Posted inChild Labor / ToMl / USA Empire

The Blueberry Children

ABC News investigation that exposed how one of the country’s largest blueberry growers uses child labor in its fields. Adkin Blue Ribbon Packing Company in South Haven, Michigan is at the center of this scandal.

Wal-Mart and the Kroger supermarkets were among Adkin’s high-profile customers that have now cut ties with the blueberry grower. A Wal-Mart company spokesperson told ABC News it will not buy anything from Adkin, pending the outcome of an investigation by the company’s own ethical sourcing team.

ABC News investigation, “The Blueberry Children.”:

“This five-year-old girl, Suli, helped lug buckets of berries picked by her parents and older brothers in Michigan. Her older brothers are Picho, who is eight years old, and Cristobal, who told us, in Spanish, he was seven.”

Brian Ross and Teresa Hendricks talking:

With the help of the four Carnegie fellows, we discovered a pervasive pattern, really across the country, of a situation that has continued for decades and has gone unenforced. There are laws against children this young working in agricultural fields. But for the most part, until very recently, those laws were largely ignored by federal authorities at the Department of Labor.

what this did was really shed light on just the tip of the iceberg of the horrors that the migrant families go through, and I was glad to see that it highlighted part of their life. This is something that has gone on for decades in Michigan and in other states, and it’s nothing unusual for us to see. We’re quite used to seeing that. And what we found was that we have raised the bar in the level of awareness for what the families go through, as far as bad housing conditions, dangerous working conditions, being drastically underpaid, not being paid at all, in some cases being held in almost slave-like conditions by certain unscrupulous crew leaders. So we were glad to see some attention to this issue, because we’ve been dealing with it for years.

In the early 1970s, when I lived in Philadelphia, actually going blueberry picking when I was a youth. The buses would come into the poor neighborhoods of Philadelphia and pack whole families out to go out to South Jersey to pick blueberries. But in those days, you had unions that had developed, farm worker unions. You had FLOC in Ohio. You had the Committee of Agricultural Workers in South Jersey and, of course, the United Farm Workers in California.

We have seen conditions go gradually down every year. And we’ve tried to organize farm workers here, but they’re so afraid of retaliation and losing the job that they have, that it’s even hard to get them to stand up for themselves, even when they’re in the most dire of situations.

the companies responded quickly after we contacted—first Wal-Mart, then we heard from Kroger and Meijer’s grocery store chains. Wal-Mart had actually put up a big billboard several years ago featuring Randy Adkin as one of its local blueberry growers. They said they were stunned to learn what we had found.

At the same time, the Department of Labor, which had begun an investigation back in June, chose the day before our broadcast to announce the results of its investigation. It had cracked down, it said, on blueberry growers in Michigan, as well as North Carolina, Arkansas and New Jersey. So there seems to be a new effort coming out of the Department of Labor now to at least—they’re aware of the situation and are taking some steps to remedy it.

the piece-rate system builds in an incentive for underpayment. So what happens is, you need all of the hands in the family picking, because you’ve got to get—for example, blueberries have to be harvested in a limited period of about ninety days. So you need everybody picking at the piece rate to try to make the minimum wage. Now, if they were guaranteed and the employers kept good track of the hours that were worked by every member of the family, they could actually earn a living wage.

But so, you uncover things like, there could be scales that are off and measuring wrong, and they’ll get underpaid that way. Or now we’re seeing more sophisticated payroll software programs, where they can back into the hours to make it look like they earned enough by minimum wage standards while picking for the piece rate, or they’re able to manipulate the data on the computer. So, the ways that they’re being underpaid are being expanded, and they’re more sophisticated these days, and we have to stay on top of that.

This really sheds light on what’s going on in this country, because we have less protective laws for these twelve-year-olds than a lot of other countries, like India and Tanzania, Guatemala, Kenya. It’s incredible, if you look at the law on our books, how poor it is compared to other countries. And then, when you look at the enforcement of the laws we do have on the books, it’s even more shameful.

US Department of Labor could do more and pay more attention to these issues, especially when it comes to the techniques that are used to underpay them on their paychecks or paying them cash or by other incentives. So I’m not sure it’s a success in any one state that we can look at. I think we need improvement in every state.

The children are actually helping the family. An average family of four will make usually under $12,000 for the year. So the parents, when they allow the children to work in the fields, and the crew leaders encourage it, are not doing that to become rich; they’re doing that so they can have food on the table and they can eat. Sometimes it’s the difference between having school supplies or having enough gas to get to their next migrating state. So it’s a matter of economic necessity and also a matter of urgency, in that you have a limited time period to get all of the crops in.

They can’t insist on anything, because they fear being reported or deported. In fact, the Carnegie fellows who work with us report that oftentimes the children would run away. They were afraid that somebody would spot them in the field. Now, a lot of these migrant families come from Florida and Texas, and the children are American citizens, and they’re due full protection. But there have been cases where the father or the parents have been deported, the children left here. It’s a horrible situation that puts them at a huge disadvantage to demand even the most basic rights.

the Department of Labor fines have been very slight. No more impressive action or stronger action can be taken than when they’re cut off, when growers like Adkin are cut off and the business is actually hurt. That can make a difference, as opposed to a fine of $1,000 per child, which is just a slap on the wrist. The Wal-Mart action was significant in that respect.

Discussion with Brian Ross

Brian Ross, Chief investigative correspondent of ABC News.
Teresa Hendricks, Executive Director of Michigan Migrant Legal Aid.

– from democracynow.org

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