www.newsandletters.org












NEWS & LETTERS, March 2002 

Taco Bell boycott grows

Memphis, Tenn.—Local activists in Memphis have launched a campaign to inform the public about the national boycott of Taco Bell initiated by the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW), a union representing tomato pickers in Florida. I am writing about the CIW campaign, and about our efforts to support it.

The CIW has been fighting for the rights of immigrant farm laborers for more than 15 years. The CIW workers are mostly immigrants from Mexico, Guatemala, Haiti, Nicaragua. Minimum wage laws in the U.S. don't apply to agricultural workers, and as a result, the Immokalee farm workers work for a "piece rate." Every 32-pound bucket of tomatoes is worth 40˘—the same that was paid in 1978.

To make the minimum wage, they must pick 13 buckets per hour; to make $50 in one day, they must pick two tons of tomatoes. When adjusted for inflation the real wages of tomato pickers has dropped 40% since 1978. Most farm workers have no right to overtime pay, sick leave, health insurance, holiday or vacation pay. The median annual income of farm workers today is $7,500.

During the last 10 years, using tactics of nonviolent direct action, the CIW workers have engaged in strikes, walkouts, protests, sit-ins, and hunger strikes to pressure Six L's Packing Company to renegotiate wages and living conditions. All of these attempts to force Six L's to change their policies were unsuccessful. On April 1, 2000, the CIW took their campaign to the public and called for a boycott of Taco Bell, the number one buyer of tomatoes from Six L's.

The CIW wants Taco Bell to pay one cent more per pound of tomatoes. If the growers passed that penny along to the pickers, their wages would double. The cost to consumers would be less than one half-cent for each chalupa or taco. Yet, interested only in profits, the representatives of Taco Bell have refused to meet with the CIW.

Fifty CIW workers will be visiting Memphis on March 16 as a part of their "Truth Tour." We will march from the National Civil Rights Museum to a highly visible Taco Bell where we are planning to have one hell of a protest. Some are considering engaging in the great American tradition of civil disobedience, that is, locking down and getting hauled off to jail. In the meantime, we have been handing out flyers at the University of Memphis; and, for the last three weeks, we have had protests at local Taco Bells where we held up signs and handed out literature.

More information about the CIW Taco Bell Campaign can be found at www.ciw-online.org.

—Steve Tammelleo, University of Memphis student

Return to top


Home l News & Letters Newspaper l Back issues l News and Letters Committees l Dialogues l Raya Dunayevskaya l Contact us l Search

Subscribe to News & Letters

Published by News and Letters Committees
Designed and maintained by  Internet Horizons