In San Diego, City, county and local offices will be closed today, Monday for César Chávez Day along with courts, public health clinics, family resource centers, libraries and animal shelters. County parks, campgrounds, and neighborhood day-use parks will largely remain open, though county officials said certain facilities will be closed Monday.
Law enforcement, emergency animal control response and other essential services will continue through the holiday, and normal business hours will resume at all county offices on Tuesday.
There will be no enforcement Monday in San Diego for parking meters, street-parking time restrictions, yellow zones and posted street sweeping routes. However, all other parking violations will be enforced. Curbside trash, recyclables, and organic waste will be collected as scheduled on Monday for customers served by the city’s Environmental Services Department. The Miramar Landfill, Greenery, Recycling Center and Mattress Collection Site will be open on Monday. Container sales at 8353 Miramar Place will be closed. San Diego public golf courses will be open until dusk. Holiday rates will apply.
There will be mail delivery because César Chávez Day is a federal commemorative holiday, first proclaimed by then-President Barack Obama in 2014, and not a federal holiday.
Then-Gov. Gray Davis signed legislation in 2000 making the March 31 anniversary of Chávez’s birth in 1927 a state holiday. When March 31 falls on a Sunday, as it did this year, the holiday is observed on the following Monday.
Chávez is credited with improving work and quality of life conditions for immigrant farm workers in Central California. Alongside Dolores Hureta he co-founded the National Farm Workers Association, which later became the United Farm Workers Union.
Chávez first gained prominence through a strike against table grape growers in the Kern County city of Delano, about 30 miles north of Bakersfield.
Life History of César Chávez
César Chávez is one of the greatest labor leaders and human rights activists in the United States history and the world. He fought for a better life for migrant farm workers, and founded the first successful farm workers’ union. César was the president of the United Farm Workers, AFL-CIO.
César Estrada Chávez was able to accomplish his goals through the philosophy of non-violence that he inherited and followed from leaders like Mahatma Gandhi and Dr. Martin Luther King.

César read about St. Francis of Assisi, Mohandas K. Gandhi and Dr. King. St. Francis was an Italian monk who lived from 1182 to 1226. He devoted his life to helping the poor. Gandhi was spiritual leader and a non-violence revolutionary who lived in India from 1869 to 1948. He practiced the philosophy of non-violence. Martin Luther King, Jr. was a Civil Rights Leader in the United States. These men profoundly influenced César Chávez, and he realized that great leaders are those who set good examples.
César Chávez adopted and practiced the philosophy of non-violence.
1927
On March 31, 1927, Cesar Estrada Chavez was born. His parents, Librado and Juana Estrada Chavez, lived on a small farm near Yuma, Arizona, that his grandfather homesteaded during the 1880’s.
1938
The Chavez family lost the farm during the Great Depression and began travelling between Arizona and California as migrant farmworkers.
1942
Chavez’s father was injured in a car accident. Cesar quit school to take his father’s place in the fields.
Along with his brother and sister, he thinned lettuce and beets with a short-handled hoe; a practice he later helped to outlaw.
1943
In Delano, California, Cesar Chavez challenged the segregation policy in theaters by refusing to sit in the “Mexicans” section; he was detained by the police for one hour.
Chavez enlisted in the U.S. Navy. While serving in the Pacific during World War II, he witnessed discrimination against Americans of other nationalities.
1946
Chavez was discharged from the Navy and returned to his family in Delano, where he resumed work in the fields. At this time, Chavez joined his first union, the National Agricultural Workers Union.
1948
The Chavez family joined the National Farm Labor Union (NFLU) and participated in a cotton strike.
Cesar married Helen Fabela.
1952
The Chavez family moved to San Jose, California, where Cesar worked in a lumber mill.
Chavez met Father Donald McDonnell, a Catholic priest from San Francisco who was sent to work with the farm laborers and braceros. Fr. McDonnell educated the workers on labor organizing and social justice.
Chavez read the papal encyclicals on labor, books on labor history, the teachings of St. Francis of Assisi, and Louis Fisher’s The Life of Gandhi . These works heavily influenced his philosophical approach to the farm workers movement.
Chavez is recruited into Saul Alinsky’s Community Service Organization (CSO), a barrio-based activist group that fought against racial and economic discrimination against Chicano residents.
1958 – 1959
Chavez was sent to Oxnard, California, by the CSO. Chavez documented abuses by the Farm Placement Service, organized a boycott of local merchants, and organized sit-ins and marches to protest the lack of jobs for local residents. These tactics become standard techniques used by the United Farm Workers Union.
The Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee (AWOC) was founded in Stockton, California, by Fr. Donald McDonnell, Fr. Thomas McCullough and Dolores Huerta.
1962
Cesar Chavez resigned from the CSO and moved his family to Delano, where he founded the Farm Workers Association (FWA). He began recruiting workers and opened a credit union to provide for members with financial emergencies.
Chavez persuaded his cousin, Manuel Chavez, to help with the organization, and convinced Dolores Huerta to quit the CSO and join the FWA.
The National Farm Workers Association (NFWA), a forerunner of the UFW, was formally established at an organizing convention. Chavez was elected president and executive officer, Dolores Huerta and Gilbert Padilla were elected vice-presidents, and Antonio Orendain was elected secretary-treasurer. The Union flag of the black eagle on a red background was accepted as the official emblem, and “Viva la Causa” was accepted as the official motto.
1964
The NFWA had 1,000 dues paying members and 50 locals. The union headquarters opened in Delano.
“El Malcriado: The Voice of the Farm Worker” becomes the official newspaper of the NFWA.
The Civil Rights Bill is passed, banning discrimination in voting, employment, and public accommodations.
1965
The Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee (AWOC), with support from the NFWA, led Filipino workers in a strike against grape growers in Delano. They received further support from the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and the Congress of Racial Equality. After a ten-day strike, the Filipino workers won a raise for themselves and Mexican-American workers.
NBC airs “A Harvest of Shame,” a television special which depicted the tragic conditions of migrant laborers in the United States.
The NFWA and the AWOC launched a campaign to boycott grapes. Walter P. Reuther, head of the United Auto Workers, met with Chavez in Delano, which brought national attention to their cause.
Chavez led a flower workers strike in McFarland, California, that brought about wage increases.
Migrant workers in Porterville, California, went on strike to protest rent increases in migrant farm worker camps.
1966
Senator Robert Kennedy openly expressed his support for the NFWA grape boycott and strike during the Senate subcommittee hearings on agricultural labor in Delano.
On March 16th, Cesar Chavez led 75 people in a march from Delano to the steps of the state Capitol in Sacramento, California, to call attention to the plight of farm workers. They receive the endorsement of the AFL-CIO.
On April 14th, the marchers arrived 250 miles later in Sacramento, California. Ten thousand people attended the rally.
The National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) and the Filipino American Agricultural Workers Organizing Committee (AWOC) merge to form the United Farm Workers (UFW), affiliating with the AFL-CIO, the national labor federation.
1968
On February 14th, Cesar Chavez began a 25-day fast as a rededication to his call for a non-violent movement.
On March 10th, Cesar Chavez breaks his fast with his wife, Helen, and Senator Robert F. Kennedy by his side.
Farm workers developed symptoms of pesticide poisoning. The union began researching the dangers of pesticides to the workers and consumers. A nationwide boycott of all California grapes is called.
1969
The UFW declared May 10th International Grape Boycott Day. Throughout the year, shipments of California table grapes were stopped in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, Detroit, Montreal and Toronto. In England, British dockworkers refused to unload California grapes.
Chavez organized a march from the Coachella and Imperial Valleys to the United States-Mexico border to protest the use of undocumented immigrants from Mexico as strike breakers. He is joined along the way by the Rev. Ralph Abernathy and Senator Walter Mondale.
During contract renegotiations, the farm workers union added clauses which called for the regulation of pesticide use and its exposure to the workers.
Chavez and union leaders picketed the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to protest pesticide hazards.
1970
On December 14th, Cesar Chavez was jailed for defying a court injunction against boycotting. He was visited in jail by Coretta Scott King and Ethel Kennedy. On Christmas Eve the California State Supreme Court ordered Chavez released, pending appeal.
1972
On January 25th, outside the Talisman Sugar Plant near Belle Glade, Florida, Nan Freeman was killed in the second week of a UFW picket. Despite repeated complaints to local police of harassment from truck drivers, Ms. Freeman, an 18-year-old college student, was knocked unconscious when a trailer load of cans knocked her against a guard railing.
On May 12th, Cesar Chavez began another fast to promote a recall campaign against Arizona Governor Jack Williams. Medical problems forced him to end the fast on June 4th. During the campaign, UFW members registered many new voters, which led to the election of the first Mexican American governor in Arizona’s history, Raul Castro.
In California, Proposition 22, an initiative to outlaw boycotting and limit secret ballot elections to full-time non-seasonal farm workers, is defeated.
1973
UFW Union member Negri Daifulla, an immigrant from Yemen, was killed on the picket line.
UFW Union member Juan de la Cruz was killed on the picket line.
The United Farm Workers of America, AFL-CIO, held their First Constitutional Convention in Fresno, California. Senator Edward Kennedy and Leonard Woodcock, UAW president, gave speeches of support. A 111-page constitution is adopted.
1975
The California Labor Relations Act was enacted, becoming the first law governing the organization of farm labor in the continental U.S. It provided for secret ballot elections, the right to boycott, voting rights for migrant seasonal workers and control over the timing of elections.
The Agricultural Labor Relations Board (ALRB) is established to administer the elections. California Governor Jerry Brown appointed LeRoy Chatfield, a former union organizer, and Bishop Roger Mahoney, who had earlier mediated between the union and the Teamsters, to the five member board.
Chavez led a 1,000 mile march through the Imperial and San Joaquin Valleys to promote upcoming union elections.
The use of a short-handled hoe, “el cortito,” was effectively outlawed by a U.S. Supreme Court ruling, Sebastian Carmona et al vs. Division of Industrial Safety , and a California administrative ruling.
1978
Cesar Chavez announced that grape and lettuce boycotts are over, and that boycotts will now target specific labels.
1979
Chavez began an internal reorganization of the UFW. Many longtime staff members left.
On February 10th, UFW member Rufino Contreras is shot and killed by armed company foremen on an Imperial Valley lettuce field during a workers’ strike.
1984
Chavez announced a new grape boycott, emphasizing the issue of pesticide residue on fruit.
1987
The UFW produced “The Wrath of Grapes”, a film that depicted the dangers of pesticides. It included graphic footage showing birth defects and high rates of cancer in farm workers and consumers. Chavez traveled throughout the Midwest and East promoting the movie and discussing the dangers of pesticides. 1988
The U.S. suffered the worst drought in more than 50 years; half the nation’s agricultural counties were designated disaster areas.
On August 16th, Cesar Chavez fasted to protest pesticide usage. Thirty-six days later, Chavez broke his fast with Jesse Jackson and the Robert Kennedy family at his side.
1992
The UFW helped organize large-scale walkouts in the Coachella Valley to protest the lack of drinking water and sanitary facilities for farm workers. In the Salinas Valley, Chavez led more than 10,000 workers in a protest march for better conditions in the field.
1993
On April 23rd, after fasting for a few days to gain moral strength, Cesar Chavez died in his sleep.
More than 35,000 people attended the funeral, following his casket for three miles, from Delano to Forty Acres. Cardinal Roger Mahoney led the funeral mass, offering a personal condolence from the Pope. Cesar E. Chavez is laid to rest in Keene, California.
1994
Cesar E. Chavez was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the United States’ highest civilian honor, by President William Jefferson Clinton.
2003
In April, the United States Postal Service will issue a Cesar E. Chavez commemorative stamp.
The stamp image was painted by Roberto Rodriguez based on a photograph taken by Bob Fitch in 1976.
2024
President Joe Biden issued a proclamation Friday, March 29, 2024 proclaiming Sunday as César Chávez Day and calling “upon all Americans to observe this day as a day of service and learning with appropriate service, community, and education programs to honor César E. Chávez’s enduring legacy.”
“On this day, we recognize that César Chávez and his fellow farm workers made progress that can never be taken back,” Biden said in the proclamation. “They fought for a sacred cause that continues to beat in the hearts of the American people: Every worker — no matter who they are, where they are from, or what they do — deserves dignity and respect.”
On his first day in office, Biden placed a bronze statue of Chávez, supplied by his children, in the Oval Office.








Thank you OB Rag for this article about an American hero. Cesar’s life should remind us of all that we are all capable of in this nation. If this kid from Yuma, a depression era baby none-the-less, can organize to lift so many others up in the face of such violent oppressionary tactics, then so can we.
Never undersestimate the commonality that all Americans undeniably share, even if temporarily misplaced. E Pluribus Unum.
“We cannot seek achievement for ourselves and forget about progress and prosperity for our community… Our ambitions must be broad enough to include the aspirations and needs of others, for their sakes and for our own.” – Cesar Chavez