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January 2002 Volume 8 Number 1
Agricultural Calfornia Tulare county is included in the American Community Survey. In November 2001, a year ahead of planned detailed data collected from one in six
Midwest: Meat and Poultry Governing Magazine's January 2002 issue includes an article that describes attracting immigrants to Iowa meatpacking plants as an economic
California: Housing, Dole California's minimum wage rose from $6.25 to $6.75 an hour on January 1, 2002. Employees paid at least $2,340 a month (twice the minimum wage for
UFW, ALRB- Coastal, Krug The UFW dealt with mushroom, nursery and furniture workers in Fall 2001. The UFW has been trying to negotiate an agreement with the Ventura,
Northest: New York, DeCoster New York's highest court, the Court of Appeals, in November 2001 ruled that farmer Paul Hafner Jr. can put mobile homes on his 800-acre farm to house
Southeast: Suits Mecca Farms, one of Palm Beach County's largest growers, and its labor contractors, Rogerio Rodriguez, Maria T. Sanchez and M. Sanchez & Son Inc,
Northwest: Teamsters Concede Teamsters Local 760 of Yakima, Washington told the National Labor Relations Board in December 2001 that it would not seek to represent workers at the
Migrant Services The US Department of Labor funds a rest stop near Hope, Arkansas that has 60 rooms that rent for $3 for 12 hours; the rest stop is open
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Tyson Indicted Tyson Foods Inc., one of the world's largest poultry processors, was indicted December 19, 2001, charged with 36 counts of recruiting illegal workers
September 11 and Farm Workers 2002 The Food and Drug Administration issued voluntary guidelines urging criminal background checks on workers hired by food companies and farms to
H-2A, Canada The U.S. Department of Labor is holding hearings around the US on regulations proposed in July 2000 to streamline the H-2A program, which allows US
Mexico: Bracero Lawsuits The US signed a bilateral bracero (person who works with arms or hands) program with Mexico on July 23, 1942. The first Mexican workers arrived in
FVH Commodities California has nine million irrigated acres of farm land; most of the state's 35 million residents live on 5.5 million acres of urban land.
Policy, Trade and Water Congress approved a new farm bill in Fall 2001 that continues the practice of paying farmers the difference between a target price set by the
Coffee in Crisis The price of coffee dropped from $0.95 a pound in December 1999 to $0.45 a pound in November 2001. The reason for the price drop is oversupply: 60
Zimbabwe: Land Invasions President Robert Mugabe and his ruling Zimbabwe African National Union-Patriotic Front, or ZANU-PF has been in power since independence in 1980.
Washington's Agricultuaral Workforce Washington's Employment Security Department released a report in August 2001 that there were 172,000 acres of apples, 18,000 acres of cherries, and
Welfare Reform, Inequality Between 1994 and 2001, over one million people, mostly women, have made the transition from welfare to employment. The number of US welfare
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