Farmworkers, Consumers to March on Downtown Boston Stop & Shop Demanding Fair Labor Standards for Farmworkers
Pressure mounts for Boston-based supermarket chain to sign Fair Food agreement with Coalition of Immokalee Workers in light of historic breakthrough with Florida tomato growers
IMMOKALEE, Fla., Feb. 25, 2011 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- On Sunday, February 27th, a busload of farmworkers from Florida – the men and women who pick the tomatoes Bostonians eat from October to May every year – will be joined by consumers from across the Northeast in a march through downtown Boston to the Brigham Circle Stop & Shop store, where they will hold a rally to demand that the supermarket chain join a growing partnership among farmworkers, Florida tomato growers, and retail food giants aimed at ending decades of farm labor abuse in Florida.
What: "March to Stop Sweatshops," farmworkers and consumers march through downtown Boston to call on Stop and Shop to do the right thing. |
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When: Sunday, February 27th, 1 p.m. in Boston's Copley Square. |
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Who: Farmworkers from the Coalition of Immokalee (FL) Workers, Slow Food USA president Josh Viertel, religious leaders, students, community activists from across the Northeast. |
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"We pick Boston's tomatoes, and for years those tomatoes have been harvested in Florida's fields under unimaginably harsh conditions," said Leonel Perez of the CIW. "Today, however, we are finally beginning to see the first glimmers of more humane treatment at work, thanks to the Campaign for Fair Food. But Boston's Stop & Shop supermarket chain, and its parent company Ahold, are standing in the way of progress, and their refusal to help improve farm labor wages and working conditions threatens to undermine the unprecedented – and still fragile – human rights advances that are just now starting to take root in the fields."
Background: Florida farmworkers have long faced brutal conditions in the fields, including sub-poverty wages, widespread labor rights violations, and even modern-day slavery. Today, however, there is hope on the horizon, thanks to the efforts of farmworkers, Fair Food activists, Florida tomato growers, and nine food industry leaders (including Stop & Shop competitor Whole Foods) who have joined in support of the CIW's Fair Food principles, including a penny-per-pound wage increase, a strict code of conduct, a cooperative complaint resolution system, a participatory health and safety program, and a worker-to-worker education process.
In November, the CIW and the Florida Tomato Growers Exchange (FTGE) signed an agreement to extend these principles to over 90% of Florida's tomato fields. And though the implementation of that agreement is being phased in gradually over the course of this season and the next, many concrete changes have already taken root on some of the state's largest farms.
Stop & Shop, however, is refusing to do its part, and if they have their way, the unprecedented farm labor transformation promised by the CIW's landmark agreement with the FTGE would be significantly diminished. That's because the solution to farm labor exploitation and abuse contained in the Fair Food principles depends on the participation of all the major purchasers of Florida tomatoes. In the words of the FTGE's Reggie Brown, "Everybody in the system has to be invested for it to work."
About the Coalition of Immokalee Workers: The CIW (www.ciw-online.org) is a community-based farmworker organization headquartered in Immokalee, Florida, with over 4,000 members. The CIW seeks modern working conditions for farmworkers and promotes their fair treatment in accordance with national and international human rights standards. The CIW's Campaign for Fair Food has won unprecedented support for fundamental farm labor reforms from retail food industry leaders.
SOURCE Coalition of Immokalee Workers
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