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Description

On today’s episode our guest is a vanguard, an activist, organizer, father, ordained chaplain, and a former farmworker. Baldemar Velasquez is the founder of the Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC) and an internationally recognized leader in the farmworker and immigrant rights movement. For the better part of his young life, Baldemar worked in the fields with his family, exposed to the harsh realities farmworkers face in the US given their lack of equal protection under the law. In this episode, Ashley and Baldemar have a rich discussion that travels through time, exploring Baldemar’s personal journey, current work, the impact of in-person organizing, how faith can bridge intolerance and foster solidarity, how the current global food landscape impacts his ability to support US farmworkers, the role of intergenerational knowledge sharing, and why living out a vision for change often requires some fumbling. 

Baldemar Velasquez was born and raised as a migrant farm worker from South Texas. In 1967, at the age of twenty, Velasquez along with his father and a small group of farmworkers, tired of the mistreatment formed the Farm Labor Organizing Committee. (FLOC). In 1978 he started an eight year strike and boycott of the Campbell Soup Company that culminated in the first multi-party contracts in labor history between farmworkers, farmers and numerous industrial produce corporations.  

These were the first supply-chain agreements in labor history achieving precedent setting human rights reforms. After Campbell Soup, many other  manufacturers followed with similar agreements, Heinz USA, Vlasic Pickles, Dean Foods and their subsidiaries Aunt Jane Pickles and Green Bay Foods. In 2004, he culminated a five year struggle with the Mt. Olive Pickle Company in North Carolina in signing a blockbuster agreement covering 8000 “guest workers” from Mexico working on over 800 farms in the Carolinas, Tennessee and Virginia. The agreements brought fair treatment and humane working and living conditions for the impoverished farm workers.

Plugs 

Farm Labor Organizing Committee (AFL-CIO)