Amended in Senate April 30, 2014

Amended in Assembly March 28, 2014

California Legislature—2013–14 Regular Session

Assembly Concurrent ResolutionNo. 114


Introduced by Assembly Members Campos and Alejo

(Coauthors: Assembly Members Achadjian, Allen, Ammiano, Atkins, Bloom, Bocanegra, Bonilla, Bonta, Bradford, Brown, Buchanan, Ian Calderon, Chau, Chávez, Chesbro, Cooley, Dababneh, Daly, Dickinson, Eggman, Fong, Fox, Frazier, Gatto, Gomez, Gonzalez, Gordon, Gorell, Gray, Grove, Hall, Holden, Levine, Linder, Lowenthal, Maienschein, Melendez, Mullin, Muratsuchi, Nazarian, Nestande, Olsen, Pan, Perea, John A. Pérez, V. Manuel Pérez, Quirk, Quirk-Silva, Rendon, Ridley-Thomas, Rodriguez, Salas, Skinner, Stone, Ting, Wagner, Waldron, Weber, Wieckowski, Wilk, and Williams)

February 25, 2014


Assembly Concurrent Resolution No. 114—Relative to César Chávez.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

ACR 114, as amended, Campos. César Chávez.

This measure would call upon all Californians to observe César Chávez’s birthday, March 31, as a day of public service, to recognize the hard work and self-sacrifice that farmworkers go through to feed all the families in our state, and to learn from César Chávez’s life and his mission of nonviolence, social justice, and selfless service to others.

Fiscal committee: no.

P2    1WHEREAS, César Estrada Chávez is one of the most significant
2civil rights leaders in the history of our nation. César Chávez
3recognized that the dignity of a society can be measured by the
4dignity by which the people who help feed our nation are treated;
5and

6WHEREAS, César Chávez experienced the hardships and
7injustices of farmworker life firsthand. He was born on March 31,
81927, inbegin delete the North Gila River Valley inend deletebegin insert Yuma,end insert Arizona, on the
9small family farm his grandfather homesteaded. César Chávez’s
10father lost the farm during the Great Depression, forcing the family
11to join some 30,000 farmworkers who followed the crops
12throughout California and lived in tents and makeshift housing
13that often lacked a bathroom, electricity, or running water; and

14WHEREAS, César Chávez understood the value of education
15as a path to a better life because he left school after completing
16the 8th grade to work full time, helping to support his family in
17the fields. Later in life, César Chávez became self-educated through
18his passion for reading; and

19WHEREAS, Although later a pacifist, in 1946, César Chávez
20enrolled and served his country in the United States Navy. He was
21honorably discharged whereupon he married Helen Fabela and
22eventually settled in the East San Jose barrio nicknamed “Sal Si
23Puedes” (“Get Out if You Can”) to raise a family that eventually
24numbered eight children; and

25WHEREAS, In San Jose, César Chávez was introduced to the
26social teachings of the Catholic Church and trained in peaceful
27community organizing strategies at McDonnell Hall, historically
28known as Guadalupe Mission Chapel. César Chávez and Fred
29Ross, an organizer for the Community Service Organization (CSO),
30established CSO chapters across California and Arizona during
31the 1950s, helping Latinos register to vote, pushing for basic public
32services and infrastructure in the barrios, peacefully battling police
33brutality and racial discrimination, and creating the most effective
34Latino civil rights group of its era; and

35WHEREAS, In 1962, after failing to convince the CSO to let
36him organize farmworkers, César Chávez resigned from the only
37decent paying job he ever held and moved his wife and eight
38children to Delano, California. There, with $1,200 in life savings
39that was soon gone, César Chávez, his family, and close friends
P3    1began building the National Farm Workers Association, which
2later became the United Farm Workers of America (UFW); and

3WHEREAS, In 1965, in a partnership with a union of Filipino
4American farmworkers, César Chávez organized a major strike
5against grape growers in California. The following year, in 1966,
6César Chávez led an unprecedented 340-mile march, from Delano
7to Sacramento, that placed the farmworkers’ plight before the
8conscience of the American people. Supporters carried slogans
9with the words “HUELGA” (strike) and “VIVA LA CAUSA”
10(long live our cause), advocating for improved compensation and
11labor conditions. Later efforts, including a 25-day fast by César
12Chávez, resulted in the enactment of California’s historic
13Agricultural Labor Relations Act of 1975, the first and still the
14only law in the nation to “encourage and protect” the right of
15farmworkers to organize and bargain with their employers; and

16WHEREAS, Through countless strikes, boycotts, marches, and
17fasts that produced many victories and some defeats, César Chávez,
18who even considered vegetarianism an integral part of living
19nonviolently, never stopped his peaceful battles on behalf of the
20farmworkers with whom he shared his life. His dedication to his
21work earned him the respect of some of our greatest political and
22civil rights leaders, including Robert Kennedy, Martin Luther King
23Jr., and Jesse Jackson. César Chávez’s motto in life, “Sí Se Puede!”
24or “Yes We Can!” has served as an inspiration not only for Latinos,
25but for working Americans of all walks for life; and

26WHEREAS, In 1993, César Chávez died peacefully in his sleep
27in San Luis, Arizona. During funeral services in Delano, 40,000
28people marched in procession behind his plain pine casket. They
29came to affirm César Chávez’s words from his landmark 1984
30address to the Commonwealth Club in San Francisco: “Once social
31change begins, it cannot be reversed. You cannot uneducate the
32person who has learned to read. You cannot humiliate the person
33who feels pride. You cannot oppress the people who are not afraid
34anymore”; and

35WHEREAS, Although César Chávez was uncomfortable with
36personal recognition in life, since his passing Chávez has been
37honored in hundreds of communities. César Chávez was awarded
38“El Aguila Azteca” (the Aztec Eagle), Mexico’s highest award
39presented to people of Mexican heritage. In 1994, President Bill
40Clinton posthumously presented César Chávez with America’s
P4    1highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom. In 2006,
2California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger inducted César
3Chávez into the first class of the California Hall of Fame. In 2011,
4the United States Navy announced naming the latest Lewis and
5Clark-class cargo ship being built in San Diego the USNS César
6Chávez; and

7WHEREAS, In 2012, in recognition of the impact of César
8Chávez to our nation’s and state’s history, President Barack Obama
9established the César E. Chávez National Monument at Nuestra
10Senora Reina de la Paz in Keene, California and concurrently
11designated La Paz as a National Historical Landmark. In 2013, La
12Paz, which is César Chávez’s final resting ground, McDonnell
13Hall, located in San Jose, California, the former site of the UFW
14headquarters, known as the Forty Acres, the Filipino Community
15Hall in Delano, California, and the 1966 march route from Delano
16to Sacramento were four of five sites, out of 100, found to be
17nationally significant for a National Historic Park honoring César
18Chávez. In 2013, McDonnell Hall (formerly Guadalupe Mission
19Chapel) was designated a State Historical Landmark for its close
20association with the life and work of César Chávez; and

21WHEREAS, Since César Chávez’s passing, the UFW has
22continued his work through organizing farmworkers and campaigns
23to enact laws and regulations to bring dignity and protections to
24farmworkers. Meanwhile, the César Chávez Foundation continues
25improving the lives of hundreds of thousands of farmworkers and
26other low-wage working families through 30 high-quality
27affordable housing communities it has built or renovated and
28manages in four states, a network of nine popular educational
29Spanish-language radio stations in three states, after-school tutoring
30for disadvantaged students in two states, and the National Chávez
31Center, including a visitor center, memorial gardens, and
32educational center on 187 acres in the Tehachapi Mountains where
33César Chávez lived and worked, and is buried; and

34WHEREAS, César Chávez successfully increased public
35awareness of farmworker working conditions. To many
36Californians the farmworkers’ struggles are an issue from the past,
37a belief reflected by the fact that farmworker suffering typically
38takes place in remote areas far from cities, thereby rendering
39farmworkers invisible to our society. The fruits and vegetables
40that we enjoy in our daily lives are produced by farmworkers who
P5    1often endure long hours of backbreaking work and still face
2challenges such as inadequate enforcement of pesticide, safety,
3and labor protection laws in the fields; and

4WHEREAS, Farmworkers still dream of providing a better life
5for their children, but the reality of having to move from crop to
6crop makes this dream hard to achieve. Economic forces and the
7rising cost of living have pushed farmworkers further into poverty;
8and

9WHEREAS, In 2000, the Legislature passed and Governor Gray
10Davis signed into law Senate Bill 984 (Chapter 213 of the Statutes
11of 2000), to create the first annual state holiday in the country on
12César Chávez’s birthday, March 31, in recognition of César Chávez
13as the most important Latino leader in the United States during
14the 20th century. Under that law, the State Board of Education
15also created a statewide curriculum on César Chávez and
16encourages schools across the state to engage teachers and students
17in service learning projects as a way of honoring the legendary
18farm labor and civil rights leader; now, therefore, be it

19Resolved by the Assembly of the State of California, the Senate
20thereof concurring,
That the Legislature calls upon all Californians
21to observe César Chávez’s birthday, March 31, as a day of public
22service; and be it further

23Resolved, That the Legislature calls upon all Californians to
24recognize the hard work and self-sacrifice that farmworkers go
25through to feed all the families in our state; and be it further

26Resolved, That the Legislature calls upon all Californians to
27learn from César Chávez’s life and his mission of nonviolence,
28social justice, and selfless service to others; and be it further

29Resolved, That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly transmit copies
30of this resolution to the Chávez family, particularly César Chávez’s
31widow, Helen Chávez, the United Farm Workers of America, the
32César Chávez Foundation, and the author for appropriate
33distribution.



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