WFWA is a 100% volunteer-run organizing drive of low-income farm, seasonal, contracted, temp and other workers and their families. Your participation will make a difference from your first day in the door. Don’t wait, call today!
Volunteer at WFWA
Get Involved
Call: (209) 467-1193
You can volunteer…
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As an individual
As an individual, you can make a huge impact through joining with a team of others concerned about the conditions of farm and other low-income workers in the San Joaquin Valley. Don’t wait, call today!
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As a group
From college classes to church groups, labor unions and civic clubs, groups large and small are welcome to participate with WFWA.
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As a professional
Doctors, lawyers, trades people, graphic designers, journalists and many other professionals can volunteer their professional skills to advance the just cause of farm workers.

How it works…
Simply call WFWA today at (209) 467-1193
No machines or automated phone trees, just human contact
You Call Us
Call us seven days a week, including weekends.
We Answer
A volunteer will answer your call.
You Schedule to Volunteer!
No prior experience is necessary and you are productive your first day as a volunteer!
WFWA’s telephones are staffed by volunteers who are ready to answer your call!
You can be productive on your first day in!
No prior experience or special skills are needed. We use “on-the-job” training, so anyone can learn while taking action and making a difference.
Weekly and Monthly Volunteer Activities
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Food Distribution
Weekly
WFWA members may enroll in the association’s budget-saving Benefit Plan II program and participate in weekly free-of-charge supplemental food distributions featuring fresh organic produce and other nutritious foods. Volunteers are needed year-round to pick up, sort, box and distribute food to enrolled members.
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Medical Education Sessions
Call for schedule
Volunteer physicians and registered nurses provide health education sessions on a variety of health topics such as diabetes, high blood pressure, nutrition and exercise.
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“Know Your Law” Sessions
Call for schedule
Volunteer attorneys present general legal information in group settings as well as private legal advice consultations, accompanied by a WFWA lay advocate. Topics include wage theft, evictions, discrimination and what to do if pulled over by a police officer. WFWA needs more volunteer attorneys, legal advocates and interpreters.
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Clothing Distribution
Weekly
WFWA volunteers assist with sorting and organizing clothing, doing benefit intakes and assisting members in filling their clothing requests.
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Benefit Advocacy
Weekly
Farm workers, landscapers, temp and gig workers and other low-paid workers can’t win without organization. WFWA teaches the skill of advocacy. You can learn how to fight to keep a member’s lights on, how to help workers win back unpaid wages, how to expunge medical debt, and fight government and corporate denials to the most vulnerable workers.
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Operation Camp Crew
Sundays
WFWA members who work the San Joaquin Valley’s farms host WFWA volunteers at farm labor camps to bring the benefit of organization, community connection and material aid, such as food, clothing, sun protection and cooling supplies to their families, and to report on farm worker conditions. Call WFWA to join us!
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Membership Canvass
Saturdays
WFWA membership canvasses are the lifeblood of our grassroots farm worker organizing drive. Alone and isolated we cannot achieve anything; united we can win! Volunteers canvass door-to-door in low-income neighborhoods where members and potential members live to build organization where it’s needed the most.
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Publication Session
Weekly
Join WFWA’s publication staff! You can learn – or help teach – how to produce the next issue of WFWA’s newspaper, the Western Farm Worker, to tell the truth about low-income workers organizing for economic justice, and our seasonal Sponsors Guide. We also need volunteers to design flyers.
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Community Outreach
Twice weekly
Volunteers set up information tables in front of grocery stores, at local community events and other locations to promote WFWA so that others can join our cause. This is one way WFWA enlists new friends and participants to come in and make a difference. Please call if you can volunteer or if you know of a location where WFWA can set up an information table.
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Mailout Session
Weekly
Volunteers prepare and send letters about our current campaigns to people who have joined WFWA and have expressed an interest in volunteering or supporting WFWA. We need volunteers to help with the daily letter mailouts as well as to assist with the bulk mailing of WFWA’s membership newspaper and Sponsors Guide.
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Phone Training Session
Weekly
Volunteers are essential to all of WFWA’s activities year-round. Volunteers conduct group telephone training sessions to call members about upcoming benefit activities and re-contact interested individuals met on community outreach about participating with WFWA’s organizing activities scheduled each week.
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Speaking Engagements
Call to Schedule
WFWA volunteers and members speak to college classes, clubs, church groups and other groups to teach about the economic problems WFWA’s members face and how people from all walks of life can participate in building solutions from the bottom up.
You Call — We Answer — You Schedule to Volunteer!
Call WFWA today at (209) 467-1193
Participate as a volunteer in seasonal events and campaigns
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Winter Survival Campaign
When weather cools for the winter, WFWA heats up to protect the lives of low-income workers suffering from high heating costs, lack of adequate winter wear and loss of work hours due to seasonal changes. Volunteers play an important role in filling benefit requests from members and checking on homebound members and other residents through canvassing in low-income neighborhoods.
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Spring Expansion Campaign
WFWA’s Spring Expansion Campaign is a material form of hope for our collective future. Along with an expansion of WFWA’s Benefit Program and community outreach, the campaign includes WFWA’s Spring Family Brunch and Children’s Easter Egg Hunt, which features a hearty meal, games, prizes and fun for membership families.
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Farm Worker Summer Campaign
WFWA’s Farm Worker Summer Campaign reaches seasonal farm workers at their homes through door-to-door membership canvasses, and migrant farm workers through Operation Camp Crews to farm labor camps throughout the San Joaquin Valley. WFWA runs distributions at the farm labor camps of food, clothing, hygiene supplies, sun protection, bottles of water and cooling equipment like fans and air conditioners.
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Back-to-School Campaign
The expenses low-income working parents face for back-to-school clothes and supplies, medical exams for school entry and immunizations can break an already overstretched budget. Our Back-to-School clothing and supply distribution can save WFWA membership families up to $500 – money that can be used to pay for rent, utilities, food and medicines these families would otherwise be forced to do without.
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Holiday Campaign
WFWA’s annual Children’s Safe and Sane Halloween Party and chaperoned Trick-or-Treat for Farm Workers is the first in a series of events organized by and for low-income workers and their families through the holiday season. In addition, WFWA runs a budget-saving program for members to help other members meet seasonal needs such as holiday food basket distributions for Thanksgiving and Christmas-time, and holiday toy distributions to parents for their private family gift giving to their children. Join the festivities!
Volunteer your professional skills as a…
As a doctor, nurse or other medical professional, you can volunteer with WFWA’s preventive medical benefit on general medical sessions providing routine health screenings and exams, or by conducting health education sessions on a variety of health topics of concern to low-income workers.
Non-emergency dental care is often inaccessible to low-income workers and their families. To help with corrective and preventive care, dentists and dental assistants can volunteer to see WFWA members in their private offices or provide dental hygiene education sessions at our office.
Volunteer attorneys present information on legal topics of concern to low-income workers by participating in WFWA’s “Know Your Law” sessions at our office or migrant labor camps. Volunteer attorneys can also hold legal advice sessions to provide individual advice upon request.
Volunteer interpreters work side-by-side with volunteer benefit advocates, office staff and canvassers to bridge the communication gap. Volunteer translators assist with translating WFWA literature including membership newspaper articles and flyers.
Graphic designers can assist in designing eye-catching posters and flyers, as well as assisting with the layout of WFWA’s newspaper. Graphic designers also lead design training sessions with other volunteers. Illustrators and artists can contribute their art to bolster WFWA’s flyers or posters.
Professional trades workers can help keep WFWA’s 365 day-a-year, all-volunteer efforts up and running by donating time or resources to ensure WFWA’s office is well maintained and upgraded to better fill the needs of WFWA’s membership.
Ready to Get Invoved?
Participation is open to all those who dare to care and invest the time. Poverty wages force working families to “choose” between putting food on the table or paying rent and utility bills. Your participation can make a difference for farm workers organizing to end poverty conditions.
Call WFWA today at (209) 467-1193
Get your group involved
In three easy steps
1. Call WFWA’s office at (209) 467-1193
and explain that you want to get your group involved.
2. Meet with a WFWA representative
to learn more about the work and activities of WFWA and discuss ways your group can participate.
3. Volunteer with your group at a preplanned activity
that will help to advance WFWA’s struggle to end the poverty conditions facing agricultural workers.
Call WFWA today at (209) 467-1193
WFWA works with churches, unions, clubs and classes to involve their entire group in activities that advance the just cause of farm workers. From food and clothing distributions to mass mailing sessions to sorting and organizing clothing and supplies, groups have played an important role in WFWA’s work.