Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29548 views
1
2
3
4
5
Report: Farm workers plagued by pesticides Legal aid group
6
alleges laws violated
7
Coleman Cornelius
8
The farm workers said they knew they had breathed poison moments
9
after a crop-duster buzzed nearby, spraying a field of sweet corn
10
with pesticides to kill mites and worms.
11
Most of the 20 migrant farm workers, in an adjacent lettuce
12
field in Olathe, said they felt sick immediately: They gasped for
13
breath, had pounding headaches, irritated eyes and swollen, numb
14
tongues. Some vomited as a cloud of white chemicals settled on
15
fields around them.
16
The farm workers in the western Colorado community said they
17
left the lettuce field when sprayed, but a foreman ordered them to
18
continue working, saying the crop-duster had released a harmless
19
solution of soap and water.
20
A new study by Colorado Legal Services, the first of its kind in
21
the Rocky Mountain region, says such migrant workers at farms
22
statewide are regularly exposed to hazardous pesticides in
23
violation of federal laws.
24
The company that hired the workers for the Olathe farm and the
25
farmer whose land they were working have denied any role in making
26
the workers sick.
27
The lettuce workers, talking about their incident last week,
28
said their experience illustrates the problems.
29
'We were cutting lettuce, and we saw the plane coming. It was
30
spraying, and the wind was blowing, so it blew toward us,' said
31
Blanca Chavez, 44, who sought shelter in a portable toilet. 'We
32
ingested it. It was like a fog.'
33
Another farm worker, 22-year-old Marcelina Lopez, was five
34
months pregnant during the reported Olathe spraying incident on
35
June 29. She developed stomach cramps and a rash on her belly and
36
arms, Lopez said as she and six others on the lettuce crew
37
discussed the incident last week.
38
Lopez saw a doctor three days after the spraying, but that
39
heightened her concern.
40
'The doctor couldn't tell if the baby was affected,' her husband
41
said in Spanish. 'We worry a lot because we don't know if the baby
42
will be affected.'
43
Jim Dorsey, an officer of Cactus Produce - the Scottsdale,
44
Ariz., farm-labor contractor that employs the crew - said company
45
policy requires that incidents of pesticide exposure be reported
46
immediately. He said crew supervisors did not report what workers
47
described. Lacking field or physician reports, he questioned
48
whether the incident occurred.
49
Grower Tom Humphrey also was skeptical.
50
'I think this is a crock,' said Humphrey, a vegetable farmer for
51
30 years. 'You're listening to somebody who wants money for
52
nothing.'
53
Nevertheless, Chavez took her case to Colorado Legal Services, a
54
nonprofit law firm that represents low-income clients in civil
55
cases around the state. She and the other farm workers said they
56
agreed to publicly discuss the Olathe incident to illustrate the
57
hazards laborers face in the fields and to push growers to abide by
58
pesticide-safety laws.
59
Chavez's case mirrors the findings of the survey by Colorado
60
Legal Services, which reports that migrant workers at farms
61
statewide are regularly exposed to hazardous pesticides in
62
violation of federal laws.
63
The exposure comes from chemical residue on plants in farm
64
fields and from pesticide drift, such as the incidents lettuce
65
workers described, according to the survey.
66
Legal Services conducted interviews with 88 farm workers in some
67
of Colorado's most abundant agricultural regions last year and
68
found that half of those surveyed had experienced symptoms of
69
pesticide exposure. The symptoms included skin rash, inflamed eyes,
70
headaches and irritation of the nose and throat.
71
Those surveyed worked in Weld County, the Arkansas Valley, the
72
San Luis Valley and the Western Slope and took part in 30-minute
73
interviews at farm-labor housing in those regions.
74
Kimi Jackson, author of the Colorado Legal Services study, said
75
the surveys were detailed and the responses consistent across the
76
state.
77
'It's striking that so many farm workers report experiencing
78
symptoms of pesticide exposure,' said Jackson, director of the
79
agency's pesticide project. 'Imagine in your own office if half the
80
workers had experienced symptoms like that. That's very high.'
81
Ray Christensen, executive vice president of the Colorado Farm
82
Bureau, said growers on the state's 20,000 farms consider pesticide
83
safety important for themselves and their employees, in part
84
because they want to maintain a productive workforce and avoid
85
liability.
86
'Pesticides can be very injurious if they are not handled
87
properly. I think farmers across the United States realize that,'
88
Christensen said.
89
Yet the Legal Services report faults growers, farm-labor
90
contractors and crop-dusters for routinely failing to abide by
91
federal regulations meant to protect worker health.
92
The study also demands that the U.S. Environmental Protection
93
Agency and Colorado Department of Agriculture better enforce the
94
10- year-old laws, collectively called the Worker Protection
95
Standard.
96
The laws require that farm workers be prevented from entering
97
fields treated with pesticides until recommended times have
98
elapsed. The laws also mandate that workers be trained in pesticide
99
safety, are notified of fields that have been sprayed, have fresh
100
water to wash chemicals from their skin and receive emergency
101
medical help in cases of pesticide exposure or illness.
102
EPA records show employers regularly fail to follow the
103
rules.
104
Last year, the agency's regional office inspected 23 Colorado
105
farms, and 20 failed to fully comply with federal laws meant to
106
protect farm workers from pesticides, said Tim Osag, an enforcement
107
coordinator. Those farms got warning letters and will be inspected
108
again, he said.
109
'Workers were not being trained. There was no central location
110
where the required information was being posted, and several of
111
them did not have decontamination supplies,' said Britta Campbell,
112
an EPA enforcement officer who conducted most of the farm
113
inspections.
114
'Obviously we have a regulation which is not being followed,'
115
Osag said. 'There is a potential that we're exposing workers to
116
increased health risks.'
117
Migrant farm workers - 16,000 to 40,000 in Colorado, according
118
to the U.S. Department of Labor - are critical to the state's $1.23
119
billion agriculture industry. They travel from farm to farm,
120
tending and harvesting fruits and vegetables.
121
Farm workers earn an average of $5.15 an hour for jobs that
122
often require fieldwork from sunup to sundown during the growing
123
season, Jackson said.
124
Many migrant farm workers are reluctant to report pesticide
125
problems because they fear they will lose their jobs, laborers
126
said.
127
'We do the work in the fields because we don't have a lot of
128
education, and in this country you need to have an education to
129
have a good job. We don't feel like we have any options,' said
130
Maria Figeroa, 54, a member of the lettuce crew reportedly overcome
131
by pesticide drift in Olathe.
132
She and other crew members spoke in Spanish through an
133
interpreter.
134
Pesticides, widely used to increase crop yields, have become a
135
leading health concern among migrant farm workers. Coloring books
136
distributed to the children of farm workers in Weld County warn
137
youngsters to run when they see crop-dusters spraying
138
'pesticidas.'
139
In 1998, Cesar Chavez fasted for 36 days in California to
140
underscore the dangers of pesticides to farm workers and their
141
children. It was the last and longest fast for the 61-year-old
142
civil-rights activist.
143
The following year, Chavez's organization, United Farm Workers,
144
released a seminal study addressing the health effects of
145
pesticides on farmworkers. The report, 'Fields of Poison,' found
146
that California farmworkers face greater risk of pesticide
147
poisoning than any other segment of the population and are not
148
adequately protected.
149
Like the Colorado report, it called for stronger enforcement of
150
existing laws.
151
Little research has been conducted on the long-term health
152
effects of pesticides on farm workers.
153
But some research points to danger: A study published earlier
154
this year in the American Journal of Industrial Medicine found that
155
migrant farm workers in California, most of them Hispanic, have a
156
59 percent higher risk of developing leukemia than other Hispanics
157
in the state.
158
Field laborers have a 69 percent higher risk for stomach cancer.
159
Male workers also have a higher chance of developing brain cancer,
160
while female workers have a higher risk for uterine cancer,
161
according to the study, which linked the risks to pesticide
162
exposure.
163
Researchers compared farm worker data from United Farm Workers
164
with that from the California Cancer Registry.
165
It is hard to prove that worker illness is a result of pesticide
166
exposure in the field because other things, both on and off the
167
job, can trigger physical symptoms, said Dr. Suzanne Wuerthele, an
168
EPA toxicologist in Denver.
169
Yet dozens of chemicals commonly used to kill weeds, fungus and
170
insects on agricultural crops can cause immediate sickness in
171
people who inhale, swallow or absorb them through skin contact,
172
Wuerthele said.
173
Recent research raises questions about the connection between
174
pesticide exposure and long-term health problems, such as chronic
175
headaches, sleep disorders, vision problems, nerve damage, cancer
176
and birth defects, Wuerthele said.
177
'These chemicals are always dangerous to humans. That's why they
178
have to be used correctly,' she said. 'They are designed to kill
179
things, and they can be toxic to humans.'
180
Chavez said she called Colorado Legal Services because she felt
181
sick and did not know where to turn.
182
'They're not worms,' said Guierrmo Othon, Chavez's husband, who
183
is also a lettuce worker. 'These are human lives.'
184
185
186
187
188