Correction: Migrant Workers-Driven to Death story
In a
A corrected version of the story is below:
Unsafe transport leads to death: Farmworkers 'disposable'?
Chronically unsafe transportation for migrant farmworkers, blamed on enforcement gaps and ag industry demands, causes uncounted deaths and injuries
By
AP National Writer
They were just north of
The crash in
It has been just over a half-century since the nation's worst fatal vehicle accident killed nearly three dozen migrants, a horror that farmworker advocates had hoped would bring lasting reforms. Yet, due to enforcement gaps and the sometimes callous attitudes of those who contract for the workers, laborers continue to ride in overloaded, poorly maintained, uninsured vehicles — often driven by a fellow crew member without a proper license, or with no license at all.
The Associated Press found more than a dozen accidents that left at least 38 dead and nearly 200 injured just since
Grim as it is, the AP's tally — generated through extensive interviews, public records requests and searches of online news reports — is almost certainly a significant undercount. No one keeps track of the casualties nationally.
"I think there's more unregistered, improperly insured, unsafe transportation out there for farmworkers than ... 20 years ago," says attorney
A big reason, he and others contend: Rarely are those who profit most from this cheap labor made to pay. Instead, it is the families of people like
In exchange for tending the landowner's animals in the Mexican mountain village of
"When you got out of the bed, the first thing you would step on was water," says Jose's mother,
Jose's dream was to replace this hovel with a solid house made of concrete. But he knew that with the
So he signed on to do farm labor in
Of the 1.1 million farmworkers in the
Chavez did it by the books. His employer, Vasquez Citrus & Hauling of
Whenever he could, Chavez dutifully wired money home. And his pledge of a better house began to be realized: His parents constructed two simple but sturdy rooms, with a roof that didn't leak.
Last
When the crash investigations began, a pattern of alleged safety violations emerged. Officials say the bus, purchased by Vasquez just the day before, was not registered with the
In addition, the vehicle was woefully underinsured, says Schell, who has been working with the victims' families. With a capacity of 47, it should have been insured for around
In the two years prior to the crash, Vasquez Citrus had been cited 22 times for alleged violations, from underage drivers to vehicles with worn tires, according to the
"It's an honor system," she says of the regulatory apparatus meant to ensure workers' safe transport. "And it's only when accidents ... happen that agencies might get involved. But then it's way too late."
It was the tragedy two generations earlier that convinced
On
In the wake of
Two decades later, lawmakers enacted the Migrant and Seasonal Agricultural Worker Protection Act, or MSPA, which, among other requirements, mandates that agricultural employers show that transportation is properly insured and meets safety standards.
Still, the transport deaths persist, and for a wide range of reasons.
More than 10,000 farm labor contractors are registered under MSPA, but Labor's Wage and Hour Division has just 976 investigators to police them, plus the millions of other businesses covered by the laws it enforces.
The agency assessed agricultural employers more than
That lack of manpower, combined with often minor penalties for infractions, encourages people to cut corners, farmworker advocates say.
"Probably the cost of a new set of tires for the van isn't all that much less than the fine. So you end up saving money by just paying the fine and treating the farmworkers as disposable," says
In addition, workers are afraid of being fired or deported for complaining about bad conditions, Schell says.
"To report a boss is not easy," said a Mexican laborer, speaking on condition of anonymity because he feared being blacklisted by employers. He described riding with 17 others in a van meant for just 10 during the
"We need to work," he said.
Often, a record of alleged non-compliance is discovered only after a crash.
This
She told AP that she was crushed beneath two benches that came loose during the crash — and unsecured bus seats were among 25 violations cited in post-accident inspections of farm labor contractor
Even after the fatal accident, the agency told Evans it found "no indication that you implemented any safety management plans or altered your current operational model." It noted the same driver had been in a similar, though non-fatal, crash in January.
The case remains under investigation. Neither Evans nor the driver responded to AP's calls for comment.
Lawyer
But the way the industry is structured, it can be difficult to determine just who is responsible.
The vast majority of farmworkers are not actually employees of the growers on whose land they toil. Instead, farmers routinely deal with a network of labor contractors, brokers and employee "leasing" companies.
The key is to get enough laborers to the fields. Some car pool. Many others fall prey to so-called "raiteros," who charge workers often exorbitant per-head fees for transportation in vehicles that are unsafe. In many cases, raiteros decide who gets work and who doesn't. This kind of unauthorized transportation "is a scourge that farmworkers across the country face as a result of their poverty and desperation to find employment," said the
When there's an accident, investigators often find that supposed worker car pools are actually directed by a grower or contractor. Two recent
On
But this March, Labor announced that it was moving to revoke C.A.T.'s certification. Terrazas insists he does not arrange transportation for his workers. That responsibility fell to the driver, who pleaded no contest in March to manslaughter, says company attorney
In another case, four farmworkers, including a 16-year-old girl, died when the van they were in crashed on
This August, Labor's
In its filing, the agency cited a 1997 federal court ruling from
The ruling stated: "Once the grower had seen the contractor's certificate, the contractor would be free to drive fruit pickers in whatever broken down, unsafe, uninsured van he or she chose. The growers actually using the workers could turn a blind eye to such flagrant abuses.
The complaint alleges that X-Treme Ag employees recruited workers and charged them for their daily round trip. Valley displayed "astonishing indifference" to the "pervasive unlawful transportation of its workers," the government says.
Neither company responded to AP's requests for comment. But in court filings, both denied any wrongdoing.
Raimondo, the C.A.T attorney, says Labor is using these court actions as a way of "extorting settlements" from growers and contractors.
"We're not going to be satisfied until fewer people are being killed on the way to work."
In the crash that killed
Despite the ongoing probes,
Meanwhile, lawyers are wrangling over how to divide the limited insurance proceeds from the crash among the 13 affected families.
Most of the dead and injured were, like
Jose's parents had to borrow money to bury him. In the simple, sturdy house his work built, they created a makeshift shrine: Beneath an arch of silk flowers stands a photo of Jose, superimposed on a picture of Jesus.
His father, 57-year-old
"The only hope we had."
AP Writer


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