[link removed] [[link removed]]Dear John,
The first decade of the Fair Food Program has been a steady climb of progress punctuated by spectacular moments of victory, and a growing recognition of the effectiveness of the new worker-driven movement for human rights.
In just ten years, the Fair Food Program has grown to include 14 major buyers, covering tens of thousands of workers harvesting multiple crops on dozens of farms across eight states. Over that same decade, as the Program itself expanded, its success inspired workers in many more industries — and even on two different continents — to adapt its unique model to their own workplaces, from dairy and construction workers here in the U.S. to apparel workers in Bangladesh and Lesotho.
Of course, the origin story of the Fair Food Program is one of worker struggle and sacrifice. Two decades of marches, hunger strikes, rallies, vigils, petitions, sermons, and teach-ins led by workers and allies laid the moral foundation for what would be called “one of the most important social impact stories of the past century.” Yet, despite the growing mountain of evidence proving that only Worker-driven Social Responsibility has the essential ingredients necessary to actually enforce fundamental human rights in global supply chains, there are still many large retailers and chains that haven’t come to the table.
Your donation today helps us gather the power and resources we need to continue marching forward into the next decade. With only 2 days left in 2021, can you make a gift before our end-of-year deadline? [[link removed]]
48 hours left to contribute [[link removed]]In 2012 — the same year that Chipotle and Trader Joe's signed Fair Food agreements — 100 workers from Immokalee and their allies fasted for a week in front of Publix headquarters in Lakeland calling on Florida's largest grocery chain to join the FFP. The next year started with a 15-day, 200-mile march and ended with the Fair Food Program's receipt of the prestigious Freedom From Want medal by the Roosevelt Institute. A Presidential Medal from the Obama White House, dozens of articles and academic reports documenting the impact of the Fair Food Program, and even an award-winning documentary sharing the FFP's unique story with millions of viewers across the globe were to follow over the coming years. But Publix and Wendy's refusal to join the Fair Food Program meant — and still means to this day — that workers in their supply chains are denied access to the Program's best-in-class human rights protections.
Even with ten years of unprecedented, documented success behind us, hundreds of thousands of farmworkers in this country continue to face abuses ranging from sexual assault to modern-day slavery in fields that remain beyond the reach of the Fair Food Program. That outrageous reality cannot be allowed to stand, and we need your help to break down the walls of resistance.
The clock is ticking! With your help, we can give farmworkers and their families a gift that changes everything: a voice and the power to win dignity and safety in the workplace. Can we count on you to make a contribution before the year ends? [[link removed]]
Make a gift by December 31 [[link removed]]
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Coalition of Immokalee Workers
110 S 2nd St
Immokalee, FL 34142
United States
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