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Dolores Huerta (1930 - )
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Dolores Huerta Biography
Dolores C. Huerta is the co-founder and Secretary-Treasurer of the United
Farm Workers of America, AFL-CIO ("UFW"). The mother of 11 children, 14
grandchildren and four great-grandchildren, Dolores has played a major roll in
the American civil rights movement.
Dolores Huerta was born on April 10, 1930 in a mining town in northern New
Mexico, where her father, Juan Fernandez, was a miner, field worker, union
activist and State Assemblyman. Her parents divorced when she was three years
old. Her mother, Alicia Chavez, raised Dolores, along with her two brothers, and
two sisters, in the central San Joaquin Valley farm worker community of
Stockton, California. Her mother was a businesswoman who owned a restaurant and
a 70-room hotel, which often put up farm worker families for free.
Dolores’ mother taught her to be generous and caring for others. Because of
her mother’s community activism, Dolores learned to be outspoken. After high
school, Dolores attended the University of Pacific’s Delta Community College and
received a teaching degree. After teaching grammar school, Dolores left her job
because in her words, "I couldn’t stand seeing kids come to class hungry and
needing shoes. I thought I could do more by organizing farm workers than by
trying to teach their hungry children."
In 1955, she was a founding member of the Stockton chapter of the Community
Service Organization ("CSO"), a grass roots organization started by Fred Ross,
Sr. The CSO battled segregation and police brutality, led voter registration
drives, pushed for improved public services and fought to enact new legislation.
Recognizing the needs of farm workers, while working for the CSO, Dolores
organized and founded the Agricultural Workers Association in 1960. She became a
fearless lobbyist in Sacramento, and in 1961 succeeded in obtaining the
citizenship requirements removed from pension, and public assistance programs.
She also was instrumental in passage of legislation allowing voters the right to
vote in Spanish, and the right of individuals to take the driver’s license
examination in their native language. In 1962 she lobbied in and Washington DC
for an end to the "captive labor" Bracero Program.
It was through her work with the CSO that Dolores met Cesar Chavez. They both
realized the need to organize farm workers. In 1962, after the CSO turned down
Cesar’s request, as their president, to organize farm workers, Cesar and Dolores
resigned from the CSO. Dolores, single with seven children, joining Cesar and
his family in Delano, California. There they formed the National Farm Workers
Association ("NFWA"), the predecessor to the UFW.
In addition to organizing, Dolores continued to lobby.. In 1963 she was
instrumental in securing Aid For Dependent Families ("AFDC"), for the unemployed
and underemployed, and disability insurance for farm workers in the State of
California.
By 1965 Dolores and Cesar had recruited farm workers, and their families,
throughout
the San Joaquin Valley. On September 8th of that year, Filipino
members of the Agricultual Workers Organizing Committee ("AWOC") demanded higher
wages and struck Delano area grape growers. Although Dolores and Cesar had
planned to organize farmworkers for several more years before confronting the
large corporate grape industry, they could not ignore their Filipino brothers;
request. On September 16, 1965 the NFWA voted to join in the strike. Over 5,000
grape workers walked off their jobs in what is now known as the famous "Delano
Grape Strike." The two organizations merged in 1966 to form the United Farm
Workers Organizing Committee ("UFWOC"). The strike would last five years.
In 1966, Dolores negotiated the first UFWOC contract with the Schenley Wine
Company. This was the first time in the history of the United States that a
negotiating committee comprised of farmworkers negotiated a collective
bargaining agreement with an agricultural corporation. The grape strike
continued and Dolores, as the main UFWOC negotiator, not only successfully
negotiated more contracts for farmworkers,
she also set up the hiring halls, the farm worker ranch committees,
administered the contracts and conducted over one hundred grievance procedures
on the workers behalf.
These contracts established the first health and benefit plans for
farmworkers
Dolores spoke out early and often against toxic pesticides that threaten farm
workers, consumers, and the environment. These early UFWOC agreements required
growers to stop using such dangerous pesticides as DDT and Parathyon. Dolores
lobbied in Sacramento and Washington D.C., organized field strikes, directed UFW
boycotts, and led farm workers campaigns for political candidates. As a
legislative advocate, Dolores became one of the UFW’s most visible
spokespersons. Robert F. Kennedy acknowledged her help in winning the 1968
California Democratic Presidential Primary moments before he was shot in Los
Angeles.
Dolores directed the UFW’s national grape boycott taking the plight of the
farmworkers to the consumers. The boycott resulted in the entire California
table grape industry signing a three-year collective bargaining agreement with
the United Farm Workers.
In 1973 the grape contracts expired and the grape growers signed sweetheart
contracts with the Teamsters Union. Dolores organized picket lines and continued
to lobby. In 1974 she was instrumental in securing unemployment benefits for
farmworkers. The UFW continued to organize not only the grape workers but the
workers in the vegetable industry as well until violence erupted and farm
workers were being killed. Once again the UFW turned to the consumer boycott.
Dolores directed the east coast boycott of grapes, lettuce, and Gallo wines. The
boycott resulted in the enactment of the Agricultural Labor Relations Act, the
first law of its kind in the United States, which granted farm workers the right
to collectively organize and bargain for better wages and working conditions. In
1975 Dolores lobbied against federal guest worker programs and spearheaded
legislation granting amnesty for farm workers that had lived, worked, and paid
taxes in the United States for many years but were unable to enjoy the
privileges of citizenship. This resulted in the Immigration Act of 1985.
At 69, Dolores Huerta still works long hours for the union she co-founded and
nurtured. Many days find her in cities across North America promoting "La Causa"
(the farmworkers’ cause) and women’s rights. For more than thirty years Dolores
Huerta remained Cesar Chavez' most loyal and trusted advisor. Together they
founded the Robert F. Kennedy Medical Plan, the Juan De La Cruz Farm Worker
Pension Fund, the the Farm Workers Credit Union, the first medical and pension
plan and credit union for farm workers. They also formed the National Farm
Workers Service Center, Inc., an community based affordable housing and Spanish
language radio communications organization with five Spanish radio stations.
As an advocate for farm worker rights Dolores has been arrested twenty-two
times for non-violent peaceful union activities.
In 1984 the California State Senate bestowed upon her the Outstanding Labor
Leader Award. In 1993 Dolores was inducted into the National Women’s Hall of
Fame. That same year she received the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU)
Roger Baldwin Medal of Liberty Award; and the Eugene V. Debs Foundation
Outstanding American Award, and the Ellis Island Medal of Freedom Award. She is
also the recipient of the Consumers’ Union Trumpeter’s Award. In 1998 she was
one of three Ms. Magazine’s, "Women of the Year", and the Ladies Home
Journal’s, "100 Most Important Women of the 20th Century".
Dolores has received honorary doctorate degrees from:
New College of San Francisco, 1990
San Francisco State University, 1993
S.U.N.I. New Palz University, 1999
Aside from currently serving as the Secretary-Treasure of the United Farm
Workers, she is the Vice-President for the Coalition for Labor Union Women, the
Vice-President of the California AFL-CIO, and is a board member for the Fund For
The Feminist Majority which advocates for the political and equal rights for
women.
OTHER BOARDS:
Democratic Socialist of America
Latinas for Choice
FAIR (Fairness in Media Reporting)
Center for Voting and Democracy
FEDERAL COMMISSIONS:
Minority Apprentice Programs, 1965
Advisory Committee on Immigration, 1980
Commission of Agricultural Workers, 1988 to 1993
STATE COMMISSIONS:
Industrial Welfare Commission, 1960
Board of Directors of the California State Library Services,
1980-1982
--Biography supplied by the United Farm Workers.
Related Resources:
Dolores Huerta
A collection of resources around the Web that are dedicated to Dolores.
Elsewhere on the Web:
United Farm Workers
Official page of the union, with news, white papers and many resources about the farmworker efforts.
UFW History
A history of United Farm Worker and key people in it's efforts.
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