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Fair Food
Archived reports from 2005-06
For other reports on worker justice >>

Archived here are stories on the Fair Food Campaign and the struggle for justice by the Immokalee farmworkers in Florida, from 2005-06..
bulletFor reports from 2009 >>
bulletfrom 2008 >>
bullet from 2007 >>
News from the Campaign for Fair Food   [12-15-06]
 
bulletSocially responsible investors including the PC(USA), call on McDonald's to work with CIW
bulletFarmworker Francisca Cortez offers an Advent reflection
bulletFarmworker ministry at Immokalee gains a mobile church

These notes come from the Rev. Noelle Damico, Associate for Fair Food of the PC(USA), sent on December 15, 2006

Dear Friends:

With the advent call to "prepare the way" echoing, socially responsible investors including the PC(USA), call on McDonald's to work with CIW. This week's Advent reflection is by Francisca Cortez. Francisca is a farmworker who was born in Mexico and who has been picking tomatoes in the fields of Florida for the last 10 years. Francisca is Catholic and she has been honored by Catholic Charities for her leadership in CIW's work for farmworkers' human rights.


PC(USA)'S Socially Responsible Investment committee writes McDonald's

The Chair of the Mission Responsibility Through Investment Committee of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) was among the signatories of a letter to McDonald's CEO, urging him to work in partnership with the CIW to improve farmworker wages and working conditions. The Presbyterian Foundation and the Presbyterian Pension Boards hold shares in the McDonald's Corporation.

The MRTI was joined by the United Church Foundation, the Pension Boards- United Church of Christ, the Shareholder, Education and Advocacy of the Sisters of Charity of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Adorers of the Blood of Christ Investment Group.

The letter concludes:

It is our sincere hope that McDonald's will move swiftly to build a partnership with the CIW so that shareholders and consumers may be assured that abuses in the field are being dealt with effectively and respectfully. Because of McDonald's' history of being on the forefront of humane treatment for animals and recycling, we are confident that with concerted leadership from key executives within McDonald's, such a partnership cannot only be established but produce an innovative and lasting model for ensuring human rights in the agri-food industry.

You can find the complete letter at www.ciw-online.org/Investor_letter.html


ADVENT REFLECTION #3: Love and Christmas By Francisca Cortez, Coalition of Immokalee Workers

This is a time of happiness and peace in our hearts, when we give love to our loved ones. But, there are also moments of nostalgia and desperation in our hearts, even though we know that Christmas is coming and that peace shall reign.

For us, the farmworkers, we continue to work hard, struggling to achieve peace and harmony. During this season, we find ourselves again without our loved ones that we left behind to come to work in this land to better our lives. But instead, we found that in this land, there is no respect for our dignity.

Every one of us must walk step by step because, otherwise, we do not know what we may trip over. Sometimes, it is sickness because of our long hours of work. Still, you think of your family you left behind and continue walking forward without looking back, although we are always thinking of our loved ones.

The Lord, our Savior, will soon come to be with us. God says to share what little you have with the poor so that they may eat. In faith, we are confident that soon the good news will come, including a dignified life of peace, happiness, and tranquility for all farmworkers.

We do not demand more than what is set for us, only what we deserve as human beings. And the love of Jesus Christ will always reign in our hearts because he chooses to walk with each of us.

Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year, Amen.


Peace,

PC(USA) Campaign for Fair Food
The Rev. Noelle Damico, Associate for Fair Food
ndamico@ctr.pcusa.org
NY office: 631-751-7076
Cellphone: 631-371-9877
www.pcusa.org/fairfood


Also - A mobile church for Immokalee ministry

The Joining Hearts & Hands (MIJHH) campaign in Peace River Presbytery has enabled the Beth-El Farmworker Ministry at Immokalee to acquire a 31-foot motor home which functions as a mobile church for their ministry among the farmworkers.

The full story, from Presbyterian News Service >>

CIW farmworkers’ truth tour heads for Chicago   [10-19-06]

Here’s the latest report from The Rev. Noelle Damico, PC(USA) Associate for Fair Food

CIW's mini Truth Tour has set off for Chicago as support from religious bodies and leaders grows. Read more below!

1. CIW "Mini Truth Tour" October 13-23 The Coalition of Immokalee Workers is planning a "mini truth tour" to the Chicago area October 18-22. During this tour they will continue to call on McDonald's to work with them to improve the poverty wages of farmworkers and end human rights abuses in the company's supply chain. The tour will involve educational events and small, peaceful demonstration at McDonald's headquarters in Oak Brook on Friday, Oct 20 from 4:00-6:00pm. Seventeen farmworkers plus translators have already set out from Immokalee. This past Sunday CIW worshipped with and led educational sessions at Anchorage Presbyterian Church, James Lees Presbyterian Church, and Crescent Hill Presbyterian Church in Louisville. The tour will pass through IN on its way to Chicago. - For tour schedule and daily updates, visit www.ciw-online.org

-- To meet up with the tour contact Brigitte Gynther of Interfaith Action, brigitte@interfaithact.org or 239-986-0688

--  Read the Presbyterian News Service article on the Mini Tour http://www.pcusa.org/pcnews/2006/06484.htm

2. The US Conference of Catholic Bishops is the most recent body to publicly call on McDonald's to work with the CIW to address exploitation in the fields of the company's suppliers. Read the story from the BBC http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/business/5402052.stm

3. Bishop Hee-Soo Jung of the United Methodist Church has written to McDonald's urging them to work with the CIW. Bishop Jung oversees the Northern Illinois Conferences of the UMC, an area that encompasses 19 counties (including the city of Chicago), 400 local churches and approximately 125,000 members. Read the full letter http://www.ciw-online.org/UMC_letter.html


Peace,
The Rev. Noelle Damico
Associate for Fair Food
The Campaign for Fair Food - a Ministry of the Presbyterian Hunger Program
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
ndamico@ctr.pcusa.org
office: 631-751-7076
cell: 516-702-8743
www.pcusa.org/fairfood

Labor Day – a time for justice
[8-23-06]

A note from Noelle Damico, The Campaign for Fair Food

Labor Day Sunday is a great time to lift up themes of fair food and worker justice in your congregation.

New Labor Day Sunday preaching and liturgical resources are available from Interfaith Worker Justice. They include lectionary commentary and prayers featuring the CIW (Coalition of Immokalee Workers), fair food and human rights by the Rev. Noelle Damico, PC(USA) Associate for Fair Food. To access these resources and other worker justice resources visit http://www.iwj.org/outreach/labor_day.html .

You'll also want to let your congregation know of the 217th General Assembly's support for ongoing work with the CIW and the Campaign for Fair Food. To get photos, a full report, and to take action in support of fair food visit www.pcusa.org/fairfood .

As you travel this summer you will likely pass many McDonald's restaurants. So be sure to carry some manager's letters with you which call on McDonald's to work with the CIW to end exploitation in the fields. Download the letter and access other actions at http://www.pcusa.org/fairfood/action.htm .

Peace,

PC(USA) Campaign for Fair Food
The Rev. Noelle Damico, Associate for Fair Food
The Campaign for Fair Food - a Ministry of the Presbyterian Hunger Program Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)

ndamico@ctr.pcusa.org
office: 631-751-7076 cell: 631-371-1629

www.pcusa.org/fairfood

National Farm Worker Ministry announces:

NFWM Young Adult Leadership Development & Farm Worker Solidarity Summit


JULY 14, 15, & 16 of 2006
NATIONAL CHAVEZ CENTER
KEENE, CALIFORNIA


Youth and Young Adult Network of the NATIONAL FARM WORKER MINISTRY

• Learn about the history of the farm worker movement at the historic BIRTHPLACE OF THE FIRST FARMWORKER UNION.
• Meet YOUTH FROM ACROSS THE NATION, network and coordinate future campaigns.
• ACT IN SOLIDARITY with farm workers in an action supporting the Giumarra workers.
• Participate in WORKSHOPS on ART & ACTIVISM, IMMIGRANT RIGHTS, campaign STRATEGY and much more.
• Continue building a youth faith-based national network in solidarity with farm workers.
• Listen to FARM WORKERS SPEAK ABOUT THEIR STRUGGLE!

REGISTER TODAY!

yaya@nfwm.org

Call: (323) 560-2381 ext. 119

ONLY $50.00
Goes towards meals, lodging and conference costs.
We encourage you to pay more if you can to help cover expenses and scholarships.
(Scholarships available based on need.)

YAYA c/o Adrian Acosta
4430 E. 60th St.
Maywood, CA 90270

Online at: www.nfwm.org/yaya/yayamain.shtml

And check out our sponsors' websites --
National Farm Worker Ministry, Cesar E. Chavez Foundation, Student Action with Farmworkers, and United Farm Workers.

Get the original, graphic version of this flier in PDF format >>

Alliance for Fair Food Calls on McDonald’s to work with farmworkers to end exploitation in the fields of its suppliers

News release from the Alliance for Fair Food, May 25, 2006    [5-26-06]


As McDonald’s shareholders gather for the company’s annual meeting today, farmworkers from the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) and members of the Alliance for Fair Food (AFF) are calling on the company to commence immediate and serious dialogue with the CIW to address exploitative wages and human rights concerns in McDonald’s tomato supply chain.

Farmworkers picking for McDonald’s suppliers earn 40-45 cents for every 32 pound bucket of tomatoes they harvest, a wage that has remained stagnant for more than 25 years. In partnership with the U.S. Department of Justice and the FBI, the CIW has successfully prosecuted five cases of slavery in the agricultural fields and freed more than one thousand slaves. More cases are under investigation.

"Consumers of conscience care that the food we purchase at McDonald’s be produced fairly and insist that the farmworkers harvesting the tomatoes be partners with the company in advancing their own human rights," said the Rev. Noelle Damico, Associate for Fair Food with the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) a founding member of the Alliance for Fair Food. The Board of Pensions of the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and the Presbyterian Foundation are institutional shareholders in McDonald’s Corporation. "Exercising such moral responsibility is also sound business practice," Damico added, "increasing consumer and shareholder confidence in the provenance of McDonald’s products and the integrity of the company." To wit, Yum! Brands’ stock soared following the company’s March 2005 decision to work with the CIW which ended a four year boycott of its subsidiary Taco Bell.

In April, McDonald’s released a study, "Economic Impact: Tomatoes in Florida, Part I", authored by the Center for Reflection, Education, and Action, in an attempt to deflect criticism of their current practices. The study has been denounced by labor experts and thirty social scientists who concur with Dr. Bruce Nissen, Director of the Research Institute on Social and Economic Policy at Florida International University, that the study is "so riddled with errors both large and small that it cannot be accepted as factually accurate on virtually any measure."

"It’s beyond time for McDonald’s to stop treating a human rights crisis as a public relations campaign. This attitude not only perpetuates the exploitation of the farmworkers but threatens to discredit McDonald’s own reputation in the area of social responsibility," said Todd Howland, Director of the Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center for Human Rights. "We expect the company to sit down and craft a meaningful solution with the farmworkers who are uniquely positioned to create a strong and enforceable code of conduct to protect their human rights."

The Alliance for Fair Food is a broad network of human rights, religious, student and labor leaders and institutions that work in partnership with the CIW to promote principles and practices of socially responsible purchasing in the corporate food industry that advance the human rights of farmworkers. AFF endorsers include Amnesty International USA, the AFL-CIO, "Fast Food Nation" author Eric Schlosser, the Rev. Dr. Bob Edgar, General Secretary of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the U.S.A., Julian Bond, Board Chairman of the NAACP, and United Students Against Sweatshops.

Founding Organizations of the Alliance for Fair Food

RFK Memorial Center for Human Rights
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
Interfaith Action
Student Farmworker Alliance
National Economic and Social Rights Initiative

Updates from the Campaign for Fair Food   [5-5-06]

These updates will help you learn more, take action and spread the word about the ongoing Campaign for Fair Food.

Call on Chipotle to Work with the Coalition of Immokalee Workers

According to its "Food with Integrity" program, Chipotle Mexican Grill ensures humane conditions for animals in its supply-chain. Now it's time for them to do the same for the human beings who pick their tomatoes. Chipotle is a part of the McDonald's family and McDonald's holds a controlling interest in the company.

Call on Chipotle to work with the CIW to improve wages, ensure farmworker participation in the advancement of their rights, and to influence McDonald's to join Yum! Brands in working with the CIW for real rights for farmworkers.

Visit www.pcusa.org/fairfood for more information and visit http://www.unionvoice.org/campaign/ciwmcdonalds/ to send an email to Chipotle today!

 

CIW and PC(USA) Featured in Sojourners May Issue

"Blessing the Hands That Harvest" invites readers to learn more about the Campaign for Fair Food and understand the exploitation of farmworkers that supports the low-cost, fast-food industry. To read more >>   [You may be asked top register to read this article, but it's read -- and simple.}


Peace,

PC(USA) Campaign for Fair Food

To learn more about the Campaign for Fair Food, visit http://www.pcusa.org/fairfood/ or contact: Campaign for Fair Food, Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) fairfood@ctr.pcusa.org; Tel. 631-751-7076.

Marchers back farm workers

Presbyterians join tomato harvesters for Louisville stop on 'Truth Tour'
   [3-29-06]

The Florida tomato pickers are 1,000 miles into their latest "truth tour" when NPR airs a story about Americans taking to the streets to protest an immigration bill that would put up a West-Bank-and-Gaza-style barrier between Mexico and the United States, all across California, New Mexico, Arizona and Texas.

The purpose of this Great Wall would be to keep out hundreds of thousands of Mexicans and others desperate to get into this country to take "the jobs Americans workers won't do."

Jobs like picking tomatoes. Here's the truth of that:

Leave home and family far behind to live in an alien culture in an un-air-conditioned high-rent dorm with dozens of strangers. Get up well before sunrise every morning to go stand in a dusty lot with throngs of other men and women, all hoping to be chosen to put in a 14-hour day of bend-at-the-waist labor under the searing tropical sun - toil for which, if you are young, strong, male and relentless, you might be paid $50. You have no health insurance or benefits, you get no overtime pay, you haven't had a raise in 30 years, and your hosts are talking about building a 1,000-mile-long wall between the likes of you and the American dream.

The rest of the story >>

Presbyterians urged to pray for McDonald's, Florida farm workers

Special observance scheduled to augment tomato pickers' latest 'truth tour
'
[3-25-06]

Presbyterians and other people of faith are being asked to keep fast-food giant McDonald's and Florida farm workers in their prayers and thoughts on March 31.

That's the Day of Prayer and Meditation to Advance Real Rights for Farmworkers, an occasion timed to coincide with a prayer vigil and demonstration led by the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) and religious leaders outside McDonald's corporate headquarters in Oak Brook, IL.

The aim is to pressure the hamburger company to work with the CIW to improve wages and working conditions for tomato pickers.

The story from Presbyterian News Service >>

also ...

United Farmworkers is urging people to "Tell McDonald's to give farm workers a fair shake"

Threemile Canyon Farm is the largest dairy in the world, and grows about 5,000 acres of potatoes.

United Farmworkers is trying to organize Threemile’s workers to help them gain better working conditions, but workers who support the union efforts, like Juan Morales, are being fired.

McDonald’s could use its influence to resolve problems like this and convince Threemile to settle its dispute with the UFW. The McDonald’s code of conduct says, "We hold our suppliers responsible for ensuring adherence to our standards in their facilities and in subcontractor facilities that produce products for us... We will not do business with suppliers who fail to uphold our standards, in action as well as words." But McDonald’s has repeatedly refused to take action.

So UFW urges: "Tell McDonald's enough is enough. It's high time that they uphold the standards that they preach about."     The rest of the story and ways to contact McDonald’s >>

PC(USA) a founder of new fair-food alliance

Group’s first aim is to pressure McDonald’s to improve farm labor wages, conditions
[3-9-06]

The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) joined a diverse network of religious, student and human-rights groups this week to officially launch a new alliance dedicated to advancing the rights of migrant farm workers.

The Alliance for Fair Food (AFF) will promote socially responsible purchasing practices among major retail food corporations, with a particular focus on improving farm labor wages and guaranteeing the human rights of farm workers.

The whole story, from Presbyterian News Service >>

New 'Truth Tour' targets McDonald's

Tomato pickers taking to the streets to demand better pay, working conditions
[2-27-06]

Presbyterian News Service reports a group of Florida farmworkers will embark on a weeklong regional tour through the Southeast and Midwest next month to carry their struggle for higher wages and better working conditions to fast-food giant McDonald's.

During the tour, about 30 farmworkers are expected to travel by van to Chicago from Immokalee, FL. On the way, they will take their stories of abuse and exploitation to cities including Atlanta, Nashville, St. Louis, Indianapolis, Louisville, Cincinnati, Madison, WI, and Ann Arbor, MI.

They will be joined at each stop, organizers say, by supporters including Presbyterians and other people of faith, student activists, farmers, labor groups and community leaders.

The full story >>

Presbyterian Campaign for Fair Food says:

Urge McDonald’s to follow Taco Bell in respecting for farmworkers’ human rights
[2-7-06]

The Campaign asks consumers to deliver letter to their local McDonald’s manager, calling for decent wages and working conditions for farmworkers.

Dear Friends:

Many of you have actively sent letters to McDonald’s encouraging them to “follow Taco Bell’s lead” and work with the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) to implement the principles achieved in the historic agreement reached with Yum Brands in March 2005. Your letters have made it clear that Presbyterians want to advance the human rights gains for farmworkers throughout the fastfood industry.

Unfortunately, McDonald’s has responded by announcing that instead of working with the CIW, the company is working with a newly-minted group of growers. This group has presented an anemic code of conduct, developed without worker input that does not address stagnant, sub-poverty wages. Many religious bodies and human rights leaders, including Clifton Kirkpatrick, Stated Clerk, stepped forward to decry this approach at the end of the year. You can see these statements and read background news at www.pcusa.org/fairfood and www.ciw-online.org .

Now, in honor of the anniversary of the signing of the XIIIth Amendment which abolished slavery, the CIW asks Presbyterians to please join consumers across the country in visiting your local McDonald’s and delivering a letter to the manager, that encourages the company to work with the CIW to address exploitation in its tomato supply chain. Download the letter by visiting the following link:
http://www.ciw-online.org/mcd_manager_letter.pdf A message from CIW is below.

-PC(USA) Campaign for Fair Food

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

A message from the CIW:

On this day, February 1, in the year 1865, President Abraham Lincoln signed the 13th Amendment into law, officially abolishing slavery in this country. Yet today, in Florida, federal prosecutors still rely on laws derived from the 13th Amendment to put farm labor employers behind bars for holding their workers in modern-day slavery.

There is today a human rights crisis in Florida's fields. But this human rights crisis does not begin and end with slavery. Rather, slavery is only the most extreme form of the sweatshop conditions that exist throughout Florida's agricultural industry – where workers toil from dawn to dusk for sub-poverty wages at a piece rate that hasn't changed significantly in nearly 30 years, with no right to overtime pay, no health insurance, no sick leave, no paid vacation or pension, and no right to organize if they would hope to improve these conditions.

On this anniversary of the signing of the 13th Amendment, the CIW is announcing an important new action in our campaign to abolish slavery and sweatshops in Florida agriculture.

Over the next several weeks, we ask that you take this simple action to help end the human rights crisis in Florida's fields: Drop a letter at your local McDonald's calling on the fast-food giant to stop sidestepping the real issues and work with the CIW for real farm labor reform, and ask the manager to make your feelings known to corporate headquarters in Chicago.

Download the letter by visiting the following link: http://www.ciw-online.org/mcd_manager_letter.pdf

No right to overtime pay, no right to organize, sub-poverty wages... it's worth thinking about those conditions again. They are the rule, the unquestioned norm in Florida agriculture. This environment of powerlessness and exploitation is the fertile ground from which case after case of modern-day slavery is born.

That's why farmworkers with the Coalition of Immokalee Workers are organizing to make sweatshops a thing of the past in the fields of Florida. The agreement with Taco Bell was an important first step toward corporate accountability in the food industry and gave hope that other major retail food corporations would follow suit and help clean up human rights violations in their suppliers' operations.

By paying a fairer price for its tomatoes, Taco Bell helped workers earn a fairer wage. And by working with the CIW on making its code of conduct stronger, Taco Bell helped open the door to farmworkers playing a meaningful role in the protection of their own rights.

But Taco Bell can't do it alone. Nearly one year later, fast-food industry leader McDonald's still refuses to take these simple steps for justice. Click here, read the letter that follows, and if you agree, print it out, take it to your local McDonald's, and ask that it be sent to Corporate Headquarters. It's one small step toward a fairer future for Florida's farmworkers, and one giant step for the fast-food industry as a whole.

And as always, visit our website at www.ciw-online.org for the latest information on this developing campaign.

Thanks,
the Coalition of Immokalee Workers

P.S. If you take a letter to McDonald's, be sure to let us know at
info@interfaithact.org.

Coalition of Immokalee Workers urges ...
Ask McDonald's to work with the CIW to change conditions in the fields!
[11-22-05]

For months, the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) and allies across the country have called on McDonald's to do the right thing: Follow Taco Bell's lead and work with the CIW to establish fair wages and working conditions for the farmworkers who pick its tomatoes.

In March of this year, Taco Bell agreed to take responsibility for the abysmal conditions faced by farmworkers who pick its tomatoes. The agreement established a partnership between Yum Brands, Taco Bell's parent company, and the CIW and set several important precedents for social responsibility in the fast-food industry. Among those precedents, Taco Bell agreed to pay a penny more per pound for the tomatoes it buys from Florida growers -- an increase that could nearly double workers' sub-poverty wages -- and to establish the first-ever enforceable Code of Conduct for US agricultural suppliers.

Yet despite strong public support for the ground-breaking agreement, McDonald's has steadfastly refused to follow Taco Bell's lead on this simple path to justice.

Now comes the news that McDonald's has announced that it will offer only fair trade coffee in more than 650 of its restaurants from New York to Maine. Fair trade coffee is a laudable initiative whereby major coffee buyers, such as McDonalds, agree to pay a premium price -- above market price -- so that workers who grow and pick their coffee can receive a fair wage and improved working conditions.

While McDonald's should be commended for addressing economic injustice in its coffee supply chain, it continues to pay the artificially low market price for tomatoes, a price that leaves farmworkers locked in poverty and sweatshop conditions.

At the press conference ending the Taco Bell boycott, CIW member and 2003 RFK Human Rights Award Laureate Lucas Benitez addressed the vast network of boycott allies directly, saying, "Our work together is not done. Now we must convince other companies that they have the power to change the way they do business and the way workers are treated."

So, this Thanksgiving season, when we traditionally celebrate the harvest, let us also celebrate the harvesters. Join the CIW in calling on the world's largest restaurant chain to stop dragging its feet and to work with the CIW to improve the wages and working conditions for the men and women who pick its tomatoes.

Contact McDonald's today and demand they, too, pay a fair price for their tomatoes and work with the CIW to end human rights violations in the fields!

To participate in this important action go to http://www.unionvoice.org/campaign/mcdonalds/ Ask your friends, family, and everyone you know to do the same.

Thank you,
the Coalition of Immokalee Workers
Fair Food update   [11-1-05]

The Coalition of Immokalee Workers is recovering from Hurricane Wilma. For the latest information visit http://www.pcusa.org/fairfood/index.htm.

And keep the postcards and letters to McDonald's, Burger King, and Subway coming! Let them know that as Christians and customers we want food that is produced fairly and respects human rights.
bulletSample letters at http://www.pcusa.org/fairfood/action.htm
bulletTo order postcards from CIW for all three companies, email workers@ciw-online.org or call 239-657-8311.

PC(USA) Campaign for Fair Food

The Campaign for Fair Food continues at home and abroad!
[10-25-05]

Here are some highlights – but get the whole story >>www.pcusa.org/fairfood


The General Assembly Council of the PC(USA) voted to become a founding member of the Alliance for Fair Food, a growing network of religious, NGO, student, labor, community, celebrity, and international allies and institutions, works with the Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) to establish socially responsible purchasing in the corporate food industry, guarantee the human rights of farmworkers and end modern day slavery in the fields.

The Coalition of Immokalee Workers are visiting Europe to spread the word about fair food. They're meeting with representatives from the World Council of Churches, the World Alliance of Reformed Churches, and the Lutheran World Federation as well as representatives from the UN, the ILO, and the government of Norway.

Clifton Kirkpatrick, Stated Clerk of the General Assembly and President of the World Alliance of Reformed Churches (WARC), speaks to leaders of the 75 million member-strong WARC at their annual meeting in Evian, France on the significance of the victory in the Taco Bell boycott in light of neo-liberal economic systems.

And keep sending those letters and postcards to McDonald's, Burger King, and Subway! As consumers and people of faith, the CIW is counting on you to encourage these companies to sit down with the CIW and discuss how they can implement socially responsible purchasing within their own supply chains.

For sample letters >> 

For free postcards email workers@ciw-online.org

Farmworkers’ campaign for justice expands to the Fast-Food World   [5-26-05]

After years of hard work and an incredible victory for Taco Bell tomato pickers, the Coalition of Immokalee Workers has announced their new target: the Fast Food World, including McDonalds and Burger King!

Background on the Taco Bell struggle ... and the victory.

New biblical and worship resources available for the Campaign for Fair Food
 [9-2-05]

Sunday, Sept. 4, is the day before Labor Day and a great time to involve your congregation in the Campaign for Fair Food. 

There are new biblical and worship resources available at www.pcusa.org/fairfood to assist in preaching and teaching on the history of the Taco Bell boycott, the ground breaking agreement with the company which was achieved in March, and the next steps in reaching out to other major fast food corporations.

Specifically the Coalition of Immokalee Workers has asked us to write letters to McDonald's, Burger King, and Subway asking them to meet with the CIW and to ensure the human rights of workers in their supply chain. Background and sample letters are available at http://www.pcusa.org/fairfood/action.htm

Peace,
Noelle

The Rev. Noelle Damico, National Coordinator
Campaign for Fair Food
Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.)
Web:  http://www.pcusa.org/fairfood/
E-mail:  fairfood@ctr.pcusa.org
Tel. 631-751-7076

Archived here are stories on the Fair Food Campaign and the struggle for justice by the Immokalee farmworkers in Florida, from 2005-06..
bulletFor reports from 2009 >>
bulletfrom 2008 >>
bullet from 2007 >>
 

Some blogs worth visiting

 

PVJ's Facebook page

Mitch Trigger, PVJ's Secretary/Communicator, has created a Facebook page where Witherspoon members and others can gather to exchange news and views. Mitch and a few others have posted bits of news, both personal and organizational. But there’s room for more!

You can post your own news and views, or initiate a conversation about a topic of interest to you.

 

Voices of Sophia blog

Heather Reichgott, who has created this new blog for Voices of Sophia, introduces it:

After fifteen years of scholarship and activism, Voices of Sophia presents a blog. Here, we present the voices of feminist theologians of all stripes: scholars, clergy, students, exiles, missionaries, workers, thinkers, artists, lovers and devotees, from many parts of the world, all children of the God in whose image women are made. .... This blog seeks to glorify God through prayer, work, art, and intellectual reflection. Through articles and ensuing discussion we hope to become an active and thoughtful community.

 

John Harris’ Summit to Shore blogspot

Theological and philosophical reflections on everything between summit to shore, including kayaking, climbing, religion, spirituality, philosophy, theology, politics, culture, travel, The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), New York City and the Queens neighborhood of Ridgewood by a progressive New York City Presbyterian Pastor. John is a former member of the Witherspoon board, and is designated pastor of North Presbyterian Church in Flushing, NY.

 

John Shuck’s Shuck and Jive

A Presbyterian minister, currently serving as pastor of First Presbyterian Church of Elizabethton, Tenn., blogs about spirituality, culture, religion (both organized and disorganized), life, evolution, literature, Jesus, and lightening up.

 

Got more blogs to recommend?

Please send a note, and we'll see what we can do!

 

Plan now for our 2010 Ghost Ranch Seminar!

GHOST RANCH SEMINAR

July 26-August 1, 2010

WE’RE ALL IN THIS TOGETHER
CONFRONTING THE STRUCTURES OF INJUSTICE

 

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