Browse
Search
APB agenda 101905
OrangeCountyNC
>
Advisory Boards and Commissions - Active
>
Agricultural Preservation Board
>
Agendas
>
2005
>
APB agenda 101905
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
5/10/2018 12:20:23 PM
Creation date
5/10/2018 11:56:10 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
BOCC
Date
10/19/2005
Meeting Type
Regular Meeting
Document Type
Agenda
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
52
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
4 ` Page I of 3 <br />X <br />., n— t( :A,Ncaii , latiii.liig Asisociallori <br />�s'ea;�:fi ;WiN ;tees' <� �i`.�Zi ;.�li�lif�• =Fi? �I<�4���?i'.s: <br />LextisNexiso <br />Copyright 2005 Los Angeles Times <br />All Rights Reserved <br />Los Angeles Times <br />September 26, 2005 Monday <br />Home Edition <br />CALIFORNIA; Metro; Metro Desk; Part B; Pg. 3 <br />1236 words <br />Cultivating Hoines for Farmworkers; <br />A.dvoca.ey groups urge the building of more affordable housing units to support Ventura <br />County's $1- billion agriculture industry. <br />Fred Alvarez, Times Staff Writer <br />In a packed Oxnard College auditorium, a short distance from fields bursting with bell peppers and artichokes, <br />housing advocate Jessica Arciniega urged students last week to think about those who supply the muscle for <br />Ventura County's $1- billion farm industry. <br />She told them that there are as many as 30,000 farmworkers in the county, many of whom live in cars, tool sheds <br />and garages because of a lack of affordable housing. And while the county's pricey housing market is tough on <br />workers in all sectors, Arciniega said, it's especially hard on farmworkers, some of whom earn as little as $9,000 a <br />year plucking lemons and picking strawberries. <br />"If we want to have sustainable agriculture in Ventura County, we have to address the issue of housing for <br />farmworkers," said Arciniega, who as coordinator for the House Farm Workers campaign roams the county planting <br />the seeds for advocacy. <br />"We want to make sure there is a voice for farmworkers and their needs," she said. "We have to start thinking <br />about where our farmworkers are living and how they are living." <br />By all accounts, that awareness is translating into action. Farmworker housing groups have formed in half of <br />Ventura County's 10 cities, with business leaders, growers, elected officials and others joining an unprecedented <br />push to eliminate the crowded and often dangerous conditions the laborers endure. <br />Grass -roots efforts to house farmworkers are underway in Ventura, Santa Paula, Oxnard and Camarillo. And this <br />week a farmworker housing group in Fillmore will hold its first meeting; adding another voice to a rising chorus of <br />advocacy on behalf of low -paid laborers. <br />Corporate travel consultant Nancie Paquin will head the Fillmore group. She decided to get involved earlier this <br />year after watching a short film produced by the Ag Futures Alliance Farm Worker Housing Task Force, which last <br />year launched the House Farm Workers campaign. <br />The effort involves identifying parcels on which housing can be built, helping shape government policies to make it <br />easier to build farmworker dwellings and advocating on behalf of projects as they come forward. <br />"I saw the conditions that many of these families were Iiving in, and I just said I need to do something about it," <br />Paquin said. "We're not talking about strangers. We're talking about families with children who go to school with <br />our children." <br />The increased advocacy comes at an opportune time. Since 1993, when Cabrillo Economic Development Corp. <br />opened the 100 -unit Rancho Sespe housing cooperative east of Fillmore, only 31 units of farmworker housing have <br />http : / /www6. lexisnexis- comlpublisherlEndUser? Action= UserDisplayFullDocument &orgId =1593 &topi... 09/27/2005 <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.