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Today in Labor History

April 23, 1993
United Farm Workers of America founder Cesar Chavez died in San Luis, Arizona, at age 66. 
~Labor Tribune

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Updated: Apr. 24 (04:04)

Starbucks Appears Likely to Win Supreme Court Dispute With NLRB
Teamsters Local 355
info meeting canceled 4/24
Duluth Police Local #807
info meeting canceled 4/24
Duluth Police Local #807
Starbucks Appears Likely to Win Supreme Court Dispute With NLRB
Teamsters Local 992
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Unions Can Help Beyond Their Membership. Chávez Proved it.
Updated On: Jan 31, 2023
Jan. 30, 2023 | LABOR HISTORY | [...] César Chávez and the United Farm Workers union he led recognized in the 1960s what was happening — long before most other Americans did. They started blowing the whistle on how the chemical industry and agribusiness manipulated the idea of scientific uncertainty to continue selling pesticides they knew were dangerous. The UFW’s crusade against toxins like DDT — its 1972 ban was a milestone in U.S. agriculture that marked the beginning of a decade of bans — revealed how activists could triumph over big business and make American life safer. Washington Post
 
 
Teamsters Local 992
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