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Description

It’s a cycle that has been happening since the late 1800s. The need for agricultural labor in California is a cycle of bringing in labor and then deporting them when they become too visible. Elaine Chukan Brown, wine writer and author of recently published The Wines of California, describes the history, current situation with new regulations and deportation, and the tension put on vineyard workers’ wages in California and their impacts on the labor market and vineyard workers.  

Detailed Show Notes: 

The Wines of California covers 3 sections: 

Interest in farmworkers started with Salud, a medical program for vineyard workers and their families

CA is the largest farm region in the US

Sources of farm labor (in chronological order)

When labor populations grow and get too big, they are expelled, which has been in ~20-year cycles

H2A Program - temporary work visa program

FDR (1930s/40s) - Labor Protections Act created worker protections, but excluded agriculture

United Farmworkers (1975) - 1st farmworker protection legislation

Association of Farmers - farm wonders banded together to have more leverage against workers

Ever-growing CA labor regulations create large compliance requirements that end up favoring big business

Current system sets up farm workers’ wages as the only lever for farm owners to maintain profit margins and be economically viable (w/w/o gov’t subsidies)

New CA farmworker overtime pay law - 8 hours/day, 40 hours/week before overtime

Many crops (e.g., strawberries, peaches) need manual labor and can’t be mechanized

ICE raids & deportations: not a new thing, but what’s new is people with documentation (visas, amnesty recipients, citizens) are being detained and deported

US tariffs increase prices to consumers, decreasing sales; it may take decades for consumers to substitute for domestic wines


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