Ohio State student fasters: “With this fast, we wanted to send the signal loud and clear [to Wendy’s] that as consumers, we care about where our food comes from…”
Hitting 14 cities in 14 days, and featuring a week-long fast by 19 courageous students and alumni at Ohio State University, the Return to Human Rights Tour undoubtedly established the high-water mark in the year-old Wendy’s Boycott. For one frenetic fortnight in March, thousands of consumers in state after state — from student fasters and local labor leaders to determined clergy and consumers of conscience of every stripe — joined forces with the tour crew and amplified the CIW’s message to Wendy’s: The time of poverty wages and unchecked human rights abuses in the fields is past, and we will fight to our last breath to preserve and expand the dignity and freedom we have won in the fields through the Fair Food Program.
That message rippled out, on the airwaves and in newspapers, from each and every tour stop along the 2,000-mile route to reach millions more consumers. Today, we bring you a mammoth media round-up, with articles, radio stories, and television reports on the tour from Gainesville to Columbus, and back down again to Tampa.
We’ve chosen highlights from three excellent articles that emerged over the course of the tour, and have included a full press list at the bottom of the post. Please keep the momentum going by sharing news of the Return to Human Rights Tour in your networks!
Media Round-Up…
First up, The Nation came out with an article tracking the progress of the Student/Farmworker Alliance’s Boot the Braids Campaign at the University of Florida, which was the very first stop along the Return to Human Rights Tour:
Students and Farmworkers Are Teaming Up to Boot Wendy’s Off Their Campuses
The effort is part of a national campaign to pressure Wendy’s to improve their labor practices.
GAINESVILLE, FL — […]
The march in Gainesville was the kickoff for a national CIW protest, the “Return to Human Rights Tour,” which concludes today with a vigil in Tampa. Over the span of two weeks, CIW members and their allies have toured cities across the US to mobilize support for the FFP. The CIW partnered with students at Vanderbilt, UNC Chapel Hill, and Ohio State—whose students completed a week-long fast in solidarity—to demand that their administrators pressure Wendy’s to sign onto the program. The 13-stop tour was the longest protest action of the coalition’s Campaign for Fair Food in the past decade, and included a protest in downtown Columbus, a few miles south of Wendy’s international headquarters, last weekend.Members of CHISPAS, a UF student organization that focuses on immigrant rights and advocacy, and other UF students have been organizing against Wendy’s since the start of the Boot the Braids campaign. For many of these students, like 20-year-old CHISPAS secretary Lucero Ruballos, the Fair Food Program has directly impacted their lives. […]
[…]
Over 90 percent of the Florida’s tomato growers have signed onto the Fair Food Program and farmworkers, including Ruballos’s aunt, have seen their wages and working conditions improve, said Patricia Cipollitti, an organizer with the Alliance for Fair Food.“This is a program that’s been working,” Cipollitti said. “Farmworkers know their reality the most. They’re the ones who know what changes need to be made. That’s the key piece of this worker-driven model of social responsibility that works, rather than this top-down model of corporate responsibility, where those who design the audits and the systems for monitoring don’t actually have their eyes and ears on the ground or an interest in enforcing these kinds of standards.”
Despite this, Cipollitti said that Wendy’s has only become further entrenched in its opposition to the FFP. As a workaround, Wendy’s no longer purchases from Florida tomato growers and has drafted its own code of conduct, which the Alliance for Fair Food called “completely void of effective enforcement mechanisms to protect farmworker’s human rights.”
In response to Wendy’s entrenchment, the student campaigns have become more complex. This year, Ruballos spearheaded a three-pronged strategy that targeted other organizations on campus for support, reached out to students through marketing and social media, and engaged UF administrators by building up to the march with smaller demonstrations throughout the year. […]
[…] “It’s not just the march,” said Ruballos. “It’s an ongoing process… We have to show Wendy’s that there are students, there are people and community leaders, that are in full support of the CIW’s Fair Food Program, that are not letting inhumane [practices] get in the way.” Read more
Second, Bloomberg published an in-depth look at the promising results of using the market to drive social change in low-wage industries, highlighting both the Fair Food Program and the ongoing fight to expand basic worker protections by bringing on new retailers like Wendy’s:
Farm, Construction Worker Groups Create Trump Resistance Blueprint
By Chris Opfer
March 31, 2017
Labor unions and worker advocates have been scrambling since the November elections to come up with a plan for action in the Age of Trump. A pair of local groups advocating for Florida tomato pickers and Texas construction workers may have the blueprint.
The Fair Food Program, a 12-year-old project created by the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, partners with farmers and big fast-food companies to increase tomato pickers’ wages and protect them on the job. The Texas Workers Defense Project has similarly had success pushing “better builder” standards to ensure that companies do right by workers who construct their offices, apartment buildings and other projects.
Both programs focus on supply-chain efforts that include workers’ direct employers and the companies that ultimately benefit from their labor. The groups have already landed some big fish: Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Yum! Brands Inc. and McDonald’s USA LLC are among the FFP participants, and Apple Inc. agreed after protracted negotiations to abide by better builder standards when it built a campus in Austin, Texas.
“I’m glad we depend on the market for enforcement, not the government,” Laura Safer Espinoza, a retired judge who works on the FFP’s enforcement board, told Bloomberg BNA March 30. “There is no reason why this model can’t be replicated and adapted in numerous industries, as long as you have a recognizable brand at the top of the supply chain.” […]
[…] “We had no choice but to persevere until we were able to educate enough consumers to generate enough pressure to overcome the buyers’ innate resistance to a new idea, and the Fair Food Program was still an untested idea at the time that Taco Bell and McDonald’s signed on,” CIW co-founder Greg Asbed told Bloomberg BNA March 30.
The CIW recently wrapped up several days of boycotts, marches and protests aimed at Wendy’s and staged in the company’s home state of Ohio. The group says the fast-food chain has shifted its tomato buying to operations in Mexico instead of signing on to the Fair Food Program. […]
[…] CIW’s Asbed said, lately it’s often employers that come to the organization seeking to join the Fair Food Program.
“Our latest agreements—Wal-Mart, Fresh Market, Ahold—have come without campaigns at all, or with relatively little public pressure, because of a combination of the fact that the Fair Food Program is undeniably the best-in-class today in social responsibility, and because, for whatever their particular reason, each new participating buyer was looking to engage with a real social responsibility program when they came to us to join,” he said.
Finally, Sierra Club’s magazine also traced the progress of the Return to Human Rights Tour, highlighting the major mobilization at the heart of the tour, the Parade for Human Rights in Columbus, Ohio, which marked the end of a weeklong fast by Ohio State University students:
A 2,000-MILE, 12-CITY PROTEST FIGHTS FOR FARMWORKER RIGHTS
This group wants fast-food giant Wendy’s to stop sourcing tomatoes from farms with human rights abuses
By Drew Higgins
March 31, 2017A workplace free of physical, verbal, and sexual abuse. Clean restrooms, shade, and drinking water. Fair wages. These are rights that the acclaimed organizer Cesar Chavez battled to achieve but are still not guarantees for farmworkers in the United States or around the globe.
The Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW), a Florida-based human-rights group, has continued Chavez’s legacy, fighting to change abysmal farmworker conditions for over 20 years.
Its latest effort? A 2,000-mile, 12-city protest tour calling for a boycott of Wendy’s.
The CIW wants the fast-food behemoth to axe its tomato supply chain. Wendy’s currently buys tomatoes from Mexican farms charged with human rights abuses, Harper’s Magazine reported last year.
Julia de la Cruz, a Florida tomato picker, joined the CIW eight years ago. She says that there are still many farms where “if you speak out in the workplace … you might not have a job the next day,” and where wage theft is common. “You might work a full day’s work and have nothing for all you’ve done.”
Unlike its corporate brethren—McDonald’s, Burger King, Chipotle, and Walmart, among others—Wendy’s doesn’t source tomatoes solely from farms within the CIW’s Fair Food Program (FFP), a workplace watchdog that ensures humane wages and conditions. These farms follow strict codes of conduct that forbid abuses like sexual violence, child labor, and wage theft. When Florida tomato growers adopted the FFP in 2011, Wendy’s stopped purchasing tomatoes from the state. […]
[…] The CIW has been boycotting the restaurant giant for a year to push it into the FPP. The protest tour caravaned through the Midwest and Southeast, with rallies, pickets, vigils, and gatherings in cities from Tampa to Minneapolis. After 11 days, the movement culminated last Sunday with a “human rights” parade in Columbus, Ohio—just a stone’s throw from Wendy’s corporate headquarters.
Nearly 500 protesters marched through rain and cold at the parade. On a stage, 19 Ohio State University students and alumni broke a seven-day fast that called for the university to cut its contract with a Wendy’s on campus.
For OSU senior Mara Momenee, abstaining from food made her think about the way we mindlessly consume it.
“That’s something that as a company, Wendy’s profits off of. Targeting young people they think are just mouths and wallets,” Momenee said. “With this fast, we wanted to send the signal loud and clear that as consumers, we care about where our food comes from.”
Wendy’s hasn’t budged so far. The company announced last October that it is “quite happy with the quality and taste of the tomatoes we are sourcing from Mexico.”
But the CIW remains confident in consumer action. In the mid-2000s, its “Boycott the Bell” national campaign pushed Taco Bell into paying tomato pickers a penny more per pound. Other companies soon fell in line. And because corporations demanded it, Florida’s tomato industry—which grows 90 percent of the country’s winter tomatoes—adopted humane practices under the FFP. Now the FFP is expanding to new crops and states, all because customers spoke up at the cash register… Read more
And that’s just the beginning! Here’s the full list of media that came out following the Tour, starting off with one more bonus highlight from Tampa:
About 200 march on South Tampa Publix, Wendy’s to protest farm-worker exploitation
Wednesday, March 29, 2017
[…] Wendy’s got on the coalition’s radar last year, when the company began purchasing tomatoes from Mexico instead of it’s traditional vendors in Florida after the FFP began seeking reforms in the industry.
A brief protest and candle-light vigil outside the Kennedy Boulevard fast-food restaurant during rush hour Wednesday marked the final stop in the coalition’s 2,000-mile, 12-city “Return to Human Rights Tour.”
One after another, potential Wendy’s customers chatted with police officers and took photos with their cell phones before making a U-turn in the parking lot and heading to the nearby Kentucky Fried Chicken, Taco Bell or McDonald’s.
“For me it means a lot because I see the changes where I work,” said Cruz Salucio, as he marched across Kennedy Boulevard while scores of Tampa police officers on bicycles held back traffic.
“Before the bosses felt like they could get away with anything and you were in an environment where you weren’t respected,” said Salucio, a 32-year-old who has worked in Immokalee’s tomato fields for about 10 years. “Now we’re starting to get the things that other workers take for granted, like being able to punch in and punch out so there’s a record of how many hours you work, or having access to shade and clean drinking water.”
Other extreme abuses in the fields, such as sexual harassment and wage theft, have also declined dramatically since the FFP’s inception, said the Rev. Noelle Damico, an organizer with the National Economic and Social Rights Initiative.
Students such 21-year-old Alex Schelle, a social services major at New College of Florida in Sarasota, have spread the movement to campuses across the country. Next week, students at New College will fast to draw attention to the coalition’s efforts, Schelle said.
“It’s really awesome how communities of faith and students can be drawn together to use their consumer powers to let these corporations know that this is already a successful program and all they have to do is join,” Schelle said. Read more…
COVERAGE OF COLUMBUS & WEEKLONG FAST
- A 2,000-mile, 12-city protest fights for farmworker rights, Sierra Magazine (31 March 2017)
- Protesters call on Wendy’s to sign worker-protection pledge, Columbus Dispatch (26 March 2017)
- Protesters march in Columbus as part of human rights campaign targeting Wendy’s, ABC Channel 6 (26 March 2017)
- Ohio State students fast, protest against university’s lease renewal with fast-food chain Wendy’s, National Catholic Reporter (24 March 2017)
- Organizations prepare for more protest against Wendy’s, The OSU Lantern (23 March 2017)
- Students look to pressure Wendy’s contract with hunger strike, The OSU Lantern (20 March 2017)
- After Ohio State Extends Wendy’s Lease, Students Fast For Farm Worker Solidarity, WOSU Radio (20 March 2017)
- The Return to Human Rights Tour Columbus, WCRS Columbus (19 March 2017)
- PC(USA) issues letter urging Wendy’s to join Fair Food Program, Presbyterian News Service (15 March 2017)
- Campus Notebook: Mascot change more Franciscan; freshman’s medical invention; solidarity with tomato-pickers, National Catholic Reporter (10 March 2017)
- Wendy’s boycotters to go hungry for Fair Food, New Food Economy (7 March 2017)
CITY BY CITY COVERAGE OF TOUR
“But, how are colleges extra powerful? … If universities publicly cut ties with companies because they stand for conflicting values which strip people of their human rights, they land a huge blow on the company image.
– Ania Szczesniewski, Vanderbilt University
Gainesville, Florida
- Students and Farmworkers Are Teaming Up to Boot Wendy’s Off Their Campuses, The Nation (29 March 2017)
- Wendy’s protest spans UF campus, The Independent Florida Alligator (17 March 2017)
- Wendy’s Boycott, Gainesville Sun (16 March 2017)
Tampa, Florida
- Coalition Of Immokalee Workers Protests Wendy’s In Tampa, WGCU (31 March 2017)
- About 200 march on South Tampa Publix, Wendy’s to protest farm-worker exploitation, Tampa Bay Times (29 March 2017)
- Farmworkers, supporters to march in Tampa; continue demands on Wendy’s, Publix, SaintPetersBlog (29 March 2017)
- Immokalee farmworkers will march from Tampa Publix to Wendy’s, WMNF (27 March 2017)
- Still hungry for human rights, Immokalee Workers’ Return to Human Rights Tour stops in Tampa Wednesday, Creative Loafing Tampa (23 March 2017)
- MidPoint Monday March 27: Coalition of Immokalee Workers, WMNF (22 March 2017)
Nashville, Tennessee
- Students Demand Vanderbilt Cut Ties With Wendy’s, News Channel 5 Network (18 March 2017)
- Where’s Their Beef? Vanderbilt Students Protest University’s Relationship With Wendy’s, Patch.com (20 March 2017)
- SZCZESNIEWSKI: On tolerating human rights violations: Why Wendy’s shouldn’t be on our meal money, Vanderbilt Hustler (13 March 2017)
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
- Protesters march against Wendy’s for fair food and farmworkers rights, The Daily Tar Heel (27 March 2017)
- UNC groups plan march against Wendy’s for farmworker rights, The Daily Tar Heel (23 March 2017)
Madison, Wisconsin
- Protesters target downtown Madison Wendy’s over farm labor issues, The Cap Times (21 March 2017)
Minneapolis, Minnesota
- Farm workers call for human rights at Wendy’s restaurants, Workday Minnesota (20 March 2017)
- Farm workers bring campaign to Twin Cities, Workday Minnesota (16 March 2017)