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U. South Florida: U. South Florida protesters grill Burger King
[April 01, 2008]

U. South Florida: U. South Florida protesters grill Burger King


(U-Wire Via Thomson Dialog NewsEdge)
U-WIRE-04/01/2008-U. South Florida: U. South Florida protesters grill
Burger King (C) 2008 The Oracle Via UWIRE

By Christine Gibson, The Oracle (U. South Florida)

TAMPA, Fla. -- Chanting slogans such as "freedom for farmworkers" and
"down with the king," a group of University of South Florida students
gathered outside a Burger King on Monday to protest against the low
wages paid to the farmworkers who pick tomatoes for the multinational
corporation.

The protesters carried signs with messages such as "no more abuses" and
"end the tyranny in the fields." One protester was wearing an outfit
similar to Burger King's monarch. He sat on a throne made of wood, upon
which the protesters carried him in marches to the Library and the
Phyllis P. Marshall Center. A wooden painting of the king was also used
as a target in a makeshift water balloon-throwing contest.

Monday's protest marked the birthday of Cesar Chavez, founder of United
Farmworkers -- the first union for farmworkers in the United States. In
honor of Chavez's legacy of fighting for justice for farmworkers,
members of Students for Social Justice (SSJ) staged the protest to
demand that the company give a penny more per pound of tomatoes to the
farmworkers of Immokalee, Fla., who harvest 90 percent of the tomatoes
used by fast-food companies in the United States.

Farmworkers who pick tomatoes for Burger King are demanding a raise in
the picking piece rate. The piece rate is the price paid to pickers for
every 32-pound bucket of tomatoes they pick. According to the Coalition
of Immokalee Workers (CIW), the rate has not seen a significant change
for nearly 30 years. The piece rate was 40 cents per bucket in 1980 and
is an average of 45 cents per bucket today -- 20 years later.

The CIW website describes work and life for the tomato pickers in
Immokalee as "looking for work before dawn, picking for 10 to 12 hours
a day under Florida's relentless sun, and returning after a long day to
the one-room cinderblock apartments and broken-down trailers that are
home during Immokalee's eight to nine month-long season."

Kaileen Schleit, a sophomore majoring in art, chairs SSJ's promotional
committee. SSJ was formed last year, with the mission of bringing more
fair trade products to campus. Schleit learned about farmworkers after
she visited Immokalee.

"It was like being in a third-world country, but it was right in
Florida, two hours away from campus," she said. "The farmworkers are
where everything starts. They're the producers of the tomatoes. They do
all the hard labor work for us so we can eat the tomatoes and they get
paid next to nothing for it."

"They should be paid a wage that they can live off because the
conditions over there are very poor. There are six or seven people to a
small room, and they pay high rent just because the land owners can get
away with it," Schleit said.

Lauren Maxwell, a senior majoring in international studies and vice
president of SSJ, said her faith informs her activism.

"I'm a Christ-follower and I can't dichotomize justice from following
Jesus," she said. "A couple of years ago, I joined a group called
Members Empowering True Awareness (META). Some members of the group
were from migrant families, and that's how I got exposed to that. The
focus of SSJ is to bring fair trade to campus. We just want people to
think about what they're buying."

Onlookers on campus were largely unmoved by the protest, however.
Lawrence Leverette and Marvin Chatman were eating at the tables outside
of the Burger King when the protest began. They were skeptical about
the message of SSJ.

"I probably wouldn't listen to them because I have my own beliefs, but
I want them to pay their workers. Burger King people have to make their
money though," Leverette, a junior majoring in communications, said.

"I think it's a business," said Chatman, a junior majoring in
sociology. "It's bigger than what they're telling us. It'll be
something I'll need to get more information about. I think college
students have their own problems, though."

Others who passed the protest were skeptical as well.

"I just didn't get the whole tomato thing. I guess Burger King is
exploiting their farmworkers. They're not really telling me anything.
It's just all this yelling," said John Sushko, a sophomore majoring in
mechanical engineering.

"I see a lot of people that don't like capitalism," said Jorge
Capdevila, a sophomore majoring in biomedical science who walked by the
protest drinking a soda from Burger King. Capdevila's buying habits
will not be changed by the protest.

"I don't like tomatoes," he said.

Some students were even annoyed by the protest.

Brittany Newkirk, a freshman who has not yet decided a major, described
the protest as "obnoxious and annoying."

One student expressed frustration with the idea of farmworkers
demanding a higher wage.

"They're getting paid. What are they yelling about? I bet every one of
those Mexicans ain't got a green card. They're tripping," Chris Secere,
a junior majoring in exercise science, said.

Justin Kampert, a junior majoring in English, described the protest as
"a little entertaining" calling it "something to look at."

Despite the criticisms of many passersby, SSJ members who took part in
the protest said they were able to reach many students.

"I'm getting a good amount of signatures," Erik Myxter, a sophomore
political science major, said. "It's amazing how Immokalee is so close
to Tampa and people don't know about it."

"We're getting attention. A lot of people are signing the petition."
Ernesto Fernandez, a senior majoring in religious studies and SSJ
member said.

The protests garnered "five or six pages" of signatures, Schleit said.

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((Distributed on bahalf of U-Wire via M2 Communications Ltd -
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