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The Immokalee, Florida migrant farmworkers who have forced some of the biggest food industry corporations in the world to acquiesce to their demands for "dignity" in the fields say they are determined to make Wendy's and Publix do the same.
To prove it, the Coalition of Immokalee Workers launched their 'Now Is the Time' tour in early March, staging rallies and actions in ten cities in 10 days that culminated in an overnight vigil of hundreds at a Lakeland, Florida Publix on Friday and Saturday.
Their demands? That Wendy's and Publix support a penny-per-pound pay increase for tomato pickers, back-up a zero-tolerance policy for abuse and sexual harassment, and allow workers to exercise their rights to organize and work safely.
Now under the banner of the Fair Food Program, these demands emerged from the earliest days of CIW organizing in the early 1990s, in which mostly Mexico, Guatemala, and Haiti born migrant farmworkers joined together to fight low pay, rampant wage theft, workplace abuse, and modern-day slavery. The organization, which has since swelled to 5,000 farmworker members, has forced a dozen of the world's wealthiest fast food and grocery corporations to sign onto the Fair Food Program, including Walmart in January 2014.
"We have seen that if we work together as one with strength and commitment and faith, we can change things," said Lupe Gonzalo, a farmworker and member of CIW, in an interview with Common Dreams.
Yet, after four years of pressure, Publix -- a grocery retail giant currently expanding across the southeast -- has so far refused to sign on or even meet with CIW representatives, say organizers. Wendy's, one of the largest fast food chains in the U.S., has refused to get on board for over a year.
So, over 50 CIW members traveled to meet with supporters from Atlanta, Georgia to Nashville, Tennessee where they staged actions demanding Wendy's and Publix enter the Fair Food Program.
In Dublin, Ohio -- a suburb of Columbus -- over 800 people joined the CIW tour in a two mile march to the Wendy's corporate headquarters last Sunday. "We have been organizing for a month, and we really wanted to send Wendy's a message that people here are aware of the Immokalee workers' fight for justice and people in Ohio will hold them accountable," said Ruben Castilla-Herrera, organizer with Ohio Fair Food, in an interview with Common Dreams. He added that the "momentum in Ohio is only going to grow."
CIW rallied at Wendy's in Louiseville, Kentucky -- the town that houses Yum! Brands -- which in 2005 signed the organization's first ever fair food agreement won by a four-year boycott of Yum! subsidiary Taco Bell.
Over 1,000 people marched on Friday to a Lakeland, Florida Publix where hundreds held an overnight vigil into Saturday. "The energy and spirit of the people who allied with us was powerful and showed they too will demand justice," said Gonzalo. "That energy is what fuels us to struggle for long haul."
In a farm-working industry defined by seasonal work, many who pick tomatoes and other crops in Immokalee, Florida travel to other states in the off season. Organizers say this presents an opportunity for CIW's human rights struggle to spread across industries and state lines. "Tomato pickers travel and pick crops all up the east coast," said Gonzalo. "We want to make sure the rights we've won here expand to other states."
Yet, once agreements have been won, workers say it takes constant organizing to ensure rights are upheld. "We will continue with worker to worker education with daily work of ensuring rights we've won in the fields. Trust us, we are not about to rest until all workers in the fields of Florida and all states are treated as they should be with the respect and dignity they deserve."
"Then we can talk about resting."


_____________________
Dear Common Dreams reader, It’s been nearly 30 years since I co-founded Common Dreams with my late wife, Lina Newhouser. We had the radical notion that journalism should serve the public good, not corporate profits. It was clear to us from the outset what it would take to build such a project. No paid advertisements. No corporate sponsors. No millionaire publisher telling us what to think or do. Many people said we wouldn't last a year, but we proved those doubters wrong. Together with a tremendous team of journalists and dedicated staff, we built an independent media outlet free from the constraints of profits and corporate control. Our mission has always been simple: To inform. To inspire. To ignite change for the common good. Building Common Dreams was not easy. Our survival was never guaranteed. When you take on the most powerful forces—Wall Street greed, fossil fuel industry destruction, Big Tech lobbyists, and uber-rich oligarchs who have spent billions upon billions rigging the economy and democracy in their favor—the only bulwark you have is supporters who believe in your work. But here’s the urgent message from me today. It's never been this bad out there. And it's never been this hard to keep us going. At the very moment Common Dreams is most needed, the threats we face are intensifying. We need your support now more than ever. We don't accept corporate advertising and never will. We don't have a paywall because we don't think people should be blocked from critical news based on their ability to pay. Everything we do is funded by the donations of readers like you. When everyone does the little they can afford, we are strong. But if that support retreats or dries up, so do we. Will you donate now to make sure Common Dreams not only survives but thrives? —Craig Brown, Co-founder |
The Immokalee, Florida migrant farmworkers who have forced some of the biggest food industry corporations in the world to acquiesce to their demands for "dignity" in the fields say they are determined to make Wendy's and Publix do the same.
To prove it, the Coalition of Immokalee Workers launched their 'Now Is the Time' tour in early March, staging rallies and actions in ten cities in 10 days that culminated in an overnight vigil of hundreds at a Lakeland, Florida Publix on Friday and Saturday.
Their demands? That Wendy's and Publix support a penny-per-pound pay increase for tomato pickers, back-up a zero-tolerance policy for abuse and sexual harassment, and allow workers to exercise their rights to organize and work safely.
Now under the banner of the Fair Food Program, these demands emerged from the earliest days of CIW organizing in the early 1990s, in which mostly Mexico, Guatemala, and Haiti born migrant farmworkers joined together to fight low pay, rampant wage theft, workplace abuse, and modern-day slavery. The organization, which has since swelled to 5,000 farmworker members, has forced a dozen of the world's wealthiest fast food and grocery corporations to sign onto the Fair Food Program, including Walmart in January 2014.
"We have seen that if we work together as one with strength and commitment and faith, we can change things," said Lupe Gonzalo, a farmworker and member of CIW, in an interview with Common Dreams.
Yet, after four years of pressure, Publix -- a grocery retail giant currently expanding across the southeast -- has so far refused to sign on or even meet with CIW representatives, say organizers. Wendy's, one of the largest fast food chains in the U.S., has refused to get on board for over a year.
So, over 50 CIW members traveled to meet with supporters from Atlanta, Georgia to Nashville, Tennessee where they staged actions demanding Wendy's and Publix enter the Fair Food Program.
In Dublin, Ohio -- a suburb of Columbus -- over 800 people joined the CIW tour in a two mile march to the Wendy's corporate headquarters last Sunday. "We have been organizing for a month, and we really wanted to send Wendy's a message that people here are aware of the Immokalee workers' fight for justice and people in Ohio will hold them accountable," said Ruben Castilla-Herrera, organizer with Ohio Fair Food, in an interview with Common Dreams. He added that the "momentum in Ohio is only going to grow."
CIW rallied at Wendy's in Louiseville, Kentucky -- the town that houses Yum! Brands -- which in 2005 signed the organization's first ever fair food agreement won by a four-year boycott of Yum! subsidiary Taco Bell.
Over 1,000 people marched on Friday to a Lakeland, Florida Publix where hundreds held an overnight vigil into Saturday. "The energy and spirit of the people who allied with us was powerful and showed they too will demand justice," said Gonzalo. "That energy is what fuels us to struggle for long haul."
In a farm-working industry defined by seasonal work, many who pick tomatoes and other crops in Immokalee, Florida travel to other states in the off season. Organizers say this presents an opportunity for CIW's human rights struggle to spread across industries and state lines. "Tomato pickers travel and pick crops all up the east coast," said Gonzalo. "We want to make sure the rights we've won here expand to other states."
Yet, once agreements have been won, workers say it takes constant organizing to ensure rights are upheld. "We will continue with worker to worker education with daily work of ensuring rights we've won in the fields. Trust us, we are not about to rest until all workers in the fields of Florida and all states are treated as they should be with the respect and dignity they deserve."
"Then we can talk about resting."


_____________________
The Immokalee, Florida migrant farmworkers who have forced some of the biggest food industry corporations in the world to acquiesce to their demands for "dignity" in the fields say they are determined to make Wendy's and Publix do the same.
To prove it, the Coalition of Immokalee Workers launched their 'Now Is the Time' tour in early March, staging rallies and actions in ten cities in 10 days that culminated in an overnight vigil of hundreds at a Lakeland, Florida Publix on Friday and Saturday.
Their demands? That Wendy's and Publix support a penny-per-pound pay increase for tomato pickers, back-up a zero-tolerance policy for abuse and sexual harassment, and allow workers to exercise their rights to organize and work safely.
Now under the banner of the Fair Food Program, these demands emerged from the earliest days of CIW organizing in the early 1990s, in which mostly Mexico, Guatemala, and Haiti born migrant farmworkers joined together to fight low pay, rampant wage theft, workplace abuse, and modern-day slavery. The organization, which has since swelled to 5,000 farmworker members, has forced a dozen of the world's wealthiest fast food and grocery corporations to sign onto the Fair Food Program, including Walmart in January 2014.
"We have seen that if we work together as one with strength and commitment and faith, we can change things," said Lupe Gonzalo, a farmworker and member of CIW, in an interview with Common Dreams.
Yet, after four years of pressure, Publix -- a grocery retail giant currently expanding across the southeast -- has so far refused to sign on or even meet with CIW representatives, say organizers. Wendy's, one of the largest fast food chains in the U.S., has refused to get on board for over a year.
So, over 50 CIW members traveled to meet with supporters from Atlanta, Georgia to Nashville, Tennessee where they staged actions demanding Wendy's and Publix enter the Fair Food Program.
In Dublin, Ohio -- a suburb of Columbus -- over 800 people joined the CIW tour in a two mile march to the Wendy's corporate headquarters last Sunday. "We have been organizing for a month, and we really wanted to send Wendy's a message that people here are aware of the Immokalee workers' fight for justice and people in Ohio will hold them accountable," said Ruben Castilla-Herrera, organizer with Ohio Fair Food, in an interview with Common Dreams. He added that the "momentum in Ohio is only going to grow."
CIW rallied at Wendy's in Louiseville, Kentucky -- the town that houses Yum! Brands -- which in 2005 signed the organization's first ever fair food agreement won by a four-year boycott of Yum! subsidiary Taco Bell.
Over 1,000 people marched on Friday to a Lakeland, Florida Publix where hundreds held an overnight vigil into Saturday. "The energy and spirit of the people who allied with us was powerful and showed they too will demand justice," said Gonzalo. "That energy is what fuels us to struggle for long haul."
In a farm-working industry defined by seasonal work, many who pick tomatoes and other crops in Immokalee, Florida travel to other states in the off season. Organizers say this presents an opportunity for CIW's human rights struggle to spread across industries and state lines. "Tomato pickers travel and pick crops all up the east coast," said Gonzalo. "We want to make sure the rights we've won here expand to other states."
Yet, once agreements have been won, workers say it takes constant organizing to ensure rights are upheld. "We will continue with worker to worker education with daily work of ensuring rights we've won in the fields. Trust us, we are not about to rest until all workers in the fields of Florida and all states are treated as they should be with the respect and dignity they deserve."
"Then we can talk about resting."


_____________________