Showing posts with label Publix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Publix. Show all posts

Monday, March 21, 2011

Farmworker Advocates Take Over 30,000 Change.org Members on Tour | Change.org News

by Amanda Kloer · March 21, 2011

The Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) are taking their mobile modern-day slavery museum on tour this week, and they're bringing over 30,000 Change.org members with them -- via petition. The museum has been working its way up from Florida, through Georgia, and next into Tennessee, where it will conclude its tour at a Publix in Nashville. And there, hundreds of farmworker advocates and the voices of tens of thousands of Change.org members will ask Publix to finally support fair food.

Despite a strong turn-out at a recent CIW-organized protest at Publix headquarters in Tampa, Florida, the company has yet to respond to growing customer demands that they work with the CIW and agree to raise farmworker wages and prevent serious human rights abuses in the industry. Publix has taken the attitude that any abuse or exploitation that goes into producing the food they sell isn't their "business." And they don't seem to care if they're profiting from modern-day slavery.

So CIW is bringing the reality of human trafficking to them, in the form of the Florida Modern-Day Slavery Museum. Touring the museum is at the same time fascinating and heart-wrenching. It consists of a cargo truck outfitted as an exact replica of one inside which Florida tomato industry workers were held in slavery in 2008.  Among the exhibits are a demonstration of the conditions the enslaved workers faced, as well as the strenuous work and low wages most workers in the industry experience.

Armed with both the reality of slavery and the signatures of over 30,000 Change.org member, this coming Saturday CIW will ask Publix yet again to do their part to fight serious human rights abuses. You can support their efforts by signing this petition and sharing it with your friends. And if you live in the South, catch up with them on their tour and tell Publix yourself that helping prevent human trafficking in the tomato industry is their business.
Photo credit: hyku
Amanda Kloer is a Change.org Editor and has been a full-time abolitionist in several capacities for seven years. Follow her on Twitter @endhumantraffic

Source:  news.change.org/
Farmworker Advocates Take Over 30,000 Change.org Members on Tour | Change.org News
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Wednesday, February 2, 2011

UF Senate passes resolution calling on Publix to meet with tomato pickers | Florida Independent: News. Politics. Media

Coalition of Immokalee Workers ProtestImage by CWMc via Flickr
By Brett Ader | 02.01.11 | 1:55 pm
“Justice is not 50 cents for a 32-pound bucket of tomatoes,” said Senator Cassia Laham, who helped draft the resolution. #


In November, the Immokalee Workers celebrated a victory against The Florida Tomato Growers Exchange, a trade group representing 90 percent of tomato producers in the state. The group has led successful campaigns in recent years against Taco Bell, McDonald’s, Subway and Aramark, who all agreed to a penny-per-pound wage raise — amounting to a nearly 50 percent increase in earnings per bucket of tomatoes picked for the average farmworker. #
Obviously, my hero in the business world has been and will always be George Jenkins, “Mr. George,” the founder of Publix and my grandfather. He was a genius with the unique ability to combine a keen business sense with his love and appreciation for people. He started Publix to make a living, but his drive for success was the result of his competitive spirit and his desire to help others. I doubt it was ever to grow his personal wealth, which is why our company is associate owned today. Much of his joy was seeing others succeed and grow.  George Jenkins set a wonderful example for me and taught me many valuable lessons, but the one that stands out, and the one I think about most often is very simply, “don’t let making a profit stand in the way of doing the right thing.” #
Publix has also taken criticism in recent weeks following a company spokesman’s comments in December on the issue of harsh labor standards in Florida’s tomato fields. #
In South Florida, deemed “ground zero for modern slavery” by a chief assistant U.S. attorney who has prosecuted multiple servitude operations, we need look no further than our local supermarket to find indifference to the plight of Floridians held against their will. Publix, a major buyer of Sunshine State produce, recently made known its lack of concern for abuse in its supply chain. When asked by The Bulletin in Alabama last month about exploitation on the farms where it buys its produce, Publix spokesman Dwaine Stevens responded: “If there are some atrocities going on, it’s not our business. Maybe it’s something the government should get involved with.” #
The UF resolution ends with the following: #
The University of Florida Student Senate urges Publix to meet with the CIW and agree to improve the wages and working conditions of the Florida tomato pickers in its supply chain by agreeing to pay at least one penny more per pound for its tomatoes – to be passed directly to the workers – and, together with the CIW, implement an enforceable, human rights-based Code of Conduct for its supply chain. #
Read the resolution in full: #
Source:  floridaindependent.com
UF Senate passes resolution calling on Publix to meet with tomato pickers | Florida Independent: News. Politics. Media
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