"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"
|
|
 |

OK... A chicken suit and a poster talking
about YUM! Brands... hmmm... trying to piece
this together...
|

Let's widen the picture a bit... seems there
were a whole bunch of farm animals gathered
at this action. But wait a minute, isn't this
a web site about farmworkers?
|

Well, let's see what their sign says, maybe
that will hold some clue:
"'As
a major purchaser of food products, we have
the opportunity, and responsibility, to influence
the way animals are treated,' YUM! Brands
Animal Welfare Program."
Oh, now
that makes sense. There was an article in
the Louisville Courier-Journal the day before
the YUM shareholders' meeting that announced
an agreement between PETA and KFC on new animal
rights standards, saying, "People for
the Ethical Treatment of Animals said yesterday
that it has wrung more concessions from KFC
about the treatment of poultry..." Good
job -- holding the fast-food giants accountable
for the conditions in their supply chains
is no easy work!
But this
wasn't a PETA action, this was a CIW protest.
Where are the farmworkers?
|

Oh, ok, here they are, and it seems like the
farmworkers still have a few issues with YUM...
Seems that YUM says one thing about farm animals
and something else altogether about farmworkers.
Throughout the boycott, YUM and Taco Bell
have insisted that the campaign is "misdirected"
at their company, and that it is not their
responsibility to get involved in its suppliers'
operations. YUM just can't seem to wrap its
corporate mind around the concept of "responsibility"
when it comes to human rights...
In fact, it is that hypocrisy
that led workers to drive almost 24 hours
straight from Immokalee to Louisville, to
join with student, religious, and labor allies
in a protest outside of YUM's annual meeting,
and to dress up as farm animals, to call attention
to YUM's double standard!
[And, for the record, despite
winning some impressive concessions, PETA
representatives were at the shareholders meeting
as well, demanding still more humane treatment
for animals in YUM's supply chain, so that
struggle is not yet over.]
|

So what were the conditions that had the workers
feathers all ruffled? "Cases of modern
day slavery," "No overtime pay,"
"Stagnant wages for 25 years," "No
sick leave," "No right to organize."
Well, when you put it that
way... and you figure that all those conditions
help growers keep their costs down and provide
their corporate clients -- like YUM's brands
-- with artificially cheap produce... seems
like the workers might just have a point.
|

A point they made outside of the shareholders'
meeting together with their four-legged friends...
|

... and together with more than 50 of their
two-legged friends and allies...
|

... including Kentucky Jobs with Justice (with
a fine t-shirt calling for an end to corporate
greed),...
|

... some old friends from Louisville who made
the trek to the shareholders' meeting for
the second year in a row (and brought their
own flair to the animal rights/human rights
theme!),...
|

... and a whole bunch of press, with local
television, newspapers, AP wire service, and
NPR covering the event, as well as a documentary
producer from PBS who is putting together
what should be a powerful special on modern-day
slavery set to air in September (get your
VCR's ready...). Click on the links below
for a sense of the coverage of the event:
Story
in the Lexington Herald Leader
AP
Story (from the Miami Herald)
|

Speaking of slavery, Antonio Martinez -- a
CIW member and farmworker who has experienced
debt bondage first hand -- spoke at the press
conference about the role that the fast-food
industry can and must
take in eliminating conditions of servitude
once and for all in Florida agriculture.
|

Stephen Bartlett, a small farmer and organizer
for Agricultural Missions in Louisville, also
spoke at the press conference, joining representatives
of the Community Farm Alliance in denouncing
the fast-food industry for demanding prices
for produce so low that both farmworkers and
family farmers cannot survive.
|

But standing tallest among all speakers (literally
and figuratively) was Clifton Kirkpatrick,
stated clerk of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A),
whose church -- 2.5 million members strong!
-- has vigorously endorsed the boycott. In
his words, "This is one of the greatest
moral atrocities of our time, and it is crucial
for Christians to stand against it. We hope
Taco Bell will join us in the cause of justice."
We can't thank Mr. Kirkpatrick
and the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A) enough
for their steadfast support in this campaign.
|

So the action at the YUM shareholders' meeting
was a great success, but not just for the
determined protesters -- animal and worker
alike -- outside the meeting, but for the
CIW representatives who addressed the shareholders
inside, and for the concerned shareholders
who filed a resolution in favor of the boycott
as well!
In an impressive showing,
the resolution in support of the workers'
campaign garnered 39% of the shareholders'
votes (as of the latest counting,
with some ballots still not in) -- winning
it an automatic place on next year's ballot
and letting YUM's Board of Directors know
that the real owners of Taco Bell and the
rest of YUM's brands think the idea of FAIR
FOOD makes good business sense! Resolutions
for social responsibility rarely get more
than 2-3% of the vote, so the results in this
case sent a truly powerful message to YUM's
Board of Directors.
The visit to Louisville
left the boycott stronger than ever. In the
words of Morpheus from The Matrix
Reloaded, "It's not a question
of hope, it's only a question of time."
[The movie was disappointing,
to say the least, but that line was good...]
|
|
 |
|