
Cityscapes
Latin America and BeyondWinter 2003
The Price of Urbanization
Alvaro Bedoya
When I
first met Antidio Román, a 26-year-old Peruvian shepherd, he had
been living in a tent for more than five months. Though he was only three
miles from the nearest village, Antidio hadn?t had a single day
off from work in the past two years. Instead of providing him a bathroom,
his boss, a prominent local landowner, had given him a shovel with which
to bury his excrement. The day I found him, Antidio was eating the remains
of an old, sick ewe that he had slaughtered six days ago. Having no means
to refrigerate the meat, Antidio kept it in a red burlap sack under his
cot. ?This way the dogs can?t get to it,? Antidio explained.
Antidio?s story sounds like the sad but familiar experience of an
abused worker in the Third World. Unfortunately, I did not find Antidio
in the pastures of Cusco, or anywhere near the Andes; Antidio Román
worked for Derek Gibbins, a wealthy Nevada rancher, and his tent was a
stone?s throw away from Interstate 395?three miles north of
the bustling, all-American town of Bridgeport, California.
More than 3,000 Peruvian shepherds are currently employed by American
ranchers. Spread throughout California, Colorado, Nevada, Wyoming, and
a handful of other western states, these workers are brought in on three-year
contracts through the U. S. Department of Labor?s ?H-2A?
agricultural guestworker program. While the wages these individuals earn
provide precious income to their home communities in JunÃn, Pasco,
and Lima, the conditions they are submitted to?in terms of housing,
health services, and employer abuse?put a high price on their families?
prosperity.
Sheepherders? living conditions have barely advanced since the 18th
century. Most sheepherders are housed year-round in dilapidated huts,
cramped old trailers or even tents. In a recent study of herders in central
California, not a single worker surveyed had access to a phone, less than
5% were supplied with a toilet, and even fewer had access to running water.
Salaries ranged from $650 to $800 a month, or, in other words, approximately
$1 an hour, given that workers are required to be on site twenty-four
hours a day, seven days a week. This backbreaking labor literally never
ends: of the 41 workers in the survey, 90% were not given a single day
off in the entire previous working year.
Ranchers justify low wages by claiming that workers receive free room
and board. ?Room? can consist of nothing more than a cloth
tent and ?board? almost unanimously consists of old lamb meat
and canned vegetables. Many sheepherders are not provided a means to preserve
their meat; hence, herders like Antidio Román are forced to finish
their seven-day allotment of meat in three or four days, before the flesh
spoils. ?It?s particularly hard in the summer? one herder
commented, ?Nothing keeps in the humidity.?
Neither law enforcement authorities nor the Department of Labor has made
any systematic effort to help; the Western Range Association (WRA), the
sheep industry?s powerful lobbying group, has spent millions of
dollars to ensure that the law is on the ranchers? side. Its efforts
have been successful: current labor regulations are riddled with special
exceptions that effectively eliminate herders? legal protections
and privileges. It is legal to house a herder in a tent. It is legal to
give him a shovel instead of a bathroom. It is legal to pay him two dollars
an hour and force him to work continuously, 24 hours a day, seven days
a week.
This summer, armed with a notebook, a camera and an absurdly powerful
pickup truck, I set out to study the working conditions of these Peruvian
pastoralists. For two whirlwind months, I logged thousands of miles on
dirt roads and mountain paths, looking for the furry flock or telltale
plume of dust that always trails a herder. In a full day of driving, I
was lucky to encounter two or three workers; at this rate, I located and
interviewed 35 sheepherders?the second largest survey of its kind.
This on-site research was complemented by interviews with industry representatives,
labor advocates and government officials.
Conditions were substandard at best and abysmal at worst. Not a single
sheepherder interviewed had access to a bathroom; every one?regardless
of the accessibility of his work site to roads?was simply given
a shovel with which to bury his excrement. Many workers lacked access
to potable water. While eight herders were provided with airtight tanks
containing presumably potable water, many more drank out of reusable plastic
containers or rusting metal barrels, and a sizable minority regularly
drank from streams, lakes, or the nearest natural water source.
Almost all lacked access to regular or even emergency medical care, and
there are reliable reports of deaths due to minor ailments or accidents?such
as snakebites, choking, or exposure to sub-freezing temperatures?that
a prompt visit to the emergency room could resolved. Most ranchers visit
their herders once every two to three days; one herder almost cried when
he met me, explaining that he hadn?t seen anyone other than his
employer for over four months. Incidents that merely injure or inconvenience
average Americans can easily kill a herder.
Sheepherders are kept from complaining about their problems through a
complex combination of neglect, coercion, and physical abuse. Under the
terms of the H-2A contract, sheepherders are only authorized to work for
the rancher that sponsored their entry; employers often use their unique
relationship with the Immigration and Naturalization Service to threaten
workers who may want to leave their jobs. One former worker spoke of a
particularly tragic episode: his employer ignored his repeated requests
to see a doctor and abandoned him at a local hotel once he could no longer
work; two days later, due to the employer?s information, the INS
arrested the herder for being ?out of status.?
Given the lack of public awareness and the sheer power of the interest
groups involved, it is unlikely that the shepherds will soon escape their
suffering. It is my hope that my research, once completed, will begin
to bridge this knowledge gap, and bring us closer to the day when workers
like Antidio get the pay, housing and employer treatment that they deserve.
Alvaro Bedoya ?03 first became interested in Peruvian shepherds while working with migrant farmworkers in rural Florida and central Mexico. His current research was funded by the Harvard University Committee on Human Rights Studies and a Patricia King Fellowship from Harvard Phi Beta Kappa; his findings will be presented as a senior honors thesis this spring. Bedoya plans on entering law school next fall, and hopes to pursue a career in international labor law.