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B. Policies to
improve and increase law enforcement to benefit farmworkers
include:
1. End farm
labor contracting abuses. Stop the sham of businesses
claiming that they don’t "employ" any farmworkers. Growers
must be held responsible for the sweatshop conditions they
perpetuate with labor contractors, through amendments to the
Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection Act (AWPA)
and the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA). Several reforms of
AWPA’s provisions are needed to address abuses in
recruitment, wage deductions, and other aspects.
2.
Enhance farmworkers’ access to justice.
The laws must be strengthened to eliminate unfair barriers
against farmworkers who wish to enforce their rights in the
courts. Undocumented workers who are victimized by illegal
employment practices should receive work permits while they
prosecute their cases. Access to legal services must be
expanded. Congress could increase funding for the Legal
Services Corporation to provide more desperately-needed
legal assistance; remove LSC restrictions against
representing undocumented workers to reduce employers’
incentives to hire and exploit them; end the ban against LSC
class action lawsuits so that farmworkers have effective
judicial remedies.
3.
Clarify that workers have the right to sue under
the Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection Act
(AWPA) for violations of employment-related laws
and retaliation for exercise of rights under such laws.
Workers’ implied right to sue under AWPA for violations of
these expected terms of employment should be made explicit.
These terms include: pesticide safety under the EPA Worker
Protection Standard (under the federal pesticide law, FIFRA);
access to toilets, handwashing water and drinking water
during work under OSHA’s Field Sanitation Standard; and
violations of record-keeping and payroll requirements under
the Social Security Act (FICA).
4.
Substantially increase law enforcement funding
devoted to farmworkers in the Department of Labor’s Wage and
Hour Division and Occupational Safety and Health
Administration, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission,
the Environmental Protection Agency and the Justice
Department. |