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Reading: Florez: The warmth-safety regulation isn’t sufficient. Farmworkers are nonetheless dying each summer time.
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The Wall Street Publication > Blog > U.S > Florez: The warmth-safety regulation isn’t sufficient. Farmworkers are nonetheless dying each summer time.
U.S

Florez: The warmth-safety regulation isn’t sufficient. Farmworkers are nonetheless dying each summer time.

Editorial Board Published August 19, 2025
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Florez: The warmth-safety regulation isn’t sufficient. Farmworkers are nonetheless dying each summer time.
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By midmorning within the Central Valley, the sunshine turns onerous and white, bleaching the sky and flattening each shadow.

The rows of melons stretch to the horizon, vines twisted low in cracked soil. Pickers transfer within the rhythm the crop calls for — bend, twist, raise, drop — their lengthy sleeves damp with sweat, caps pulled low, bandanas hiding heat-burned cheeks. Spanish drifts alongside the rows, a joke right here, a warning there, carried within the heavy air.

These are the cruelest days of harvest, when the solar turns fields into gradual ovens and the warmth climbs earlier than breakfast, holding on till the celebs are out. By dusk, the harm is finished: one other collapse within the dust, one other household handed a loss of life certificates as an alternative of a paycheck.

It’s an all-too-familiar outdated downside in California. Practically 20 years in the past, within the shadow of 4 farmworker funerals — Arvin, Fresno County, Kern, Imperial Valley — California enacted the nation’s first warmth guidelines for primary employee security: water, shade, relaxation. Mercies you’d assume wanted no regulation.

Enforcement missing

My fellow lawmakers and I who wrote these guidelines, together with then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger who signed them into regulation, believed they had been sufficient. However twenty years on, the grim reaper nonetheless walks the rows: 110 levels, no tree, no tarp, a single water jug rising heat, its deal with slick from mud and arms. Breaks denied, not from cruelty alone, however from the unrelenting clock of the harvest.

This isn’t a failure of the regulation itself, however of enforcement. Some handled the invoice’s signing because the end line as an alternative of the beginning gun. Inspectors are too few. Penalties too gentle. Investigations too gradual. The state auditor’s newest report learn like an obituary for Cal/OSHA’s credibility: outdated guidelines, missed probabilities, places of work too empty to reply the telephone.

In the meantime the local weather has turned meaner. Nights that when cooled now maintain the day’s warmth like a grudge. And the hazard within the fields isn’t simply the solar. Immigration raids now sweep by way of the Valley like mud storms — sudden, unannounced, cruel. For greater than half of California’s 350,000 farmworkers, the better risk isn’t warmth stroke however a knock on the door earlier than daybreak or a site visitors cease that ends with a automobile stuffed with employees detained and trucked to some distant website. The meals that feeds the nation is pulled from the earth by individuals who work underneath triple-digit skies but dwell within the shadows, the place one grievance can price them their job, their dwelling, their freedom.

Twenty harvest seasons later, I’m calling for motion — not one other invoice signing on the Capitol steps, however {dollars}, actual and dedicated, and the laws to match. With that can and funding, 4 easy fixes can flip promise into safety.

4 fixes

First, convey twenty first century instruments to the fields. In 2005, the “high-tech” resolution was a plastic water jug within the shade and a flapping pop-up cover. In the present day, for $50 — the worth of two containers of gloves — employers can deploy a wearable sensor clipped to a employee’s arm to trace core temperature and coronary heart price, sending a warning earlier than the physique crosses the sting into heatstroke. That’s not Silicon Valley moonshot cash. It’s pocket change for agribusiness, and for employees it might imply the distinction between strolling out of the rows or being carried out.

Second, implement in actual time. If a employee drops to at least one knee within the warmth, the state shouldn’t hear about it days later in a report. Think about a community linking growers, regulators and emergency crews to the identical pulse of knowledge — turning a gradual, reactive system that paperwork tragedies into one that may act shortly and stop a lot of them.

Third, prepare earlier than the primary row is picked. Ten minutes — no extra — for employees to face upright and be taught, in their very own language, the indicators: dizziness, nausea, the creeping fog within the thoughts meaning it’s time to cease. Not a photocopied handout in English tucked into an envelope behind a paycheck, not a rushed discuss in Spanish on the area’s edge, however a verified security course — licensed by labor contractors and farmers alike.

Information right here is as life-saving as water and shade.

Lastly, match the urgency we see in different arenas. Whereas Cal/OSHA limps alongside, starved of workers and mired in purple tape, Immigration and Customs Enforcement prices in the wrong way — spurred by $170 billion in new funding, an immigration-enforcement and border-security blitz hiring hundreds, dangling $50,000 signing bonuses, paying off scholar loans, waiving age limits, even pulling retirees again for double-dip salaries.

On fallacious mission

That’s what occurs when a authorities decides the fallacious mission issues most. We pour urgency into chasing farmworkers from the fields, but can’t muster the need to guard them within the warmth. Till Cal/OSHA will get that very same drive — inspectors recruited in each nook of the state, incentives to usher in a brand new era, hurdles stripped away — the legal guidelines we wrote will stay a promise with no witness.

Some will say it’s an excessive amount of, that the business can’t bear the associated fee. However I’ve walked behind the hearses by way of Valley mud, stood within the gravel plenty of farm city funeral properties, watched wives clutch work shirts as in the event that they nonetheless held his heat, seen kids in Sunday garments staring on the dust. No price range line can measure that loss.

The Valley will preserve feeding the nation. The query is whether or not we are going to preserve feeding the graveyards too.

As soon as, by enacting warmth security guidelines, California declared {that a} life was value greater than a field of produce. If we let that promise wither within the warmth, all we wrote again then was a press launch. Authorities methods can fast-track billion-dollar tasks, however till this way more reasonably priced precedence will get that form of consideration, the principles are simply ink on paper, and the roll name of the lifeless simply grows longer.

Dean Florez is a former California Senate majority chief, representing parts of the Central Valley. ©2025 Los Angeles Occasions. Distributed by Tribune Content material Company.

 

TAGGED:dyingfarmworkersFlorezheatsafetyisntlawSummer
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