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[PCUSANEWS] Pressuring Taco Bell


From PCUSA NEWS <PCUSA.NEWS@ecunet.org>
Date 6 Mar 2003 15:42:38 -0500

Note #7618 from PCUSA NEWS to PRESBYNEWS:

Pressuring Taco Bell
03126

Pressuring Taco Bell

Tomato pickers, supporters start 2nd week of hunger strike 

by Evan Silverstein

LOUISVILLE - More than 50 farm workers camping outside Taco Bell's corporate
headquarters in Irvine, CA, have been on a protest fast for more than a week.

The Florida-based Coalition of Immokalee Workers stopped eating on Feb. 24 to
call attention to the low wages paid to the people who pick the tomatoes that
go into Burrito Supremes and Gorditos in Taco Bell's 6,500 restaurants
nationwide.

Several Presbyterians have joined the hunger strikers, along with sympathetic
students, small farmers and Christians and clergy from around the nation.

"The response is, 'We're bearing the exploitation we face in the fields every
day,"' the Rev. Noelle Damico, the national coordinator of the PC(USA)'s Taco
Bell boycott, said by phone from the protest site.

Last year's General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church (USA) endorsed the
boycott until Taco Bell improves the workers' wages and working conditions
and starts a serious dialogue with its tomato supplier and representatives of
the coalition.

"The mood is very good, but physically they're really hurting," said Damico,
an ordained minister in the United Church of Christ (UCC). "Their basal body
temperature dropped, and so they're very cold and they're very tired. They're
covered in quilts right now. It's pretty intense."

Wind, rain and unseasonably cold temperatures have battered the protesters.
One Immokalee worker has been hospitalized with pneumonia, according to
organizers. He was treated and released.

 A California woman fasting in solidarity with the farm workers was
hospitalized for high blood pressure and continued her fast in the hospital.
She was released after two days.

An Arizona college student was admitted to a hospital for observation after
the fasting caused problems with his appendix, organizers said. He was
treated and released.

Damico said some of the workers have vomited and have been feeling faint. A
doctor and nurse at the scene are checking the participants' blood pressure
and vital signs daily.

On March 4, the ninth day of fasting, the physician and nurse entered Taco
Bell's headquarters to express concern for the workers' health and to request
a meeting. The company had them escorted from the building.

"I can't (overemphasize) how profound and serious this is, that these workers
are really putting their bodies on the line here to try to get dialogue with
Taco Bell," Damico said. "I would say there are about 50 (workers) that have
not eaten in a week."

The Coalition of Immokalee Workers is trying to persuade the company, one of
the nation's largest tomato buyers, to pay growers 1 cent per pound more, an
increase the coalition expects would be passed on to the field workers.

Growers pay the workers 40 to 50 cents per 32-pound bucket of tomatoes. The
requested increase would raise the pickers' per-bucket pay by 60 to 80
percent.

According to a U.S. Department of Labor survey, farm pickers made an average
of $7,500 a year in 2000, and had no healthcare insurance, overtime or sick
leave. Farm workers' income, adjusted for inflation, dropped 10 percent
between 1989 and 1998, according to the survey.

Damico said workers, religious leaders and supporters gathered on Feb. 23 for
an ecumenical worship service at Immanuel Presbyterian Church in Los Angeles.

Damico said Presbyterian supporters of the workers have included Immanuel,
First Presbyterian Church in Anaheim, CA, and St. Mark Presbyterian Church in
Newport, Beach, CA. These congregations have sponsored forums on the farm
workers' plight and have provided meals for non-fasting protesters.
Gatherings in support of the Irvine hunger strike have been held in cities
around the country.

On Feb. 28 more than 1,000 people joined the demonstration at Taco Bell
headquarters.
The farm workers have targeted Taco Bell in hope that the fast-food chain can
do what the coalition has been unable to do - pressure Florida growers to
raise pay rates for pickers.

"I'm feeling really good. The response from the students and the community of
Irvine has been really good," Lucas Benitez, fasting farm worker and a
founder of the Immokalee coalition, told a California newspaper.

Damico said hunger and poor weather have impacted the protesters' spirit,
leaving them cold and wet. The protesters kicked off the event last week,
waving picket signs shaped like tomatoes and displaying banners with messages
such as "Honk for a Living Wage."

"They'll get up every so often and do a little chanting: 'Boycott Taco Bell,
Boycott Taco Bell,' " Damico said. "They'll hold some signs and hold a banner
that says it's the seventh day of the hunger strike. But they're really
exhausted, just physically wiped out at this point. So it's not like a high
animation (with) people dancing around everywhere."

After a march outside the fast-food giant's headquarters last year, coalition
representatives met with a company vice president, but no progress was made.
They launched the national consumer boycott in 2001. They claim they have
managed to get Taco Bell kicked off some college campuses.

Taco Bell says the dispute is between the workers and the growers. The
growers, many of them in Florida, say foreign competition makes it impossible
to pay more.

Damico said Ash Wednesday, March 5, would be a good time for Taco Bell
officials to break their silence.

"I think it would be an appropriate time for Taco Bell to respond in some
way, if they so chose," she said. "I'm continuing to pray that they will
reach out and do some serious dialogue. Of course, as a Presbyterian Church
we want to reach out to them and encourage them toward that." 

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