Fla. Farmworkers Marching to Publix HQ
Hundreds of farmworkers from the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW), joined by consumer allies from across the country, gathered March 3 at Jesus Obrero Catholic Church in Ft. Myers, Fla., to embark on a two-week, 200-mile march to Publix corporate headquarters in Lakeland, Fla. Marchers want the grocer to join the labor reform movement known as the Fair Food Program (FFP).
The FFP unites farmworkers, growers, consumers, and 11 multibillion-dollar food retailers such as Whole Foods Market and Trader Joes in support of fair wages and humane labor standards, including a complaint mechanism and a penny-per-pound bonus for tomato harvesters. However, Publix, one of the largest purchasers of Florida tomatoes, continues to buy tomatoes from Florida growers that dont recognize the FFP.
While the changes we are seeing in farmworkers lives today are indeed unprecedented, said the CIWs Gerardo Reyes, there is still much to be done. With each new corporation that joins, the wage increases and labor reforms grow and deepen, which is why Publixs decision to turn its back on the FFP is so unconscionable. Its support, which would cost Publix little or nothing, could significantly change the lives of some of the states hardest workers, yet the $28 billion company wont even show farmworkers the respect of granting us a meeting to discuss the Fair Food Program face-to-face.
We are going to take our case directly to the consumers through our presence in the streets, through nightly meetings with supporters in churches, schools, and community halls along the way, and through our voices in the media, added Oscar Otzoy of the CIW. We will not rest until Publix realizes that the 21st-century supermarket cannot afford to turn its back on human rights.
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