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  • The Sacramento Bee

    Gov. Newsom vetoes bill to help farmworkers who are working in extreme heat. Here’s why

    By Mathew Miranda,

    14 hours ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=151aLV_0vnO4LoN00

    Gov. Gavin Newsom on Saturday vetoed a bill that proposed strengthening protections for California farmworkers working in extreme heat.

    Senate Bill 1299 , authored by Sen. Dave Cortese, D-San Jose, would have made worker compensation claims presumed work-related when agricultural employers are not complying with heat safety standards. The bill sought to increase employer accountability by adding financial consequences for non-compliance.

    But Newsom called the bill’s intentions “not an effective way to accomplish” the goal of protecting California’s farmworkers from the risk of heat-related illness. Under the bill, the Workers’ Compensation Appeals Board would have determined if Cal-OSHA heat illness standards were violated.

    “Conditioning a workers’ compensation presumption on compliance with standards set and enforced by another regulatory division is not an effective way to improve working conditions,” Newsom said in his veto statement .

    Heat standard compliance persists despite a 2005 law requiring agricultural employers provide shade, hydration access, rest breaks and heat illness prevention training. Cal-OSHA cited noncompliance in 47% of more than 4,000 heat-related inspections in 2019, according to a Legislative analysis.

    The United Farm Workers union backed the bill, highlighting the urgency brought by rising temperatures. Agricultural workers are 35 times more likely to die from heat-related stress than workers in other industries, according to the National Institutes of Health.

    SB 1299 was particularly timely in the capital region after six Yolo County farmworkers claimed they were fired in retaliation in June .

    The workers allegedly received permission from their supervisor to go home early during a day of triple-digit heat. When they returned the following day, members of the group were relieved of their jobs and received their final paychecks. Both Cal-OSHA and the California Labor Commissioner’s Office are investigating the incident.

    Approved worker compensation claims cover medical care, lost wages and death benefits for families.

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    Comments / 50
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    Mikey Valdez
    3h ago
    doesn't this piece of shit own vineyards? He doesn't want his worker's to sue him for not providing protection if he passed it.
    Linda Stuart
    7h ago
    listen we have some serious shit going he needs to give back the money for the homeless an have this rent control fixed in every city
    View all comments
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