Yesterday's Internment Camp - Today's Labor Camp Monday, 16 September 2013 
09:40  By David Bacon, Truthout 

http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/18770-yesterdays-internment-camp-todays-labor-camp
 
A worker picks flowers and fruit off strawberry plants. (Photo: David Bacon).
In Modoc County, farm workers do a job few people have ever seen. For eight 
hours, they lie on padded platforms on each side of an elaborate 
metal apparatus, suspended just inches above rows of strawberry plants. 
As a tractor slowly pulls them through the field, the workers pick off 
the flowers and budding fruit - not to harvest them - but to keep the 
plants from producing more.

The plants they're tending in this 
unique operation are seedlings. Eventually they'll be uprooted, the dirt
 will be knocked off their roots, and they'll be sent to cavernous 
warehouses. There, other workers will trim the roots to an even length. 
Then the plants will be packed into containers and shipped to the 
strawberry growers of Watsonville, California, or Mount Vernon, 
Washington, or out of the country entirely. 
Workers' homes on the land that was formerly the Tule Lake Internment Camp. 
(Photo: David Bacon).Today big commercial strawberry growers often don't grow 
their plants from 
seeds. It takes too long. In addition, growers formerly killed the 
nematodes that infect the roots of young strawberry plants by covering 
fields in plastic sheets, then injecting methyl bromide or methyl iodide into 
the soil. Those two extremely poisonous chemicals are now being 
banned in state after state, because they contribute to depleting the 
ozone layer, which protects life on this planet.

So the 
seedlings are grown separately. Farm workers migrate from towns in more 
populated areas of California into this county, at the far northern end 
of the state, to lie on the platforms and pinch off the flowers. "It's a
 good six months of work," explains Elpidio Gonzalez, one of the 
workers. "I can go back to Stockton with enough money for the rest of 
the year, especially if I can find a little work in the winter pruning 
grapes. The only disadvantage is that there's really no place to live 
here for migrants. I share a trailer with a bunch of others, and we were
 lucky to find it."
Older workers, with experience and skill, are needed for this job. (Photo: 
David Bacon).Gonzalez and his coworkers on the machine are Mexican immigrants, 
but most of 
them have been living in the US for years. This industry, however, uses 
guest workers as well. The county's largest grower, Sierra Cascade, with 1,000 
acres planted in strawberry rootstock, brings laborers to Modoc 
directly from Mexico, using the H2A contract labor program. In 2006, 
Sierra Cascade was sued by those workers, represented by California 
Rural Legal Assistance (CRLA), over bad housing and living conditions. 
A tractor carrying the workers on platforms moves through the field. (Photo: 
David Bacon).
Under the H2A program, growers have to provide housing and give the 
workers a contract that specifies the months of work they'll get. Sierra 
Cascade began by putting them into a warehouse on the county 
fairgrounds. There, life was grim. "During the first two weeks, on many 
occasions, we would have a cup of coffee for breakfast, a small portion 
of greasy tough meat with rice for lunch, and cereal, coffee and bread 
with jelly for dinner," Ricardo Valle Daniel recalled. After the workers got in 
touch with the CRLA lawyers, the food got better. But in the 
warehouse, couples were housed in a cavernous room where many men and 
women were mixed together, despite company promises of family quarters. 

These workers had been hired under nine-week contracts to trim the root
 of the plants after they'd been unearthed. The contracts specified 
they'd have to meet production standards requiring them to process more 
than 1,000 plants per hour - one every three and a half seconds. When 
some workers couldn't meet the quotas, even when they worked through 
their meal breaks, Sierra Cascade fired them and put them on buses back 
to Mexico. Although the legal case eventually improved conditions 
somewhat, a state court judge ruled that the production quotas were 
legal. The workers had no way to keep the company from firing (and 
deporting) them for not working at that rapid rate. Today Sierra Cascade
 continues to bring in H2A workers for its root-trimming operation, and 
the quota is still in place.
Each wing of the machine holds platforms for four workers. (Photo: David 
Bacon).Housing the workers in the fairgrounds was more than ironic. The Tule 
Lake 
grounds is home to a small museum devoted to the Tule Lake Internment 
Camp, where 18,000 Japanese-Americans, most US citizens, were imprisoned during 
World War II. The museum preserves one of the hundreds of 
barracks that originally housed the internees. Visitors can peek through 
plexiglas windows and see the austere furnishings - military-style 
metal bed frames, unadorned table and chairs, a plain chest of drawers.
The warehouse where the H2A workers were housed in 2006 was not one 
of the original barracks, and the fairgrounds itself isn't the site of 
the internment camp. That is in a huge empty plain, not far from the 
modern borders of Tule Lake itself, in the tiny hamlet of Newell, seven 
miles south.
Farm workers on platforms in front of the tractor. (Photo: David Bacon).
Almost nothing is left of the original camp. After the war, most of 
Tule Lake itself was drained. The "reclaimed" land was auctioned off as 
farm homesteads to World War II veterans. The internment camp was closed and 
residents were dispersed - none wanted to remain in an area that 
held such bitter memories. The barracks were cut in half, and each 
family that was awarded a homestead was given a half as a home starter. 

But a few of the barracks were left in place in Newell. They've become 
housing for low-income families, many of them farm workers. Over the 
years, they've been painted in brighter colors, perhaps so they won't 
immediately remind anyone of their origins. But the poverty of the 
families who live in them can't be as easily disguised.
Houses like this on the old internment camp land were originally barracks for 
internees. (Photo: David Bacon).After the war, a few growers in Tule Lake 
brought in braceros, under the 
contract guest worker program that was ended in 1964. That bracero 
program is the direct ancestor of today's H2A guest worker scheme. In 
the museum, there's no mention where those braceros lived or how many 
there were. Maybe some lived in the old transplanted barracks, too.

Eventually Modoc County built a little housing for migrant workers - a 
group of cabins called the Newell Migrant Center. They were built on the
 ground where the barracks of the old interment center were. This year, 
no one was living in the camp. The gates were locked, and it was closed.
 Migrants such as Gonzalez had to find trailers or motel rooms on their 
own in Tule Lake, Dorris and Macdoel, the farm worker towns of this 
valley.
Behind the barbed-wire fence - the vacant cabins of the Newell Migrant Center. 
(Photo: David Bacon).The empty cabins of the Migrant Center are a strange sight 
- empty homes 
surrounded by a tall fence, topped by barbed wire. The old internment 
camp barracks also must have been surrounded by barbed wire fences - 
perhaps even in the same locations. Many internees were also farm 
laborers, not just before they were imprisoned but even during their 
incarceration, when they grew the food consumed by the camp's residents. 
Internee farm workers even organized a strike one year over abusive 
conditions, which turned into a general strike of camp residents. Camp 
managers brought in other internees to break that strike, housing them 
in another small internment camp a few miles away. Then the government 
brought Italian and German prisoners of war to Tule Lake, contracting 
them out to local growers for farm labor. And then, after the war ended, 
growers brought in the braceros.

Today, Congress is debating 
bills that would make the H2A program look like small potatoes - 
expanding the number of recruited workers many times over, possibly even
 reaching the 500,000 worker peak of the bracero program in the 
mid-1950s. The bill recently passed by the Senate, and other bills in 
the House, would even lower the legally mandated wage that H2A workers 
receive. These bills would eliminate the current housing guarantee, as 
miserable as that sometimes is. These new guest workers would get 
instead a rent "subsidy," putting them into competition with traditional
 migrants like Gonzalez for the small trailers of Macdoel or Tule Lake. 
Maybe the county would open and expand the Newell migrant camp. Sierra 
Cascade undoubtedly would like that idea.
Residents paint bright colors on their converted barracks homes. (Photo: David 
Bacon).It's hard to travel through Tule Lake without thinking about the way 
people 
have been dehumanized here because of their race, national origin and 
class. History here is written into the soil beneath the old and new 
barracks, and under the strawberry plants themselves. But Tule Lake 
isn't some special case, and the worst abuses of today take place far 
from here. 

When war hysteria took hold with the invasions of 
Iraq and Afghanistan, people from the Middle East and South Asia were 
thrown into prison with as little regard for their rights as there was 
for the rights of the Japanese half a century earlier. Now there are 
camps surrounded by barbed wire for hundreds of thousands of deportees, 
who can languish there for months and even years. The hysteria that 
demonizes Mexicans who come across the border to work, especially those 
that come on their own without papers, often forces them into brutal 
living conditions that are worse than those of the braceros. And 
Congress' answer is replicating and expanding contract labor programs, 
just as the growers did after World War II or as Sierra Cascade does 
today. In Tule Lake you can see what that reality looks like.
Workers lie only a few inches above the plants they're trimming. (Photo: David 
Bacon).But the internment camp gates did finally open, and people were freed. 
The 
old bracero program did end - the year after the March on Washington we 
just celebrated. Today you can see Mexican families coming out of the 
church across from the fairgrounds and hear young people call out to 
each other in the soft evening. If there's a future for Tule Lake, they 
are it. Tule Lake could be a good place for them to live, whether 
they're here all year around or just come for a few months work. 

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