Tag Archives: coalition of immokalee workers

Coalition of Immokalee Workers Reaches Agreement with Burger King

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The Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW), an organization representing farmworkers in South Florida, announced today that it has reached an agreement with Burger King that requires Burger King to pay fair prices for the tomatoes that it uses in its products.

Some highlights of the agreement:

* BK agrees to pay an additional net penny per pound to the Florida farm workers who harvest its tomatoes. To encourage grower participation in this increased wage program, BK will also pay incremental payroll taxes and administrative costs incurred by the growers as a result of their farmworkers’ increased wages, or a total of 1.5 cents per pound of tomatoes.

* BK also joins other fast-food industry leaders and the CIW in calling for an industry-wide net penny per pound surcharge to increase wages for Florida tomato harvesters.

* Together, BK and the CIW have also established zero tolerance guidelines for certain unlawful activities that require immediate termination of any grower from the Burger King supply chain. The BK/CIW collaboration additionally provides for farmworker participation in the monitoring of growers’ compliance with the company’s vendor code of conduct.

The CIW has suggested that following victories over Burger King, Taco Bell, and McDonalds, it will move on to target additional companies.

Protest Demands Fair Food from Burger King

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On Friday, around twenty-five people gathered outside of the Burger King restaurant on Pearl Street in downtown Grand Rapids to demand that Burger King pay more for the tomatoes that it uses in its products. The protestors leafleted people entering the restaurant and marched in front of the store while holding signs reading “One Penny More,” “Exploitation King,” and “Fair Food Now.”

Shortly after the protest began, the manager of the Burger King came out and told some of the protestors that it was a locally owned franchise and that he did not understand why they were targeting the restaurant. He was handed a leaflet and told about the reason for the protest, but said that there was “nothing he can do about it.”

The protest was held in solidarity with a march to Burger King’s corporate headquarters that took place on Friday in Miami. The march was part of an ongoing effort by the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) demanding that Burger King pay more the tomatoes that its restaurants use. The CIW represents farm workers who pick tomatoes in the fields of South Florida, some of which are eventually sold to Burger King. While the CIW has been successful in getting Yum Brands (Taco Bell, A&W, KFC, Pizza Hut, and Long John Silver’s) and McDonald’s to recognize the exploitation of farm workers growing their tomatoes and agree to pay more, Burger King has refused. Instead, Burger King has aligned itself with the tomato growers and has launched a public relations effort designed to undercut the agreements with other restaurants. Burger King CEO John Chidsey has gone as far as to claim that farm workers do not live in poverty.

However, the CIW has been active in documenting and addressing exploitation in the fields, even uncovering cases of slavery. The CIW asserts that farm workers work in “sweatshop conditions.” Farm workers picking tomatoes are paid sub-poverty wages (roughly $10,000/year, according to the USDOL), have not received raises in nearly 30 years, workers must pick 2.5 tons of tomatoes to earn minimum wage for a typical 10-hour day, and are have no labor rights (including overtime pay or the right to organize).

Solidarity Protest with Farm Workers Planned at Burger King

photo from a ciw protest at burger king

Tomorrow, a protest is planned outside of a Burger King restaurant in downtown Grand Rapids in solidarity with the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) protest at Burger King’s corporate headquarters. The CIW’s efforts targeting Burger King and the solidarity protest in Grand Rapids are part of an ongoing effort by the CIW to improve conditions for farm workers picking tomatoes in Florida. Previously the CIW won concessions from Taco Bell and McDonalds including agreements to pay more for tomatoes. In advance of the protest, Burger King has gained some attention in the media–including in the Grand Rapids Press–for its efforts to undercut the agreements. This strategy reportedly includes a public relations effort designed to convince the public that farm workers are well paid along with an effort to pressure growers not to cooperate with McDonald’s and Taco Bell.

The statement announcing the protest in Grand Rapids states:

“The Coalition of Immokolee Workers is staging a protest at Burger King’s headquarters in Miami, Florida on November 30. Here in Grand Rapids we are committed to supporting their fight for a living wage and will be holding a solidarity protest at the downtown Grand Rapids Burger King ( 410 Pearl St NW, Grand Rapids, MI). It will begin at 4:00 sharp and last for about two hours. Please bring signs, bullhorns, and get ready to make some noise for justice! Here are some:

* Tomato pickers make, on average, $10,000 a year

* Pickers are paid virtually the same per-bucket piece rate (about 45 cents per 32 lb bucket) today as they were in 1980. At this rate, workers have to pick 25 TONS of tomatoes just to earn minimum wage in a typical 10-hr day.

* Farmworkers in Florida have no right to overtime pay and no right to organize or bargain collectively. In the most extreme cases, farmworkers face conditions of modern-day slavery.

BUT, remember that people like us can and have made a difference. Both Taco Bell and McDonalds have agreed to the CIW’s requests after pressure from their customers. Let’s tell Burger King how much justice means so us!”

In the Grand Rapids area, there is a history of organizing in solidarity with the CIW. At Grand Valley State University (GVSU) during the campaign against Taco Bell, the campus’ chapter of Students Against Sweatshops was active from 2002 through the end in 2005.

A video providing a short overview of the campaign nationally and its future was recently produced by the CIW:

Organizing Leads to Agreement to Improve Farmworker Wages and Working Conditions

The Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) announced today that they have reached an agreement with McDonald’s to improve wages and working conditions for farmworkers supplying tomatoes to the restaurant. According to the agreement announced Monday, the CIW, McDonald’s, and its suppliers have agreed to:

  1. Pay a penny more per pound to workers harvesting tomatoes for McDonald’s.
  2. Develop a stronger code of conduct based on the principle of worker participation.
  3. Undertake a collaborative effort to develop a third party mechanism for monitoring conditions in the fields and investigating workers’ claims of abuse.
  4. The agreement marks the second major victory for CIW in their ongoing campaign to improve the livelihood of farmworkers. In 2005, the CIW won a similar victory against Taco Bell’s parent company, Yum Brands. Organizers with the CIW pledged that this victory is another step in a long struggle towards improving farmworkers rights, with CIW member Lucas Benitez stating “Today, with McDonald’s, we have taken another major step toward a world where we as farmworkers can enjoy a fair wage and humane working conditions in exchange for the hard and essential work we do every day. We are not there yet, but we are getting there, and today’s agreement should send a strong message to the rest of the restaurant and supermarket industry that it is now time to stand behind the food they sell from the field to the table.”

    The CIW’s campaign has relied not only on their own organizing work, but also the organizing done by student allies across the country through the Student Farmworker Alliance (SFA) and widespread community support. At the time of the announcement, the CIW and the SFA were in the midst of the McDonald’s Truth Tour 2007 and was visiting communities around the country to build support for the campaign. The CIW is continuing with plans to host a massive convergence this weekend in Chicago.

    The CIW will now set its sites on Burger King, who in February of 2007 rejected a partnership offer by the CIW and instead suggested CIW members should consider getting jobs at Burger King restaurants.

CIW Protests at McDonalds Headquarters

Protestors gathered on the street in front of McDonald’s headquarters in Oak Brook, Illinois today while shareholders met inside. The protest was part of a national campaign by the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) to compel McDonald’s to acknowledge its ability and responsibility to improve the lives of farmworkers in its supply chain. The CIW’s “Fair Food” campaign is a continuation of a four-year long Taco Bell boycott which ended in March of 2005 when Taco Bell finally committed to work toward improving the working conditions and wages of farmworkers in Immokalee, Florida. Protestors demanded that McDonald’s follow the precendent set by Taco Bell and support “real rights” for farmworkers, which include safe working conditions, fair wages and freedom from harassment and discrimination. So far, McDonald’s has launched a public relations campaign to counteract the work of the CIW but has not addressed the human rights abuses that still occur in the fields of Florida.

Photos from the protest:

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Media Mouse was also at a protest at the “rock and roll” McDonald’s earlier this year.

Farm Workers March on Rock and Roll McDonalds in Chicago

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On Saturday in Chicago, 300 to 400 members of the Coalition for Immokalee Workers (CIW) and their allies participated in a five-mile march to demand that McDonalds improve the working condition and pay for farm workers supplying tomatoes to the restaurant. Marchers chanted “Down, Down with McSploitation, Up, Up with the Fair Food Nation,” “Exploitation makes me Grimace, we won’t stop until it’s Finished,” “Si Se Puede, and “Hey Mickey, you won’t last, you won’t last, we’ll kick your ass” (sung to the tune of the song “Hey Mickey”) as they marched from Plaza Tenochtitlan in Pilsen to the “Rock and Roll” McDonalds in downtown Chicago. Along the way the march stopped and briefly rallied at McDonalds restaurants, culminating with a large rally at the Rock and Roll McDonalds.

At the rally, the CIW announced that it is expanding its campaign to target Chipotle Mexican Grill, a “Mexican-style” restaurant that McDonalds retains 70% ownership of after a public stock offering in January of this year. Chipotle, who touts their corporate philosophy in the manifesto “Food with Integrity,” describes how they want to “revolutionize the way America grows and gathers food” by “working back along the food chain” beyond distributors to encourage healthy production of vegetables and humane living conditions for animals used by Chipotle. While calling for improved production of vegetables and animals used by the company, Chipotle says nothing about the conditions under which farm workers supplying the company work. Consequently, the CIW is calling on Chipotle to expand their mission to include “work with dignity” and is demanding that the company act to improve the labor conditions of farm workers supplying the restaurant by increasing the amount they pay farm workers by a penny per pound of tomatoes picked.

The CIW’s campaign against McDonalds, launched in December of 2005, is a follow-up to their successful boycott of Taco Bell that ended last year with Taco Bell’s parent company, Yum! Brands, agreeing to increase the amount that Taco Bell pays for its tomatoes and to take a role in improving the conditions for farm workers in the tomato industry. McDonalds, who is one of the largest corporations in the fast-food industry, has refused to work with the CIW to expand on the precedent set by Taco Bell, and instead has ignored calls to improve the conditions for workers supplying its tomatoes. While the company has undertaken some steps towards “social responsibility” in the past few years with the decision to purchase fair-trade coffee for 650 of its restaurants and the establishment of a code of conduct that guarantees labor rights for workers supplying the company with toys, it has failed to do so with farm workers in the United States. As part of this effort, the CIW has engaged in a number of tactics that they fine-tuned during the Taco Bell boycott, including pray-ins, connections with student groups, and the development of an extensive coalition to pressure McDonalds. Additionally, as they did during the campaign against Taco Bell, the CIW conducted a “Truth Tour” where they visited 16 cities across the country educating and organizing allies and potential constituents while protesting at McDonalds restaurants along the way. The tour ended in Chicago with a meeting with representatives of McDonalds at their corporate headquarters outside Chicago.

Photos from the Chicago March and Rally

Send an email to McDonalds urging them to improve conditions for farm workers