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  arvesting Poison

by Rebecca Clarren
http://www.headwatersnews.org/HCN.farmworkers.html

In the little-seen world of immigrant farmworkers, pesticides are a constant
threat - and for the workers, the only options are shutting up or getting
out.

SUNNYSIDE, Wash. - Long, ordered rows Harvesting Poisonof grapevines and
cherry trees cling to the edge of the Yakima River, filling this arid heart
of eastern Washington with bounty. Scattered throughout the fields, hundreds
of farmworkers perch on metal ladders, picking the shiny fruit and putting
it into white plastic buckets strapped to their chests. The sound of someone
singing in Spanish rises from the sea of green up into the searing heat of
mid-morning.

Yet this bucolic scene is not as serene as it seems. Take a deep breath.
Instead of the sweet scent of plants, the air is dusty, sharp and acidic.
It's the smell of pesticides, chemicals that protect trees from insects.
It's an odor that farmworker Juan Rios knows far too well.

Each summer, as the grapes clinging to their vines turn the reddish purple
of a deep bruise, Rios feels like he is being poisoned. His head aches, he
feels dizzy, nauseated, tired, and his nose won't stop running. Rios sprays
pesticides at a winery, working 12 hours a day, five days a week, and he
suspects that the chemicals make him sick.

"I remember the first time I worked with the pesticidos, I was wearing a
full mask while we were spraying, but it filled with blood; my nose, it
wouldn't stop bleeding. I was worried," says Rios, 39, speaking in Spanish,
in a rare moment in July away from the fields. As he sits in the United Farm
Workers union office in the small town of Sunnyside, he describes how he's
experienced the lack of protection for farmworkers. On the wall above him is
a portrait of the late Cesar Chavez, the farmworker activist who founded the
original union in 1962; nearby hangs a Mexican flag. "I went to the doctor,
but he didn't give me anything," Rios says. "He just told me to stop working
with the pesticides."

But Rios, who moved to this agricultural valley from central Mexico 18 years
ago, can't afford to quit his job. As a unionized pesticide handler, he
makes $10 an hour in seasonal work - $3 more than the average Washington
farmworker. The extra money has helped him support his two young daughters,
and he's been able to help 14 of his 15 brothers also flee poverty in Mexico
and make the long trip north to live in this country. Anyway, he says with a
shrug, as long as he works in agriculture, there's no escaping the
chemicals.

In their search for a better life, what Rios and so many other immigrants
have found are the jobs that no one else wants. The West runs on this
largely underground workforce, including the immigrants who mow our lawns,
clean our hotel rooms, work in our restaurants, and construct our homes
(HCN, 12/23/96: El Nuevo West) . Farm work is the very bottom of the barrel.
For those without documentation or English skills, it is often the only work
they can find: 95 percent of farmworkers are immigrants, and nearly half are
here illegally. But there's a reason so many jobs in the fields are
available.

Of 2.5 million farmworkers nationwide, 300,000 are poisoned to some degree
each year, estimates the Environmental Protection Agency; 800 to 1,000 die,
says the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. Some surveys indicate the number
of victims is higher. Pesticide handlers such as Rios are especially prone
to exposure, as they apply round after round of pesticides using
truck-mounted or backpack sprayers, but all farmworkers are vulnerable. The
spray, which is also applied by planes and helicopters, can drift away from
the targeted fields and land on workers - and their families - in nearby
fields or living quarters. Even when the spray settles in the intended
place, small amounts of the chemicals may remain on the plants, and when
workers who thin and harvest crops re-enter the fields, they breathe and
touch and rub their eyes with the dusty particles.

Studies suggest that farmworkers and their children are vulnerable to a
torturous list of illnesses potentially related to pesticides: brain,
breast, thyroid and prostate cancer, kidney and liver disease, childhood
leukemia, infertility, neurological disorders, birth defects and reduced
cognitive skills.

The workers are up against an agri-chemical juggernaut. In 1939, there were
32 pesticide products registered in the United States; now there are more
than 20,000. Farmers spray an estimated 1.8 billion pounds of pesticides
annually. That means big revenues for the industry, and the ability to
exercise a lot of political clout through campaign contributions. Weigh that
against the average farmworker earning $6,500 last year. .

The disparity of wealth and power is reflected in a regulatory system that
ignores the plight of farmworkers and discounts their importance in
providing cheap, widely available food. "Despite the fact that farmworkers
do extremely hard work and conduct utterly essential tasks, they are the
most ignored, exploited and vulnerable population in this country. Their
health needs are entirely subordinated" to the needs of the growers, the
pesticide industry, and everyone who buys the crops, says Shelley Davis,
co-director of the Farmworker Justice Fund, a Washington, D.C.-based
nonprofit. It's a system whose failures are painfully obvious, but only to
the people caught up in it.

"I know that the only way things will change is if I stop working in the
fields," says Rios, his long fingers drumming on the table. "But agriculture
is such a huge force here - there really are no other options."

The doctor

Twenty miles west of Sunnyside, in Toppenish, another small farming town,
the waiting room at the Yakima Valley Farm Workers Clinic is packed.
Dark-haired children spill off chairs to play on the floor, young men read
Spanish-only newspapers; an old woman with dark Jackie O sunglasses and a
pink scarf around her head clutches her purse. Everyone wears the tired and
impatient look reserved for waiting rooms. In a back hall of the
three-building complex, past bilingual signs and posters, Dr. Paul Monahan,
an internist, talks about the challenges of diagnosing and treating
pesticide poisoning.

"There's not much in the textbooks or medical journals about pesticide
exposure in farmworkers. Very few people are studying this, because there's
not a lot of money in it," Monahan says, his pale blue eyes heavy with
resignation. "If you were going to give a lecture on the world of
pesticides, there would be a lot of blank slides."

Not only has relatively little research been done on the long-term effects
of exposure to pesticides, it's an elusive problem, hard to diagnose and
address. Many pesticides are basically diluted nerve gases, so when Monahan
moved here 30 years ago to help open the nonprofit clinic, he worried that
he would see a constant flow of pesticide-related illness. Yet in his time
here, he has diagnosed only a handful of people. It's tricky, he explains,
because the symptoms, which are often flu-like, could have many causes, and
for the majority of pesticides, there are no blood tests that detect
overexposure.

Even if there were diagnostic tests, most farmworkers have no idea what
chemicals they've been exposed to, and most have never been told about the
long-term health effects. Nine out of 10 sick farmworkers never mention
pesticide exposure, says Monahan. The majority of farmworkers at the clinic
come to be treated for diabetes and obesity and the other diseases that ride
the bus with poverty.

"Pesticide poisoning is a lot like lead poisoning: If you look for it,
you'll find it, but it's easily dismissed as something else," says Monahan.
"I often find there's not enough hours in the day to tackle these issues."

The physicians and epidemiologists who are studying pesticide exposure find
plenty to worry about. Five-year-old children in Mexico who were exposed to
pesticides suffer giant lags in development - they can't catch a ball, draw
pictures of people, or perform simple tasks involving memory and
neuromuscular skills, according to a study by Elizabeth Guillette, an
anthropologist now with the University of Florida. An EPA doctor of public
health, Dina Schreinemachers, recently found that babies born in Montana's
major wheat-producing counties, where herbicides are sprayed routinely, are
twice as likely to have birth defects as those born in rural counties with
low wheat production. And in California, farmworkers have elevated levels of
leukemia, stomach, uterine and brain cancers, according to research funded
in part by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the California
Cancer Research Program.

Although those studies were published in Environmental Health Perspectives,
a prestigious medical journal, they are limited in scope and remain open to
criticism for a range of reasons. Research into pesticide effects is still
in its infancy, in need of more extensive studies over a longer time period.

Monahan likens the situation to the history of tobacco and lung cancer:
Studies showed there was a relationship for decades before people believed
smoking was dangerous. Once hundreds of studies produced similar findings,
the balance tipped against tobacco. The National Cancer Institute and the
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health are finally conducting
large studies measuring pesticide exposure and related illness in
farmworkers, but the final results aren't due for over a decade.

The situation is endlessly frustrating for Monahan, who became a doctor
because he wanted to be useful to society. "If the (patient's health)
problem is caused by pesticides, there's a good chance you can't prove it,
and if you do try to trace the problem to pesticide exposure, there's not
really any treatment," says Monahan, as he hurries off to see another
patient. "With pesticides, we in the medical community are caught in a
perfect catch-22."

The farmer

As orchardist Robert Thacker walks past rows of recently harvested apricot
trees, his metal knees betray him - the legacy of 26 years spent in another
difficult job, squatting to lay foundation for the Columbia River dams. His
pace is as slow and creaky as a '54 Ford truck with a rusty clutch. Thacker
says pesticides are essential to his orchard's operation, and he doesn't
believe the chemicals he uses are a legitimate health concern.

"I never wear a spray suit; I can't stand those things. But look at me: I'm
67 and healthy," says Thacker. With a wink and a mischievous grin, he shows
off fist-sized apricots, already boxed and ready to be shipped to Texas, San
Francisco and Los Angeles. "If the pesticides land on me, they just make me
more vigorous."

More than 30 years ago, when Thacker's knees fell apart, he and his wife
moved to this 40-acre orchard on the cliffs above the Columbia River, near
Wenatchee. At first, he says, he made a good living growing apples, peaches
and apricots. Then in the 1990s, global market pressure, including
competition with Australian and Chilean growers, made it unprofitable for
many Washington orchardists to continue to grow Red Delicious apples. Many
Washington growers gave up - they've uprooted nearly 40,000 acres of Red
Delicious in the past five years. Thacker uprooted eight acres of apple
trees, and the loss, he says, "damn near broke us."

Like many growers, Thacker faces a host of pressures, including thin profit
margins and drought. In such challenging times, growers and Farm Bureau
lobbyists say that pesticides are the one thing that can be depended on.
Thacker would like to retire, but feels stuck. His land, worth $800,000 in
the 1980s, is now worth about half of that, he says. As he stops his creaky
stroll through the orchard to fix the engine on an aging blue tractor, he
also laments that hard times for growers mean less opportunity for
farmworkers. He speaks with affection about the people who work for him,
some of whom have returned to his farm every summer from Mexico for 28 years
in a row.

Still, he admits that sometimes he bends the rules on pesticide application
and expects workers to re-enter fields too soon after spraying. "The
regulations are killing us. If we stuck to every rule there was, we could
not do it," he says, frowning as he takes a long pull on a cigarette. "My
workers, they go in and pick, and they're well aware of the pesticides we've
sprayed; they know the damn stuff won't hurt 'em."

The pesticide cop

Highway 2 snakes its way westward from Wenatchee, between parched sagebrush
hillsides that wear a fringe of green orchards. As David Zamora, a pesticide
specialist with the Washington Department of Agriculture, drives it, he
describes his experiences in a regulatory system which, at the state and
federal level, treats farmworkers like second-class citizens.

In 1996, after a decade of discussion, the EPA began to enforce the Worker
Protection Standard, which calls for a range of safety measures. The federal
standard calls for workers to have protective gear, for example, and
describes what must be worn in different situations: Gloves, long-sleeved
shirts and masks are typically required for spraying pesticides.

Yet even when protective gear is provided and worn, farmworkers still face
exposure. That was shown by researchers at the University of Washington,
who, in a 2002 study, added fluorescent tracers to pesticides. Hours after
pesticides were sprayed on fields, their fluorescent traces could be
detected on the people who did the spraying, despite the protective gear.
Even though one pesticide handler wore a full-face respirator and heavy work
pants, pesticide dust stuck to his chin and upper lip, and the chemicals
peppered his legs and ankles.

The federal standard also requires that farmworkers have access to
information about which pesticides are sprayed in their workplace. They are
supposed to receive training, which often amounts to a 20-minute video about
what to do if they feel nauseated or otherwise ill, or get pesticides in
their eyes.

Other federal regulations set the time periods between spraying and workers'
re-entering the fields - required delays that range from several hours to 14
days, depending on which chemical is used. But those regulations - weak when
compared to other occupational standards that aim to completely isolate
workers from toxic chemicals - are rarely enforced, says Zamora.

Zamora, who enforces the federal regulations, says that every time he goes
out, he sees people spraying pesticides too close to unprotected workers.
But the state Agriculture Department usually conducts an investigation only
when a grower or farmworker initiates a complaint. Only one of the agency's
13 pesticide specialists speaks Spanish, he says, so he and the other agents
often have to rely on employers to translate employee grievances. It's a
situation that doesn't encourage farmworkers, fearful for their job
security, to trust regulators.

"A guy can have three strikes, he can be hurting people, before anything
really happens. No wonder growers around here think they're above the law,"
says Zamora, whose tan skin and dark eyes indicate his own Mexican heritage
(his father was an immigrant). "We're a police agency. We should be out
looking for problems, but that never happens."

For Zamora, who has a doctorate in botany and more than 20 years of
experience with pesticides, including five years with the department,
cracking down on pesticide violations has become a personal struggle. One
day in 2000, as he was picking up his 9-year-old son from school, he noticed
the neighboring orchardist spraying pesticides and the drift floating onto
the playground, where many young children played on the swings and in the
dirt. He took soil samples and discovered a cocktail of harmful pesticide
chemicals.

"It scared the hell out of me," says Zamora, shaking his head. "You don't
have to read the label to know that pesticides are toxic. Every time you go
and sit in an orchard, it makes you sick. I don't want my kids anywhere near
that."

Since the school incident, Zamora has instigated investigations. It isn't
making him popular. He's received a death threat, and local politicians and
grower advocates have tried to get him fired. Recently, when Zamora charged
a large apple grower with spraying pesticides too close to a public walkway,
the company called a meeting with legislators and contacted the director of
the Department of Agriculture. Ultimately, the department decided to call
off the investigation because it was too hot politically.

A few weeks before this story went to press, Zamora was transferred out of
the field to a non-agricultural desk job. Zamora's boss, Cliff Weed, says
the action was "not a performance issue, but due to the concerns of people
in the area, we did not think Dave could be an effective investigator. This
is an opportunity for things to cool down."

In the face of this kind of political pressure, only one Western state
collects accurate, detailed information about which pesticides are used
where, when and in what amounts - California, where the United Farm Workers
union is strongest. The federal government has no clearinghouse for the
information that does exist and no specific policy to direct state efforts.
The limited national oversight coupled with local political pressure means
that state agencies have little incentive to enforce the law. Of the 5,400
investigations of pesticide poisoning conducted by all states' departments
of agriculture in 2002, only 102 resulted in monetary fines.

But the government failure actually begins upstream, with the federal
Environmental Protection Agency, which creates pesticide policy.

When the EPA registers pesticide products for use, a team composed of a
diverse array of experts balances the chemical's possible health risks
against economic considerations. "We evaluate whether the pesticide will
cause death or a relatively reversible ailment, and then we'll weigh that
against whether a farmer has any other options, and how expensive they are
for getting rid of a certain pest," says Rich Dumas of the EPA's pesticide
programs office. "It's a pretty amorphous process."

The health risks are calculated in terms of how many additional cases of
cancer or other diseases would be caused by different levels of exposure.
But without the scientific studies to accurately determine those risks, the
assessment all too easily tilts to the side of economics, critics say. For
the past several years, a group of chemical companies (the Agricultural
Reentry Task Force) conducted the studies used to determine health risks.
This data was not brought before the EPA's scientific advisory panel;
instead, a panel of scientists selected and paid by industry conducted the
peer review.

"It's definitely a mixture of science and politics," says Richard Fenske, a
University of Washington professor of health sciences, who served on the
advisory panel.

The EPA's cozy relationship with industry also shows in the backgrounds of
many top agency officials, who in the past have worked for agricultural or
pesticide companies. Linda Fisher, the EPA's deputy administrator (the
agency's number two position), used to lobby for Monsanto, a top
agri-chemical company, for example. High-ranking EPA officials also often
leave the agency to work for pesticide interests, according to a report by
the Environmental Working Group.

"When there is a revolving door between industry and the government," says
Gina Solomon, a senior scientist at the Natural Resources Defense Council,
"are the regulators protecting farmworkers, or are they protecting their
former and future associates and friends in the private sector?"

Pesticide companies say such criticism is unfair, because there is a
rigorous process to create and register new products. To win approval from
the EPA, a pesticide must pass as many as 120 tests, a process that can take
up to nine years. "It's a daunting task. We are one of the most highly
regulated industries," says Pat Donnelly, senior vice president of CropLife
America, a biotechnology and pesticide products trade organization. "We have
always been proponents of a rigorous safety program, so we work
cooperatively with EPA. We fundamentally share the same goal."

Within a limited budget, the EPA has funded several of the long-term
studies. The agency is also working to develop a better pesticide-poisoning
screening process for doctors, and has started to compile state
investigations of pesticide exposure. "The program (regulating farmworker
exposure) seems to be working," says Jack Neylan, a Washington, D.C.-based
EPA branch chief. "This is not to say that it couldn't be improved, and
nobody thinks we're there yet, but it's better than what we had before."

The lawyer

All this ongoing research provides little consolation for farmworkers and
their advocates. And few farmworkers are in any position to fight for better
protection: They lack even the most basic form of political clout.

"These workers don't vote, so they don't count," says Griselda Vega, a
lawyer for Columbia Legal Services, a public-interest law firm. Sitting in a
Mexican restaurant in Sunnyside, where Spanish telenovelas blare from the
television, Vega alternates between taking bites of her torta con pollo and
talking animatedly about a host of farmworker issues.

The workers don't have adequate housing; many live in barracks or other
crowded housing on the farms, or on public land in makeshift shelters made
with tree limbs, blankets and tarps. Most of them have less than an
eighth-grade education, and no health insurance. While Vega represents a few
clients who claim they've been poisoned by pesticides, for the most part she
fights for farmworkers who have not been paid - sometimes for more than a
year.

"The core of all of these problems is exploitation and racism. These people
are expendable," says Vega, 28, the daughter of Mexican immigrants and the
first in her family to graduate from college. "If an employee gives their
boss a hard time, he's out of work. Fast. Jobs are really hard to come by
and there is a steady flow of immigrants looking for work."

The U.S.-Mexico border is a militarized zone, with a force of Border Patrol
agents larger than the FBI's number of agents (HCN, 10/9/00: Hunters and the
hunted) . Even so, more than 300,000 people illegally cross the border every
year. The constant supply of desperate workers undermines attempts to
organize farmworkers and gain power.

"We have to face the fact that there are 5 to 8 million unauthorized workers
in this country," says Don Villarejo, founder of the California Institute
for Rural Studies, a Davis-based policy center. "It's time for plan B."

Villarejo thinks the U.S. should work to improve Mexico's economy, so that
immigrants have less incentive to leave their country. He also wants to make
it easier for immigrants to work in the U.S. legally, without offering them
permanent residence. Before the terrorist attacks of 9/11, President Bush
met with Mexico's president, Vicente Fox, and attempted to hammer out a new
guest-worker program. So far, nothing has come of it. Various members of
Congress continually propose immigration reform and get voted down (HCN,
12/18/00: Troubled Harvest) .

Vega and other lawyers for farmworkers see few or no prospects for change.
Pesticide-exposure cases are hard to win. There are few laws on the books -
so few that even salmon are afforded more protection than farmworkers. In
July, a federal judge ruled that the EPA must establish buffer zones along
streams for more than 50 pesticides, because salmon are protected by the
Endangered Species Act. While Vega praises environmental groups for their
work on the salmon case, she says they should also use their clout and their
lawyers to protect farmworkers.

"I understand that their members care about salmon, and it's good that
they're protecting wildlife, but I'm out here in eastern Washington and I
see what goes on, and it just seems so wrong that I can't get the same
protection for human beings," says Vega. "It's ridiculous to me that the
general public cares more about a little fish than about farmworkers."

Legal-aid organizations, the farmworkers' union, and a smattering of
farmworker justice groups are left to fight in the courts for small
victories, which result in better protective gear, bilingual signage that
indicates which pesticides are being sprayed, and regular blood tests to
monitor exposure to some chemicals.

The farmworker

Change may also begin with farmworkers like Juan Rios. About seven years
ago, Rios and Columbia Legal Services sued the state for not protecting
farmworkers from pesticides. Specifically, the case demanded that pesticide
handlers be provided with regular blood tests to monitor cholinesterase, an
indicator of elevated levels of pesticide poison. In February 2002, Rios
won: The state Supreme Court found the monitoring was "both necessary and
doable."

Yet the victory is bittersweet. The state has involved public stakeholders
to create the monitoring rules, including growers and other industry
representatives, as well as farmworker representatives. The farmworkers feel
outnumbered and outgunned, and the process has become a political quagmire.
There have been more than 20 meetings, and still no blood tests have been
offered.

Rios is lucky, because the union has organized the workforce at the winery
where he sprays pesticides on grapes. Less than 1 percent of farmworkers are
unionized; those who are can press complaints and lawsuits and talk to
reporters with less risk of losing their jobs.

"If people don't have documentation, they won't come forward. I guess they
feel that they can't afford to," says Rios. "I hope this court case will
make a difference for my colleagues and myself."

Even with the potential for new monitoring, Rios worries about his health.
And he worries about the pesticides that stick to his clothes at the end of
the day, which he likely takes home to his two young daughters, Jacqueline
Elizabeth, 4 years old, and Julianne Salome, 9 months old.

Rios is doing what he can to map out another life. He is taking night
classes to learn English, and plans to earn a college degree. "I realize
being a farmworker is an honorable job, but I would like to maybe do
something else, like be an architect, or maybe I would own my own orchard
someday," says Rios. Then he quickly interrupts himself with a laugh. "An
organic orchard."


Rebecca Clarren writes from Portland, Oregon.

Farm Worker Pesticide Project in Seattle, Carol Dansereau, 206-522-5287

Columbia Legal Services branch office in Yakima, Wash., Griselda Vega,
509-575-5593 or www.columbialegal.org

Environmental Protection Agency Kevin Keaney, branch chief for worker
protection, Arlington, Va., 703-305-5557

CropLife America a pesticides and biotech trade group, in Washington, D.C.,
202-296-1585 or www.croplifeamerica.org  .

 

Action Alerts /

Acciones Urgentes:

News Release: Canadian Parliament Calls for Implementation of the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, April 9, 2008 (PDF 51K)

IITC files urgent action with United Nations for Indigenous Peoples of Maluku, June 6th 2008 and post in Urgent/Urgente and in UN Human Rights 2008 (PDF 79K)

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March 7th, 2008: United Nations Body Expresses Concerns about Racism in the United States, Calls for the US to apply the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (PDF)

 

Important Updates

Noticias al Dia:

34th Annual Treaty Conference, Chimaltenango Guatemala June 19 – 22, 2008, Conference Resolutions/Resoluciones de la Conferencia

Nibutani Declaration of Indigenous Peoples, Indigenous Peoples Summit in Ainu Mosir (July 1-4), Hokkaido Japan, addressing the G-8 Summit (PDF 180K)

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IITC 2008 Conference in Guatemala, new information for participants

UNPFII 7th Session, April 21st - May 2nd 2008, Interventions and Statements

Human Rights Council, 8th session, 2 – 18 June

2008 International Indian Treaty Conference, Guatemala

SYMPOSIUM ON THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE UN DECLARATION ON THE RIGHTS OF INDIGENOUS PEOPLES” Monday April 21st, 2008, during UNPFII7 (PDF 555K)

Opening Statement of the Indigenous Caucus, 11th Meeting of Negotiations in the Quest for Points of Consensus, Organization of American States April 14th, 2008

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Indigenous Peoples' Caucus, UN Permanent Forum on April 19th & 20th , 2008 (PDF 90K)

Web link for Longest Walk 2

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NEW! IITC Power point: “Indigenous Peoples’ Advocacy for a Rights and Culturally-based Approach to Food Security”, April 3, 2008 (9.4 MB PowerPoint Presentation)

Treaty Conferences/2008 Guatemala, “Provisional Conference Agenda” (PDF 28K)

The UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, Treaties and the Right to Free, Prior and Informed Consent: The Framework For a New Mechanism for Reparations, Restitution and Redress, submitted by the IITC to the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues Seventh Session (UNPFII7) (PDF 80K)

NEW save the dates, 34th Anniversary Treaty Conference, Chimaltenango Guatemala, June 19th – 22nd 2008 (PDF 448K)

Aparte las fechas, Asamblea Anual XXXIV del Consejo Internacional de Tratados Indios junio 19 a 22 de 2008, Chimaltenango, Guatemala (PDF 138K)

Report of the North America Preparatory meeting for UNPFII7, Vancouver Canada, February 22nd and 23rd 2008 (PDF 168K)

Hawaiian Land Rights decision by Hawaiian Supreme Court, Nation of Hawaii calls upon Legislature to "Cease and Desist", February 8, 2008

Indigenous Shadow Report to UN CERD highlights Racism by United States, February 5th 2008

Peoples’ Shadow Report to the CERD on the United States submitted by IITC January 2008 (PDF 400 KB)

New IITC Brochure

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PUBLIC FORUM, Local Indigenous Environmental and Sacred Sites Issues, Saturday, November 17 U of A College of Law, Tucson AZ

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AGROQUIMICOS: LA AMENAZA A NUESTRA SALUD COMUNITARIA Y AL MEDIO AMBIENTE/ Pesticides: The Threat to our Community Health and the Environment, AHOME, SINALOA, Mexico, Octubre 26 - 28 2007, October 26 – 28, 2007 (PSD 52K)

IITC Training Manual for filing “Shadow Reports” for the review of the United States by the UN Committee on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (CERD), October 17th, 2007 (PDF 578K)

IITC Human Rights Training Novmeber 8th 2007, during the Indigenous Peoples’ Border Rights Summitt II, San Xavier Arizona! (PDF 79K)

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UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples as adopted by the UN General Assembly September 13th 2007 (PDF 56k)

Declaracion de las Naciones Unidas sobre los derechos de los Pueblos Indigenas, adoptada por la Asemblea General el 13 de septiembre de 2007 (PDF 60K) 

IITC Statement on the Adoption of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, September 16th 2007 (PDF 200K)

US Statement against the adoption of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples, September 13th 2007 (PDF 53K)

CSD 15th session, 2007, April 30 - May 11, 2007

Link for the COMMITTEE FOR THE ELIMINATION OF RACIAL DISCRIMINATION, Seventieth session, 19 February – 9 March 2007,  Concluding observations re: CANADA/ COMITÉ PARA LA ELIMINACIÓN DE LA DISCRIMINACIÓN RACIAL, Septuagésimo período de sesiones, 19 de febrero – 9 de marzo de 2007,  Observaciones finales sobre CANADA

Appointment of Indigenous UNPFII members (2008-2010) announced, April 20, 2007

Treaty Council News Winter 2007 (PDF 1MB)

IITC Submission to the UN High Commissioner on Human Rights for her study on the Human Right to Water, April 15th, 2007 (PDF 136k)

Pesticides are Poison” booklet now available online

Los Plaguicidas son Venenos” manual ahora disponible en internet

UN Web page, Indigenous Peoples and Treaties, the UN Treaty Study Expert Seminars