The CPC endorsed Taco Bell
Boycott - led by the heroic and tireless members
of the Florida-based Coalition of Immokalee Workers
- is over and the farmworkers have won a historic
agreement on wages and working conditions.
CPC has long been a supporter of
the CIW led boycott, hosting two separate visits
of CIW members to Denver, including a massive 80
member stop in Denver three years ago that featured
dozens of visits to local classrooms filled with
Taco Bell's youth demographic and a four hundred
person informational protest of a downtown Taco
Bell location.
We send congratulations to the
Coalition of Immokalee Workers for their inspiring
victory and their courage in the face of what have
been horrible and inhumane living and working conditions.
Please read on for more details of this historic
victory.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
from the Coalition of Immokalee Workers
The news you've heard is true!
The Taco Bell boycott is over... and we won!!!
Taco Bell agreed to meet all our
demands and then some.
We'll be sending out more information
soon, but for now check out this great report (below)
from the Washington Post announcing the agreement
reached between the CIW and Yum Brands.
The Coalition of Immokalee Workers
www.ciw-online.org
******************************************************
"Accord With Tomato Pickers
Ends Boycott Of Taco Bell"
By Evelyn Nieves
Washington Post Staff Writer
Wednesday, March 9, 2005; Page A06
A group of tomato pickers from
Florida announced an end to a boycott of Taco Bell
yesterday after the fast-food chain and its parent
company agreed to meet demands to improve wages
and working conditions for the farmworkers.
In what both sides called an unprecedented
agreement, the fast-food company said it will increase
the amount it pays for tomatoes by a penny per pound,
with the increase to go directly to workers' wages.
Taco Bell said it will help the farmworkers' efforts
to improve working and living conditions.
The Coalition of Immokalee Workers,
an advocacy group made up largely of indigent immigrants
who work tomato fields in southwest Florida, and
representatives of Taco Bell and its corporate parent,
Yum Brands Inc., announced the agreement at a news
conference at Yum headquarters in Louisville. The
farmworkers had traveled there for a protest on
Saturday.
Although they praised the outcome,
both sides stressed that the fast-food industry
as a whole needs to do more.
"Now we must convince other
companies that they have the power to change the
way they do business and the way workers are treated,"
said Lucas Benitez, a founding member of the workers
coalition.
Jonathan Blum, senior vice president
of Yum -- the world's largest fast-food corporation
-- said that laws need to be changed to protect
workers and that the industry needs to hold growers
accountable. He added that the company had included
language in its supplier code of conduct to ensure
that indentured servitude by suppliers is prohibited
-- referring to several cases in recent years in
which the Coalition of Immokalee Workers helped
federal authorities prosecute farm bosses for holding
workers as slaves.
The coalition had called a boycott
of Taco Bell, which buys its fresh tomatoes from
Immokalee growers, after the company refused to
negotiate unless everyone else in the industry did
as well; Yum argued that Taco Bell's share of the
total amount of tomatoes bought is small.
The coalition, meanwhile, argued
that Yum, which includes KFC, A&W, Long John
Silver's and Pizza Hut as well as Taco Bell, helped
keep the workers in poverty by pressuring suppliers
to provide a volume discount. Farmworkers today
usually earn 40 cents for each 32-pound bucket of
tomatoes they pick, the same rate as 30 years ago,
and have to pick 2 tons of tomatoes to earn about
$50.
The Taco Bell boycott had picked
up considerable support in the last two years, especially
among students and church leaders. Students at 21
colleges had removed or blocked the restaurant chain
from their campuses, and "Boot the Bell"
campaigns were active in at least 300 colleges and
universities, and in more than 50 high schools.
Religious organizations actively supporting the
boycott included the National Council of Churches,
representing 50 million Christians. Former president
Jimmy Carter, among the workers' most prominent
supporters, helped negotiate the resolution reached
through his center.
About 80 Immokalee farmworkers
had traveled by bus to Louisville for what they
called their Taco Bell Truth Tour, stopping at 15
cities en route to bolster support for the boycott.
The rally on Saturday, featuring celebrities such
as Martin Sheen and Kerry Kennedy, a daughter of
the late Robert F. Kennedy, will go on, coalition
members said, as a celebration of the agreement.