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On César Chávez’s 95th Birthday, President Biden Must Deliver for Farmworkers

Florencio Gueta Vargas had always worked the land, beginning on his family ranch in his hometown of Zacatecas, Mexico, and later in the fields of California and Washington State. He was a father of six daughters, and the head of his household. In July of 2021, he’d worked at Virgil Gamache Farms in Yakima County, Washington for more than 18 years—but he’d always hoped someday to return to and die in his homeland.

He never had the chance. On July 29, 2021, at the age of 69, he died. That day, it was 100.8 degrees. The coroner ruled his cause of death was heat stress.

Only a few weeks earlier, the historic Pacific Northwest heat wave also took 38-year-old Sebastián Francisco Perez. Sebastián was moving irrigation lines at Ernst Farms and Nursery in the Willamette Valley, Oregon, when he went missing. When his fellow workers found him, he was unconscious in the fields and could not be revived. The temperature that day was 115 degrees.

Today, March 31, is marked as César Chávez Day. It’s a day to honor the legacy of the labor activist, co-founder of the farmworkers labor movement and what is now the United Farm Workers, who fought for dignity, livable wages and fair working conditions for these too often overlooked workers throughout his life.

On his 95th birthday, we are far from the justice Chávez sought. But there are solutions the Biden administration can implement today to protect those who feed us, and ensure that there are no more stories like Florencio’s or Sebastián’s. Today, we’re asking President Biden to act on the Congressional Progressive Caucus’ recommendation for a national heat standard and call on Congress to pass the Fairness for Farm Workers Act to update the nation’s labor laws to ensure farmworkers receive overtime pay, just like everyone else. We must ensure that the men and women who harvest our food receive the wages they have earned and need.

Florencio and Sebastián are two of at least 384 farmworkers who have died of heat-related causes in the United States in the last decade. And with climate change continuing to escalate, we can expect these stark statistics to get much worse.

But currently, there is no permanent, federal heat standard covering outdoor and indoor workers. According to Bureau of Labor Statistics data, heat has killed 815 U.S. workers have and seriously injured almost 70,000 more between 1992 and 2017. There is no standard reporting mechanism for heat-related death and injury so it is likely this number is higher. Heat-related injuries and death are only going to increase as the climate becomes hotter as a result of climate change. The summer of 2021 marked the hottest summer on record in the contiguous U.S. and the sixth hottest year on record, with Death Valley, California experiencing the hottest day ever recorded at 130 degrees. Scientists fear 2022 will also be among the seven hottest years ever recorded.

Farmworkers are roughly 20 times more likely to die of heat-related causes than workers in all other civilian occupations. In addition to requiring increased heat exposure, farmworkers are paid based on their productivity. As a result, taking a break to get out of the sun or to drink water can result in lower wages for these workers. And the Department of Labor estimates that roughly 50% of farmworkers are undocumented, who are less likely to be able to speak up for their rights in the workplace out of fear of retaliation

Last August, I joined Representative Judy Chu (CA-27) and more than 20 other members of Congress in calling on President Biden to do more to direct the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) to issue a permanent federal heat standard. The standard should be modeled after the provisions in H.R. 2193, the Asunción Valdivia Heat Illness and Fatalities Prevention Act, introduced by Representatives Chu, Bobby Scott (VA-03), and Alma Adams (NC-12) and I in the House and supported by the United Farm Workers. In the Senate, the companion bill, S.1068, has been introduced by Senators Sherrod Brown (D-OH), Catherine Cortez Masto (D-NV), and Alex Padilla (D-CA).

The legislation would require employers to provide the following to employees: adequate hydration, rest breaks, areas for rest breaks that are shaded (in the case of outdoor work) or air-conditioned (in the case of indoor work), medical services and training to address signs and symptoms of heat-related illness, and a plan for acclimatization to high-heat work conditions.

The challenge, of course, remains the Senate. We know that Republicans in the Senate will not take up this bill, and are intent on keeping the filibuster in place to continue blocking legislation that would bring equity and justice. That’s why we need to use every tool available—including executive action. And it’s why when the Congressional Progressive Caucus released its comprehensive executive action agenda for the Biden administration, policies to expand worker power —including a national, permanent heat standard— were included.

Heat threatens workers in a variety of indoor and outdoor workplaces—but, it disproportionately impacts farmworkers, who are also disproportionately Latino. Since 2010, Latinos have accounted for a third of heat-related fatalities despite making up only 17% of the U.S. workforce. The President has declared his commitment to racial justice, and a national heat standard would be a way for him to match that with action.

President Biden has announced a series of actions to address heat-related death and injury that lay the groundwork for a strong OSHA heat standard. The Department of Labor launched an initiative to address heat exposure for indoor and outdoor workers, including farmworkers. The Administration increased the number of cooling centers in communities. And, the Biden Administration created an Interagency Working Group on Extreme Heat to coordinate a holistic response.

These are great first steps, but they don’t go far enough. That is why the Congressional Progressive Caucus included in its executive action agenda a call for the Biden Administration to direct OSHA to issue a permanent heat standard to ensure farmworkers are protected. With the peak of summer only months away, time is of the essence. We need action urgently before the temperature becomes warmer and more farmworkers, warehouse workers, construction workers, and workers in other heat-exposed industries across our nation are unfairly left to face excruciating and hazardous work conditions with little protection.

I will continue to advocate for the passage of legislation that would give farmworkers additional legal protections, better working conditions and a pathway to citizenship. On César Chávez’s 95th birthday, President Biden has a chance to be the leader that delivers fair wages, compensation, and justice for farmworkers by updating our labor laws and declaring a national, permanent heat standard.

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Source: Latino Rebels – March 31, 2022
This is an excerpt. The full article can be found by clicking here.

New law gives veterans, Gold Star Families free lifetime access to America’s national parks

A new law is giving veterans and Gold Star Families free lifetime access to national parks and federal recreational lands. The Alexander Lofgren Veterans in Parks (VIP) Act was rolled into the National Defense Authorization Act, which was signed into law over the holidays.

Lofgren, a congressional aide for Rep. Raúl Grijalva, D-Ariz, and former volunteer for Sinema, died at Death Valley National Park last April.

Before joining Grijalva’s office as a Wounded War Fellow in 2019, he served four years in the Army as a combat engineer and deployed to Afghanistan in 2011, according to the announcement of his hiring.

Grijalva said Lofgren loved the outdoors and used it as therapy.

“Alex working with us here saw that nature, our open spaces, our state and federal park lands and wilderness areas and public places were therapeutic, that they were important in the reintegrations of veterans back into our civilian life here after they completed their service to the nation, and he was a huge proponent of that,” Grijalva told The Arizona Republic, part of the USA TODAY Network.

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Source: USA Today – Jan 18, 2022
This is an excerpt. The full article can be found by clicking here.

Rep. Raúl Grijalva wants end to privately owned prisons, immigrant detention centers

A Latino Democratic lawmaker from Arizona has drafted legislation that would end federal contracts with private companies and remove federal prisoners and immigrant detainees from the facilities within two years.

Rep. Raúl Grijalva of Arizona plans to reintroduce the Justice is Not For Sale Act on Thursday. It would bar the Justice Department from contracting with private entities to provide or operate prisons and immigration detention facilities, as well as move its prisoners and detainees out of those facilities.

“For too long, private prisons and detention centers have benefited from lucrative government contracts and taxpayer dollars to profit off the pain and suffering of others,” Grijalva said in a statement to NBC News.

Grijalva’s legislation would go further than President Joe Biden’s Jan. 26 executive order, which phases out private prison contracts and instructs the Justice Department to decline to renew private prison contracts.

Biden’s order does not address privately operated immigration detention centers as Grijalva’s bill does.

While only about 8 percent of imprisoned people were held in private prisons, 81 percent of people in immigration custody were held in privately run or -operated detention centers, according to a report last year by the American Civil Liberties Union.

The bill also seeks to end contracts with private companies for other criminal justice entities, such as halfway houses, re-entry programs and community treatment centers, among others. Grijalva’s office said private companies have extended into those areas as the movement against the private prison industry has grown.

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Source: NBC News – Feb 11, 2021
This is an excerpt. The full article can be found by clicking here.

Grijalva bill would provide COVID-19 relief to small businesses near the border

Small businesses within 25 miles of the U.S.-Mexico border could get up to $500,000 in COVID-19 relief under a bill introduced Thursday by Rep. Raúl Grijalva.

If the Border Business COVID-19 Rescue Act becomes law, small businesses would be eligible for $10,000 grants or up to $500,000 in loans.

The money would be dispersed through the Small Business Administration’s Emergency Injury Disaster Loan Program.

Grijalva, D-Ariz., decided to focus on businesses near the border after looking at the distribution of the Paycheck Protection Program funds.

“It’s clear that many minority-owned businesses were some of the last to get relief — if at all,” Grijalva told The Arizona Republic in an emailed statement. “Simultaneously, much of the Paycheck Protection Program funds went to larger businesses.”

Grijalva, who represents a border congressional district, said he crafted the legislation with his constituents in mind.

“My office has heard of the devastating consequences of the border closures on those businesses in the immediate vicinity of the border such as restaurants and retail stores,” he said.

The border with Mexico has been closed for many months, causing many small businesses along the border to reel from the loss of customers.

“Many of the Mexican citizens used to come across the border to do a lot of essential shopping,” Ruben Walshe said.

Walshe owns two restaurants, La Bodega and La Concha, in San Luis.

“I want to say 80% of the people across the border they come and do some sort of shopping over here on the U.S. side,” he said.

His first restaurant, La Bodega, usually was filled with the sounds of karaoke on Thursday nights, prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. The professional musicians would take over the rustic restaurant and bar on Friday nights.

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Source: Arizona Republic – Jan 22, 2021
This is an excerpt. The full article can be found by clicking here.

Democrat Up-Ends What Used To Be A Republican Agenda in House Natural Resources Committee

A new leader is settling in at the U.S. House Natural Resources Committee: U.S. Rep. Raul Grijalva.

“I’m from the West,” said the Arizona Democrat. “I grew up — born-and-raised in Arizona, grew up on a ranch. My daddy was a cowboy and he worked construction. So that runs through me.”

Grijalva says his Natural Resources Committee will operate differently than the committee did during the past four years, when U.S. Rep. Rob Bishop was chairman. Bishop, a Utah Republican, supported the Trump administration’s “energy dominance” agenda and the downsizing of two national monuments in southern Utah’s redrock country, Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante.

By contrast Grijalva’s already planning to investigate those monument decisions. And the committee has already fielded a bill to restore the original boundaries of the Bears Ears. Next week the committee’s first hearing is expected to focus on climate change.

KUER’s Judy Fahys talked with the new Natural Resources chairman in his Capitol Hill office, where Grijalva said Congress needs to hear from monument supporters who say they were snubbed by former Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, who advised President Donald Trump to shrink the Utah monuments.

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Source: KUER 90.1 NPR Utah – Feb 1, 2019
This is an excerpt. The full article can be found by clicking here.

Progressive House Dems Pushing for Release of Trump’s Tax Returns

House Democrats who have been itching to get their hands on President Donald Trump’s tax returns are growing impatient with leadership for not moving fast enough to access and release the documents.

Digging into Trump’s personal finances was supposed to be one of the top priorities under the House Democratic majority. But to the frustration of many rank-and-file members, newly minted Ways and Means Chairman Richard Neal (D-Mass.) has taken a go-slow approach, saying he wants to build a public case for the idea first.

“People are grumbling, ‘Why can’t we have this? Why can’t we at least make the effort to get this?'” said Rep. Raúl Grijalva (D-Ariz.), former co-chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus on Monday. “I hope we do go forward. … This is something we want.”

The CPC is in the process of drafting a letter that will urge Neal to obtain both Trump’s personal and business tax filings, while also making clear that they think the effort should happen as quickly as possible, according to sources. Trump is the first president in decades to refuse to release his tax returns.

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Source: Politico – Jan 28, 2019
This is an excerpt. The full article can be found by clicking here.

The Trump Administration Can’t Ignore Raúl Grijalva Anymore

On January 7, Rep. Raúl Grijalva (D-Arizona), the new chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee, sent a pointed letter to David Bernhardt, the acting secretary of the Department of the Interior. Grijalva wanted to know why the department’s Bureau of Land Management (BLM) was moving ahead with public meetings on plans for oil and gas leasing in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge despite a partial government shutdown that had furloughed thousands of Interior employees and halted other operations. The meetings should be delayed, he wrote; holding them during a shutdown “gives the strong impression that BLM is simply trying to check the boxes and end the comment periods as soon as possible.”

Two days later, BLM announced it would postpone the meetings. Huh. This was something new.

It’s not clear if Grijalva’s note drove BLM’s decision, but getting his way was a welcome change for the nine-term congressman from Arizona. Grijalva says he sent Interior dozens of unanswered letters seeking explanations for the department’s policies under Ryan Zinke, the former secretary who became the target of multiple ethics probes and resigned in December.

Grijalva, the committee’s ranking Democrat since 2014, has watched in frustration as the Trump administration barrels ahead toward its stated goal of energy dominance. In December, for example, BLM issued plans that would lift restrictions on oil and gas development in some nine million acres of Greater Sage-Grouse habitat on federal lands that had been protected under a 2015 compromise to keep the birds from being listed under the Endangered Species Act. Interior is also moving quickly to facilitate drilling in the Arctic Refuge and expand energy development in the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska, along with taking a decidedly industry-friendly approach to enforcing the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA).

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Source: Audubon – Jan 16, 2019
This is an excerpt. The full article can be found by clicking here.

Raúl Grijalva Says Border Wall Crisis “Manufactured by the Trump Administration”

Rep. Raúl Grijalva, D-Arizona, said Tuesday on CBSN that the border crisis which President Trump will address in his speech this evening was not a true emergency. Grijalva, who represents the largest stretch of the U.S.-Mexico border in Arizona, called it a “manufactured crisis.”

“This is a manufactured crisis, and a crisis that is manufactured by the Trump administration,” Grijalva said, arguing that Mr. Trump’s speech Tuesday night was going to be about an issue which the president helped to create. “So now we find him giving a speech today that is self-fulfilling.”

Grijalva said that the biggest crises at the border was a crisis of confidence, and for the economy and well being of the border region. However, he agreed that border security was a priority.

“Everybody agrees security is critical,” Grijalva said. He also said that he wanted Congress to approve a comprehensive approach to border security, focusing specifically on improving ports of entry, which Mr. Trump has also said he supports.

“This wall, this fantasy, this political promise that was inane when he made it and it continues to be inane, is not the solution,” Grijalva said.

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Source: CBS News – Jan 8, 2019
This is an excerpt. The full article can be found by clicking here.

Grijalva’s Moment Arrives as He Takes Natural Resources Gavel

As climate change and immigration lead priorities for the new House Democratic majority, Rep. Raúl M. Grijalva may just be the man for the moment.

The question however is: Did Grijalva find this moment or did the moment finally find him?

“It took time,” the Arizona Democrat said. “I think people have come to the conclusion that one has to look beyond the obvious and understand that [on] environmental issues, particular to climate change, we’re all in the same boat.”

The 70-year-old son of a Mexican immigrant, Grijalva is the new chairman of the House Natural Resources Committee. With it comes a platform to focus public attention, and legislation, on public lands and environmental issues with a progressive bent and a consideration of racial justice.

His committee’s first major hearing will be on the effect of climate change on public lands, Grijalva said. He also expects to hold hearings on the environmental complications of President Donald Trump’s proposed border wall and has staked out a big policy fight by vowing to try to reauthorize the nation’s fishery laws, where climate change impacts will be an issue.

Republicans on the often-contentious committee likely will oppose many of Grijalva’s initiatives, and a Republican Senate majority, not to mention Trump, will stand in the way.

But environmental groups are excited about Grijalva.

“Congressman Grijalva is without a doubt one of conservation’s biggest champions on Capitol Hill,” said Alex Taurel, conservation program director for the League of Conservation Voters.

“He’s an authentically progressive American who does not in any way imbibe Beltway values,” Maryland Democratic Rep. Jamie Raskin said. “He doesn’t speak bureaucratese.”

Rep. Jared Huffman, the California Democrat likely to chair the committee’s Water, Power and Oceans Subcommittee, who is also working on the fishery legislation, said he finds Grijalva “almost like a poet philosopher in his wisdom.”

Grijalva, who co-chaired the Congressional Progressive Caucus for 10 years, sits squarely to the left politically of the chairmen of the two other House committees with jurisdiction over climate issues: Reps. Frank Pallone Jr. of New Jersey at House Energy and Commerce, and Peter A. DeFazio of Oregon at Transportation and Infrastructure.

His progressive allies describe him as a “true believer” on environmental issues who can be trusted to advance bold legislation now that the Democrats’ planned select committee on climate change will have no legislative authority.

“I trust Grijalva by a mile over the others,” California Democrat Ro Khanna said. “By far. It’s not even close.”

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Source: Roll Call – Jan 7, 2019
This is an excerpt. The full article can be found by clicking here.

Grijalva Could Bring Dramatic Shift as Head of Resources Committee

U.S. Rep. Raúl Grijalva, D-Tucson, may take over the House Natural Resources Committee in a couple of weeks, and his potential presence as chairman is already being felt.

Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, long a target of Grijalva’s, recently said he will resign before Democrats take control of the House — when Grijalva will likely take control of the committee overseeing Interior.

It was not the only factor — Zinke had reportedly fallen out of favor with the White House — but the abrupt resignation came just two weeks after Zinke’s blistering Twitter response to a Grijalva editorial that called on the secretary to resign.

Grijalva said in a statement afterward that the resignation was “no kind of victory,” but that he hoped it would bring a change in direction for Interior. And he promised that Zinke’s resignation would not mean the end of aggressive oversight of the department by a Democrat-led committee.

“He’s gone, but his decisions and how he reached those decisions, I still believe are open for public review and public scrutiny,” Grijalva said in an interview on CNN.

“Those decisions were made, we’re going to be seeking some balance, bringing conservation and science back into the equation … and that’s going to require, on occasion, that we dig a lot deeper than just the surface material that we get from Interior,” he said.

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Source: Cronkite News – Dec 24, 2018
This is an excerpt. The full article can be found by clicking here.