Friday, 16 May 2008 01:00
Amy Bennett Williams – Burger King – Coalition of Immokalee Workers
The Coalition of Immokalee Worker’s efforts to get Burger King to pay south Florida tomato pickers a penny more per pound took some unexpected twists in recent weeks – including the revelation that the fast food giant had used a private investigative firm called Diplomatic Tactical Services to spy on the Coalition. It all began with what the Miami Herald called “a nifty piece of reporting” by News Press reporter and WGCU essayist Amy Bennett Williams. After a bit of online digging Williams learned that message board postings attacking the Coalition weren’t made by a teenage girl from Miramar, but by her father who’d been using her online identity…She spoke to WGCU’s Mike Kiniry.
Published in
WGCU News
Tuesday, 29 April 2008 01:00
CIW Delivers Petitions to Burger King Headquarters
Farm worker advocates presented Burger King officials in Miami with tens of thousands of signed petitions demanding tomato pickers be treated more fairly on Monday. WGCU’s Mike Kiniry reports.
The petition delivery comes shortly after U.S. Senate hearings on the matter - during which lawmakers promised to investigate the wages and working conditions of south Florida’s tomato pickers.
Burger King officials maintain tomato pickers in Florida are treated well and paid more than 12-dollars an hour on average. The company has refused to sign a deal with the Coalition of Immokalee Workers to pay a penny more per pound for the tomatoes it buys.
Coalition spokeswoman - Julia Perkins – says they’ve focused on companies like Burger King because of its enormous buying power.
The petition delivery comes shortly after U.S. Senate hearings on the matter - during which lawmakers promised to investigate the wages and working conditions of south Florida’s tomato pickers.
Burger King officials maintain tomato pickers in Florida are treated well and paid more than 12-dollars an hour on average. The company has refused to sign a deal with the Coalition of Immokalee Workers to pay a penny more per pound for the tomatoes it buys.
Coalition spokeswoman - Julia Perkins – says they’ve focused on companies like Burger King because of its enormous buying power.
Published in
WGCU News
Wednesday, 16 April 2008 01:00
U-S Senate Considers Ways to Help Florida Tomato Workers
Published in
WGCU News
Friday, 04 April 2008 01:00
The Coalition of Immokalee Workers vs. Burger King
When you bite into a sandwich from a fast food restaurant, do you ever wonder where the tomato slice came from? Well, from October to May there’s a good chance it was grown in South Florida. But the Sunshine State’s tomato fields are full of controversy now as a farm worker advocacy group and fast food giant Burger King squabble over money. WGCU’s Valerie Alker reports.
Published in
WGCU News