
WHAT THEY'RE SAYING ABOUT THE TACO BELL VICTORY:
US Congressional Hispanic
Caucus: "This is a truly historic agreement,
marking perhaps the
single greatest advance for farm workers since the early
struggles of the United Farm Workers. To the the workers
and organizers of CIW, we express our deepest gratitude
for their determined work for their own dignity and
their historic contribution to advancing the cause of
labor rights.”
Former US President/Nobel
Laureate Jimmy Carter: “I commend the
Coalition of Immokalee Workers
for their principled leadership in this very important
campaign. I am pleased Taco Bell has taken a leadership
role to help reform working conditions for Florida farmworkers
and has committed to use its power to effect positive
human rights change. I now call on others in the industry
to follow Taco Bell’s lead to help the tomato
farmworkers.”
Tom Morello, former guitarist
for Rage Against the Machine: "Today the Immokalee
farmworkers struck a blow
for dignity and human rights in the workplace and received
the long overdue raise they have been fighting for.
This is a major victory for the workers and demonstrates
that by standing up and standing together, we can overturn
any injustice. By standing up and standing together,
we can change the world."
Congressman John Lewis (D-GA): "This is a great victory for the champions of social
justice and equality in America and around the world. The courageous men and women of the
Coalition of the Immokalee Workers prove that standing
strong in the struggle can remove the greatest obstacles,
even the resistance of a goliath in corporate industry.
This victory once again confirms that the methods of
nonviolence can win deep and lasting change in the most
powerful institutions of the world, in American government
and in corporate conglomerates. I applaud all the Coalition
workers who struggled and suffered for years to win
greater equality for American workers."
Congresswoman Barbara Lee
(D-CA): "Yum
Brands acceptance of your demands is a great achievement
and hopefully only a first step in a widespread awakening
to the impacts of corporate policies... It is only through
the strength and courage of those few who are willing
to stand against insurmountable odds and incalculable
risk that true change can be wrought. Your work to end
modern day slavery reminds us all that there is still
much to be done to end injustice both at home and abroad!

"Como trabajadores y mujeres, tenemos que luchar por nuestros derechos y contra la violencia tanto en la labor como en la casa"
"As women and as workers, we have to fight for our rights and against violence both in the fields and in our own homes"
|

* Ethel Kennedy visits Immokalee, pledges to
support boycott (1/05)!... read
more!
* 2005 Truth Tour preparations heating up in
Louisville(1/05)!... read
more!
* Year of the Worker party smashes previous attendance
record, turns Immokalee into "Domingo Gigante"
(1/05)... read
more!
* Faith-based symposium a huge success! Nearly
40 years later, Dr. King's prophetic vision alive
in Immokalee, boycott (1/05)!...read
more!
* Leading human rights organization releases
report on modern slavery, CIW member Francisca
Cortez highlighted as "Partner for Justice"
(1/05) ... read
more!
* Bonnie Raitt, Wendell Berry endorse boycott
(12/04)!... read
more!
* Democracy Now makes Boot the Bell campaign
headline news, BtB campaign raging in the West
(12/04)... Click
here to read more!
* Ozomatli, Cecil Martin endorse boycott!... Read
more by clicking here
* News Round-up for Nov. 24 -- Cal State Univ.
San Bernadino becomes 21st school to "Boot
the Bell"; UCLA officially closes Taco Bell;
New endorsements pouring in, including CODEPINK
and Pax Christi International... Click
here to read more!
* 2004 School of the Americas protest largest
ever; CIW, Taco Bell boycott figure prominently
in weekend of actions... Read
more and see pics from the protest here!
* Northwest Tour a huge success (10/04)!... Check
out all the pics, media clips, and daily reports
by clicking here!
* Rock the Vote says "Thanks, no thanks"
to Taco Bell (10/04)!... Read all about it by clicking here!
* UCLA says "No Mas" to Taco Bell,
votes to shut down campus restaurant (10/04)!... Click
here for more!
* Notre Dame cancels contract with Taco Bell
(9/04)!... Click
her for details and articles on the student-led
campaign!
* Boise State U. employee resigns over Taco Bell
contract (10/28/04)!... Click
here for the whole story
* National Day of Action (10/12/04) a huge success... Click
here for pics from the Miami action
* CIW member Lucas Benitez named Mother Jones
Magazine's "Hellraiser of the Month"
for July, 2004!.. Click
here for more!
* CIW Congressional Briefing (7/04) - RFK Memorial
Center for Human Rights organizes briefing on
Capitol Hill for CIW members on slavery, boycott... Click
here for report in PDF format
* CIW members win 2003 Robert F. Kennedy Human
Rights Award - See photos, press, acceptance speech by Lucas
Benitez from award ceremony in DC
* CIW, Root Cause March, protest FTAA Ministerial
in Miami - See
first-hand daily reports, photos, videos, press
* CNN:
"Report: Modern-day slavery alive and well
in Florida"
*
United Methodist Church endorses Taco Bell Boycott
* National student hunger strike boosts
Boot the Bell campaign - See photos, press from
around country
* Pax Christi honors
CIW at national conference
* Check out the daily
reports, photos, and press from the CIW "Texas-sized
Mini-Tour"
* MEChA, nation's largest Chicano student organization,
endorses Taco Bell boycott, 700 march on Taco Bell in Corvallis, Oregon
* CIW Annual "Year of the Worker" party
a huge success- See
photos, report
* Palm Beach Post Special Report: "Still
harvesting shame"
* Miami
Herald Special Report:"Florida's
Fields of Despair: Destitute Farmworkers Exploited"
*
Florida BIshops praise CIW for organizing and
anti-slavery efforts - See statement and St. Petersburg
Times story on religious support for boycott: "Church
bells ring in Taco Bell boycott"
* National Council of Churches endorses Taco
Bell boycott - Read
the CNN story
* CIW statement on Bush guestworker program picked
up by The Nation magazine online... See
CIW statement on The Nation's Act Now page
Click on the link below to see first-hand reports,
photos, video, and press from the first two years
of the boycott, including:
* CIW actions at Yum Brands' annual shareholder
meeting (2003, 2002)
* Thousands participate in record Taco Bell protest
in Washington, DC (2003)
* Immigrant Freedom Ride (2003) starts in Immokalee
* Leaders of major slavery operation uncovered
by CIW found guilty of slavery, extortion, and
firearms charges
* Northeast Mini-tour photos and reports (2002)
* Daily reports, press, photos and video from
the first-ever cross-country Taco Bell Truth Tour
(2002)... and more!
Click
here for news from the first two years! |
 |
See all the statements of support for this historic
agreement below!
The
four-year Taco Bell boycott is over! Click
here for details on the precedent-setting accord.
Click
here for photos and reports from Saturday's day-long
Victory Celebration & Rally (3/12).
And
don't miss the complete mulitmedia reports from the
Truth Tour that turned out the lights on the Taco
Bell boycott, including the boycott-ending press conference
at Yum Brands (3/8) and the "Our World, Our Rights"
Conference on Global Justice (3/11)! Click
here for photos, video, audio, and more!
Boycott supporters are already gearing up for
the next step in the campaign to make fast food fair food! Stay tuned for information
on how you can play a role in the next few weeks.
In the meantime, here's the victory press round-up
and some kind words from a few names you might recognize.
|
Washington Post
(3/9):
"Accord with tomato pickers ends boycott
of Taco Bell"
The Guardian of London (3/12): "Farmworkers
win historic deal after boycotting Taco Bell"
La Jornada (3/17): "Jornaleros
ganan batalla a Taco Bell"
The Nation (3/11): "Sweet victory: Yo quiero justice"
Palm Beach Post (3/9):
"Farmworkers win wage increase in fight
against Yum!"
Democracy Now! (3/10):
"Immokalee Tomato Pickers Win Campaign
Against Taco Bell"
Palm Beach Post (3/9): "The
pickers finally win"
Louisville Courier- Journal (3/13): "Farmworkers celebrate accord"
Common Dreams (3/18): "They
Say Tomato, Students Say Justice"
Mother Jones (3/22): "People
Power: An Interview with David Solnit"
Notre Dame Observer (3/23): "Celebrating
Taco Bell boycott victory"
Louisville Courier-Journal (3/13): "Chuch,
student groups aided workers' campaign"
Louisville Courier-Journal (3/9): "Yum picks up Florida field workers"
PR Week (3/9): "Labor
group ends Taco Bell boycott"
OC Weekly (3/18): "Now
we have faith"
Business Wire (3/8): "CIW,
Taco Bell reach groundbreaking agreement"
Tallahassee Democrat (3/9):
"Workers agree to extra penny"
Daily Texan (3/9): "Taco
Bell boycott finally over"
Daily Bruin (3/9): "Taco
Bell accord reached"
|
Nobel Peace Prize winner and former
U.S. President Jimmy Carter: "I
commend the Coalition of Immokalee Workers
for their principled leadership in this
very important campaign..." >>
Read the full statement
Lucas Benitez, Coalition of Immokalee
Workers: "Human rights are
universal, and if we as farmworkers are
to one day indeed enjoy equal rights, the
same rights all other workers in this country
are guaranteed, this agreement must only
be a beginning..." >>
Read the full statement
Tom Morello, Audioslave, formerly
of Rage Against the Machine: "This
is a major victory for the workers and demonstrates
that by standing up and standing together,
we can overturn any injustice. By standing
up and standing together, we can change
the world..." >>
Read the full statement
Congressman John Lewis (D-GA): "This is a great victory for the champions
of social justice and equality in America
and around the world..." >>
Read the full statement
Dennis J. Kucinich (D-OH), former
presidental candidate: "So
today we celebrate a tremendous victory
of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers and
the many farm workers who organized a very
effective boycott of Taco Bell to draw attention
to their plight. And it is an important
start..." >>
Read the full statement
Clifton Kirkpatrick, Stated Clerk
of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian
Church (U.S.A.): "I call upon
all members... to immediately cease boycotting
Taco Bell and to join with the CIW and Yum
Brands in advancing the gains for human
rights made today throughout fast-food industry..." >>
Read the full statement
Bishop Nicholas DiMarzio, Chairman
of U.S. Bishops' Domestic Policy Committee: "This is a great achievement for the
Immokalee Workers who have turned their struggle
for decent wages and human dignity into a
national movement enlisting religious groups
and colleges and universities across the country..." >>
Read the full statement
Todd Howland, Director, RFK Memorial
Center for Human Rights: "Taco
Bell has shown that companies can and should
reach for a standard higher than their bottom
line—that major corporations can be
part of the solution to human right abuses
instead of merely profiting off of the poverty
of others..." >>
Read the full statement
Cathy Albisa, Executive Director,
National Social and Economic Rights Initiative:
"It is a serious victory, but we must
also be cognizant that it is but a stepping-stone
in the longer journey to creating human rights
protections for all workers..." >>
Read the full statement
Gay McDougall, Executive Director,
Global Rights: Partners for Justice:
"This agreement proves the collective
power of community members claiming their
human rights and demanding accountability
from those who have the duty to meet those
rights..." >>
Read the full statement
Camilo Perez-Bustillo, Director of
Human Migration & Mobility / Project Voice,
American Friends Service Committee: "The successful settlement of the Taco
Bell boycott is a key, long-awaited step in
the right direction for Florida and for the
country as a whole, and will help set the pace
elsewhere for farmworker justice in the future..." >>
Read the full statement |
On May 15, hundreds of allies and friends of
the CIW from across South Florida came together
to throw a victory party for the farmworkers
in Immokalee to celebrate the recent historic
victory in the Taco Bell boycott.
In the last days of the tomato picking season
in Southwest Florida, farmworkers gathered
to listen to messages of congratulations from
faith-based, community, and student supporters
from around the region and across the country,
including Bishop John Nevins of the Diocese
of Venice, the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial
Center for Human Rights, National Farmworker
Ministry, and many more.
As
the CIW's agreement with Taco Bell represents
a huge advance in the fight to eliminate slavery
from the fast-food industry's supply chain,
it was only fitting that the celebration be
filled with music from Son del Centro (pictured
here, right, performing at the celebration).
Son del Centro, a group of Southern California
youth dedicated to keeping their cultural
roots alive in the perfomance of Son Jarocho,
traditional music and dance derived from the
struggle for freedom by enslaved people in
Mexico, led the festivities until nightfall.
An excellent article covering the event appeared
in the Ft Myers News Press. Read it by clicking
here.
Click here
to see how you can help spread this agreement
to the rest of the fast-food industry.
As
workers in Immokalee put the final touches on
plans for the 2005 Truth Tour, unprecedented support
for the Taco Bell boycott continues to roll in.
Yet another wave of prominent artists have added
their names to the growing roster demanding an
end to sweatshops in the fields. This time, the
list includes one of America's favorite and most
versatile actors: Jeff Bridges, of such films
as Seabiscuit, The Fisher King, and The Big Lebowski.
And if that wasn't enough, Utah Phillips -- renowned
storyteller and folk musician -- as well as acclaimed
guitarist Muriel Anderson and popular indie rock
band The Weakerthans have also formally joined
the campaign!
Louisville, KY, the hometown of Yum Brands
and site of the upcoming March 12th National
Convergence for Farmworkers Justice, has also
witnessed a recent explosion of support.
In the last few weeks, the local labor community
has joined its voice with faith, student,
and community organizations throughout the
city. The CIW applauds UFCW Local 227
Executive Board and the Jefferson County Teachers
Association for endorsing the boycott and
committing to join us outside Yum's headquarters
on March 12th for a truly historic day!
Click
here for all the latest logistics &
resources for the 2005 Taco Bell Truth Tour!
Last week, national and regional leaders of
Christian churches called upon their members
to fast and pray each Friday during Lent for
a just resolution of the Taco Bell Boycott.
The Christian season of Lent begins with Ash
Wednesday and concludes six weeks later with
the celebration of Jesus' resurrection on Easter
Sunday.
"We pray that both Yum Brands and the
(CIW) would find new energy to renew serious
talks and work together for the just world
God intends," explained the Rev. Dr.
Clifton Kirkpatrick, Stated Clerk of the General
Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.).
The boycott has drawn the support of national
religious bodies including the National Council
of Churches, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.),
United Methodist Church, United Church of
Christ, Christian Church (Disciples of Christ),
American Friends Service Committee, Alliance
of Baptists, Pax Christi USA and the Unitarian
Universalist Service Committee. To read the
press release, click
here.
For resources on fasting and prayer from
the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), click
here.

Actor and activist Martin Sheen -- star of TV's
"The West Wing" as well as such landmark
films as "Catch 22," "Gandhi,"
and "Apocalypse Now" --  will
be joining farmworkers and allies on March 12th
in Louisville, KY, outside of Yum Brands headquarters
as a featured speaker in the culminating rally
of what promises to be the biggest Taco Bell
Truth Tour yet!
Joining Mr. Sheen on the program as a featured
speaker will be Kerry Kennedy (r), Founder
of the RFK Center for Human Rights, whose
new book "Speaking Truth to Power"
tells the stories of human rights defenders
from across the globe.
The CIW is delighted to announce that Mr.
Sheen and Ms. Kennedy will be joining us at
this year's event for what is sure to be a
very powerful day of action for a fairer,
more humane fast-food industry!
A hard-hitting new article published on the
progressive media website gadflyer.com takes
a provocative new look at Yum Brands and its
CEO David Novak. The article, entitled "Leading
Like Jesus," discusses Yum Brands'
recent decision to pull its advertising from
the popular, but racy, new TV show "Desperate
Housewives," a decision prompted by a threatened
boycott by the American Decency Association
(the ADA is "a Christian organization whose
positions on the nature of morality emanate
from a biblical worldview," according to
its literature).
The article, by Sarah Posner, contrasts Yum's
willingness to make this significant business
concession to the ADA -- which the author
attributes to strong conservative religious
influences within Yum, including CEO David
Novak, who is also a speaker for the motivational
business seminar series "Lead Like Jesus"
-- to the fast-food giant's stubborn refusal
to deal with the CIW on the issue of serious
human rights abuses in its supply chain. The
contradiction begs the question whether the
exploitation of labor is not considered a
moral issue at least on par with television
indecency by the leaders of Yum Brands...
READ
THE FULL ARTICLE HERE!
Nobel Peace Prize winner and former US President
Jimmy Carter, writing from the Carter Center
in Atlanta, added his voice to the growing
chorus of organizations and individuals
calling on Yum Brands to take meaningful
steps to improve wages and working conditions
in its tomato suppliers' operations The
following is the full text of the former
President's statement:
"I
have followed with concern for a number
of years the appalling working conditions
in the Florida-based tomato industry. While
production costs in the industry have increased
over the last 25 years, wages have been
effectively stagnant, as giant cooperative
buying mechanisms hold prices down. Conditions
are so bad in parts of the industry that
there have been two separate prosecutions
for slavery in recent years.
In recent years, the
Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) has
been publicly campaigning to bring attention
to these abuses of human rights and for
industry-wide change. In particular, CIW
has led a campaign to ask Taco Bell, a subsidiary
of Yum! Brand, Inc., the world's largest
restaurant company, to accept responsibility
for ensuring that its profits are not derived
from abuses of workers in its supply chain.
Recently, Yum! and CIW
have been in private talks, convened by
the Presbyterian Church (USA), to try to
identify tangible ways to resolve the problems
in the tomato industry. Regrettably, the
latest round, which included talks held
at The Carter Center, was not successful.
On May 20, Taco Bell issued a statement
that Yum! CEO David Novak has called a "proposed
solution." Mr. Novak's proposal involves,
first, the CIW calling off its boycott,
and second, a statement that Taco Bell would
be willing to work toward an industry-wide
solution to pay and conditions. While
Yum's belated acknowledgement of the need
for improved pay and conditions is welcome,
this cannot be considered a serious proposal.
Yum! is saying that only if the CIW ends
its boycott will it be willing to support
efforts to improve wages, and only if the
rest of the industry does. This is a lost
opportunity for the head of the world's
largest restaurant company to take the lead
in eliminating human rights abuses that
he knows exist within his supply chain."
The CIW
thanks President Carter for his continued
interest in our campaign.
Thursday, May 20th, started
out as a fairly typical day in the Taco
Bell boycott. Workers from Immokalee traveled
to Louisville, KY, for an animated protest
at Yum Brands' annual shareholder meeting,
building again the "Pyramid of Poverty"
(left, 125 tomato picking buckets, representing
the 2 tons of tomatoes workers must pick
to earn minimum wage for a 10 hour day)
as the centerpiece of a protest full of
eye-catching banners and a jubilant spirit.

Across the country, over 1,600 people fasted
in solidarity with the workers' protest
(right, fasting students at UCLA pass out
flyers to fellow students, read article,
"Protesters
boycott Taco Bell with fast").
Then suddenly, things
took an interesting turn. Inside an otherwise
formulaic and oddly uncompelling shareholders
meeting, Yum Brands CEO David Novak made
an unexpected announcement. "We're
ready to end this boycott, if you are,"
he told Lucas Benitez of the CIW, along
with the shareholders and the gathered press.
Sadly... it turns out
that the "offer" (which Yum spent
considerable energy publicizing following
Thursday's annual meeting, leaving little
doubt as to the real purpose behind the
move...) was not so interesting, nor so
sincere, after all. As the saying goes,
the devil is in the details.
In short, Yum's CEO offered
to work with the CIW toward an industry-wide
surcharge of 1 penny per pound to be paid
by all buyers of Florida tomatoes, and second,
to help lobby Florida's legislature for
better working conditions. In return, he
demanded that the CIW end the Taco Bell
boycott immediately (i.e., in exchange for
Yum's willingness to work together,
not for the actual achievement
of any real change). For those of you who
like to cut to the chase, here is the CIW's
formal answer to Yum's "offer":
"At
the shareholders' meeting, we asked David
Novak to enter personally into meaningful
talks to address
farmworkers'
sub-poverty wages
and sweatshop working conditions and to
resolve the boycott. Apparently he prefers
to negotiate through the press. So here's
our answer: As it stands right now, your
offer is little more than a transparent
public relations ploy -- empty promises
with no real commitment to change. When
you're ready to talk about real change for
real people, we are ready, too.
It
took your company three full years to finally
acknowledge what the CIW has been saying
all along: that farmworkers are indeed a
part of your business, and that the workers
who pick your tomatoes are indeed in need
of real change in their wages and working
conditions. But simply acknowledging what
so many have said for so long is not enough.
Your offer does nothing to actually improve
those conditions and leaves farmworkers
as poor as they've ever been, with nothing
more than a vague hope for change. The boycott
will only end when Yum is committed to taking
concrete measures to improve labor conditions
for tomato harvesters in its supply chain."
For
other reactions from across the nation,
click on the following links:
*
Statement from Former U.S. President Jimmy
Carter
*
Presbyterian Church USA's reaction to Yum's
offer by clicking here
*
Robert F. Kennedy Center for Human Rights
statement by clicking here
* National
Farmworker Ministry response by clicking
here
*
letter from the United Church of Christ
to David Novak, Yum CEO
In
this case, the old adage rings true: Yum,
it's time for you to put your money
where your mouth is. Don't just talk
about a penny surcharge, pay the penny more
to your Florida based tomato suppliers so
that they can give farmworkers a long overdue
raise in the picking piece rate. You can
afford it. And don't just talk about labor
reforms, reform labor abuses in your own
supply chain. You have the power.
Until then -- until
Yum actually commits a fraction of its considerable
resources as the largest restaurant company
in the world toward making these hollow
promises real -- the boycott continues!
In
a powerfully-worded letter to Yum Brands board
member James Dimon (CEO of Bank One Corp.),
AFL-CIO President John Sweeney wrote,
"For my part, I
will be urging my constituents, the 13 million
members of the AFL-CIO and their families,
to boycott Taco Bell products until this issue
is resolved." President
Sweeney's letter was written to request intervention
by Mr. Dimon in favor of the Immokalee workers'
demands.
Click here to see the full text of
President Sweeney's letter to Yum Brands board
member James Dimon!
Ms.
Robinson (shown in the photo on the right
touring Immokalee migrant labor camps with
CIW member Lucas Benitez) met with CIW members,
took a walking tour of Immokalee, and spoke
at a press conference (below, left), where
she was joined by several CIW members, President
of the National Council of Churches Bishop
Thomas Hoyt, Rev. Noelle Damico representing
the Presbyterian Church U.S.A., and Oxfam
America President Raymond C. Offenheiser.
At
the press conference, Ms. Robinson was refreshingly
forthright in conveying her perspective
on the CIW's struggle, saying:
"My
message to Yum Brands is: you can't pass
the buck. You are profiting by exploitation
and you have the power to change what is
happening in the fields. So, pay this penny
a pound more for workers rights, and assume
your fair share of responsibility."
Press turnout
for the conference was great. Click on the
links below for stories on the day's events
from the:
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