UFW & IBT, 1966-1977OVERVIEW: California Farmworkers
Agricultural land use
in southern CA The struggle of the United Farm Workers (UFW), and their dynamic leader Cesar Chavez, to unionize field laborers- the lowest rung in California's profitable agricultural industry- was deeply marked by a decade of conflict with the International Brotherhood of Teamsters (IBT).
After the initial successes of the UFW's predecessor unions, the IBT- which had long represented workers handling agricultural products after harvesting, in hauling, packing, and canning/processing- made a series of agreements with agri-business growers to break or prevent strikes and boycotts, and bring farmworkers under Teamster contract.
Jobs under UFW contract
1962-1993 The UFW Organizing Committee was formed in 1967 to meet the Teamster challenge, and in three distinct engagements- the last of which extended for 4 years- the United Farm Workers defeated the Teamsters by using worker support to mobilize a variety of different constituencies. Following each victory, the UFW forced the Teamsters to withdraw from fieldworker contracts and sign pacts re-affirming the jurisdictional division of the industry.
Complicating the rivalry, field hands were specially excluded from the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA)- although the NLRA
did cover the packing shed, truck, and processing workers traditionally represented by the Teamsters. This meant that field hands (usually just called “farmworkers”) were without normal legal means to choose which union would represent them. The resolution of the UFW-Teamster conflict would ultimately hinge on the 1975 passage of a new law in California– the Agricultural Labor Relations Act (ALRA)- which established norms for union elections to determine representation.