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Farmworkers turn up heat on Taco Bell
Scott Harris, AFL Staff
The Coalition of
Immokalee Workers (CIW) is expanding its year-and-a-half-old boycott
campaign against fast food giant Taco Bell, demanding it intervene to improve
working conditions for farmworkers who pick the tomatoes which supply the chain.
"The tomatoes Taco Bell buys for its tacos and chalupas
are produced in what can only be described as sweatshop conditions,"
explains CIW organizer Lucas Benitez.
Workers, most of whom are immigrants from Latin America, are
paid 45-50 cents for every thirty-two pound bucket of tomatoes they pick, a wage
that has been virtually stagnant since 1980.
At this wage, workers must pick two tons of tomatoes in a day
to earn $50.
CIW organizers also point to terrible working conditions,
which are hard to combat since seasonal farmworkers are excluded from the
national labour relations act and Florida is a "right to work" state.
"Twenty years of picking at sub-poverty wages, no right
to overtime pay, no right to organize without fear of being fired, no health
insurance, no sick leave, no paid holidays or paid vacation, and no pension is a
national disgrace" says Benitez.
The Florida tomato industry is dominated by a half-dozen
corporations which supply major restaurant chains. CIW says that as one of the
largest buyers, Taco Bell has the responsibility to ensure good working
conditions in its supplier’s fields.
Jonathan Blum, public affairs VP for the parent company of
Taco Bell, says they are not involved. "This a labour dispute between the
workers and their employer. We don’t intervene in any company’s labour
dispute."
CIW says this was the same response Nike first made about
sweatshop conditions in its subcontractors’ factories, and points out that
Taco Bell has previously intervened to improve conditions for farm animals in
its supplier’s operations.
According to CIW information, if Taco Bell paid just one cent
more per pound of tomatoes, and insisted the increase be passed on to pickers,
wages would nearly double.
Such an increase would mean one quarter of one cent passed on
to consumers for the average meal.
The campaign, which was launched in April of 2001 also
demands that Taco Bell open up a three-way dialogue with suppliers and CIW to
address working conditions.
On February 24th, farmwokers will begin a hunger strike at
the global headquarters of Taco Bell in Irvine, California. Solidarity fasts and
protests are planned across the country on Feburary 28th.
In 2001, Taco Bell had sales of over $5 billion, while its
parent corporation YUM Inc., which is the world’s largest restaurant system,
reported sales of over $22 billion from its five restaurant chains.
"When you look at the difference in power between us as
farmworkers and Taco Bell as a billion dollar corporation, you may think we are
crazy for taking them on," says CIW member Romeo Ramirez.
"They have all the wealth and political power, and we
have only one weapon. But that weapon-the truth-is the most powerful thing on
earth, so we are certain that we will prevail."
For more information on the campaign, visit the Coalition of
Immokalee Workers website at www.ciw-online.org.
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