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Coalition of Immokalee Workers

The Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) is a worker-based human rights organization  focusing on social responsibility in corporate supply chains, human trafficking, gender-based violence at work and occupational health and safety.

Logo of the CIW
Farmworkers protests organized by the Coalition of Immokalee Workers

Starting in 1993 from a foundation of farmworker community organizing in Immokalee, Florida, the CIW is best known today for its Fair Food Program (FFP), launched in 2011. The FFP harnesses the purchasing power of over a dozen retail food brands, from Taco Bell to Walmart, to compel compliance with a human rights-based code of conduct on participating farms. The Program was born in the Florida tomato industry and has spread to ten US states and Chile, including expansion into the cut flower industry and multiple additional crops, and incipient expansion efforts in South Africa and Mexico through the support of the US Department of Labor.[1] A new channel for co-ops and smaller independent grocery stores to support the Program is expanding thorough the FFP Sponsor Program.

The FFP also gave rise to the Worker-driven Social Responsibility model (WSR), which has been successfully replicated in the apparel industry in Bangladesh through the Bangladesh Accord (now the International Accord), in Lesotho through the Lesotho Agreements,[2] and in the dairy industry in the state of Vermont through the Milk with Dignity Program. The CIW provides technical assistance to organizations that are interested in adopting the WSR model through an umbrella organization, the WSR-Network.

Along with its campaigning and human rights enforcement efforts, CIW was a pioneer in the early days of the US anti-trafficking movement, uncovering several forced labor operations and collaborating with federal authorities in successful prosecutions in the 1990s.[3][4] Since then, the CIW has continued its anti-slavery efforts,[5] collaborating with law enforcement in more than a dozen domestic and transnational slavery prosecutions, helping to free thousands of workers from slavery operations in the Southeastern US, and training state and federal law enforcement officers in what has come to be known as the “victim-centered” approach to fighting human trafficking.

Early actions in Florida agriculture edit

The CIW, initially called the Southwest Florida Farmworker Project, was formed in 1993 in Immokalee (Im-AH-ka-lee), Florida, a center of the state's billion-dollar fresh tomato industry.[6] The group's organizing philosophy is based on principles of popular education[7][8] and leadership development,[9] as epitomized in CIW’s motto “Consciousness + Commitment = Change”.

Between 1995 and 2000, the CIW organized several major actions to protest declining real wages for tomato harvesters, as well as frequent violence from supervisors towards field workers. This period included community-wide work stoppages in 1995, 1997 and 1999; a 30-day hunger strike undertaken by six members in December, 1997– January,1998; and a 230-mile march from Ft. Myers to Orlando in 2000.[10] By 1998, these protests "won industry-wide raises of 13-25% (an aggregate of several million dollars annually for the community in increased wages). Those raises brought the tomato picking piece rate back to pre-1980 levels (the piece rate had fallen below those levels over the course of the intervening two decades), but wages remained below poverty levels and continuing improvement was slow in coming."[11]

In 2000, a change in strategy gradually emerged,[12] from one that looked exclusively at the farm level, with a focus on abusive farm bosses and farm owners unwilling to consider workers’ concerns, to an analysis that places much of the responsibility for degraded farm labor conditions at the feet of the multibillion-dollar retail food corporations.[13] According to this analysis, retail food giants leverage their unprecedented volume purchasing power to drive prices down at the farm gate, where falling prices are translated into downward pressure on farmworkers’ wages and working conditions by farms looking to maintain shrinking margins. The organization’s focus then moved from growers to retail companies, to be pursued through the launch of a nation-wide campaign.

Campaign for Fair Food edit

Winning a partnership with buyers edit

In 2001, the CIW declared a national boycott of Taco Bell, marking the launch of the Campaign for Fair Food.[14] The CIW argued that when major buyers such as Taco Bell leverage their volume purchasing power to demand discounts from their suppliers, they create strong downward pressure on wages and working conditions in these suppliers' operations. The Campaign’s key slogan—"Taco Bell makes farmworkers poor”—captured the essence of the CIW’s thinking: when major buyers such as Taco Bell leverage their volume purchasing power to demand discounts from their suppliers, they create strong downward pressure on wages and working conditions in these suppliers' operations.

A 2004 study by Oxfam America confirmed this trend: "Squeezed by the buyers of their produce, growers pass on the costs and risks imposed on them to those on the lowest rung of the supply chain: the farmworkers they employ."[15]

During the Taco Bell Boycott, the CIW worked closely with religious and community groups and a student network, the Student/Farmworker Alliance, to pressure Taco Bell from different angles. The idea was that collaboration was built on a shared self-interest for desired change.[16] For Immokalee farmworkers, that change was higher wages and improved working conditions. For their allies, the change was ethical consumption. From this foundation, a national consumer-network enlisting students, faith organizations, food and environmental justice advocates, and socially responsible investors[17] formed to hold retail food industry brands accountable for human rights abuses in their produce supply chains.

The CIW launched a boycott of Taco Bell in 2001, holding the company accountable for the wages and working conditions of farmworkers in its tomato supply chain. The CIW argued that when major buyers such as Taco Bell leverage their volume purchasing power to demand discounts from their suppliers, they create strong downward pressure on wages and working conditions in these suppliers' operations. A 2004 study by Oxfam America confirmed this trend: "Squeezed by the buyers of their produce, growers pass on the costs and risks imposed on them to those on the lowest rung of the supply chain: the farmworkers they employ."[18]

During the Taco Bell Boycott, the CIW worked closely with religious and community groups and a student network, the Student/Farmworker Alliance, to pressure Taco Bell from different angles. On March 8, 2005, Yum! Brands, Inc., parent company of Taco Bell, agreed to all of the CIW's demands,[19] including:

  • The first-ever direct, ongoing payment by a fast-food industry leader to farmworkers in its supply chain to address sub-standard farm labor wages (nearly doubling the percentage of the final retail price that goes to the workers who pick the produce);
  • The first-ever enforceable Code of Conduct for agricultural suppliers in the fast-food industry (which includes the CIW as part of the investigative body for monitoring worker complaints);
  • Market incentives for agricultural suppliers willing to respect their workers’ human rights, even when those rights are not guaranteed by law;
  • 100% transparency for Taco Bell's tomato purchases in Florida.

After the Taco Bell Boycott, the Campaign for Fair Food shifted its focus to the rest of the fast-food industry. In response to the campaign, McDonald's helped create an industry-controlled code of conduct known as SAFE (Socially Accountable Farm Employers) that the CIW and its allies deemed insufficient.[20] On April 9, 2007, an agreement between McDonald's and the CIW was announced at the Carter Center in Atlanta, Georgia.[21] The agreement, which met the standards previously set by the Taco Bell accord, also included a commitment by McDonald's to work with the CIW to develop an industry-wide third-party mechanism to monitor conditions and investigate abuses in the fields.[22]

In May 2008, at the U.S. Capitol, the CIW announced an agreement with Burger King. The world's second-largest burger chain had originally strongly opposed the campaign, even going so far as to hire a private investigative firm to provide information on the Student/Farmworker Alliance.[23] As part of the announcement, Burger King's chief executive, John W. Chidsey, apologized for prior negative remarks directed towards the CIW and went on to praise the group's efforts.[24] Subway, the largest fast-food buyer of Florida tomatoes, signed an agreement with the CIW six months later in December 2008.[25] With this agreement, four of the world's largest fast-food companies were now supporting the campaign. The CIW and Chipotle Mexican Grill reached a Fair Food Agreement on October 4, 2012,[26] after a six-year campaign by the CIW.[27]

In September 2008, the CIW broke ground in the supermarket industry by signing an agreement with Whole Foods Market. Karen Christensen, a Whole Foods executive explained, "We commend the CIW for their advocacy on behalf of these workers. After carefully evaluating the situation in Florida, we felt that an agreement of this nature was in line with our core values and was in the best interest of the workers."[28] The Whole Foods agreement marked the first time a retailer agreed to support the CIW initiative without extended public protests.

Throughout 2009 and 2010, the Student/Farmworker Alliance's "Dine with Dignity" campaign targeted the foodservice industry since many of these companies operate on college campuses. During this period, the CIW reached agreements with Bon Appétit Management Company,[29]Compass Group,[30] Aramark,[31] and Sodexo.[32]

In February 2012, the CIW and Trader Joe's "signed an agreement that formalizes the ways in which Trader Joe's will work with the CIW and Florida tomato growers to support the CIW's Fair Food Program."[33] This was the first Fair Food agreement the CIW signed with a major food retailer in the aftermath of the 2010 breakthrough settlement with the Florida Tomato Growers Exchange.

In January 2014, Walmart, the largest grocery retailer in the U.S., announced it was joining the Fair Food Program. In its agreement with the CIW, Walmart committed to help expand the Fair Food Program outside of Florida and into crops other than tomatoes.[34] Alexandra Guáqueta, chair of the UN Working Group on Business and Human Rights, attended the signing ceremony and conveyed a statement on behalf of the Working Group. The statement praises the Fair Food Program for its "smart mix" of monitoring and enforcement tools, including "market incentives for growers and retailers, monitoring policies and, crucially, a robust and accessible mechanism to resolve complaints and provide remedy," adding, "Workers have no fear of retaliation if they identify problems." The statement concludes, "We are eager to see whether the Fair Food Program is able to leverage further change within participating businesses, and serve as a model elsewhere in the world."[35]

In 2015, the CIW signed Fair Food Agreements with The Fresh Market[36] and Ahold (parent company of Giant and Stop & Shop).[37]

The Campaign for Fair Food is currently focused on Wendy's, in addition to several supermarket chains who remain uncommitted to the Fair Food Program, including Publix and Kroger.[38] In March 2023, a group of around 100 farm workers launched a protest march across Florida to both pressure both Publix and Kroger to join the Fair Food Program, and to highlight their deplorable working conditions, including forced labor.[39][40]

The CIW innovative campaigning strategy has not gone unchallenged. For instance, in November 2017, the Center for Union Facts filed a complaint with the Internal Revenue Service asserting the CIW "does not serve the public at large but instead a group of workers seeking concessions from their employers."[41] The union watchdog requested that "the IRS examine CIW's Forms 990 for 2013, 2014, and 2015, and, if appropriate, revoke its tax-exempt status."[42] The complaint was investigated by the Trump Administration Department of Labor and ultimately dismissed.

Winning a Partnership with Growers edit

In November 2007, the Florida Tomato Growers Exchange (FTGE), an agricultural cooperative that provides its grower members with limited antitrust protection for marketing their products, announced that the Taco Bell/Yum and McDonald's deals "will not be executed and now are considered moot."[43] Citing antitrust concerns, the FTGE threatened its members with $100,000 (~$136,653 in 2022) fines for cooperating with McDonald's or Yum Brands. One month later, FTGE Vice President Reggie Brown explained, "I think it is un-American when you get people outside your business to dictate terms of business to you."[44] As a result of the FTGE's resistance, the penny-per-pound funds accrued during the stalemate were held in escrow.

On April 15, 2008, the United States Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) held hearings on "Ending Abuses and Improving Working Conditions for Tomato Workers" in which Reggie Brown claimed farmworkers earned an average wage of "between $10.50 and $14.86 per hour." Lucas Benitez of the CIW and Senators Bernie Sanders (VT-I) and Dick Durbin (IL-D) disputed Brown's claim by citing contradictory evidence. The senators also scrutinized the legal basis for the FTGE's resistance to the Campaign for Fair Food.[45]

In November 2010, an agreement was reached between the CIW and the Florida Tomato Growers Exchange to implement the Fair Food Program – "including a strict code of conduct, a cooperative complaint resolution system, a participatory health and safety program, and a worker-to-worker education process – to over 90% of the Florida tomato industry".[46][47] Workers could receive an increase in annual wages from $10,000–12,000 a year to $17,000 if additional large buyers agree to the increase. In an editorial, the New York Times described the agreement as a "remarkable victory in a 15-year struggle for better pay and working conditions... The Immokalee victory won’t impose fairness overnight, but after generations of exploitation, part of the farm industry is pointing in the right direction."[48]

Timeline edit

Year Date Event
2005 March 8 Agreement reached with Yum! Brands (Taco Bell)
2007 April 9 Agreement reached with McDonald's
2008 May 17 Agreement reached with Burger King
2008 September 9 Agreement reached with Whole Foods Market
2008 December 2 Agreement reached with Subway
2009 April 29 Agreement reached with Bon Appétit Management Company
2009 September 25 Agreement reached with Compass Group
2010 April 1 Agreement reached with Aramark
2010 August 24 Agreement reached with Sodexo
2012 February 9 Agreement reached with Trader Joe's
2012 October 4 Agreement reached with Chipotle Mexican Grill
2014 January 16 Agreement reached with Walmart
2015 January 8 Agreement reached with The Fresh Market
2015 July 29 Agreement reached with Ahold

Fair Food Program edit

Structure and functions edit

The Fair Food Program is a human rights monitoring and enforcement program designed to protect farmworkers’ fundamental human rights on participating farms by harnessing the purchasing power of more than a dozen of the world’s largest retail food brands. The CIW’s Fair Food Agreements with major food retailers provide for the enforcement of the Fair Food Code of Conduct through a multi-layered approach to monitoring and enforcement that features a 24/7 complaint investigation and resolution mechanism and comprehensive field and office audits.

The CIW’s legally-binding agreements with participating buyers include two primary provisions: the Fair Food Premium — a bonus paid by the retailers and distributed directly to farmworkers on top of their regular pay, to help improve longstanding poverty-level wages in the US agricultural sector — and the market-backed enforcement of the Fair Food Code of Conduct, through the suspension of purchases by the Participating Buyers from farms that have committed zero tolerance (e.g., forced labor) violations or else failed to remediate other violations (e.g., wage theft). Workers on participating farms receive multiple forms of education on their rights under the Fair Food Code of Conduct, including written and video education at the point of hire and at least two in-person, worker-to-worker educations, on the farm and on the clock, administered by a CIW worker education team per season.

Working in a spirit of partnership with brands and growers, CIW and grower representatives regularly meet and collaborate to revise the Code and resolve concerns over its implementation. For instance, in the face of rising heat-related health risks due to the effects of climate change, the Code has recently been updated to include mandatory breaks every two hours, increased monitoring of heat-stress prevention measures, education and training, and responding to heat-stress symptoms.[49] Another example of how new standards are developed to timely address emerging challenges is the “FFP COVID-19 Illness Prevention, Assessment and Response Plan”.[50] These protocols became effective in September 2020 and were the first set of privately enforceable mandatory standards to protect farmworkers from COVID-19 in the U.S.

The Fair Food Standards Council, an independent monitor set up by the CIW to monitor Code compliance, administers the 24/7 complaint hotline, provides ongoing third-party monitoring and annual auditing (including interviews with over half the workforce on-site), as well as ongoing reviews and payroll and timekeeping systems to ensure that there is no wage theft and that the Fair Food Premium is distributed properly on top of regular wages. The Fair Food Standards Council is based in Sarasota, Florida, and directed by a former New York State Supreme Court Justice.[51]

Corrective action plans are the building blocks for improving supplier compliance with the Code. Audit reports and complaint findings serve as the starting point for a conversation. The corrective action plans that follow are co-created with farms to address their unique circumstances. This contributes to supplier buy-in, as does the independent monitor’s experience, and the efficiency gains from having a clear plan that sets priorities and realistic timelines for achieving them. The entire process is backed by the possibility of market consequences for the failure or refusal to comply with the requirements of the corrective action plan.

Complaint resolutions closes the circle by providing for ongoing monitoring and enforcement. The independent monitor improves communication through effective and efficient resolution of workers’ complaints, free of retaliation, which in turn builds trust in the system and encourages workers to come forward.[52]

With its worker-centered approach to human rights monitoring and enforcement, the Fair Food Program was the first comprehensive, fully functional model of the Worker-driven Social Responsibility (WSR) paradigm.[53] The Fair Food Standards Council recently released its 2021 Fair Food Program report,[54] which includes updated statistics regarding the impact of the program along with education and training for farmworkers to use at their jobs.

The Fair Food Sponsor Program edit

The FFP Sponsor Program is a new entry point for smaller retailers who aspire to support ethical practices, meet the expectations of a committed shopper base, and help build a more just food system. Sponsors make three commitments under the program:

–       making an annual support payment to the Fair Food Program based on a sliding scale,

–       educating their customers about the Fair Food Program through the announcement of the partnership and material making an effort to source Fair Food Program produce if it is available to them from their distributors.

The Sponsor Program has the potential to maximize the industry power of smaller food retailers to preserve the gains that the FFP has achieved for workers in the US tomato industry and reduce the almost exclusive reliance on the industry power of corporate buyers as the source of the FFP supplier incentives for decent work.

Currently, the Program includes three co-ops, one independent retailer and one restaurant –respectively, Takoma Park Silver Spring Co-Op (Maryland),[55] Park Slope Food Coop (N.Y.C.),[56] Three Rivers Market (Tennessee), Each Peach Market (D.C.)[57] and The Trashy Vegan (Tennessee).[58]

Program Expansion edit

The Program is steadily expanding to new sectors and new states. In 2020, the Program expanded to the cut flower industry in Virginia,[59] California, and, since 2022, in Chile. The Program is planning further international expansion to South Africa and Mexico through support of the US Department of Labor.[60]

Anti-Slavery Campaign edit

The CIW has developed an internationally recognized "worker-based approach to eliminating modern-day slavery in the agricultural industry. The CIW helps fight this crime by uncovering, investigating, and assisting in the federal prosecution of slavery rings preying on hundreds of farmworkers. In such situations, captive workers are held against their will by their employers through threats and, all too often, the actual use of violence – including beatings, shootings, and pistol-whippings."[61]

The CIW is a founding member of the national Freedom Network U.S.A to Empower Victims of Slavery and Trafficking. Additionally, the CIW is a regional coordinator for the Freedom Network Training Institute on Human Trafficking (FNTI). In this capacity, the CIW trains state and federal law enforcement and NGOs on how to identify and assist people held in slavery operations.

Other selected anti-slavery partnerships and collaborations include:

  • Legislature-appointed member, Florida Statewide Task Force on Human Trafficking
  • Florida Dept. of Law Enforcement (FDLE), curriculum for Advanced Investigative Techniques in Human Trafficking
  • Collier County Sheriff's Department Anti-Trafficking Unit
  • US Attorney's Anti-Trafficking Task Forces, Tampa and Miami districts
  • Federal Bureau of Investigation (F.B.I), Supervisory Special Agents In-Service trainings
  • North Carolina State Troopers Training Academy, training
  • U.S. Department of Justice, Civil Rights Division, Anti-Trafficking Unit, Washington, DC [62]

In 2010, the CIW developed a mobile Florida Modern-Day Slavery Museum that has extensively toured the southern and eastern U.S.[63][64]

Community organizing edit

One of the CIW's first accomplishments was to establish a cooperative to sell staple foods and other necessities at cost in order to combat price gouging by local merchants. CIW has owned and operated WCIW-LP (107.7 FM, "Radio Conciencia"), a low-power FM radio station that features music, news, and educational programming in several languages, since 2004. The station has served as a vital emergency services information hub during the state’s many hurricanes over the past two decades. Most recently, during the Covid-19 pandemic, the Radio helped raise awareness about the virus, prevention and good practices, as well as information about available health services established by the CIW in partnership with Doctors Beyond Borders, Partners in Health, and other organizations. Recent scientific evidence shows how CIW’s community-building efforts proved crucial to increasing trust and improve the response of the local health system to a devastating pandemic.[65]

Following the killing of an unarmed farmworker, Nicholas Morales Besanilla, who was fatally shot by a Collier County Sheriff’s deputy on Sept. 17, 2020, CIW launched the “Justice for Nicolas” campaign. Decrying rising police brutality across the country, the campaign specifically asked for a federal investigation into Nicholas’s shooting, the implementation of accessible crisis response teams across the county, and increased transparency.[66]

As part of its engagement with the Immokalee community, CIW has long attempted to alleviate the dire housing conditions farmworkers have to endure, often having little choice but to live in crowded, over-priced, and even dangerous trailers. These efforts increased following Hurricane Irma in 2017, which further aggravated the housing situation. Today, CIW representatives sit in the board of the I mmokalee Fair Housing Alliance, a nonprofit with the mission to build affordable housing for 128 families.

Awards and recognition edit

The CIW has received a wide array of honors and recognition, including:

  • 2006 – Paul and Sheila Wellstone Award, Freedom Network USA, for outstanding contributions to combating human trafficking and modern-day slavery in the U.S.[67]
  • 2007 – Anti-Slavery Award, Anti-Slavery International of London (world's oldest human rights organization) for exceptional contribution towards tackling modern-day slavery in the U.S. agricultural industry.[68]
  • 2008 – Sister Margaret Cafferty Development of People Award, Catholic Campaign for Human Development.[69]
  • 2010 – Adela Dwyer-St. Thomas of Villanova Peace Award, Villanova University, Center for Peace & Justice Education.[70]
  • 2010 – People of the Year, Fort Myers (FL) News-Press, in recognition of the CIW's "years of groundbreaking advocacy" and "landmark efforts, which have far-ranging implications beyond Southwest Florida."[71]
  • 2010 – Hero Acting to End Modern-Day Slavery Award, U.S. Department of State awarded to CIW Co-Founder, Laura Germino, for her "perseverance against slavery operations in the U.S. agricultural industry and determination to eliminate forced labor in supply chains”.[72] The award was given to Laura Germino on the occasion of the State Department's release of the 10th annual Trafficking in Persons (TIP) report, which for the first time included the United States in its rankings.
  • 2012 – Growing Green Award, Natural Resources Defense Council, for leaders and innovators in the field of sustainable food and agriculture.[73]
  • 2013 – Franklin D. Roosevelt Four Freedoms Awards, Freedom from Want Medal, Roosevelt Institute, in recognition of creating "a sustainable blueprint for worker-driven corporate social responsibility, winning fairer wages; work with dignity; and freedom from forced labor, sexual harassment, and violence in the workplace" [74]
  • 2014 – Clinton Global Citizen Award, Clinton Global Initiative, in recognition of the Fair Food Program as "a breakthrough, worker-driven approach to verifiable corporate accountability recognized by the United Nations and the White House for its unique effectiveness."[75]
  • 2015 – Presidential Medal for Extraordinary Efforts to Combat Human Trafficking in Persons, "by pioneering the Fair Food Program, empowering agricultural workers, and leveraging market forces and consumer awareness to promote supply chain transparency and eradicate modern slavery on participating farms."[76]
  • 2017 – MacArthur Genius Fellowship awarded to CIW Co-Founder, Greg Asbed, for pioneering a “visionary strategy… with potential to transform workplace environments across the global supply chain”[77]
  • 2018 – ALBA/Puffin Award for Human Rights Activism from the Puffin Foundation and the Abraham Lincoln Brigades Archives. "In support of their continued efforts to protect the rights of agricultural workers, prevent involuntary servitude, and create a food supply chain that is fair from bottom to top."[78]
  • 2022 – The American Bar Association’s 2022 Frances Perkins Public Service Award, in recognition of CIW’s vital decades-long fight for the dignities of agricultural workers and its impact on harnessing legal and market forces to bring about change.[79][80]

The Fair Food Program was the subject of a feature-length, front-page article in The New York Times on April 24, 2014. In this article Janice Fine, a labor relations professor at Rutgers University stated, ""This is the best workplace-monitoring program I’ve seen in the U.S.... It can certainly be a model for agriculture across the U.S. If anybody is going to lead the way and teach people how it’s done, it’s them." In the same article, Susan Marquis, dean of the Pardee Rand Graduate School commented on the FFP's effectiveness, noting, "When I first visited Immokalee, I heard appalling stories of abuse and modern slavery... But now the tomato fields in Immokalee are probably the best working environment in American agriculture. In the past three years, they’ve gone from being the worst to the best."[81] The CIW recently released its 2021 Fair Food Program report, which includes updated statistics regarding the impact of the program along with education and training for farmworkers to use at their jobs.[82]

Further expressions of praise for the Program include:

  • President Jimmy Carter echoed this conclusion in a public letter to the CIW from July 2013, stating, "You have formed innovative partnerships to find common ground between diverse interests, including some of the poorest workers in the United States and their employers, supply chain companies, retailers, consumers and law enforcement. My hope is that this will become a model for social responsibility within the agricultural industry."[83]
  • After a year-long investigation of sexual assault in the fields from California to Florida, a PBS Frontline producer declared the Fair Food Program to be the single most effective prevention program in the U.S. agricultural industry.[84]
  • A delegation from the United Nations Working Group on Business and Human Rights toured the U.S. on a mission to "explore practices, challenges and lessons relating to efforts on implementing" the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights. The delegation visited with several Fair Food Program stakeholders as part of its broader investigation. While the Working Group found numerous shortcomings in the response of U.S. businesses generally to human rights issues, it left "impressed" with the Fair Food Program specifically, praising the FFP for "innovatively address[ing] core worker concerns" and "governance gaps relating to labour issues" through "market incentives for participating growers" and an "independent and robust enforcement mechanism."[85]
  • The White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships singled out the Fair Food Program in a major 2013 report as one of the "most successful and innovative programs" in the world today to uncover and prevent modern-day slavery.[86]
  • An April 2021 policy brief produced by ReStructure Lab, a collaboration among Yale University, Stanford University, and Sheffield University (UK), concluded that "binding worker-driven social responsibility agreements," complete with third-party monitoring, are the most promising avenue for fighting forced labor in supply chains”.[87]
  • In 2022, a Harvard-based policy consortium calls on Congress, US Department of Agriculture to help drive expansion of FFP and other WSR initiatives in agriculture, stressing that “By incentivizing the growth of WSR [Worker-driven Social Responsibility] initiatives and focusing attention at the “top” of the supply chain — specifically, by preferentially providing the many forms of financial support government provides to those farms that join WSR programs — Congress can advance the twin aims of ending working exploitation and supporting the diversity and vibrancy of the farming sector.”[88]
  • In 2022, the United Nations Forum on Business and Human Rights featured a session on the WSR-model and the success of the Fair Food Program as a leading example of governance initiatives for centering rights holders in the business and human rights space.[89]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Asbed, Greg and Hitov, Steve. Preventing Forced Labor in Corporate Supply Chains: The Fair Food Program and Worker-driven Social Responsibility. Wake Forest Law Review, 2017.
  • Bales, Kevin and Ron Soodalter. The Slave Next Door: Human Trafficking and Slavery in America Today. University of California Press, 2009.
  • Bowe, John. Nobodies: Modern American Slave Labor and the Dark Side of the New Global Economy. Random House, 2007.
  • Estabrook, Barry. Tomatoland. Andrews McMeel, 2011.
  • Marquis, Susan. I Am Not a Tractor! How Florida Farmworkers Took On the Fast Food Giants and Won. Cornell University Press, 2017.

External links edit

  • Coalition of Immokalee Workers website
  • Alliance for Fair Food website
  • Fair Food Program website
  • Fair Food Standards Council website

coalition, immokalee, workers, worker, based, human, rights, organization, focusing, social, responsibility, corporate, supply, chains, human, trafficking, gender, based, violence, work, occupational, health, safety, logo, ciwfarmworkers, protests, organized, . The Coalition of Immokalee Workers CIW is a worker based human rights organization focusing on social responsibility in corporate supply chains human trafficking gender based violence at work and occupational health and safety Logo of the CIWFarmworkers protests organized by the Coalition of Immokalee WorkersStarting in 1993 from a foundation of farmworker community organizing in Immokalee Florida the CIW is best known today for its Fair Food Program FFP launched in 2011 The FFP harnesses the purchasing power of over a dozen retail food brands from Taco Bell to Walmart to compel compliance with a human rights based code of conduct on participating farms The Program was born in the Florida tomato industry and has spread to ten US states and Chile including expansion into the cut flower industry and multiple additional crops and incipient expansion efforts in South Africa and Mexico through the support of the US Department of Labor 1 A new channel for co ops and smaller independent grocery stores to support the Program is expanding thorough the FFP Sponsor Program The FFP also gave rise to the Worker driven Social Responsibility model WSR which has been successfully replicated in the apparel industry in Bangladesh through the Bangladesh Accord now the International Accord in Lesotho through the Lesotho Agreements 2 and in the dairy industry in the state of Vermont through the Milk with Dignity Program The CIW provides technical assistance to organizations that are interested in adopting the WSR model through an umbrella organization the WSR Network Along with its campaigning and human rights enforcement efforts CIW was a pioneer in the early days of the US anti trafficking movement uncovering several forced labor operations and collaborating with federal authorities in successful prosecutions in the 1990s 3 4 Since then the CIW has continued its anti slavery efforts 5 collaborating with law enforcement in more than a dozen domestic and transnational slavery prosecutions helping to free thousands of workers from slavery operations in the Southeastern US and training state and federal law enforcement officers in what has come to be known as the victim centered approach to fighting human trafficking Contents 1 Early actions in Florida agriculture 2 Campaign for Fair Food 2 1 Winning a partnership with buyers 2 2 Winning a Partnership with Growers 2 3 Timeline 3 Fair Food Program 3 1 Structure and functions 3 2 The Fair Food Sponsor Program 3 3 Program Expansion 4 Anti Slavery Campaign 5 Community organizing 6 Awards and recognition 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksEarly actions in Florida agriculture editThe CIW initially called the Southwest Florida Farmworker Project was formed in 1993 in Immokalee Im AH ka lee Florida a center of the state s billion dollar fresh tomato industry 6 The group s organizing philosophy is based on principles of popular education 7 8 and leadership development 9 as epitomized in CIW s motto Consciousness Commitment Change Between 1995 and 2000 the CIW organized several major actions to protest declining real wages for tomato harvesters as well as frequent violence from supervisors towards field workers This period included community wide work stoppages in 1995 1997 and 1999 a 30 day hunger strike undertaken by six members in December 1997 January 1998 and a 230 mile march from Ft Myers to Orlando in 2000 10 By 1998 these protests won industry wide raises of 13 25 an aggregate of several million dollars annually for the community in increased wages Those raises brought the tomato picking piece rate back to pre 1980 levels the piece rate had fallen below those levels over the course of the intervening two decades but wages remained below poverty levels and continuing improvement was slow in coming 11 In 2000 a change in strategy gradually emerged 12 from one that looked exclusively at the farm level with a focus on abusive farm bosses and farm owners unwilling to consider workers concerns to an analysis that places much of the responsibility for degraded farm labor conditions at the feet of the multibillion dollar retail food corporations 13 According to this analysis retail food giants leverage their unprecedented volume purchasing power to drive prices down at the farm gate where falling prices are translated into downward pressure on farmworkers wages and working conditions by farms looking to maintain shrinking margins The organization s focus then moved from growers to retail companies to be pursued through the launch of a nation wide campaign Campaign for Fair Food editWinning a partnership with buyers edit In 2001 the CIW declared a national boycott of Taco Bell marking the launch of the Campaign for Fair Food 14 The CIW argued that when major buyers such as Taco Bell leverage their volume purchasing power to demand discounts from their suppliers they create strong downward pressure on wages and working conditions in these suppliers operations The Campaign s key slogan Taco Bell makes farmworkers poor captured the essence of the CIW s thinking when major buyers such as Taco Bell leverage their volume purchasing power to demand discounts from their suppliers they create strong downward pressure on wages and working conditions in these suppliers operations A 2004 study by Oxfam America confirmed this trend Squeezed by the buyers of their produce growers pass on the costs and risks imposed on them to those on the lowest rung of the supply chain the farmworkers they employ 15 During the Taco Bell Boycott the CIW worked closely with religious and community groups and a student network the Student Farmworker Alliance to pressure Taco Bell from different angles The idea was that collaboration was built on a shared self interest for desired change 16 For Immokalee farmworkers that change was higher wages and improved working conditions For their allies the change was ethical consumption From this foundation a national consumer network enlisting students faith organizations food and environmental justice advocates and socially responsible investors 17 formed to hold retail food industry brands accountable for human rights abuses in their produce supply chains The CIW launched a boycott of Taco Bell in 2001 holding the company accountable for the wages and working conditions of farmworkers in its tomato supply chain The CIW argued that when major buyers such as Taco Bell leverage their volume purchasing power to demand discounts from their suppliers they create strong downward pressure on wages and working conditions in these suppliers operations A 2004 study by Oxfam America confirmed this trend Squeezed by the buyers of their produce growers pass on the costs and risks imposed on them to those on the lowest rung of the supply chain the farmworkers they employ 18 During the Taco Bell Boycott the CIW worked closely with religious and community groups and a student network the Student Farmworker Alliance to pressure Taco Bell from different angles On March 8 2005 Yum Brands Inc parent company of Taco Bell agreed to all of the CIW s demands 19 including The first ever direct ongoing payment by a fast food industry leader to farmworkers in its supply chain to address sub standard farm labor wages nearly doubling the percentage of the final retail price that goes to the workers who pick the produce The first ever enforceable Code of Conduct for agricultural suppliers in the fast food industry which includes the CIW as part of the investigative body for monitoring worker complaints Market incentives for agricultural suppliers willing to respect their workers human rights even when those rights are not guaranteed by law 100 transparency for Taco Bell s tomato purchases in Florida After the Taco Bell Boycott the Campaign for Fair Food shifted its focus to the rest of the fast food industry In response to the campaign McDonald s helped create an industry controlled code of conduct known as SAFE Socially Accountable Farm Employers that the CIW and its allies deemed insufficient 20 On April 9 2007 an agreement between McDonald s and the CIW was announced at the Carter Center in Atlanta Georgia 21 The agreement which met the standards previously set by the Taco Bell accord also included a commitment by McDonald s to work with the CIW to develop an industry wide third party mechanism to monitor conditions and investigate abuses in the fields 22 In May 2008 at the U S Capitol the CIW announced an agreement with Burger King The world s second largest burger chain had originally strongly opposed the campaign even going so far as to hire a private investigative firm to provide information on the Student Farmworker Alliance 23 As part of the announcement Burger King s chief executive John W Chidsey apologized for prior negative remarks directed towards the CIW and went on to praise the group s efforts 24 Subway the largest fast food buyer of Florida tomatoes signed an agreement with the CIW six months later in December 2008 25 With this agreement four of the world s largest fast food companies were now supporting the campaign The CIW and Chipotle Mexican Grill reached a Fair Food Agreement on October 4 2012 26 after a six year campaign by the CIW 27 In September 2008 the CIW broke ground in the supermarket industry by signing an agreement with Whole Foods Market Karen Christensen a Whole Foods executive explained We commend the CIW for their advocacy on behalf of these workers After carefully evaluating the situation in Florida we felt that an agreement of this nature was in line with our core values and was in the best interest of the workers 28 The Whole Foods agreement marked the first time a retailer agreed to support the CIW initiative without extended public protests Throughout 2009 and 2010 the Student Farmworker Alliance s Dine with Dignity campaign targeted the foodservice industry since many of these companies operate on college campuses During this period the CIW reached agreements with Bon Appetit Management Company 29 Compass Group 30 Aramark 31 and Sodexo 32 In February 2012 the CIW and Trader Joe s signed an agreement that formalizes the ways in which Trader Joe s will work with the CIW and Florida tomato growers to support the CIW s Fair Food Program 33 This was the first Fair Food agreement the CIW signed with a major food retailer in the aftermath of the 2010 breakthrough settlement with the Florida Tomato Growers Exchange In January 2014 Walmart the largest grocery retailer in the U S announced it was joining the Fair Food Program In its agreement with the CIW Walmart committed to help expand the Fair Food Program outside of Florida and into crops other than tomatoes 34 Alexandra Guaqueta chair of the UN Working Group on Business and Human Rights attended the signing ceremony and conveyed a statement on behalf of the Working Group The statement praises the Fair Food Program for its smart mix of monitoring and enforcement tools including market incentives for growers and retailers monitoring policies and crucially a robust and accessible mechanism to resolve complaints and provide remedy adding Workers have no fear of retaliation if they identify problems The statement concludes We are eager to see whether the Fair Food Program is able to leverage further change within participating businesses and serve as a model elsewhere in the world 35 In 2015 the CIW signed Fair Food Agreements with The Fresh Market 36 and Ahold parent company of Giant and Stop amp Shop 37 The Campaign for Fair Food is currently focused on Wendy s in addition to several supermarket chains who remain uncommitted to the Fair Food Program including Publix and Kroger 38 In March 2023 a group of around 100 farm workers launched a protest march across Florida to both pressure both Publix and Kroger to join the Fair Food Program and to highlight their deplorable working conditions including forced labor 39 40 The CIW innovative campaigning strategy has not gone unchallenged For instance in November 2017 the Center for Union Facts filed a complaint with the Internal Revenue Service asserting the CIW does not serve the public at large but instead a group of workers seeking concessions from their employers 41 The union watchdog requested that the IRS examine CIW s Forms 990 for 2013 2014 and 2015 and if appropriate revoke its tax exempt status 42 The complaint was investigated by the Trump Administration Department of Labor and ultimately dismissed Winning a Partnership with Growers edit In November 2007 the Florida Tomato Growers Exchange FTGE an agricultural cooperative that provides its grower members with limited antitrust protection for marketing their products announced that the Taco Bell Yum and McDonald s deals will not be executed and now are considered moot 43 Citing antitrust concerns the FTGE threatened its members with 100 000 136 653 in 2022 fines for cooperating with McDonald s or Yum Brands One month later FTGE Vice President Reggie Brown explained I think it is un American when you get people outside your business to dictate terms of business to you 44 As a result of the FTGE s resistance the penny per pound funds accrued during the stalemate were held in escrow On April 15 2008 the United States Senate Committee on Health Education Labor and Pensions HELP held hearings on Ending Abuses and Improving Working Conditions for Tomato Workers in which Reggie Brown claimed farmworkers earned an average wage of between 10 50 and 14 86 per hour Lucas Benitez of the CIW and Senators Bernie Sanders VT I and Dick Durbin IL D disputed Brown s claim by citing contradictory evidence The senators also scrutinized the legal basis for the FTGE s resistance to the Campaign for Fair Food 45 In November 2010 an agreement was reached between the CIW and the Florida Tomato Growers Exchange to implement the Fair Food Program including a strict code of conduct a cooperative complaint resolution system a participatory health and safety program and a worker to worker education process to over 90 of the Florida tomato industry 46 47 Workers could receive an increase in annual wages from 10 000 12 000 a year to 17 000 if additional large buyers agree to the increase In an editorial the New York Times described the agreement as a remarkable victory in a 15 year struggle for better pay and working conditions The Immokalee victory won t impose fairness overnight but after generations of exploitation part of the farm industry is pointing in the right direction 48 Timeline edit Year Date Event2005 March 8 Agreement reached with Yum Brands Taco Bell 2007 April 9 Agreement reached with McDonald s2008 May 17 Agreement reached with Burger King2008 September 9 Agreement reached with Whole Foods Market2008 December 2 Agreement reached with Subway2009 April 29 Agreement reached with Bon Appetit Management Company2009 September 25 Agreement reached with Compass Group2010 April 1 Agreement reached with Aramark2010 August 24 Agreement reached with Sodexo2012 February 9 Agreement reached with Trader Joe s2012 October 4 Agreement reached with Chipotle Mexican Grill2014 January 16 Agreement reached with Walmart2015 January 8 Agreement reached with The Fresh Market2015 July 29 Agreement reached with AholdFair Food Program editStructure and functions edit The Fair Food Program is a human rights monitoring and enforcement program designed to protect farmworkers fundamental human rights on participating farms by harnessing the purchasing power of more than a dozen of the world s largest retail food brands The CIW s Fair Food Agreements with major food retailers provide for the enforcement of the Fair Food Code of Conduct through a multi layered approach to monitoring and enforcement that features a 24 7 complaint investigation and resolution mechanism and comprehensive field and office audits The CIW s legally binding agreements with participating buyers include two primary provisions the Fair Food Premium a bonus paid by the retailers and distributed directly to farmworkers on top of their regular pay to help improve longstanding poverty level wages in the US agricultural sector and the market backed enforcement of the Fair Food Code of Conduct through the suspension of purchases by the Participating Buyers from farms that have committed zero tolerance e g forced labor violations or else failed to remediate other violations e g wage theft Workers on participating farms receive multiple forms of education on their rights under the Fair Food Code of Conduct including written and video education at the point of hire and at least two in person worker to worker educations on the farm and on the clock administered by a CIW worker education team per season Working in a spirit of partnership with brands and growers CIW and grower representatives regularly meet and collaborate to revise the Code and resolve concerns over its implementation For instance in the face of rising heat related health risks due to the effects of climate change the Code has recently been updated to include mandatory breaks every two hours increased monitoring of heat stress prevention measures education and training and responding to heat stress symptoms 49 Another example of how new standards are developed to timely address emerging challenges is the FFP COVID 19 Illness Prevention Assessment and Response Plan 50 These protocols became effective in September 2020 and were the first set of privately enforceable mandatory standards to protect farmworkers from COVID 19 in the U S The Fair Food Standards Council an independent monitor set up by the CIW to monitor Code compliance administers the 24 7 complaint hotline provides ongoing third party monitoring and annual auditing including interviews with over half the workforce on site as well as ongoing reviews and payroll and timekeeping systems to ensure that there is no wage theft and that the Fair Food Premium is distributed properly on top of regular wages The Fair Food Standards Council is based in Sarasota Florida and directed by a former New York State Supreme Court Justice 51 Corrective action plans are the building blocks for improving supplier compliance with the Code Audit reports and complaint findings serve as the starting point for a conversation The corrective action plans that follow are co created with farms to address their unique circumstances This contributes to supplier buy in as does the independent monitor s experience and the efficiency gains from having a clear plan that sets priorities and realistic timelines for achieving them The entire process is backed by the possibility of market consequences for the failure or refusal to comply with the requirements of the corrective action plan Complaint resolutions closes the circle by providing for ongoing monitoring and enforcement The independent monitor improves communication through effective and efficient resolution of workers complaints free of retaliation which in turn builds trust in the system and encourages workers to come forward 52 With its worker centered approach to human rights monitoring and enforcement the Fair Food Program was the first comprehensive fully functional model of the Worker driven Social Responsibility WSR paradigm 53 The Fair Food Standards Council recently released its 2021 Fair Food Program report 54 which includes updated statistics regarding the impact of the program along with education and training for farmworkers to use at their jobs The Fair Food Sponsor Program edit The FFP Sponsor Program is a new entry point for smaller retailers who aspire to support ethical practices meet the expectations of a committed shopper base and help build a more just food system Sponsors make three commitments under the program making an annual support payment to the Fair Food Program based on a sliding scale educating their customers about the Fair Food Program through the announcement of the partnership and material making an effort to source Fair Food Program produce if it is available to them from their distributors The Sponsor Program has the potential to maximize the industry power of smaller food retailers to preserve the gains that the FFP has achieved for workers in the US tomato industry and reduce the almost exclusive reliance on the industry power of corporate buyers as the source of the FFP supplier incentives for decent work Currently the Program includes three co ops one independent retailer and one restaurant respectively Takoma Park Silver Spring Co Op Maryland 55 Park Slope Food Coop N Y C 56 Three Rivers Market Tennessee Each Peach Market D C 57 and The Trashy Vegan Tennessee 58 Program Expansion edit The Program is steadily expanding to new sectors and new states In 2020 the Program expanded to the cut flower industry in Virginia 59 California and since 2022 in Chile The Program is planning further international expansion to South Africa and Mexico through support of the US Department of Labor 60 Anti Slavery Campaign editThe CIW has developed an internationally recognized worker based approach to eliminating modern day slavery in the agricultural industry The CIW helps fight this crime by uncovering investigating and assisting in the federal prosecution of slavery rings preying on hundreds of farmworkers In such situations captive workers are held against their will by their employers through threats and all too often the actual use of violence including beatings shootings and pistol whippings 61 The CIW is a founding member of the national Freedom Network U S A to Empower Victims of Slavery and Trafficking Additionally the CIW is a regional coordinator for the Freedom Network Training Institute on Human Trafficking FNTI In this capacity the CIW trains state and federal law enforcement and NGOs on how to identify and assist people held in slavery operations Other selected anti slavery partnerships and collaborations include Legislature appointed member Florida Statewide Task Force on Human Trafficking Florida Dept of Law Enforcement FDLE curriculum for Advanced Investigative Techniques in Human Trafficking Collier County Sheriff s Department Anti Trafficking Unit US Attorney s Anti Trafficking Task Forces Tampa and Miami districts Federal Bureau of Investigation F B I Supervisory Special Agents In Service trainings North Carolina State Troopers Training Academy training U S Department of Justice Civil Rights Division Anti Trafficking Unit Washington DC 62 In 2010 the CIW developed a mobile Florida Modern Day Slavery Museum that has extensively toured the southern and eastern U S 63 64 Community organizing editOne of the CIW s first accomplishments was to establish a cooperative to sell staple foods and other necessities at cost in order to combat price gouging by local merchants CIW has owned and operated WCIW LP 107 7 FM Radio Conciencia a low power FM radio station that features music news and educational programming in several languages since 2004 The station has served as a vital emergency services information hub during the state s many hurricanes over the past two decades Most recently during the Covid 19 pandemic the Radio helped raise awareness about the virus prevention and good practices as well as information about available health services established by the CIW in partnership with Doctors Beyond Borders Partners in Health and other organizations Recent scientific evidence shows how CIW s community building efforts proved crucial to increasing trust and improve the response of the local health system to a devastating pandemic 65 Following the killing of an unarmed farmworker Nicholas Morales Besanilla who was fatally shot by a Collier County Sheriff s deputy on Sept 17 2020 CIW launched the Justice for Nicolas campaign Decrying rising police brutality across the country the campaign specifically asked for a federal investigation into Nicholas s shooting the implementation of accessible crisis response teams across the county and increased transparency 66 As part of its engagement with the Immokalee community CIW has long attempted to alleviate the dire housing conditions farmworkers have to endure often having little choice but to live in crowded over priced and even dangerous trailers These efforts increased following Hurricane Irma in 2017 which further aggravated the housing situation Today CIW representatives sit in the board of the I mmokalee Fair Housing Alliance a nonprofit with the mission to build affordable housing for 128 families Awards and recognition editThe CIW has received a wide array of honors and recognition including 2006 Paul and Sheila Wellstone Award Freedom Network USA for outstanding contributions to combating human trafficking and modern day slavery in the U S 67 2007 Anti Slavery Award Anti Slavery International of London world s oldest human rights organization for exceptional contribution towards tackling modern day slavery in the U S agricultural industry 68 2008 Sister Margaret Cafferty Development of People Award Catholic Campaign for Human Development 69 2010 Adela Dwyer St Thomas of Villanova Peace Award Villanova University Center for Peace amp Justice Education 70 2010 People of the Year Fort Myers FL News Press in recognition of the CIW s years of groundbreaking advocacy and landmark efforts which have far ranging implications beyond Southwest Florida 71 2010 Hero Acting to End Modern Day Slavery Award U S Department of State awarded to CIW Co Founder Laura Germino for her perseverance against slavery operations in the U S agricultural industry and determination to eliminate forced labor in supply chains 72 The award was given to Laura Germino on the occasion of the State Department s release of the 10th annual Trafficking in Persons TIP report which for the first time included the United States in its rankings 2012 Growing Green Award Natural Resources Defense Council for leaders and innovators in the field of sustainable food and agriculture 73 2013 Franklin D Roosevelt Four Freedoms Awards Freedom from Want Medal Roosevelt Institute in recognition of creating a sustainable blueprint for worker driven corporate social responsibility winning fairer wages work with dignity and freedom from forced labor sexual harassment and violence in the workplace 74 2014 Clinton Global Citizen Award Clinton Global Initiative in recognition of the Fair Food Program as a breakthrough worker driven approach to verifiable corporate accountability recognized by the United Nations and the White House for its unique effectiveness 75 2015 Presidential Medal for Extraordinary Efforts to Combat Human Trafficking in Persons by pioneering the Fair Food Program empowering agricultural workers and leveraging market forces and consumer awareness to promote supply chain transparency and eradicate modern slavery on participating farms 76 2017 MacArthur Genius Fellowship awarded to CIW Co Founder Greg Asbed for pioneering a visionary strategy with potential to transform workplace environments across the global supply chain 77 2018 ALBA Puffin Award for Human Rights Activism from the Puffin Foundation and the Abraham Lincoln Brigades Archives In support of their continued efforts to protect the rights of agricultural workers prevent involuntary servitude and create a food supply chain that is fair from bottom to top 78 2022 The American Bar Association s 2022 Frances Perkins Public Service Award in recognition of CIW s vital decades long fight for the dignities of agricultural workers and its impact on harnessing legal and market forces to bring about change 79 80 The Fair Food Program was the subject of a feature length front page article in The New York Times on April 24 2014 In this article Janice Fine a labor relations professor at Rutgers University stated This is the best workplace monitoring program I ve seen in the U S It can certainly be a model for agriculture across the U S If anybody is going to lead the way and teach people how it s done it s them In the same article Susan Marquis dean of the Pardee Rand Graduate School commented on the FFP s effectiveness noting When I first visited Immokalee I heard appalling stories of abuse and modern slavery But now the tomato fields in Immokalee are probably the best working environment in American agriculture In the past three years they ve gone from being the worst to the best 81 The CIW recently released its 2021 Fair Food Program report which includes updated statistics regarding the impact of the program along with education and training for farmworkers to use at their jobs 82 Further expressions of praise for the Program include President Jimmy Carter echoed this conclusion in a public letter to the CIW from July 2013 stating You have formed innovative partnerships to find common ground between diverse interests including some of the poorest workers in the United States and their employers supply chain companies retailers consumers and law enforcement My hope is that this will become a model for social responsibility within the agricultural industry 83 After a year long investigation of sexual assault in the fields from California to Florida a PBS Frontline producer declared the Fair Food Program to be the single most effective prevention program in the U S agricultural industry 84 A delegation from the United Nations Working Group on Business and Human Rights toured the U S on a mission to explore practices challenges and lessons relating to efforts on implementing the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights The delegation visited with several Fair Food Program stakeholders as part of its broader investigation While the Working Group found numerous shortcomings in the response of U S businesses generally to human rights issues it left impressed with the Fair Food Program specifically praising the FFP for innovatively address ing core worker concerns and governance gaps relating to labour issues through market incentives for participating growers and an independent and robust enforcement mechanism 85 The White House Office of Faith Based and Neighborhood Partnerships singled out the Fair Food Program in a major 2013 report as one of the most successful and innovative programs in the world today to uncover and prevent modern day slavery 86 An April 2021 policy brief produced by ReStructure Lab a collaboration among Yale University Stanford University and Sheffield University UK concluded that binding worker driven social responsibility agreements complete with third party monitoring are the most promising avenue for fighting forced labor in supply chains 87 In 2022 a Harvard based policy consortium calls on Congress US Department of Agriculture to help drive expansion of FFP and other WSR initiatives in agriculture stressing that By incentivizing the growth of WSR Worker driven Social Responsibility initiatives and focusing attention at the top of the supply chain specifically by preferentially providing the many forms of financial support government provides to those farms that join WSR programs Congress can advance the twin aims of ending working exploitation and supporting the diversity and vibrancy of the farming sector 88 In 2022 the United Nations Forum on Business and Human Rights featured a session on the WSR model and the success of the Fair Food Program as a leading example of governance initiatives for centering rights holders in the business and human rights space 89 See also editFood Chains a 2014 documentary about the Coalition of Immokalee Workers Workers self managementReferences edit US Department of Labor awards 2 5M grant to promote human labor rights in the international cut flower supply chains DOL Retrieved 2023 04 16 Humphreys Rachel Kelly Annie 2020 09 10 The women fighting sexual abuse in the factories where your jeans are made podcast the Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 2023 04 16 Bowe John Nobodies Does Slavery Exist in America The New Yorker April 21 2003 Estabrook Barry Politics of the Plate The Price of Tomatoes Archived 2011 07 30 at the Wayback Machine Gourmet March 2009 Labor contractor sentenced for forced labor conspiracy of H 2A workers The Packer 2023 01 03 Retrieved 2023 04 16 Cui Xiurui Guan Zhengfei Morgan Kimberly L Huang Kuan Ming Hammami A Malek 2022 12 16 Multitiered Fresh Produce Supply Chain The Case of Tomatoes Horticulturae 8 12 1204 doi 10 3390 horticulturae8121204 ISSN 2311 7524 Haedicke Susan 2020 10 01 Coalition of Immokalee Workers farmworker led popular education and performance Research in Drama Education The Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance 25 4 576 580 doi 10 1080 13569783 2020 1804347 ISSN 1356 9783 S2CID 225047197 Reimagining a National Symbol The Immokalee Statue of Liberty Smithsonian Learning Lab Retrieved 2023 04 16 Rosile Grace Ann Boje David M Herder Richard A Sanchez Mabel 2021 The Coalition of Immokalee Workers Uses Ensemble Storytelling Processes to Overcome Enslavement in Corporate Supply Chains Business amp Society 60 2 376 414 doi 10 1177 0007650320930416 ISSN 0007 6503 S2CID 225607485 Marquis Susan L 2017 I Am Not a Tractor How Florida Farmworkers Took On the Fast Food Giants and Won Cornell University Press JSTOR 10 7591 j ctt1w1vjwx CIW website About Us Archived 2011 07 30 at the Wayback Machine Drainville Andre C 2008 09 01 Present in the World Economy The Coalition of Immokalee Workers 1996 2007 Globalizations 5 3 357 377 doi 10 1080 14747730802252495 ISSN 1474 7731 S2CID 154679723 Bell Beverly 2007 Florida Farmworkers Build Unity through Education and Action Race Poverty amp the Environment 14 2 39 41 ISSN 1532 2874 JSTOR 41554555 CIW Boycott the Bell www ciw online org Retrieved 2023 04 17 Like Machines in the Fields www oxfamamerica org Retrieved 2023 04 17 Walsh Jane M 2014 05 30 OUR STRUGGLES ARE NOT THE SAME BUT THEY CONVERGE FARMWORKERS ALLIES AND THE FAIR FOOD MOVEMENT d scholarship pitt edu Retrieved 2023 04 17 Workers Coalition of Immokalee 2021 04 16 Investors rise up Responsible investors representing 1 trillion dollars in assets under management urge Wendy s to join the Fair Food Program Coalition of Immokalee Workers Retrieved 2023 04 17 Like Machines in the Fields www oxfamamerica org Retrieved 2023 04 17 Accord With Tomato Pickers Ends Boycott Of Taco Bell washingtonpost com www washingtonpost com Retrieved 2023 04 17 Coalition of Immokalee Workers 2011 07 19 Archived from the original on 2011 07 19 Retrieved 2023 04 17 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Groom Nichola McDonald s agrees to pay more for Florida tomatoes Reuters April 9 2007 CIW 2007 04 09 McDONALD S USA AND ITS PRODUCE SUPPLIERS TO WORK WITH THE COALITION OF IMMOKALEE WORKERS Coalition of Immokalee Workers Retrieved 2023 04 17 Schlosser Eric 2008 05 07 Opinion Burger With a Side of Spies The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 04 17 Martin Andrew 2008 05 24 Burger King Grants Raise to Pickers The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 04 17 Miguel Tracy X Subway agrees to pay another penny per pound for Southwest Florida tomatoes Naples Daily News December 2 2008 Chipotle signs agreement to improve conditions for workers The Denver Post 2012 10 04 Retrieved 2023 04 17 Sellers Sean Chipotle Challenge Time to Back Up Food With Integrity Grist org December 11 2009 Whole Foods Market Press Room Blog Archive Whole Foods Market Signs Agreement with the Coalition of Immokalee Workers CIW to Support Penny per Pound Tomato Program in Florida 2011 10 06 Archived from the original on 2011 10 06 Retrieved 2023 04 17 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Press Releases Bon Appetit Management Company 2011 08 29 Archived from the original on 2011 08 29 Retrieved 2023 04 17 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Black Jane 2009 09 25 Farm Workers Wages to Increase Under Labor Agreement The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 2023 04 17 Coalition of Immokalee Workers Dine with Dignity Campaign 2015 04 16 Archived from the original on 2015 04 16 Retrieved 2023 04 17 Sodexo and Coalition of Immokalee Workers Sign Fair Food Agreement 2012 10 24 Archived from the original on 2012 10 24 Retrieved 2023 04 17 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Trader Joe s Caves to Coalition of Immokalee Workers Signs Fair Food Agreement In These Times CIW 2014 01 16 PRESS RELEASE Coalition of Immokalee Workers Announces Walmart to Join Groundbreaking Fair Food Program Coalition of Immokalee Workers Retrieved 2023 04 17 CIW 2014 01 16 BREAKING NEWS Walmart joins CIW s Fair Food Program Coalition of Immokalee Workers Retrieved 2023 04 17 Fresh Market grocery chain joins CIW s Fair Food Program WMNF 2015 01 08 Retrieved 2023 04 17 USA Ahold Ahold USA Joins the Coalition of Immokalee Workers Fair Food Program www prnewswire com Press release Retrieved 2023 04 17 MIKE SCHNEIDER Farmworkers use Florida march to pressure other companies iFIBER One News Associated Press Retrieved 2023 04 16 Wilson Bill March 22 2023 Farm workers walk to convince Kroger Publix to join Fair Food Program Supermarket News Retrieved September 14 2023 Alvarez Maximillian March 16 2023 Farmworkers in Florida Are Protesting Modern Day Slavery Jacobin Retrieved September 14 2023 Center for Union Facts Complaint PDF DOL Scrutinizing Worker Centers Management Report for Nonunion Organizations 41 2 8 2018 doi 10 1002 mare 30364 Hughlett Mike McDonald s Farmworker Raise Fought by Growers Chicago Tribune November 6 2007 Greenhouse Steven 2007 12 24 Tomato Pickers Wages Fight Faces Obstacles The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 04 17 Ending Abuses and Improving Working Conditions for Tomato Workers The U S Senate Committee on Health Education Labor amp Pensions www help senate gov Retrieved 2023 04 17 Florida tomato growers and farm workers reach agreement on principles Wides Munoz Laura Fla Tomato Growers Farmworkers in Landmark Deal Associated Press November 16 2010 Opinion One Penny More a Pound The New York Times 2010 12 04 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 04 16 Schneider Karl Florida coalition protects farm workers from rising temperatures amid climate change Naples Daily News Retrieved 2023 04 16 Voices From the Front Lines of America s Food Supply The New York Times 2021 01 05 ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 04 16 Fair Food Standards Council tasked with improving tomato industry working conditions Sarasota Herald Tribune April 20 2012 Angelini Antonella Curphey Shauna 2022 The Overlooked Advantages of the Independent Monitoring and Complaint Investigation System in the Worker driven Social Responsibility Model in US Agriculture Business and Human Rights Journal 7 3 494 499 doi 10 1017 bhj 2022 25 ISSN 2057 0198 S2CID 252901481 Chavez Gerardo Reyes 2023 Awareness Analysis and Action A Rights Holder Perspective on Building the Fair Food Movement and the Way Forward for Worker Driven Social Responsibility Business and Human Rights Journal 8 1 85 89 doi 10 1017 bhj 2022 36 ISSN 2057 0198 S2CID 256572581 Fair Food Standards Council PDF Updates on the Fair Food Program Takoma Park Silver Spring Co op 2021 09 13 Retrieved 2023 04 16 Park Slope Food Coop joins forces with CIW to expand award winning Fair Food Program Grassroots Economic Organizing geo coop Retrieved 2023 04 16 Each Peach to be Fair Food Sponsor Each Peach Market Retrieved 2023 04 16 Fair Food Sponsors The Fair Food Program fairfoodprogram org Retrieved 2023 04 16 Bloomia Gets Big Honor Good Guys Do Win Flower Power 2023 03 29 Retrieved 2023 04 16 US Department of Labor awards 2 5M grant to promote human labor rights in the international cut flower supply chains DOL Retrieved 2023 04 16 Anti Slavery Program Coalition of Immokalee Workers 2013 03 14 Retrieved 2023 04 17 CIW Highlights 2011 07 18 Archived from the original on 2011 07 18 Retrieved 2023 04 17 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Florida Modern Day Slavery Museum ciw online org Retrieved 2023 04 17 Moynihan Colin 2010 08 04 Rolling Museum Casts Light on Current Day Forced Labor City Room Retrieved 2023 04 17 Murtagh Caroline Asbed Greg Ptaszek Emily Leandre Fernet Monacello Vitina Hing Matthew Pedretti Julie Marcelin Frantzso Chavez Gerardo Reyes Perkins Julia DeYoe Ruth Palazuelos Daniel 2022 The Immokalee Community Health Coalition Operationalizing Trust Journal of Health Care for the Poor and Underserved 33 4S 243 254 doi 10 1353 hpu 2022 0173 ISSN 1548 6869 PMID 36533473 S2CID 254824205 Immokalee Vigil Attendees Demand Justice for Slain Single Father WGCU PBS amp NPR for Southwest Florida 2021 03 01 Retrieved 2023 04 16 Wellstone Award Contributions to Anti Trafficking Freedom Network USA Retrieved 2023 04 17 Anti Slavery 220507 US forced labour activists win UK Anti Slavery Award 2011 09 27 Archived from the original on 2011 09 27 Retrieved 2023 04 17 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Sr Margaret Cafferty Development of People Award USCCB www usccb org Retrieved 2023 04 17 Adela Dwyer St Thomas of Villanova Peace Award Villanova University www1 villanova edu Retrieved 2023 04 17 CIW 2010 12 28 Looking back CIW s own annus mirabilis Coalition of Immokalee Workers Retrieved 2023 04 17 Laura Germino U S Department of State Trafficking in Persons Report Heroes www tipheroes org Retrieved 2023 10 25 Growing Green Awards www nrdc org Retrieved 2023 04 17 Franklin D Roosevelt Four Freedoms Awards Roosevelt Institute Retrieved 2023 04 17 CIW 2014 09 22 President Bill Clinton Secretary of State Hillary Clinton honor CIW with Global Citizen Award Coalition of Immokalee Workers Retrieved 2023 04 17 Coalition of Immokalee Workers gets Presidential Medal The News Press Retrieved 2019 08 10 Greg Asbed MacArthur Foundation www macfound org Retrieved 2019 08 10 2018 Coalition of Immokalee Workers Spotlight on Coalition of Immokalee Workers www americanbar org Retrieved 2023 04 16 Frances Perkins Public Service Award www americanbar org Retrieved 2023 04 16 Greenhouse Steven 2014 04 25 In Florida Tomato Fields a Penny Buys Progress The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2023 04 17 Workers Coalition of Immokalee 2021 09 02 RELEASED 2021 Fair Food Program Report Coalition of Immokalee Workers Retrieved 2021 09 09 CIW 2013 07 10 President Jimmy Carter writes letter to CIW following 2013 Roosevelt Freedom from Want Medal Coalition of Immokalee Workers Retrieved 2023 04 17 Rape in the Fields A FRONTLINE Univision Investigation WGCU PBS amp NPR for Southwest Florida Retrieved 2023 04 17 Peru Milestone disability reforms lead the way for other States says UN expert OHCHR Retrieved 2023 04 17 President s Advisory Council on Neighborhood and Faith Based Partnerships Report of recommendations to the President Building partnerships to eradicate modern day slavery March 13 2013 The Briefs Re Structure Lab Retrieved 2023 04 16 https www farmbilllaw org wp content uploads 2022 06 Farmworkers Report pdf 11th UN Forum on business and human rights The importance of rights holder perspect 2022unforumbhr sched com Retrieved 2023 04 16 Further reading editAsbed Greg and Hitov Steve Preventing Forced Labor in Corporate Supply Chains The Fair Food Program and Worker driven Social Responsibility Wake Forest Law Review 2017 Bales Kevin and Ron Soodalter The Slave Next Door Human Trafficking and Slavery in America Today University of California Press 2009 Bowe John Nobodies Modern American Slave Labor and the Dark Side of the New Global Economy Random House 2007 Estabrook Barry Tomatoland Andrews McMeel 2011 Marquis Susan I Am Not a Tractor How Florida Farmworkers Took On the Fast Food Giants and Won Cornell University Press 2017 External links editCoalition of Immokalee Workers website Alliance for Fair Food website Fair Food Program website Fair Food Standards Council website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Coalition of Immokalee Workers amp oldid 1181886340, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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