8/5/97 -- UFW Press Release
United Farm Workers co-founder Dolores
Huerta comatented on the permanent
dismissal of a lawsuit tiled last
January that claimed the UFW instructed women
organizers to offer sex to farm
workers in exchange for their support of the union.
Berkeley attorney James D. Lorenz
Jr. told a reporter for the La Opinion
Spanish-language newspaper that
he "has decided to withdraw the complaint about the
charges of sexual harassment...due
to doubts about the veracity of the [charges],"
according to an article in the Los
Angeles daily's July 17 edition. The suit was
dismissed in U.S. District Court
in San Jose, with prejudice's-meaning it cannot be
refiled--through a "stipulation
for dismissal" that Lorenz signed on July 9.
UFW Secretary-Treasurer Dolores Huerta,
who has earned a national reputation as a
leader in the labor and women's
movements, stated:
When the Lorenz lawsuit was first
filed, the UFW insisted that none of the allegations
about sex in exchange for union
support were true. When tarn workers organize, they
often face attempts to undermine
their efforts by California agribusiness, which was
worth $24.5 billion in 1966. This
is among the most repugnant attempt I have ever
seen.
The UFW has a proud 35-year history
of fighting to end abuses facing women farm
workers. Three members of the union's
seven-person executive board are women as are
many leaders of the union's strawberry
workers organizing drive.
We hope news outlets will provide
as rauch coverage on the withdrawal of this lawsuit
as they did when it was filed.