Amended in Assembly June 17, 2014

California Legislature—2013–14 Regular Session

Assembly Concurrent ResolutionNo. 156


Introduced by Assembly Member Weber

(Coauthors: Assembly Members Alejo and Bonta)

June 2, 2014


Assembly Concurrent Resolution No. 156—Relative to the Itliong-Vera Cruz Memorial Bridge.

LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL’S DIGEST

ACR 156, as amended, Weber. Itliong-Vera Cruz Memorial Bridge.

This measure would designate the overpass on South Woodman Street that crosses State Route 54, also known as the Filipino American Highway, in the City of San Diego as the Itliong-Vera Cruz Memorial Bridge. The measure would request the Department of Transportation to determine the cost for appropriate signs showing this special designation and, upon receiving donations from nonstate sources covering that cost, to erect those signs.

Fiscal committee: yes.

P1    1WHEREAS, Larry Itliong was a Filipino American labor leader
2who founded the Filipino Farm Labor Union (FFLU) in 1956. He
3was alsobegin delete the Presidentend deletebegin insert a memberend insert of the Agricultural Workers
4Organizing Committee (AWOC). He was born in 1913 in the
5begin delete Pangilinanend deletebegin insert Pangasinanend insert Province of the Philippines and immigrated
6to the United States in 1929. His first involvement in a labor strike
7was one year later in 1930. Itliong was a self-taught labor leader
8and was instrumental in leading protests in California and Alaska;
9and

P2    1WHEREAS, After he founded the FFLU, Larry Itliong became
2the assistant director of the United Farm Workers Organizing
3Committee (UFWOC) which eventually became the United Farm
4Workers (UFW). Itliong is viewed as “one of the fathers of the
5West Coast labor movement”; and

6WHEREAS, On Sept. 8, 1965, Filipino farm workers, known
7as manongs, organized by Itliong began the grape strike that set
8the stage for the boycott that would lead César Chávez and
9thousands of farmworker families to create the nation’s pioneering
10agricultural labor union, the UFW; and

11WHEREAS, Mexican and Filipino workers had been historically
12pitted against one another to suppress wages or break strikes. Yet
13Itliong approached César Chávez, then busy organizing the
14National Farm Workers Association (NFWA). For the first time,
15Filipino and Mexican workers became “brothers,” eventually
16forming one organization -- the UFWOC -- with Itliong as an
17assistant director, one of several Filipino leaders on the executive
18board; and

19WHEREAS, Larry Itliong resigned from the UFWOC in 1971
20and dedicated the remainder of his life to improving the lives of
21retired Filipino farm workers, and to a wide variety of community
22and civic projects, many of which were related to the Filipino
23American community. He died in 1977; and

24WHEREAS, Philip Vera Cruz was a Filipino American labor
25leader, a farm worker, and a leader and activist for the Asian
26American civil rights movement. He was one of the founders of
27the AWOC, which later merged with César Chávez’s NFWA and
28gave birth to the UFW. Philip Vera Cruz was a long-time vice
29president of the UFW; and

30WHEREAS, Philip Vera Cruz was born in Ilocos Sur in the
31Philippines in 1904 and immigrated to the United States in 1926.
32Vera Cruz also worked in canneries and restaurants and attended
33Gonzaga University in Spokane, Washington, for a year. He joined
34the National Farm Labor Union which was affiliated with the
35American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial
36Organizations in the 1950’s. Along with Larry Itliong, Philip Vera
37Cruz convinced César Chávez and Dolores Huerta’s predominantly
38Mexican/Latino NFWA to join the Grape Strike and Boycott of
391965 demanding better pay and benefits; and

P3    1WHEREAS, One week later César Chávez and Dolores Huerta
2joined the strike that eventually brought an end to the unfair wages
3and benefits with a 300 mile pilgrimage from Delano to
4Sacramento; and

5WHEREAS, After Philip Vera Cruz resigned from the UFW in
61977, he remained loyal to the UFW and the unionizing movement
7and maintained his dignity as a Filipino American supporting his
8community and fighting for worker’s rights. He affirmed an
9embodiment of internationalism and believed in serving the people
10instead of making profits. He died in 1994; and

11WHEREAS, The contributions of Larry Itliong and Philip Vera
12Cruz and other Filipino American farm workers were instrumental
13in starting the Grape Strike and Boycott of 1965; and

14WHEREAS, Together the Filipino and Mexican farm laborers
15formed the United Farm Workers union (UFW), which would not
16have been as successful without this coalition of Filipino and
17Chicano workers coming together in unity; now, therefore, be it

18Resolved by the Assembly of the State of California, the Senate
19thereof concurring,
That the Legislature designates the overpass
20on South Woodman Street that crosses State Route 54, also known
21as the Filipino American Highway, in the City of San Diego as
22the Itliong-Vera Cruz Memorial Bridge; and be it further

23Resolved, That the Department of Transportation is requested
24to determine the cost of erecting the appropriate signs, consistent
25with the signing requirements for the state highway system,
26showing this special designation and, upon receiving donations
27from nonstate sources covering that cost, to erect those signs; and
28be it further

29Resolved, That the Chief Clerk of the Assembly transmit copies
30of this resolution to the Director of Transportation and to the author
31for appropriate distribution.



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