The pesticide poisoning of California farm workers
In the time since Rachel
Carson’s book, Silent Spring
raised a warning flag about the dangers of rampant pesticide use we
have come full circle as a nation of toxic chemical users. The
outrage caused by Carson’s book sparked the environmental
movement that swept America in the 60’s and 70’s. Though we have
started to clean up certain sectors of the environment, other hazards
continue. Pesticide poisoning of farm land and farm workers occurs
throughout America. The situation is most dramatic among the
approximately 300,000 farm workers and their families who live and work
in California’s Central Valley. The area is America’s
richest food producing regions, yet the
water, the air and the food carry known carcinogens. Years of using
these chemicals have built up immunities in the pests; the farmers find
they must use more of the pesticides each year to achieve the same
results.
Through out the Valley and particularly in the small grape growing
towns of McFarland, Delano and Fowler, there have been regular
poisonings of the population and dramatically increased incidences of
cancer among farm workers, families and Valley residents not directly
involved with agriculture. This project was funded by the National
Press Photographers Association and Nikon Documentary Sabbatical
Grant.