needs—giants such as Exxon, John Deere,
and Monsanto. Against these multinational corporations the growers
have no bargaining power. So, with nothing to say about their escalat-
ing costs or the buyers’ shrinking prices, the only way they can hold on
to profits is by cutting labor costs. Their aim is to keep at gutter level the
amount they pay—and for decades have paid—their workers, and they
do. As a 2004 Oxfam America report put it, “Squeezed by the buyers of
their produce, growers pass on the costs and risks imposed on them to
those on the lowest rung of the supply chain: the farmworkers they
employ.”9 And because these privately held Florida-based grower cor-
porations are constantly expanding, a worker can move to North
Carolina, Delaware, California, or even Puerto Rico and still be work-
ing in the same grower’s fields—for the same pay, and under the same
conditions. There is no refuge. While the large grower corporations
compete, they have also banded together to control the labor market by
forming the Florida Tomato Committee. The committee and the Florida
Fruit and Vegetable Association are powerful lobbies with the state gov-
ernment; this is not surprising, since some of the large growers are them-
selves members of the Florida legislature.
This situation is not new. In her excellent history of Atlantic Coast
farmworkers, Cindy Hahamovitch writes of Florida in the 1930s:
“While the rest of growers’ expenses rose over the course of the
decade—the cost of seed, fertilizer, and equipment all went up—farm
wages remained stagnant or fell, depending on the crop. . . . As a vet-
eran of harvests in thirty-three states put it, ‘Florida is the sorriest wages
in the United States.’”10 In those days, the workers were mostly African
American and Bahamian; today they are most likely to be Latino.
Otherwise little has changed, with one ugly exception.
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As bad as most pickers have it, there is a rung on the ladder that is lower
still—the
enslaved
farmworker. Antonio Martinez came from a family of
five younger siblings, in Hidalgo, Mexico. His parents were sickly, and
Antonio was unable to make a sufficient living to support them all. He
met with a contractor—a
coyote
—who promised that he would smuggle
Antonio into the United States and find him construction work in
California for a fee of 16,000 pesos—about $1,700 American. Antonio
told the man that he didn’t have that much money, but the
coyote
assured
him that he could pay it off once he started to work. Two weeks later, he
was on a bus along with forty others, heading north toward the border.
When the bus arrived at a sparse border camp in the Sonora desert,
the workers were separated and given to other
coyotes.
The man in
charge of Antonio’s group was called Chino. He led them through the
desert for three days, despite having water and supplies for only one day,
crossing the border to a whistle-stop called Tres Puntas. From there they
were driven to a house in Tucson, where Chino demanded additional
money from them or their families, on pain of violence. Some of the
others complied, but Antonio had no money to give. At this point, with-
out money or papers, under violent threat, he realized he was trapped.
Antonio was told that instead of going to a construction site in
California he would be put to work in the tomato fields of South Central
Florida, at the pay rate of $150 per day. The promised amount went far
toward allaying his misgivings. Chino then handed him over to a van
driver, or
raitero,
called “el Chacal”—the jackal. Antonio was crowded
into the back of the van along with seventeen other Mexican workers.
On the long drive to Florida, the van stopped only for gasoline; the
migrants in the back were told to urinate in a bottle when the need
arose. Twice on their journey police stopped the van; on neither occa-
sion did the officer question the presence of eighteen Mexicans packed
like cargo in the back.
When el Chacal arrived in Florida, he drove to the camp of two labor
contractors, Abel and Basilio Cuello. Here, Antonio overheard el Chacal
negotiating with the Cuello brothers for the sale of the workers. El
Chacal was demanding $500 apiece, whereas the Cuellos were willing
to pay only $350. At this point, Antonio realized, “We were being sold
like animals.”11
Antonio’s life was tightly controlled. The door of the shack in which
he and the other workers slept was locked at night and was unlocked in
the morning by Abel Cuello only when it was time to go to the fields.
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Cuello never left them alone; he stayed with them as they picked and
threatened violence and death should they attempt to escape. The prom-
ised pay was whittled away to practically nothing as Cuello deducted for
rent, food, water, even the cost of transportation to and from the fields.
With the tiny amount left to them, the workers bought food or toiletries
when taken by the bosses on rare trips to a small local grocery store.
After four months in slavery, Antonio saw his chance. While he and a
few others were shopping, Cuello, on guard outside the market, dozed
off, and the workers ran to the highway and escaped. The subsequent
case against the Cuello trafficking operation was one of Florida’s first
contemporary cases of forced labor. Cuello was convicted and sen-
tenced to prison on slavery charges.
Antonio still works with the crops—but under his own volition, and
not with tomatoes. He also travels throughout the country, speaking
about the slavery in America’s fields and in the food we eat. He has
marched in several campaigns against corporate abuse and participated
in the ten-day hunger strike against Taco Bell. At one point, he taught a
training session to law enforcement officers and government officials in
Chiapas, Mexico, through the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ). This
author spoke with Antonio while he was participating in a late-2007
workers’ march against Burger King, and his motivation was clear.
Taking action against the offending corporations, he said, “is extremely
important; there is more and more consumer participation in the strug-
gle, and it makes the campaign that much stronger. The big companies
buy so much produce that they must take responsibility for the condi-
tions under which the people who harvest it are suffering. It infuriates
me that some of these corporations are still ignoring the plight of the
farmworkers.
“I just want you to know,” he states, “why I’m out here today. For
four and a half months, I was held in forced labor in the fields against
my will, and it seemed like an eternity for me. They were watching me
all the time, controlling all I did. I thought I was going to die. Thanks to
God, I was able to escape, and it allowed me to become more and more
aware. I’m out here learning more every day.”12
H I D D E N A M O N G T H E C R O P S
In the words of one human rights activist, “It is, of course, almost too
obvious to state that the deprivation of liberty typical of agricultural
slavery operations is the most extreme violation of human rights in the
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fields today.”13 Obvious though it might be, agricultural slavery is virtu-
ally unknown to most Americans. In a country where the plight of mil-
lions of migrant workers—suffering the nation’s lowest wages and worst
conditions—fails to hold the public’s attention, agricultural slavery finds
no place at all. Yet slavery on America’s farms is one of the three largest
forms of human trafficking in America today. Activist Laura Germino
states the case well: “American consumers don’t want to have slavery
woven into the fabric of their daily lives; but, unknown to most, it
already is. They drink orange juice in the morning, they eat tomatoes
with their burger for lunch.”14
Slavery in the fields is especially common in the southeastern United
States; one DOJ official referred to this part of Florida as “ground zero
for modern slavery.”15 Enslavement usually takes the form of debt
bondage. The trafficked worker is an easy target—socially discon-
nected, recently homeless, and without resources. He is literally sold by
the
coyote
to the crew leader, or contractor, who then puts the purchase
price—or whatever price the crew leader decides—back on the head of
the worker. He is told that he must work to pay off his debt, which is
often quoted in the thousands of dollars; but in most cases, no matter
how hard he works, the debt just increases. Kept isolated with other
trafficked workers—often under armed guard or open threats of vio-
lence—he is forced to work when, where, and for however long the crew
leader decides. In some instances, whatever necessities he requires—
food, clothing, medicines—are purchased from the crew leader’s own
store and deducted from his wages or added to his debt. As time passes,
the debt grows, and the worker sees no hope of liberation. Lucas Benitez
describes the process of enslavement: “Debt begins when the
coyote
turns you over to the crew leader. So many of our
companeros
have suf-
fered in this way and say being sold . . . feels worse than being an
animal. . . . You get sold for $500, but next day the debt is $1,000. Then
they add on rent and food, and your debt increases. . . . If you have a
slow day in the fields, the crew leader will say, ‘You owe us more now;
you didn’t work well.’ You never see the check stubs, so you have no idea
where you stand with your debt.” And workers can stay indebted, and
enslaved, for years. A single trafficking operation can keep hundreds of
people in bondage; as Benitez points out, “The more workers enslaved,
the greater the profits.”16 By convincing the worker that he is responsi-
ble and might someday pay off this debt, the slaveholder diverts his
attention from the real situation: he is a slave and if he tries to leave he
will be hurt.