Perry Bush discusses FLOC in Nov. 9 colloquium
Dr. Perry Bush, professor of history, will present the Colloquium, “Christian Nonviolence and the Farm Labor Organizing Committee,” at 4 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 9, in Centennial Hall’s Stutzman Lecture Hall.
During the presentation, Dr. Bush will share research on the history of the Farm Labor Organizing Committee (FLOC), and in particular, how it integrated Christian nonviolence in its organizing efforts.
Begun by Bluffton College student Baldemar Velasquez in 1977, FLOC celebrated its 50-year anniversary last year. Velasquez, who remains FLOC’s national president, has led the group through a number of successful campaigns. In the 1970s and 1980s, FLOC began to target major food corporations including Campbell Soup and Libby tomato operations, headquartered out of Napoleon, Ohio, and North Carolina’s Mt. Olive Pickle Company in the 1990s.
In both instances, after extensive strikes that made use of picketers, boycotts and a growing national network of allies in religious and civic groups, FLOC was ultimately successful in pioneering innovative three-way contracts between the farmworkers, growers and their corporate partners. In the Campbell Soup/Libby campaign, FLOC achieved union recognition despite concurrent efforts by growers to mechanize tomato production.
Altogether FLOC successfully unionized 3,000 to 4,000 migrant farmworkers, helping them achieve dramatic changes in their quality of life. Since the successful culmination of its Mt. Olive boycott and campaign in 2004, the organization has turned its attention to immigration reform and also efforts to unionize upwards of 20,000 migrant farmworkers in the North Carolina tobacco fields of agri-business giant R.J. Reynolds.
As the founder and head of FLOC, Velasquez himself has won increasing recognition as one of the most successful and creative labor leaders in the country, a recognition symbolized in 1989 by his being awarded a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship and, in 1994, the Aguila Azteca, the highest honor the government of Mexico bestows on a noncitizen.
He also has remained committed to the calling and expression of Christian nonviolence, the germ of which, he has testified publicly on a number of occasions, stems back to his student days at Bluffton College.
This event is free and open to the public.
Stories Posted This Week
Wednesday, February 26, 2025
- Senior Center ready for annual garage sale, Feb. 27-Mar. 3
- Fredrick “Fred” W. Evans served in the U.S. Army
- Ashes to Go on March 5
- Ticket reminder for BHS boys basketball semi-final on Feb. 26
- ODNR urges caution during spring wildfire season
- Registration opens for Ropp Triplett Business Plan Competition and classes
- Phillips named as new head of LACRPC and WORPO
- Blanchard Valley Hospital makes World’s Best Hospitals list
Tuesday, February 25, 2025
- Bluffton mayor asks residents to turn in KKK flyers, denounces hate message
- Public Hearing on proposed vacation of a portion of Vine St.
- Annette "Sue" Sprunger helped establish Bluffton Community Daycare
- Community Foundation awards $770K in grants
- Letter: S.H.A.N.N.O.N. Service Club of Bluffton is disbanding
Monday, February 24, 2025
Sunday, February 23, 2025
Saturday, February 22, 2025
- Pirate Bowlus competes in state backstroke consolation finals
- James Arden Emmert was a kidney dialysis technician
- Pirate bowlers 13th at districts
- Pirate boys basketball win sectional vs. Wayne Trace
- Pirate Bowlus advances to OHSAA swim final, Downey swims in prelims
- Flu-related death of teen reported in Allen County
- Bluffton University public events for March 2025
- Weekend Doctor: Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD)
- January 2025 EMS by the numbers