Yum! hears from Taco Bell protesters
Tomato pickers picket HQ of fast-food giant's parent
company
by Evan Silverstein, Presbyterian News Service
The story as posted on the PCUSA website includes photos.
[5-19-03]
LOUISVILLE - May 16, 2003 - About 50 farm workers and
supporters, including a number of Presbyterians, staged a protest on May 15
at the headquarters of the parent company of fast-foot giant Taco Bell.
Carrying signs and banners and chanting "Boycott Taco
Bell," members of the Florida-based Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW)
demanded higher wages and improved working conditions in the fields where
tomatoes for the Mexican-style restaurant chain are picked.
The peaceful group gathered in a parking lot, then
embarked on a half-mile march to the stately white headquarters building of
Louisville-based Yum! Brands Inc., where they were joined by sympathetic
Presbyterians, including members of the national staff of the Presbyterian
Church (USA), students, union members, farmers and other Christians.
Last year's General Assembly of the PC(USA) endorsed a
national boycott of Taco Bell and called for a good-faith dialogue between
its tomato supplier and representatives of the coalition.
"This issue is solvable," said the Rev. Noelle Damico, a
United Church of Christ minister who is the national boycott coordinator for
the PC(USA). "What we hope (is) that Yum! Brands and Taco Bell will sit at a
table with willing growers and with the workers, and will work out a
three-way solution that is beneficial to all parties that ensures workers'
rights and well-being."
The demonstrators chanted and waved signs with such
messages as "Justice for Tomato Pickers", "Yum! is Dumb" and "Taco Bell
Exploits Farm Workers." Some motorists passing the scene honked their car
horns in support.
Some protesters came dressed for the occasion: One was
dressed as a chicken, one as a pig and one as a cow. Organizers said the
outfits symbolized Yum!'s "double standard" of requiring meat suppliers to
treat animals humanely while refusing to ask their tomato suppliers to treat
workers fairly.
Others wore anti-Taco Bell buttons bearing a picture of a
small dog used in advertisements for Taco Bell's chalupas with a line drawn
through it.
The farm workers' group is pressuring Taco Bell to do what
the coalition has failed to do ---- persuade Florida growers to pay pickers
more for the buckets of tomatos they pick. They now earn 40 to 45 cents per
32-pound bucket, a rate that hasn't changed appreciably in more than 20
years.
Meanwhile, the average retail price of tomatoes has risen
from 67 cents per pound in 1980 to $1.32 in 2002, according to U.S.
government figures.
The Rev. Clifton Kirkpatrick, the PC(USA) stated clerk,
addressed the crowd, calling the boycott of Taco Bell the "morally right
thing to do," and asserting that "the abuse of farm workers in this country"
is one of the "small atrocities of our time."
"Our hope and dream in all of this is that companies like
Taco Bell will move from being part of the problem to being part of the
answer," Kirkpatrick said, "that they will join with us in an effort to pay
decent wages to farm workers, to recognize their rights to human dignity and
... build an economy and society that provides justice to farm workers and
well-being to companies."
Last March, Kirkpatrick was among a number of religious
leaders who called for an end to the workers' hunger strike outside Taco
Bell headquarters in Irvine, CA, after 10 days and urged the company to meet
with the workers.
The low wages are devastating to the tomato pickers and
their families, according to Edbin Lopez, a CIW member who is married, has
two children and helps support his family with money he sends home to
Guatemala.
"When you first come to the United States you have a
different idea," Lopez said, noting that a worker must pick two tons of
tomatoes to earn $50. "You're thinking, ''I'm in the United States, I should
be able to make some good money.' It's very sad then to realize that ...
we're exploited in this way. We can't support our families the way we want
to."
The peaceful gathering coincided with the annual meeting
of Yum! Brand shareholders, who were addressed by three coalition farm
workers inside as protesters outside called for improved working conditions
and higher pay.
But the meeting was not beneficial, according to one of
the farm workers who was present.
"It didn't go as we had hoped ... because of the attitude
that they took with us," said Francisca Cortez, a 20-year-old CIW member.
"Even though there was some discussion, we didn't think we were going to get
anything, because of the lack of respect. Not the words, but the attitudes
showed that we weren't going to get very far."
PC(USA) officials had met with Yum! representatives on the
previous day, to no avail. Damico said no further talks are scheduled.
"We welcomed, and continue to welcome, opportunities for
dialogue with the company," she said, "and our position remains the same."
The pickers and their supporters are demanding higher
wages and improved working conditions in the tomato fields.
Yum! representatives did not return a telephone call
seeking comment.
However, a spokeswoman for Taco Bell, which operates 6,500
restaurants nationwide, said in February that it shouldn't be part of the
dispute. "We do believe the coalition's efforts are misdirected at our
company," Laurie Gannon said then.
Pete Cashel, a Presbyterian small farmer from Harrodsburg,
KY, showed up to support the tomato pickers.
"We're showing our support because their plight is
reflective of what's happening with small farms in Kentucky and all over the
country," he said. "Giant corporations are putting small farmers out of
business."
The demonstrators later held a boycott rally outside a
Taco Bell restaurant in downtown Louisville. After about an hour, they had
lunch at nearby Central Presbyterian Church.
Members of another Louisville church, Crescent Hill
Presbyterian Church, greeted workers with a hot breakfast and a warm place
to sleep on their early morning arrival.
More information about the boycott is available at the Web
sites of the workers' coalition,
the
PC(USA),
the United Church
of Christ, and
the
National Farm Worker Ministry.