"All he needed was water."
(Crossposted at the Change to Win blog, CtW Connect)
One year ago, farmworker Audon Felix Garcia died of heat stroke after a day working without adequate heat protection in a California field where temperatures reached 108 degrees and beyond. He was 42 years old.
Now, his niece has made it her personal mission to ensure that no more families have to suffer as hers has. Learn how you can help, after the jump.
What was the cause of Audon's death? Heat stroke, brought on from working in the fields without adequate protection during a heat wave which brought temperatures as high as 111 degrees.
Every worker has a right to a safe workplace. That right is just as valid if your workplace is a farm field as it is if it’s a factory or a downtown office building.
Audon Felix Garcia died, needlessly and preventably, simply because a corporation chose not to take that right seriously — and because lawmakers and regulators didn’t force them to do so.
Now, on the one-year anniversary of his death, his niece, Alma Felix, is asking us all to take action to make sure that no more families have to suffer the tragedy that hers has.
Here is her open letter:
Nearly a year ago I remember sitting at my parents’ dining room table. We had just finished having an early dinner when my mom, dad and myself began talking about the Felix brothers and sisters. (How ironic, right?) We were talking about where everyone was now and what had become of the family after the tragic death of my grandfather who had been killed by a hit and run accident. The phone began to ring and none of us had bothered to pick it up since we were so in depth into our conversation.
It’s very rare that I pick up my parents’ home phone...but on this particular day that the phone kept ringing. I picked it up. On the other end was my uncle Raudel, whom we had not spoken to in years.
He asked to speak to my mom and after talking to him for a couple of minutes he broke the news to me about my uncle Audon being in the hospital. A minute later he confessed my uncle had just passed.
How could I tell my mom that one of her baby brother had just passed? How did I become the one to break this news to her? I gave her the news of what seemed to be the most dreadful conversation I’ve ever had with my mother and right then and there IT HIT ME THAT I HAD LOST MY FAVORITE UNCLE... the one who helped raised me while my mother would be at work, the one who would pick me up from school and the one to always give me my "domingo" because I WAS his favorite little niece.
That same day I looked up information about my uncle’s death and noticed that the UFW had immediately began with providing information to the public. I e-mailed the UFW to thank them for what they had begun to do. For that MY FAMILIA and I thank you ALL tremendously for what you have done, not only for my uncle, but for those who have died a preventable death.
Thank you all for reaching out to us in a very personal level and know that this has helped us with dealing with my uncle’s death. I have made it now my personal mission to educate those who I cross paths with because I have learned that by educating/informing one person I have reached five!
The UFW is working on a bill that would give farm workers like my uncle a voice in the fields. It could help stop more preventable heat deaths like my uncle’s so other families don’t have to suffer like ours. The bill SB789, CA Employee Free Choice Act for Farm Workers passed the Assembly appropriations last week. It can soon be voted on by the full Assembly and then go to CA Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger.
The Governor has talked a lot about how he cares about this issue, but his actions have not shown it. Farm workers like my uncle are dying due to heat. Violations of safety laws—like water and shade—in the fields occur way too much. It has to change. I can’t bear the thought of more families dealing with what we had to.
Please help. Send CA Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger an e-mail today and tell him to pass this bill. GRACIAS for all that you’ve done!
Help Anna in her mission: use the UFW’s easy online tool to send an e-mail to Governor Schwarzenegger urging him to support SB789.