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Judge restricts Border Patrol in California: ‘You just can't walk up to people with brown skin'
Judge restricts Border Patrol in California: ‘You just can't walk up to people with brown skin'

Yahoo

time30-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Judge restricts Border Patrol in California: ‘You just can't walk up to people with brown skin'

This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. A federal court on Tuesday issued a preliminary injunction forbidding the Border Patrol from conducting warrantless immigration stops throughout a wide swath of California. The ruling came in response to an American Civil Liberties Union lawsuit filed after the El Centro Border Patrol traveled to Kern County to conduct a three-day sweep in January, detaining day laborers, farm workers and others in a Home Depot parking lot, outside a convenience store and along a highway between orchards. The ruling prohibits Border Patrol agents from taking similar actions, restricting them from stopping people unless they have a reasonable suspicion that the person is in violation of U.S. immigration law. It also bars agents from carrying out warrantless arrests unless they have probable cause that the person is likely to escape before a warrant can be obtained. 'You just can't walk up to people with brown skin and say, 'Give me your papers,'' U.S. District Court Judge Jennifer L. Thurston said during a Monday hearing in Fresno that featured moments of heated exchange between government attorneys and the judge. The ACLU filed suit on behalf of United Farm Workers, arguing that the stops violated the Fourth Amendment. The judge has not decided on the totality of the case, but on Tuesday granted the ACLU's motion to stop the Border Patrol from conducting similar operations while the case moved through the courts. 'I think that it's pretty clear that half of a century of really established law is being upheld. It's unfortunate that this is a cause for celebration. It's not legal to snatch people off the street for looking like farm workers or day laborers,' said Elizabeth Strater, vice president of United Farm Workers. California Attorney General Rob Bonta agreed. 'That's existing law, and the judge's order reflects existing law.' 'You can't just indiscriminately stop people and search them without any appropriate reasonable suspicion or probable cause or without a warrant,' Bonta said at a news conference in San Diego on Monday about conditions in ICE detention. 'So, it sounds like the judge had seen enough and wanted to issue an order. ' The ACLU filed suit on behalf of United Farm Workers, arguing that the stops violated the Fourth Amendment. The judge has not decided on the totality of the case, but on Tuesday granted the ACLU's motion to stop the Border Patrol from conducting similar operations while the case moved through the courts. 'I think that it's pretty clear that half of a century of really established law is being upheld. It's unfortunate that this is a cause for celebration. It's not legal to snatch people off the street for looking like farm workers or day laborers,' said Elizabeth Strater, vice president of United Farm Workers. California Attorney General Rob Bonta agreed. 'That's existing law, and the judge's order reflects existing law.' 'You can't just indiscriminately stop people and search them without any appropriate reasonable suspicion or probable cause or without a warrant,' Bonta said at a news conference in San Diego on Monday about conditions in ICE detention. 'So, it sounds like the judge had seen enough and wanted to issue an order." The injunction is in effect in the jurisdiction of California's Eastern District, which spans the Central Valley from Redding to Bakersfield. After the January sweep, the man who led it, Chief Patrol Agent Gregory Bovino, said his agents specifically targeted people with criminal and immigration histories. However, a CalMatters investigation revealed that the Border Patrol had no criminal or immigration history on 77 of the 78 people it arrested. The court also ordered the Border Patrol to document every stop and provide reports within 60 days. During oral arguments on Monday, the government attorney said doing so would be burdensome to Border Patrol agents. Judge Thurston rebuked the government, saying: 'They have to make a report for every arrest, not sure what the burden is.' According to sworn declarations filed in court by those detained, Border Patrol agents slashed tires, yanked people out of trucks, threw people to the ground, and called farmworkers 'Mexican bitches.' Border Patrol attorneys characterized those examples as actions of individual agents, and not reflective of a policy from the agency. Thurston disagreed. 'The evidence is that this was wide scale' and not limited to individual agents, she said. Border Patrol attorneys didn't offer evidence of their own to dispute the evidence presented by the ACLU, including stopping people based on their race and warrantless arrests. They tried to persuade Thurston that the order would not be necessary because the agency is already taking steps to retrain its officers. In a previous court filing, government attorneys said Border Patrol had issued guidance to retrain the El Center sector's 900 agents on the Fourth Amendment in order to prevent warrantless arrests. At Monday's hearing, Thurston questioned why guidance would even be necessary since agents are trained on the Fourth Amendment in the academy. Government attorneys told the judge 270 agents have received the training. Thurston asked for details on how the training was being carried out. 'Shift by shift?' she said. But government attorneys said they did not know. The packed courtroom was contentious at times. U.S. Department of Justice attorney Olga Y. Kuchins argued that the Border Patrol's sweep in Kern County, known as 'Operation Return to Sender' wasn't standard policy. 'This two-day operation does not a policy make,' she said. Thurston asked how many days were needed for an operation to be taken as policy, and on what authority the government was relying on to establish this operation could not be interpreted as part of Border Patrol policy. 'Do you know of that authority?' Thurston said. 'I don't know of that authority,' Kuchins said. The injunction also compels the El Centro Sector to provide proof within 90 days, and every 30 days thereafter, that agents involved in these operations have been trained on these rules. 'This ruling is a powerful recognition that what happened in Kern County and surrounding area in January was illegal,' said Bree Bernwanger, ACLU senior staff attorney. She called it a 'powerful reminder that law enforcement agents – including immigration – cannot stop you, detain you because of the color of your skin.' Even after government attorneys pledged to retrain agents on the Constitution, El Centro sector traveled more than 200 miles north to Pomona last week and rounded up day laborers outside a Home Depot, an action reminiscent of the Kern County raid. Witnesses say federal agents arrived in unmarked vehicles around 8:30 a.m. Tuesday, and quickly surrounded the Home Depot parking lot on South Towne Avenue. 'When they saw that a critical mass was gathered, they executed the raid,' said Alexis Teodoro, a Worker Rights Director with the Pomona Economic Opportunity Center. According to U.S. Customs and Border Protection, agents arrested 10 and placed them into removal proceedings. No other agencies were involved, said Michael Scappechio, a spokesman for U.S. Customs and Border Protection. Advocates are adamant that more than 20 people were initially taken into custody, based on piecing together the accounts of different witnesses about what happened. Federal officials defended their actions, saying agents were initially targeting a single individual with an active arrest warrant. During the operation, nine other people were also taken into custody. Some of those detained had prior charges, including child abuse, assault with a deadly weapon, immigration violations, and DUI, said Hilton Beckham, the assistant commissioner for CBP's office of public affairs. Jesus Domingo Ross, 38, was standing on a street corner looking for work near the Home Depot in Pomona last week when, he said, agents appeared from all sides, grabbed him and threw him to the ground. 'I panicked,' he said, describing the moment he realized he was in custody of U.S. immigration authorities. 'Just with everything you're seeing on the news right now, I really panicked because we didn't know what was going to happen.' He spoke to CalMatters on Saturday night during visiting hours at the Imperial Regional Detention Facility in Calexico, where he is now being held. 'I'm trying to keep my confidence in God to carry me through this,' he said quietly. This article originally appeared on Palm Springs Desert Sun: Border patrol injunction in California

'People have to rev up their bravery': Dolores Huerta shares lessons from a lifetime of organizing
'People have to rev up their bravery': Dolores Huerta shares lessons from a lifetime of organizing

Yahoo

time13-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

'People have to rev up their bravery': Dolores Huerta shares lessons from a lifetime of organizing

Apr. 13—Dolores Huerta is a legendary labor organizer and feminist activist. In 1962, she and César Chávez cofounded the first union for farmworkers in the United States, the National Farm Workers Association, which later became United Farm Workers. Over the years, she has collaborated with women's rights organizations, including the Feminist Majority Foundation, and served as an honorary co-chair of the 2017 Women's March in Washington, D.C. Since 2002, she has served as president of the Dolores Huerta Foundation, which promotes participatory democracy, social justice and civic engagement. On April 4, the eve of New Mexico's 32nd Annual Cesar Chavez and Dolores Huerta Celebration, Huerta sat down with the Albuquerque Journal at the National Hispanic Cultural Center to discuss the current political situation in the U.S. and lessons learned from a lifetime of organizing. You are a legend. There were no farmworkers unions before you created one with César Chávez. People thought you couldn't do it, but you did. What would you say to people today who are feeling discouraged and powerless? What I like to say to people, since I'm an elder, about to turn 95 years old (on April 10), is that I was born during the Depression, and that was a very dark time in the United States of America. The economy had collapsed. People were out of work. But out of that came the New Deal, right? We got workers' rights, the National Labor Relations Act, Social Security — things we didn't have before. Then we had another dark period of the '60s. We had the Vietnam War. The country was divided. Students were being killed by our own National Guard. And what came out of that? We had the Civil Rights movement, the Chicano movement, the environmental movement, the LGBTQ movement, a big surge in the women's movement. Now we're going through another dark period. So, we have to start planning for the future. What kind of future do we want? Do we, as a country, want to continue with corporate governance? Because it's not working. Now that we have seen what corporate governance looks like, we know it's something our country does not want. I think people are already saying that with the election that they had in Wisconsin recently, that we're not going to have that. So it's going to take a lot of organizing and a lot of work to make sure that we change our economic system in our country. I feel like the last politician on the national stage who was really talking about that was Bernie Sanders. But at the time, you didn't endorse him. You endorsed Hillary Clinton. The reason I endorsed Hillary Clinton is — well, a couple of things. Number one, I knew Hillary. Number two, she had always been out there working for immigrants' rights. Bernie had not been working for immigrants rights, so I felt she was closer to our community than Bernie was at that point in time. It wasn't that I disagreed with his economic policies at all. And I do believe Hillary would have actually carried out some of the things that Bernie wanted to see. In practical terms today, what can people do? How should people be organizing? What people have today in terms of organizing tools — they have the internet, they have social platforms. We didn't have that back then. When we were organizing in the '60s, it was always person to person. You know, snail mail, telephones. Now you have all of these great tools at your disposal that you can use really, really rapidly to organize. Even as these tools are useful for activists, they're also useful for people who are trying to oppose activists. I mean, you had an FBI file, which people can read now ... Well, it's all redacted. But, I mean, we know they were monitoring you. And I think that's not gone away. The government is still suspicious of people who are trying to make life better for other people. How do you deal with that? I mean, how have you dealt with that in your personal life? Were you ever scared? Well, these are things that are going to happen. You just have to kind of ignore them, and keep your eye on the prize, keep working for what we're working for. And the other missing piece, I believe — what's missing in our society — there's just a huge lack of education. We have a country that is steeped in ignorance, where people don't know civics, and people don't understand science. And when I talk about science, I'm talking about a women's right to abortion, about transgender or LGBTQ people in our society, and about the science of global warming. We are now in danger of destroying humanity with global warming. And I don't know why people don't get that. Because every part of our country has either been beset with horrible heat waves, wildfires, tornadoes or floods — all of these terrible weather conditions. I don't understand why people can't see that or feel that, when they're actually being affected. It's harder to deny it when you can see and feel the physical effects impacting your daily life. I don't know how it happened that somehow in our society it's seen as not good to be educated. That it's OK to be ignorant. Certain people benefit when people are ignorant, right? That's true. But you would think that the majority of people would realize, hey, there's something wrong here. But people are going to have to reckon with it when it starts affecting their daily lives. Then again, when will they understand that the president has no control over the price of oil or gas, or the price of food, which people were upset about in the last election. Well, he has some control, if he's going to put tariffs on all these countries. Well, that's a whole new ball game that's coming. He called it "Liberation Day." That's kind of ironic, right? Yes. But we should also mention the rights of workers that have been stripped away from getting rid of the National Labor Relations Act. As it is, workers' rights have been diminished, and the laws have been weakened for workers' rights. So you have big companies like Amazon and Starbucks where workers had voted for a union, and yet they refuse to bargain with the workers. Labor laws need to be strengthened, because the majority of people in the United States are workers. I'm originally from Florida, and I know there was a big campaign with the Immokalee Workers for a while, who were picking tomatoes. They said if they raised the price of tomatoes by just one cent, then they could actually live. It took time, but they eventually had some success. With the United Farm Workers, we had contracts in Florida. As you know, Florida doesn't really have laws to protect the workers. Our contracts were with Coca-Cola (covering citrus workers with Coca-Cola's subsidiary, Minute Maid). But what they did is they moved the orange groves from Florida to Belize, I believe, in order to get away from the contracts. But the workers there that were under contract have pension plans. Many of them, even though they don't have their jobs anymore, they were able to collect their pensions It's good to remember those successes. I think if someone's a worker who doesn't have money, doesn't have privilege or if they don't have the right immigration status, they might be afraid to organize. How have you been able to convince people to risk what little they have, knowing that it could all be taken away? When we started organizing the union, we had learned some organizing tactics from a man named Fred Ross, who had done community organizing in Los Angeles and other parts of the state of California. Fred taught us how to do basic organizing, and that is family by family, to convince the workers that unless they stood up for themselves, that nothing would ever change, and that they could not expect anyone to come in from the outside to solve their issues. They are the ones that had to do it. It took us three years of organizing, from 1962 to 1965, to convince the workers that they could fight. It was difficult. Yeah, it was. It was a very slow method of organizing, but it was very effective. So, when the strike happened, the delegates were ready. The workers were ready. They were ready to make those sacrifices. We would say to say to them, if you don't make this sacrifice now, nothing will ever change. And I think that's what we have to say to people here in the United States of America now. We may have to make some sacrifices for the next couple of years, until we get through this dark period, but then at the end of the day, it's going to come out better. You're playing a long game. It's a slow process, building trust, building community. This type of organizing is very tedious, of course. And, unfortunately, there's only, I think, a couple of states in the United States that have collective bargaining rights for farmworkers. You knew Bobby (Robert) Kennedy, and you were there when he was assassinated. How do you think America would be different today if he had become president? There would never have been another war. I think there would not have been a war in Iraq, and definitely no war in Afghanistan, had Bobby Kennedy lived. It really set things back. Yes. His son is so different from him, right? Very, very different. (Laughs.) But who knows what trauma he went through, with having his father killed, you know? We have to wonder why he is who he is. But he does focus on some good issues — even in the area of medicine, about more natural, holistic types of medicine. Although I think you have to have a combination. Because you can use Indigenous types of medicine in some respects. But, as someone once said to me, you can't use Indigenous medicine to cure the ills that the colonizers brought to the Indigenous population. In order to cure things like cancer, you've got to have Western medicine. So many farmworkers from the fields in California have cancer. So many people who are now in their 50s and 60s are coming down with cancer, because of the continuous use of pesticides out there. You campaigned against pesticides. Weren't you responsible for getting DDT banned? Yeah, the United Farm Workers, we were responsible for that. Which is huge. But we had a dozen others. We called them the "Dirty Dozen" pesticides that were bad. Unfortunately, they're still being used. And with GMOs, they even put pesticides into the seeds of the plants. So, no wonder cancer is so prolific in our society. Sometimes when people think about these issues, it can be overwhelming. People can be overcome with anger or fear. But when I speak with great activists like you, it seems like you have such discipline. How do you deal with your own emotions? Are emotions like anger and fear useful? I think they are, because you can take the energy of anger, and you can turn that energy into the positive energy of actually going out there and doing something about it. You know, as Michelle Obama says, "Do something." And it comes back down to the basics, again, of people voting, of electing good people, good representation. If we can get good people into office in our Congress and our state legislatures, then we can change some of these things, like even banning some of these pesticides. We can do that through legislation. We've got to, number one, be cognizant of what's going on, then know that these are the solutions we need. These are the laws we need to pass to change things. It comes down to basic democracy. You might say it comes down to voting. People have to understand that not only do we have the right to choose our representation, but we have a responsibility to get involved. Not only ourselves personally, but making sure that everybody — our families, friends and neighbors — understands that we cannot have a democracy unless we participate. If you don't participate, it all goes away. But it's not just about voting. I mean, your organizing work goes beyond voting. It's voting and advocacy. I think that the farmworker movement is a good example of that, because even though the farmworkers were on strike for five years, we didn't win. We did not win until we had a national boycott. When we had a national boycott, and you had 17 million Americans that didn't buy grapes, then we won. Again, that shows you the power of the people — the power of the people that are united in taking collective action — and this is the way that we win. But we have to convince people. Because I think the biggest thing is, we have apathy. As Helen Keller said, "The biggest problem that we have with people is apathy." People don't realize that they have that power. How do you convince people that they do have power? We would just talk to them and try to get them involved. Once people participate, then they learn, and it becomes part of them. This is what we did with farmworkers, and what we still do in my foundation today. We go into communities, we have house meetings, we get them all together once we have the meetings, and then they decide what they want to improve within their community. And once they get involved, they go, "I can do this! I don't have to have a high school education. I can still go to a school board meeting. I can go to a city council meeting. I can make sure I get somebody good elected to that position." You know, in our foundation, one example is that, in Kern County, in Bakersfield, California, we have the largest high school district in the state of California. Well, our current high school district in Bakersfield had suspended 2,100 kids in one year, primarily kids of color. We filed a lawsuit, and from 2,100 expulsions, we got it down to 21. People got involved, and we got testimonies from people on what was happening to their kids. I can give dozens of examples of that. People got street lights, sidewalks, gutters, swimming pools, neighborhood parks — all by just coming together. Well, I'm amazed that it seems like you never stop. Your whole life, you've been fighting the good fight, and you're still doing it. Well, now more than ever! And more than ever, we have to have people understand their power. We just saw that in Wisconsin, where people rejected (Elon) Musk. There's $21 million that (Musk and his affiliated groups) put in there (to flip the Wisconsin Supreme Court). But the people said, "No, you're not buying this. We're not for sale." So, people are waking up. I don't think anyone anticipated that it was going to be this severe when (Donald) Trump took office, how many people he was going to be able to hurt. It was shock and awe. He shocked the nation. And people are kind of stunned. But people are coming out of it, and once they realize that they have the power to change it, as with the example of Wisconsin, I think that's gonna save us. What do you think are the main issues we should be focusing on now? Right this minute, right now, I think it's elections — getting ready for the elections in 2026 to make sure we have a stronger Congress, with more people in the Congress to counteract the actions that Trump and the Republican Party are doing right now. And then, starting to think of the future. One thing we're seeing is that we do not want corporate governance. Something's wrong when we — the richest country in the world, the United States of America — when we do not have universal health care. There's no reason why we shouldn't have universal health care. And we don't have universal college education, which we should have. We should have pre-K daycare, as they have in the Scandinavian countries. We are the richest country in the world, and there's no reason why we can't have those benefits for the people here in the United States of America. I feel like certain politicians have been able to convince large swaths of people in America that if we make life better for everyone, it's going to take something away from them, that it's a zero-sum game. Well, these ugly policies that they have — the way that they have demonized immigrants, for instance, and people of color — I mean, we were making a lot of progress in terms of getting rid of racism and sexism and homophobia. But they've used all these culture wars to divide people. And that's very vicious. I like to remind people that the true immigrants to this country were like my great-grandparents, one of them came from Spain, one of them came from England, and then on my dad's side, we were here to greet them! So, who are the true immigrants to this country? The Europeans. And every group that came to the United States was legalized. They got the legalization status to be able to vote and to participate. So demonizing people, and calling all immigrants criminals is so wrong. That is straight, outright racism, and they need to be called out. And how they're attacking transgender people — they take the most vulnerable people in our society, and they start attacking them. That is vicious, and it's wrong. Some people have compared Trump to the fascists in World War II. Having lived through WWII, do you see parallels? Oh, absolutely. The word fascist means to hurt people. It's an Italian word. To hurt and to punish. ("Fascism" comes from the Latin "fascis," a weapon used to punish people.) For some reason, Trump thinks this is good. We know that he idolizes (Adolf) Hitler, and he's following his playbook. But people have to wake up and understand that. So, a lot of work in education needs to be done right now to get people to wake up. And to understand that it's okay to be educated. It's okay to be woke. When you're woke, that means you're educated. That's exactly what that means. And there's nothing wrong with that. Yeah, because what's the opposite of being woke? Being asleep? Being unconscious? Right. Is there anything I haven't asked you about that you'd like to say? Well, one of the great things that's happening now is that our governors in our different states are fighting back. They're using their power. And we have judges and attorneys that have now become the Marines to save our democracy, you know? This is all happening, so we're not at a total loss. I think we will be able to prevent what happened in Germany to the Jewish population. And not only the Jews. It was the gypsies, the people who were disabled, people who were gay, etc. Jehovah's Witnesses were persecuted. And when we look at Russia, the Jehovah's Witnesses are still being persecuted. LGBTQ people are still being persecuted in Russia, too. How can our president think that (Vladimir) Putin and the Russian policies are somehow something that we should imitate here in the United States of America? We're gonna call that out. People just have to rev up their bravery. If they never participated in a protest before, now's the time to do it. If they didn't engage in organizing others for elections, now's the time to do it. And I always brag about the fact that I'm from the state of New Mexico, because my father was an assemblyman here in New Mexico, and my grandfather was born here. And when we were kids, we would sit down and listen to (Franklin D. Roosevelt) when he did his Saturday night lectures. I'm very blessed, because I was raised in a family where we had very active civic participation. And that's what we want for everyone now. We want people to be civically involved. This interview has been edited for length and clarity. Logan Royce Beitmen is an arts writer for the Albuquerque Journal. He covers music, visual arts, books and more. You can reach him at lbeitmen@

Civil rights icon Dolores Huerta celebrates 95th birthday
Civil rights icon Dolores Huerta celebrates 95th birthday

Yahoo

time11-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Civil rights icon Dolores Huerta celebrates 95th birthday

BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (KGET) — Happy birthday, Dolores Huerta! The labor leader and local civil rights icon turned 95-years-old on Thursday, and it hasn't gone unnoticed. The United Farm Workers co-founder was honored Thursday in Sacramento on Dolores Huerta Day. The celebration comes two days after she was honored in Los Angeles by the L.A. County Board of Supervisors. Community helps Bakersfield Pet Food Pantry stay open, but a new facility is needed She seems to not have slowed down much at all. 'It's a very critical moment in the United States of America, what we're going through right now, said Huerta. 'People really have to step up and we have to fight for justice for other people.' Meanwhile, all systems are a go in her adopted hometown of Bakersfield, for the $35 million Dolores Huerta Peace and Justice Cultural Center, which will feature a hologram of Huerta discussing her life and times. The center is tentatively scheduled to break ground at 21 and Eye streets in June. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Sian Barbara Allen, Former Actress and Star of 'The Waltons', Dies at 78
Sian Barbara Allen, Former Actress and Star of 'The Waltons', Dies at 78

Yahoo

time01-04-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Yahoo

Sian Barbara Allen, Former Actress and Star of 'The Waltons', Dies at 78

Sian Barbara Allen, the beloved star of The Waltons, has died. She was 78. The actress died of Alzheimer's in Chapel Hill, N.C., on Monday, March 31, an online obituary announced. 'She lived her final year of life in North Carolina, surrounded by all of her favorite things, new friends, and more time with [her daughter] Emily than she'd had in 35 years,' the obituary stated. Allen is survived by her daughter Emily Fonseca, two sisters, Hannah Davie and Meg Pokrass, nephew, Miles Bond, ex-husband, Peter Gelblum and grandson, Arlo Fonseca, who, per the obituary, "made her laugh more than anyone could dream." Allen's sister Pokrass confirmed the news on Facebook, writing, 'My wonderful sister, actress Sian Barbara Allen died peacefully today after a long illness … This loss is too hard.' Allen starred in several 1970s and 1980s TV shows, including The Waltons, The Incredible Hulk, Hawaii Five-0, Columbo, The Rockford Files and Gunsmoke. She also appeared in films such as Billy Two Hats (1974), Love American Style, Scream, Pretty Peggy (1973) and The Lindbergh Kidnapping Case (1976). Allen was born in Reading, Penn., and attended the Pasadena Playhouse on a scholarship after graduating high school. She went on to star in several theater productions including Our Town in 1976, playing one her favorite roles, Emily Webb — and later naming her daughter after the character. Never miss a story — sign up for to stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories. The late star earned her first Golden Globe nomination for her role in the 1972 film You'll Like My Mother and became the first woman to pen a script for the TV series Baretta in 1978. She withdrew from acting and public life to focus on politics in 1990, according to the obituary. 'Along with then-husband, Peter, and daughter, Emily, they volunteered for Jackie Goldberg's 1993 city council campaign in Los Angeles. Sian was a staunch supporter of Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers and never crossed a picket line in her entire life,' the obituary further noted. Allen's daughter asked that her mother be honored with donations to the AuthoraCare collective hospice of Burlington or a local organization combating oppression. Read the original article on People

Thousands march across Delano in honor of civil rights icon César Chávez's 98th birthday
Thousands march across Delano in honor of civil rights icon César Chávez's 98th birthday

Yahoo

time01-04-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Thousands march across Delano in honor of civil rights icon César Chávez's 98th birthday

BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (KGET) — Each March 31 — the day civil rights icon Cesar Chavez was born in Yuma, Arizona, in 1927 — Americans celebrate César Chávez Day. California is one of few states to recognize the day as an official holiday. The name César Chávez is extra special to Kern County, as the years-long grape strike, for which Chávez is often remembered, happened right here in Delano. 'The work began here in Delano. It was here in Delano that voice, that message was sent out to the country that if you stand up and you fight hard, you can make social change,' said Paul Chávez, son of César Chávez. All of Monday, agricultural workers and supporters marched through Delano. The crowd amassed to several thousand, as workers from all around the state rallied to protest what they describe as an extra difficult time under the Trump Administration and its plans for mass deportations. 'We need to remember that immigrants, especially farmworkers, do a very, very important job, and we need to respect them for that,' said Teresa Romero, president of United Farm Workers. 'He's been honored in many communities in different ways,' said Paul Chávez. 'They've named different streets after him, parks after him, there's libraries and holidays… but we know the best way to honor his legacy is to get out and keep that fight for justice going.' Bakersfield man identified in riverbed homicide case Chávez, for decades, stood at the vanguard of the farm workers' rights movement. In 1962, he co-founded the United Farm Workers union — then known as the National Farm Workers Association — with Dolores Huerta, another name embedded into Kern County history. 'We're still there for farmworkers,' added Romero. Chávez famously was part of the 1965 grape strike in Delano, initiated by Filipino American grape workers protesting poor pay. For this steadfast believer in nonviolence, the movement included leading a 300-mile march from Delano to Sacramento, fasting, as well as a grape boycott — which farmworkers and consumers nationwide participated in. All this led to the first-of-its-kind union contracts, granting workers better pay and benefits. Chávez leaves behind the UFW and the Cesar Chavez Foundation. 'We're talking about people who produce the greatest bounty of food this country has ever seen, people who makes hotel rooms, beds, they build the houses we all live in,' said Paul Chávez. 'Today, we're here to honor farmworkers and workers in general.' Romero also noted it's not just fruits and vegetables that come at the hands of these workers, many of whom call Kern County home. 'Milk, eggs, chicken. Every that is, is because of our farmworkers and agricultural workers,' she said. She also emphasized while farm work is often looked down upon as 'manual labor,' it too is considered a profession, and the field workers are 'professionals' at their jobs. Meantime, local efforts to celebrate César Chávez daily are underway by renaming a street after him in Bakersfield. City Councilmember Eric Arias told 17 News the latest update is that the City is leaning towards H Street. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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