California Farmworkers on Edge Over Historic Overtime Bill

MENDOTA, Calif.— Many California farmworkers who make up the backbone of the nation’s No. 1 agricultural state were praising historic legislation that brings them closer to receiving the same overtime pay as the rest of the state’s workers who are pa...
California Farmworkers on Edge Over Historic Overtime Bill
Farmworker Florentino Reyes picks tomatoes in a field near Mendota, Calif., on Aug. 30, 2016. Scott Smith/AP Photo
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MENDOTA, Calif.—Many California farmworkers who make up the backbone of the nation’s No. 1 agricultural state were praising historic legislation that brings them closer to receiving the same overtime pay as the rest of the state’s workers who are paid by the hour.

If signed into law by Gov. Jerry Brown, a new overtime bill would put California at the forefront nationally of farm labor pay and mark a victory in the fight to improve farmworkers rights in the decades old movement launched by Cesar Chavez, the legendary co-founder of the National Farm Workers Association who fought for higher farm worker pay.

Brown, a Democrat, has not said whether he will sign the law that would be the first of its kind for the United States.

Florentino Reyes, 48, has been picking tomatoes and working a wide variety of crops in California’s fertile Central Valley for more than two decades and says he could make another $60 weekly. That would give him more purchasing power to buy better food and clothes for his wife and three children and ease his stress over paying down bills.

Maria Ceja, right, joins other farm workers in celebrating outside the Assembly Chambers after lawmakers approved a measure requiring farmworkers to receive overtime pay after working eight hours, at the Capitol, Aug. 29, 2016, in Sacramento, Calif. (AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)
Maria Ceja, right, joins other farm workers in celebrating outside the Assembly Chambers after lawmakers approved a measure requiring farmworkers to receive overtime pay after working eight hours, at the Capitol, Aug. 29, 2016, in Sacramento, Calif. AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli