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Dolores Huerta at seventy-five: still empowering communities; Interview with cofounder of United Farm Workers of America Dolores Huerta.(Interview)
Publication: Harvard Journal of Hispanic Policy Publication Date: 01-JAN-05 Author: Aledo, Milagros ; Alvarado, Maria C. |
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COPYRIGHT 2005 President and Fellows of Harvard College, through the John F. Kennedy School of Government
Dolores Huerta is currently President of the Dolores Huerta Foundation for Community Organizing. She cofounded the United Farm Workers of America (UFW) with Cesar E. Chavez and holds the emeritus positions of the UFW as secretary-treasurer and first vice president. She is also a member of the Fund for the Feminist Majority.
As the legislative advocate for the Community Service Organization and the United Farm Workers Union, she was instrumental in helping pass legislation related to disability insurance for farm workers, Spanish-language voting ballots, eligibility for public assistance for resident immigrants, ending the Bracero Program and the legalization of one million farm workers under the Immigration Reform Act of 1984-1985. As the main negotiator for the United Farm Workers, she obtained many "firsts" that had been denied to farm workers: toilets in the fields along with soap, paper towels and cold drinking water with individual paper cups; the Robert F. Kennedy medical plan that covered farm worker families; the Juan de la Cruz pension fund; and rest periods, paid vacations, holidays and protections from pesticides in union contracts.
Together with Cesar E. Chavez, she established the National Farm Workers Service Center, which builds low-income housing throughout the United States, and Radio Campesina, a radio network connecting farmers in California, Washington and Arizona.
There are four elementary schools in California, one in Fort Worth, TX, and a high school in Pueblo, CO, named after Dolores Huerta. She has received numerous awards including the Eleanor Roosevelt Humans Rights Award from President Clinton in 1998, Ms. Magazine's one of the three most important women of 1997, Ladies Home Journal's 100 most important woman of the twentieth century, the Puffin Foundation's award for Creative Citizenship Labor Leader Award in 1984, Kern County's Woman of the Year by California State legislature and the Ohtli award from the Mexican government.
More recently, she held a six-month position as a University of California Regent and is currently a professor at the University of Southern California on community organizing where she lectures before students and community groups throughout the country and abroad.
Milagros "Mimi" Aledo and Maria C. Alvarado interviewed Dolores Huerta on 1 February 2006. Aledo, a native of Florida and a senior editor of the HJHP, will receive a master...
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