Inspired by The Harvest (La Cosecha), new app AgHelp aims to help migrant farm workers

Inspired by The Harvest (La Cosecha), new app AgHelp aims to help migrant farm workers

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Inspired by Shine Global’s Film The Harvest (La Cosecha), New App AgHelp Aims to Help Migrant Farm Workers

Two of the AgHelp founders: Sadoc Paredes (L) and Feliciano Paredes (R), not pictured Ivan Paredes and Lori Paredes

Though released in 2011, Shine Global’s second film The Harvest (La Cosecha) is still having an impact today. A new app, AgHelp, launched this year to help farmworkers connect with jobs and social services, was inspired in part by the documentary.

Directed by U. Roberto Romano with Executive Producer Eva Longoria, the film looked at the plight of migrant farmworker children in the United States. There are an estimated 400,000 children who work in the fields in the United States, picking the food we all eat. The documentary followed three of them — Zulema, Perla and Victor — as they journeyed from the scorching heat of Texas’ onion fields to the winter snows of the Michigan apple orchards and back south to the humidity of Florida’s tomato fields to follow the harvest.

Since its release, the film has been used by advocates across the country and around the world to illustrate the need for stronger child labor laws and for farmworker rights more generally.

Shine Global screened the film for members of congress and the department of labor in support of child labor laws. Rep. Lucille Royball-Allard (D-CA), especially used the film in support of introducing legislation to raise the minimum age for children working in the fields:

“I applaud Eva Longoria, Robin Romano and Shine Global for using the power of film to shine a light on the plight of child farmworkers in The Harvest/La Cosecha. As this film documents, children in agriculture too often work in dangerous and exploitive conditions, which are illegal in every other industry. That is why I authored HR 3564, the CARE Act, which would raise labor standards and protections for farmworker children to the same level set for children in all other occupations”
–Congresswoman Lucille Roybal-Allard

The founder of AgHelp, Feliciano Paredes, himself knows the hardship of growing up in a migrant farmworker family. He and his seven siblings traveled with their parents across the country – picking in Florida, Georgia and Louisiana in the spring then heading up north eventually to Michigan to harvest peaches, cherries and apples. His family eventually settled in Michigan permanently and he went to college and then on to a career in human resources. He knew there was a need for a business to help migrant farmworkers and off and on for years he worked on trying to make that happen.

While working as an analyst for the state’s Workforce Development Agency, Paredes would make field checks of Michigan farmers to make sure they were in compliance with laws regarding the treatment of migrant workers. There he encountered many families who needed housing or services and didn’t know where to get them – even one family who waited months for healthcare not knowing there was subsidized healthcare available only 10 minutes away.

Feliciano Paredes said his “aha” moment came in 2011 when he was watching The Harvest/La Cosecha.

I was watching a scene where one of the families arrives at a rundown motel, only to find out that the work that was promised to them is no longer there. When I saw their expressions of desperation, concern, anger and sadness, a light went off in my head…
I thought to myself, ‘It’s 2011 and I can download an app that helps me find the coolest coffee shop or the trendiest place to eat dinner. But If I’m a farm worker, traveling around trying to earn enough money to make it through the winter, and trying to find resources to meet my basic needs, word of mouth is the only thing available.’ That’s when I made a promise to myself that I would do what I could to change that.

Last year, his “Yelp for ag jobs” dream became a reality. Two of his brothers and his wife have joined him in the business. Over the past year, AgHelp won a total of $203,000 in funding and services at a series of business-plan competitions across the country, giving it the money it needed to finish building a robust website, aghelpusa.com, which went live in December, and to launch a smartphone app in early March.

So far, Feliciano says he has signed up 140 growers across the U.S. and more than 40 service agencies that provide help to migrants, including info on who was hiring, what they paid, and connect them to resources and information in the community, like where they could find a health clinic or http://premier-pharmacy.com how to get their kids enrolled in schools. Last year, AgHelp got about 1,100 migrant workers to sign up to be included when things went live. The service is free for service providers and workers.

Read more about the journey in this Crains Detroit article

Tre Maison Dasan on PBS April 1 – National Visit Day Campaign

Tre Maison Dasan on PBS April 1 – National Visit Day Campaign

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Tre Maison Dasan on PBS April 1
National Visit Day Campaign

Mark your calendars and tune in to the broadcast!

TRE MAISON DASAN is an award-winning feature documentary about three boys – Tre, Maison, and Dasan – whose lives are complicated by having a parent in prison. Following their interweaving trajectories through boyhood, and shown directly through their points of view, the film is an exploration of relationships and separation, masculinity, and coming of age when a parent is behind bars. In this age of mass incarceration, Tre, Maison, and Dasan are only 3 out of the 5,700,000 American children who have been directly impacted by the incarceration of a parent.

Support the film by:

✔️ Tuning in to PBS on Monday April 1st

✔️Hosting a screening with friends, family, or a local prison facility as part of the National Visit Day initiative (see more info below)

✔️Sharing the film and tune in info on social media

National Visit Day

A nationwide series of events to bring families and communities together with their incarcerated loved ones, around the national broadcast of the award winning documentary Tre Maison Dasan on PBS’ Independent Lens.

CAN YOU HOST OR PARTNER ON A WATCHING EVENT IN YOUR REGION?
CAN YOU FACILITATE A WATCHING EVENT WITH YOUR LOCAL PRISON OR JAIL?

Visiting Day is one of the most important days of the week, month, or sometimes year for children and parents separated from their loved ones due to incarceration.

With the national broadcast premiere of Tre Maison Dasan on PBS / Independent Lens on April 1st, 2019, we want to help make that day happen for families across the country, strengthen bonds of family, and prompt a national reflection about the the rippling effects of mass incarceration in America. We’re looking for partners to take action and join us in sharing this experience with as many children and families across the country as possible.

NATIONAL VISITING DAYS events can be large or small – 50 people or 5.

All it needs is:

  • A place where you and your audience can watch the film on PBS or PBS.org – it could be your living room, a theater, a library, an auditorium, community center, or the visiting room of a prison or jail. The film will be available April 1-14th.
  • Invitations sent out to families, friends, and community members who are ready to come together to experience the film
  • A host organization or facilitator willing to guide a discussion and response during and after the film (with the help of our guides, available soon at tremaisondasan.com)You can download the “How to Host Guide” pdf by clicking here

Other Ways to Support the Film

  1. Post about the film on social media: Use #TreMaisonDasan, #NationalVisitDays and @TreMaisonDasan on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram.
    EXAMPLE posts
    Looking forward to watching @TreMaisonDasan a doc about three boys, each with a parent in prison April 1st on @PBS @Independent Lens  tremaisondasan.com #TreMaisonDasan
    OR
    Host a #NationalVisitDay screening of doc @TreMaisonDasan about three boys, each with a parent in prison April 1st-14th while streaming on @PBS @Independent Lens tremaisondasan.com/national-visiting-day
  2. Invite a friend to watch with you on April 1st: Maybe you can’t organize a National Visit Day screening – but you can still invite some friends over to watch with you!
  3. Share this email! Forward to others who you know would be interested in hosting a screening of their own
  4. Bring TRE MAISON DASAN to your city: There will be plenty more opportunities to host a screening after the PBS broadcast window too – stay tuned!
  5. Donate to support the outreach and engagement campaign (select Tre Maison Dasan option on the form):  shineglobal.org/donate/