Site Index

Labor Education & Research Center

About the Labor Center

Advisory Committee

Newsletter / Noticias

Staff

Union Power Classes

Organizing: Internal and External, January 21st and 22nd, 2010

Solidarity! The History of U.S. Organized Labor March, 2010

Labor History and Unionism 101 in Spanish March, 2010

Events

2010 Summer Institute for Union Women

Resources

Free Labor History Presentations

Asian Workers' Journey for Justice Project

Film and Book Libraries

Emergency Resources for Mason and Thurston Counties

Recursos de la emergencia para los condados del Mason y Thurston

Floral Greens Industry Report

A Workers' Rights Manual for Washington State, 2nd edition

Un Manual de Derechos de los Trabajadores, para el Estado de Washington, edición segundo

Summary of WA State Department of Labor and Industries Safety Standards for Construction Work

Connections and Links

Readers' Corner

When someone purchases flowers from a florist, whether in the U.S., Europe, Canada , or many other parts of the world, there typically will be sprigs of greenery that are part of the arrangement. Frequently these sprigs are salal, a plant that grows abundantly in the wet forests of Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia.

Thousands of workers pick this salal, and millions of dollars in sales are recorded every year. Increasingly the salal harvesters are immigrants from Mexico or Central America , and typically they are paid as "independent contractors" by buying sheds who, therefore, don't have to pay workers comp or payroll taxes on these workers.

Much money is made on this natural resource, but how much of it is going to the harvesters? How much to the buying sheds, to the wholesalers who buy from those sheds, etc.? Outside of the Pacific Northwest (Canadian Southwest), in what other regions of the world is this or a similar plant harvested? Overall, wheredoes the industry seem to be headed?

These are questions that have been asked by the Labor Center and by the Jefferson Center which for a number of years has been holding community meetings and popular education workshops with harvesters from Shelton, Belfair, Forks, Aberdeen, and other communities on the Olympic Peninsula and in other parts of Washington and Oregon .

To try to get some answers, we hired George Draffan, who has significant experience with corporate and environmental research. You can read George's report by clicking on the PDF link below. It contains a lot of good information and a bibliography as well.

Report in PDF

Contact the Site Manager

 

Last Updated: November 17, 2009


The Evergreen State College

2700 Evergreen Parkway NW

Olympia, Washington 98505

(360) 867-6000