Message from New York Farm Bureau
New York Farm Bureau learned today that Judge Richard McNally has
granted farm bureau's request to dismiss the New York Civil
Liberties Union’s lawsuit that sought to create collective
bargaining rights for farmworkers.
The court’s decision is a major
victory for New York’s family farms, said Farm Bureau President David Fisher.
"New York Farm Bureau argued in
State Supreme Court in Albany, last July that our system of
government requires that the legislature change state law, not the
courts.
The court agreed," Fisher said.
In his decision, Judge McNally wrote, “…the plaintiffs and the
State have not demonstrated that the Labor Law statues are racially
discriminatory or that farm workers are a suspect class entitled to
constitutional protections. Any changes to the SERA (State Employee
Relations Act) should emanate with the New York State Legislature as
‘the legislative power of this state shall be vested in the senate and
the assembly.’”
The court previously granted New York Farm Bureau intervenor status
in the lawsuit. "Our organization petitioned the court in 2016 to become a
defendant only after the Governor and Attorney General refused to
uphold and defend the State Labor Relations Act from the lawsuit filed
by the New York Civil Liberties Union," Fisher said.
New York Farm Bureau has long opposed farmworker collective
bargaining for one simple reason. Farms do not have a standard
eight-hour workday.
Last year’s growing season demonstrated that. Weeks
of heavy rains followed by shorter bouts of sunshine forced farmers and
their employees to squeeze in weeks of work into just a few dry days.
Work never stops inside the barn. For instance, cows need to be fed and
milked multiple times every day, Fisher said.
"A farmworker strike or confining work
agreements could jeopardize a crop or the health of an animal. Everyone
who works in farming understands this, including farmworkers," Fisher said.
"Farmers
have great respect for the people who they employ, and this court
victory does not diminish that. They value their employees’ commitment,
work ethic, and the partnership it takes to get the job done on the
farm.
"New York Farm Bureau has represented farmers for more than a century,
and today’s ruling will go down as another defining moment in Farm
Bureau’s long history.
New York Farm Bureau will always stand up for our
members, either in court or at the Capitol, to ensure that their rights
are protected and their voices are heard,” said Fisher.
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