https://www.thenation.com/article/activism/cedar-point-organizing-labor/

The Real Target in the Supreme Court’s ‘Cedar Point’ Decision
The court and the press talked about “property rights.” But the real impact 
will be on organizing, and workers’ rights.

By David Bacon

Two farmworkers, who have left their jobs to work as organizers for the United 
Farm Workers, hold a meeting at lunchtime in a crew of strawberry pickers in 
1997. (David Bacon)
Oakland, Calif.—Most of the media coverage of the recent Supreme Court decision 
about the farmworker access rule took for granted the way growers, and the 
court, defined this regulation. Jess Bravin in The Wall Street Journal called 
it “a regulation giving union organizers the right to visit farmworkers.” The 
first line of the right-wing majority’s opinion called it “[a] California 
regulation [that] grants labor organizations a ‘right to take access’ to an 
agricultural employer’s property.”

The court, and the growers, deliberately confuse the mechanism of the rule with 
rights, calling it a right of organizers or organizations. It is not. The right 
the rule implements is simple. When workers are protesting and organizing a 
union in the fields, they have a right to talk to union representatives at 
work. It’s a right of workers, rather than a right of union representatives. 
Rolling back this right, and the ability of farmworkers to organize against 
their endemic poverty, is the main target of the Supreme Court’s attack.

At Cedar Point Nursery, the grower that filed the case heard by the court, the 
stakes were clear. Cedar Point grows root stock for commercial strawberry 
growers in Dorris, a remote town in Northern California near the Oregon border. 
Hundreds of workers migrate here from their homes in Central and Southern 
California every year to harvest, trim, and pack the plants.

In 2015 Cedar Point laborers walked out to protest conditions that included, 
according to worker Jessica Rodriguez, low wages, dirty bathrooms, and 
harassment from supervisors. They called the United Farm Workers, which sent 
organizers and implemented the access rule to talk with them on the property. 
The strike lasted for just a day, and after the strikers returned to their 
jobs, the organizing effort fizzled out. No election was ever held to begin the 
process of trying to get a contract.

What happened at Cedar Point is not unusual. The following spring in McFarland, 
in the densely farmed San Joaquin Valley, hundreds of workers struck the 
blueberry fields of Gourmet Trading over similar issues. Support for the 
organizing was overwhelming. Workers called the UFW after they’d struck. Once 
they returned to work, the union filed for access, and workers held meetings 
after work at the ranch. They voted for the union a few days later, and today 
they work under a union contract.

In 1996, during a huge campaign to organize the strawberry industry in 
Watsonville, UFW organizers visited picking crews in dozens of fields. They 
taped butcher paper on the walls of the porta-potties during lunchtime 
meetings. Strawberry workers wrote down their demands for raising some of the 
lowest wages in agriculture, and planned marches to the company offices to 
announce them.

In all these cases, the access rule provided a way for workers to understand 
the organizing process and get help with it. Farmworkers need this because of 
the nature of the work. They are often migrants, working in a harvest in one 
area of California although they live in another. Cedar Point’s workers lived 
hundreds of miles from Dorris, and during the work season slept in motel rooms 
and temporary housing. At Gourmet Trading, some pickers traveled an hour or 
more to get to the field every day. Those distances make it hard—and sometimes 
impossible—for people to meet with union organizers at home.


Organizer Yolanda Serna talks to workers eating lunch under the vines during 
the UFW campaign to organize grape pickers in Delano in 2007.
According to the Handbook of the Agricultural Labor Relations Board, which 
administers California’s Agricultural Labor Relations Act, “The access 
regulations…are meant to insure that farm workers, who often may be contacted 
only at their work place, have an opportunity to be informed with minimal 
interruption of working activities.”

Organizing a union is a collective process. Workers need to talk with one 
another about it. When the Pacific Legal Foundation argued Cedar Point Nursery 
v. Hassid in 2017 before the US Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, and 
lost, its attorney, Wen Fa, asserted, “All the workers live in houses or 
hotels. Many have cellphones.” Even if this were true, forming or joining a 
union at work is not like buying insurance. It is something people do together.

When organizing starts, and workers and the union announce that they want an 
election, California’s labor law says voting must take place within a week 
(within 48 hours if there’s a strike), because the work only lasts as long as 
the season. The law requires the grower to furnish a list of names and 
addresses, but, according to longtime organizer and former UFW vice president 
Eliseo Medina, “those lists are notoriously bad.”

For the tens of thousands of H-2A guest workers brought to California by 
growers every year, home visits are often forbidden in their company housing. 
“H-2A workers are even more impacted by losing the access rule,” Medina 
charges. “They don’t have the legal right to organize and they’re living in 
housing under the growers’ 24-hour control.”

But the most important thing about the access rule is that it demonstrates that 
the grower doesn’t have absolute power at work. As an organizer for the UFW in 
the 1970s, and now as a journalist, I’ve seen what normally happens in the 
fields when workers start to organize. The crew foreman usually begins talking 
all day about how terrible the union is. He makes threats: If people join the 
union, they’re going to be fired or the company is going to move its crop 
production elsewhere.

Supervisors buzz around the field in their pickup trucks, watching everyone and 
making sure the workers know they’re being watched. Very often the company 
hires union busters. They talk to workers, while they’re working, as long as 
workers are in that field.

When union organizers come into the field at lunchtime, it shows that the union 
has power too, and can actually change things. That’s really why growers hate 
the rule—because it’s a limitation on their power. According to Medina, “It 
gives people confidence that change is possible.”


Aquiles Hernandez, an indigenous Mixtec farmworker, was a teacher and union 
activist in Mexico. He became an organizer for the United Farm Workers, and is 
pictured informing Mixtec- speaking workers at Gourmet Trading about their 
labor rights at lunchtime, during the access period in 2016. (David Bacon)
Growers hated the rule because it made organizing easier, and called it a 
“taking.” In an important way, it is. Unspoken in the Supreme Court decision is 
that the real damage growers suffer is that farmworker wages will go up if 
organizing is successful. If the access rule helps them, it will cost the 
growers money.

That’s not a respectable argument, though, even for right-wing lawyers and 
justices. Instead, Pacific Legal Foundation attorney Wen Fa claimed (and the 
Supreme Court agreed) that access damages growers’ property rights. Property 
rights trump the right of workers to organize. The majority opinion asserts, 
”No traditional background principle of property law requires the growers to 
admit union organizers onto their premises.”

However, William Gould III, former chair of both the National Labor Relations 
Board and the Agricultural Labor Relations Board, says the access rule creates 
“a kind of public forum where everyone is congregated [that] is vital to union 
organizing efforts and our public policy which supports them.”

He warns that the impact of the court’s decision will not be confined to 
farmworker organizing. “One of the court’s casualties,” Gould charges, “may 
well be the constitutionality of legislation [the PRO Act] passed by the House 
in Washington, pending before the Senate, which would give expanded access to 
reply to employer captive audience speeches filled with anti-union propaganda 
on company time and property.”

While the PRO Act’s passage is far from certain, the sights of growers and the 
Pacific Legal Foundation are also trained on a target closer to home. The 
Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence, another right-wing legal think tank 
that filed an amicus brief in the Cedar Point case, has been trying to knock 
out another key provision of California’s farm labor law: mandatory mediation. 
Under this procedure, when workers vote for a union and the grower won’t agree 
to a contract, the ALRB can appoint a mediator to craft a settlement. That can 
then be adopted by the board and imposed on the grower as a first contract.

The Center for Constitutional Jurisprudence supported a challenge to mandatory 
mediation by Gerawan Farming, Inc. In 2017 the California Supreme Court ruled 
against Gerawan, and held the process constitutional. It would not be unlikely 
to see growers take a challenge to the US Supreme Court, seeking a decision 
upholding property rights. Ultimately, the Agricultural Labor Relations Act 
itself could either be taken off the books, or, as it was in the 1980s, 
rendered so weak as to be virtually useless to farmworkers and farmworker 
unions.

In 1975, when California passed the Agricultural Labor Relations Act, the UFW 
had a big impact on the wages and working conditions of California farmworkers. 
At that time, the base wage in a union contract was about two and a half times 
the minimum wage. At the end of the 1970s, the union had 40,000 members paying 
dues at any given time. During those years, when I was an organizer for the 
union, we’d won elections to represent about 160,000 workers.

That’s not the case today. In her defense of the access rule, ALRB attorney 
Victoria Shahid argued that it was not used often enough to impose a real 
burden on growers. In 2015, she noted, the UFW used the access rule on only 62 
of California’s 16,000 farms.

The decline in the union’s strength has had a direct impact on the living 
standards of farmworkers. Today, their wages hover around the minimum wage. 
Each year growers bring a mushrooming number of H-2A guest workers into the 
state’s fields. “Even undocumented workers have more rights than H-2A workers,” 
Medina charges. In this context, eroding the right of farmworkers to organize 
will have immediate consequences.

For the UFW and other unions trying to rebuild their strength in the fields, 
access has been a very important tool. On the ALRB’s current agenda is an 
access request filed by the Teamsters Union to go onto the property of a 
cannabis grower. Workers in the industry today are organizing rapidly, and 
unions use access to go into the greenhouses to talk with them.

Losing the access rule is not going to stop farmworkers from organizing in 
California and elsewhere—or stop unions from helping them. That is the key to 
raising their wages and fighting this country’s epidemic of rural poverty. 
Farmworkers were not helped, however, by the relative silence of the labor 
movement in the face of this attack on their rights. And because other workers 
need these same rights desperately—to access and mandatory mediation—the labor 
movement’s silence hurts their efforts as well.

The Supreme Court may have made a predictable decision in the Cedar Point case. 
But a much more vocal and militant response can and should push hard to force 
its right-wing majority to retreat.

[David Bacon is author of Illegal People—How Globalization Creates Migration 
and Criminalizes Immigrants (2008), and The Right to Stay Home (2013), both 
from Beacon Press. His latest book is In the Fields of the North / En los 
campos del norte, University of California Press, Colegio de la Frontera Norte, 
2017. David Bacon's photography archive is now in the Special Collections of 
the Green Library at Stanford University.]


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