BREAKING!! Ahold USA (Giant and Stop n Shop) Join the Fair Food Program!

Gerardo Reyes Chavez of CIW (left) and Felis Andrade of Giant Food place a Fair Food sign next to tomatoes in Giant’s O Street store in Washington DC. Photo credit: Helena Coutinho
Gerardo Reyes Chavez of CIW (left) and Felis Andrade of Giant Food place a Fair Food sign next to tomatoes in Giant’s O Street store in Washington DC. Photo credit: Helena Coutinho

Ahold:  “The Fair Food Program is a time-tested leader in improving the lives of agricultural workers…”

CIW:  Ahold’s “leadership will send an invaluable message to the rest of the grocery industry that social responsibility is greatly strengthened when workers, suppliers and retailers work together toward a more modern, more humane agricultural industry.”

In a landmark development for the Fair Food Program, Ahold USA and the CIW announced today that Ahold has agreed to join the award-winning social responsibility program, bringing worker-certified Fair Food tomatoes to over 50 million new customers a month in nearly 780 new stores in 14 states.  You can read the entire press release here.

Report Back & Video – Food Justice Bike Tour

DC Fair Food and Three Part Harmony Farm successfully pulled off Washington DC’s first ever “Food Justice Bike Tour & Community Dinner“! About 30 people came out on Father’s Day, June 21st, to show their support for #FoodJusticeDC movement in the District, urban farming and national farmworker organizing.

Activists on bikes can travel much faster than any march from one location to another (photo: Luke of DC Direct Action News).

Our bike ride began by stopping at Ben & Jerry’s in Georgetown to deliver a letter delegation calling on Ben & Jerry’s to support farmworker rights in the Vermont dairy industry (a new campaign by Migrant Justice, “Milk for Dignity,” that we are excited to be supporting).

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Outside the Ben & Jerry’s in Georgetown (photo: Luke of DC Direct Action News).
Entering the Ben and Jerry’s in Georgetown with a letter concerning worker conditions in Vermont’s dairy factory farms.
Entering the Ben and Jerry’s in Georgetown with a letter concerning worker conditions in Vermont’s dairy factory farms (photo: Luke of DC Direct Action News).

View a video of our letter delivery here!

Next, we stopped at Bread for the City and heard from Sustainable Agriculture and Community Engagement Manager, Zachari Curtis, to learn about food access,  community health issues and the role Bread for the Coty has played in the Shaw community since the 1968 riots. After that, we biked on to visit Jeremiah Lowrey, Research and Policy Coordinator from Restaurant Opportunities Center DC. Jeremiah spoke to us about the work ROC DC does to build worker power within the service industry.

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Jeremiah Lowery of ROC DC speaking to the bike riders.
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Finally, we ended our bike ride at the beautiful Three Part Harmony Farm located on a 2-acre plot of land in Brookland, NE. Three Part Harmony Owner and Operator, Gail Taylor, welcomed us along with her farm crew to enjoy a delicious home cooked picnic dinner incorporating many of the crops grown on the farm itself.

Gail Taylor of Three Part Harmony Farm speaking to the bike riders.
Gail Taylor of Three Part Harmony Farm speaking to the bike riders.
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This Food Justice Bike Tour and Community Dinner was a huge success in bringing several members of our local Washington DC food system together to build community, discuss our vision of a food justice and support the urban farming and farmworker organizing that we believe in!

We extend a particular thanks to our partners in this event who provided food and drink for the dinner: Three Part Harmony Farm, Copycat Co, Misfit Juicery.

Additional press coverage by DC Direct Action News: “DC Food Justice Bike Tour Enters Georgetown Ben and Jerry’s with Labor Demands

 

Food Justice Bike Ride and Community Dinner Fundraiser | June 21st

FOOD JUSTICE BIKE RIDE AND COMMUNITY DINNER FUNDRAISER | JUNE 21ST
SECONDPOSTERWhen most people think about the food movement, what comes to mind is likely a $8 jar of artisanal sauerkraut, or a waiter getting grilled about the locality, diet, slaughter, and general happiness of a chicken. But there’s another side of the movement for a better food system — food justice movements that connect the quality and affordability of the food we eat with the living and working conditions of the farmers, farmworkers, servers, cooks, and other food system workers that we rely on to set the table.

Join us for a bike tour of sites and local organizations working for food justice in DC and beyond. The ride will start at Dupont Circle and end at Three Part Harmony Farm with an outdoor community meal. We are asking for sliding scale donations of $10 or more to support both the farm and youth organizing in solidarity with farmworkers.

MEET UP at Dupont Circle at 3:30pm, June 21st. Ride will last approximately 2 hours and end at Three Part Harmony Farm (~Michigan and 4th Ave NE) with a meal around 6pm. Yes, this is Father’s Day!

And don’t forget to check out our event site for more information on purchasing tickets: bit.ly/dcffbiketour

Want to get involved, or help out? E-mail info@dcfairfood.org

Don’t have a bike? No worries – you can easily rent one at a Capital Bikeshare station. The meeting place for the tour has a station, or go to:http://www.capitalbikeshare.com/

DCFF supports “One Fair Wage” in Washington DC

DC Fair Food has signed onto the One Fair Wage campaign to support raising the minimum wage for all workers in DC.

Restaurant Opportunity Center’s One Fair Wage campaign will be advancing the campaigns across the country to pass legislation in cities and states that will require the restaurant industry to pay all its employees at least the regular minimum wage rather than a tipped minimum wage.

DCFF Participates in Rooting DC, urban farming and gardening conference

This weekend, DC Fair Food participated in the Info Fair at Rooting DC, the District’s 8th annual free urban gardening conference. Held at Wilson High School, the event attracted over 1,200 people for a full day of workshops on all the skills required to grow and enjoy food in the city. Over 60 organizations joined the Info Fair, and DCFF was there in full force to educate people about the importance of worker leadership, the ally model of the Alliance for Fair Food, the unique success of the Fair Food Program, and the ongoing national campaign urging Wendy’s to join their fast food competitors and put a stop to modern-day slavery in the tomato fields.

DC Fair Food member and Real Food Challenge Staff, Jon Berger, reflects:

Personally, I had a great time at the event. Our focus on labor and food justice issues set us apart from many of the other organizations present, but I found that many people I talked to were at least vaguely aware of the issues that farmworkers face, and found great inspiration in the amazing success of the Fair Food Program implementation over the past two years. Some people were skeptical about the continued use of chemical fertilizers and pesticides in the tomato industry, but everyone I talked to eventually saw the ethical and strategic importance of supporting workers when they decide to focus first on the everyday issues of wage theft, harassment, and common dignity. I particularly enjoyed connecting with people from Eco-Hermanas, the Community Farming Alliance, and the Arlington Food Assistance Center.

Fundraiser – Help Get DC to the CIW Spring Action!

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Every year, the Coalition of Immokalee Workers organizes a major spring action, and allies from across the country fly, drive, bike and caravan down to Florida to take part in this annual tradition. This year, DC and Philly will be caravaning down together to St. Pete, FL on March 21st for the CIW’s “Parade and Concert for Fair Food”.

Join us at Haydees Restaurant on Wednesday March 4th to help us make this trip affordable for everyone who wants to come! There will be live music by our comp@s Poppy Patica, Son Cosita Seria & DJ Dia, and a raffle with prizes like art, a screen printing workshop, and more. Haydees is generously donating some of the food & drink sales, so come ready to eat, drink and hang with friends!

If you cannot come to the fundraiser but would still like to support our efforts, we encourage you to donate online at: bit.ly/funddccaravan.

For more information and to RSVP, visit the Facebook event.

Fair Food Reflection by Patricia Cipollitti

Below is an original reflection written by DC Fair Food Member and Georgetown University Student, Patricia Cipollitti after the Georgetown University Kalmanovitz Initiative sponsored her trip down to Immokalee in September of 2014 to attend the Student/Farmworker Alliance Encuentro. The Kalmanovitz Initiative continues to support DC Fair Food’s work and will be hosting a screening of Food Chains, the documentary film about the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, on March 17th!

“Down, down with the exploitation! Up, up with the Fair Food Nation!” we chanted, full-force and full animo, as we picketed outside of Publix with members of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers Women’s Group and their children. “We” were students and youth from all around the country. “We” were 70 members of theStudent/Farmworker Alliance’s national network that had converged in Immokalee, Florida, for four days in September 2014 to build relationships with each other and strategize for the year ahead.

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Our current mission? Leverage our power as young people to pressure fast-food holdout Wendy’s and supermarket giant Publix to sign on to the Fair Food Program. To date, 13 corporations have signed on to the FFP, a farmworker-farmer-retail food company partnership that ensures that farmworkers receive “a penny more per pound” of tomatoes picked—and, as the program expands to other agricultural sectors, of other fruits and vegetables harvested—along with dignified working conditions on the fields. This list includes fast food companies, food service companies, and supermarkets like Walmart.

We kicked off the long weekend with a “teatro mistica,” a form of popular education used by the CIW to educate workers about the Campaign for Fair Food. It narrates the exploitation and terrible working conditions that used to exist on Florida tomato farms before the development of the Fair Food Program—in fact, the same conditions that continue to persist outside of the “oasis” made up by participating farms—as well as the alliance of students, youth, people of faith, food justice advocates, and other folks that, by working in solidarity with the CIW, have helped hold big tomato buyers accountable to the workers that pick their produce. In other words: zero tolerance for forced labor, sexual harassment, and other practices that had, up to now, run rampant and with impunity on Florida’s tomato fields.

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The days were non-stop after that: skill-building workshops, a picket outside of a Wendy’s and a Publix in the nearby town of Naples, Florida, and delicious (vegan!) meals shared with some of the most incredible, passionate, and strong youth organizers I have ever met. We also got the chance to watch Food Chains, a documentary that premiered in theaters later in November and chat with the producer, Sanjay Rawal, about the making of the film and about how to make the launch a successful one.

On the second evening, we had the incredible privilege of sitting down with a panel of CIW members and engage with them in a serious conversation about what it means to work in solidarity with Florida farmworkers. What role do students have in a movement for farmworker justice? Where do we, as young people and consumers, stand in the fight against sweatshop conditions in the fields? We have a large role, and our voices are powerful. But farmworkers know the realities of the injustice and exploitation that they are fighting. As non-farmworkers, we energetically take our lead from them in our education and organizing efforts.

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On the last evening, we had a dinner outdoors under the expansive South Florida sky (home of the most gorgeous sunsets ever). CIW members came with their families, as well as long-time allies from around the area. We sat around, telling stories and singing songs, making each other laugh and taking in each other’s knowledge and creativity. This sharing has become tradition: the “Café Cultura” that closes each Encuentro. So has the dancing to reggaeton and cumbia and hip hop right after—this time, it went on for hours!

In the spirit of the beautiful and vibrant community of Immokalee, we call this annual convergence the Encuentro: the encounter of old friends, new friends; farmworkers and staff working in Immokalee, allies working everywhere else on the CIW’s campaign. This was my second-ever Encuentro, though I had been in Immokalee another time before. I first went down with Georgetown’s Alternative Spring Break program. In 2013, with the Fair Food, Labor, and Migration trip, I participated in a stretch of the CIW’s annual spring action: a 200-mile march to Lakeland, FL, the location of the headquarters of Publix.

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I left the Encuentro feeling re-energized, with a heart full of love, a belly full of fire, and a head full of thoughts and visions for the future. The friendships that I had made the year previously had persisted and deepened—as had my commitment to the worker-led movement the CIW has built around them.

So I decided to apply to join the SFA steering committee for 2015. I had always wanted to become more involved, especially as I had been slowly but surely integrated into the local CIW support network through DC Fair Food. This is the local chapter of the Alliance for Fair Food (and fun fact: it was started by members of Georgetown Solidarity Committee back in the day!).

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As a newly minted steering committee member, I just recently returned from Immokalee once more. This time, I participated in the Face2Face, four days of training in January specifically for steering committee members. Four days of: strategy, skill-building, caffeine, jelly roll hugs, solidarity discussions, campfires—and more caffeine. Because we are currently in the thick of a campaign to “Boot the Braids,” i.e. to force Wendy’s off of campuses nationwide, that took up a lot of our time. So did planning for the 2015 Parade and Concert for Fair Food, this year’s CIW Spring Action. Local SFA chapters and Fair Food groups, like DC Fair Food, are now mobilizing supporters to join in a caravan to participate in this year’s action, which will take place on March 21 in St. Petersburg, Florida. Georgetown students are encouraged to hop on the bus!

I am so grateful for the community I have found in Immokalee, and in the other authentic and passionate youth organizers that are a part of this network. My involvement would not have been made possible without the support of Georgetown students (now alumni) that initially encouraged me to join in this fight—or without the support of the Kalmanovitz Initiative, which has been a long-time supporter of the CIW and SFA. I am so excited to see what this year on the Student/Farmworker Alliance steering committee brings. Here’s to hoping it is a commitment by both Wendy’s and Publix to respect the dignity of farmworkers by joining the Fair Food Program!

 

Philly/DC Caravan to CIW’s Parade & Concert for Fair Food

Every year, the Coalition of Immokalee Workers organizes a major spring action; and every year, allies and community members from across the country, fly, drive, bike, and even caravan down to Florida in order to take part in this annual tradition.

This year, friends and community members from both DC and Philly will be caravaning down together to St. Pete, FL on march 21st for the CIW’s major spring action: “The Parade and Concert for Fair Food”!

Why the “Parade and Concert for Fair Food”?

Today, the fourth full season of the Fair Food Program has seen protections in the Florida tomato industry stronger than ever before, with over twenty thousand workers educated by their CIW peers on their new rights: the right to report abuse without fear of retaliation; the right to form participatory health and safety committees; the right to work free of wage theft, sexual harassment, slavery.

In the recent words of one worker: “Our dignity has been restored.”

But the proliferation of these rights across industries is not inevitable. It requires, more than ever, the participation of allies around the country to heed the call of the CIW and convince remaining corporate holdouts, principal among them Publix and Wendy’s, to stop their futile attempts to turn back the clocks and join this proven solution to decades-old farmworker abuse.

So this spring, we’ll take to the streets of downtown St. Petersburg toward Publix and Wendy’s — but this time, parade-style.

Because though their intransigence is unconscionable, we have cause to celebrate — and we’re certainly not going to let them turn us ‘round. Our vibrant procession, full of original artwork, puppets, and even floats, will wind its way until arriving at Vinoy Park for an unmatched Concert for Fair Food, which promises unforgettable dusk-time performances on the edge of the water.

Don’t miss your opportunity to be part of this historic action!

REGISTER NOW: bit.ly/NECaravanRSVP

DONATE TODAY: bit.ly/funddccaravan

LIVE UPDATES: bit.ly/NECaravanFB


TENATIVE SCHEDULE

Thursday Night 03/19
•Buses leave NE (times TBA)
Friday 03/20
•Caravans Arrive in St. Petersburg, FL
Saturday 03/21
•Parade and Concert for Fair Food
Sat Night 03/21
•Caravans depart after action

**Meals and housing will be provided.
**Potential buses leaving earlier as needed.

More info: ciw-online.org/blog/2015/01/concert-parade-announce/

Valentine’s Day Breakup with Wendy’s!

On Friday, February the 13th, the Alliance for Fair Food launched a National Valentine’s Weekend of Action to call on Wendy’s to show some love for farmworker and join the Fair Food Program!

Wendy’s don’t be #frosty! Join the #FairFoodProgram!

DC Fair Food began the weekend with an intimate Valentine’s Day Fundraiser Dinner with an elegant home cooked meal hand-served by DC Fair Food members. We invited friends and loved ones from around the District to enjoy the good company, good food, and help us raise funds for the CIW’s annual spring action.

Every year, DC Fair Food and allies venture down to Florida to support the CIW’s spring action – this year we will be caravaning down to St. Petersburg on March 21st for a “Concert for Fair Food“!

This is one of the most important ways for allies and community members to get involved, and support the Campaign for Fair Food and the proven solution to farmworker exploitation — The Fair Food Program.

Unfortunately, we had to end the National Weekend of Action on a sad note:

Last year on Valentine’s Day we proposed to Wendy’s, asking her to join the Fair Food Program. A year later, she has still refused to respect farmworker’s rights. So, this Valentine’s Day, we broke up with Wendy’s! Enough is enough!

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A special thank you goes out to our local partners who donated food and made the Valentine’s Day Fundraiser Dinner possible: Zenful Bites, 4P Foods, and Copy Cat Co.

Report Back: “Food Chains” Is a Huge Hit in the District!

The weekend before Thanksgiving, as we reflected on what we were grateful for, Washington, DC had the opportunity to take a look at our food system. “Food Chains,” a documentary by Sanjay Rawal, premiered across the country on Friday, November 21st with DC being one of several cities welcoming the premiere. “Food Chains” explores the exploitation of farmworkers in the agriculture industry in the United States, the complicity of government and corporations in perpetuating human rights abuses, and the role consumers can play in ending some of the most egregious human rights violations within our borders.

When a major film documenting the work of the CIW comes to town what does DC Fair Food do? We take to the streets! Through the work of DC Fair Food and other ally organizations, West End Cinema screened Food Chains to 5 sold out crowds, and even continued to screen the film a week longer. Due to a gracious donation by Founding Farmers and other organizations, DC Fair Food was able to to provide sliding scale priced tickets and even free tickets. West End Cinema added early screenings and moved screenings to bigger theatres to accommodate school and community groups, and growing crowds.

Through out the weekend, the screenings were accompanied by “Talk-Backs” with CIW member Santiago Perez, CIW staff Marley Moynahan, DC Fair Food members and guest speakers. This provided an opportunity for movie goers to ask questions and learn how to further engage in the Campaign for Fair Food. Friday’s showing was accompanied with a panel with Director Sanjay Rawal, Arthur Allen, author of “Ripe” and Greg Kaufmann from the Center for American Progress.

Saturday, through the collaboration of DC Fair Food and SongRise (a DC based, all female acapella group), a vigil was held at GW Plaza, reflecting on the impact of the Fair Food Program and the work left to be done. There were several speakers present at the vigil including Yanely Perez, a Georgetown University student and organizer with DC Jobs with Justice, and a rabbi representative from the T’ruah Board.

Thank you to everyone who joined us and made the DC run of Food Chains a success. As the CIW says: “consciousness + commitment = change.” If you weren’t able to attend a screening, or if you’d like to see it again, look for Food Chains on iTunes and OnDemand. Also, expect another screening in DC in the Spring!

Blog post written by Brittany Urse, DC Fair Food Member.