Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Interfaith Campaign to Support Sanitation Workers!


Hello, all,

I have recently joined the National Sanitation Worker Justice Committee, a project of Interfaith Worker Justice (http://www.iwj.org/). We are working hard in support of our sisters and brothers who work in the sanitation industry, but it isn't easy. As you will see below, sanitation workers don't only have to deal with the "garbage" they haul, but with sometimes being treated like garbage as well. For more information about the campaign, please read the letter below from committee co-chair, Rev. Nelson Johnson, and sign the online petition if you feel so moved. http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/1035/petition.jsp?petition_KEY=1315

Dear Brothers and Sisters of Our Faith Communities:

I am writing to you in hopes that you will spend just a few minutes of your time to help workers at Waste Management Inc. (WMI), the nation's largest waste company, who are involved in a struggle for dignity.

I ask you to click on the link below and sign the petition demanding that WMI remain neutral in the workers' federally protected right to form a union to improve working conditions. Waste Management, Inc., headquartered in Houston with over 13 billion dollars in sales annually, has an in-house union avoidance team which methodically fights workers' attempts to organize. Currently around a quarter of their workers are organized and the other workers often feel intimidated when they attempt to join their organized brothers and sisters.

Forty years ago this past April, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was killed while supporting the struggles of striking sanitation workers in Memphis. The same kinds of struggles continue today for sanitation workers, including those at WMI who are simply trying to exercise their rights to form a union and take steps to improve their lives. WMI continues to violate worker rights and, because our federal laws are so weak, the company continues to get away with its immoral behavior.

There are many examples of WMI's anti-union tactics, including the July 4, 2008 firing of Stacey Stevenson, a sanitation worker and union activist in Little Rock, Arkansas, who we believe was fired for his attempts to organize his coworkers. Local ministers in Little Rock have signed on to a letter in support of Stacey Stevenson.

WMI's intimidation must stop, and your help will go a long way in that fight. Please sign the petition:

http://salsa.democracyinaction.org/o/1035/petition.jsp?petition_KEY=1315

By signing the petition, you are calling on WMI to stop its anti-worker, anti-union tactics by remaining neutral in union-organizing campaigns.

Immokalee Workers

What a ridiculously long time between posts! I apologize to any of you who have been checking in all this time only to fid that nothing has changed - until now. Finally, a new post. I'll do better from now on - promise.

I have been a bit busy since I last posted. Eliza and I have loaded up everything we own and left our home in Colorado (very sad) for our new life in Santa Barbara, where I am the new minister of the Unitarian Society (very happy). Life is very good and very busy, which is just the way I like it. I won't say anything about how uncannily beautiful and pleasant it is here other than to say it feels like we've unwittingly stumbled into Eden. It's that kind of perfect, except that you can eat all the fruit.

Anyway, below is a column from the St. Petersburg Times. I recently helped lead a workshop dealing with the struggle of the Coalition of Immokolee Workers to end the practice of modern slavery and exploitation in the tomato fields of Florida and beyond. These are amazing people, and I hope you will check out their website (http://www.ciw-online.org/) and the Alliance for Fair Food (http://www.allianceforfairfood.org/) to find out more about how you can help bring a little more justice to this world of ours.

There happened to be a journalist named Bill Maxwell from St. Petersburg at my workshop, and he called to interview me a few days later. He is a wonderful man with a huge heart and a powerful commitment to justice and his columns are always worth reading.

Here is his column:

"Eating that tomato can put you in moral peril"
http://www.tampabay.com/opinion/editorials/article695177.ece

By Bill Maxwell, Times columnist
In print: Sunday, July 13, 2008

Some deeds and practices define our individual and shared morality. When, for example, we turn our backs on the cruel treatment of farmworkers, we are complicit in inhumanity and are acting immorally.

Tens of thousands of Floridians read about the case of U.S. vs. Ronald Evans without blinking an eye. To me, everyone who eats fruits and vegetables should be outraged and should be, in some manner, advocating for farm-worker justice.

A review: In 2007, farm labor contractor Ronald Evans, his wife Jequita Evans and their son Ron Evans Jr. were sentenced to federal prison for enslaving farm workers and for other labor-related crimes in Florida and North Carolina. They were sentenced to 30, 20 and 10 years respectively.

Ronald Evans recruited homeless U.S. citizens from shelters across the Southeast, including in Tampa, Miami and New Orleans, with promises of decent jobs and housing. After the farmworkers arrived at the labor camps in Palatka and New Grove, N.C., Ronald Evans deducted the price of rent, food, crack cocaine and alcohol from the workers' pay, keeping the workers "perpetually indebted" in what the U.S. Justice Department referred to as "a form of servitude morally and legally reprehensible."

Justice Department records show that the Palatka labor camp was enclosed by a chain-link fence topped with barbed wire. A "No Trespassing" sign warned outsiders.

The Evans family worked for grower Frank Johns, then-chairman of the Florida Fruit & Vegetable Association, the powerful lobby of the state's agricultural industry. As a grower, Johns was not charged with a crime.

This is not an isolated case. Since 1997, through efforts of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, six other labor outfits have been prosecuted for servitude. The cases involved more than a dozen employers and more than 1,000 workers, who testified to being locked in their compounds at night, beaten, raped, pistol-whipped and shot.

Remember, the average U.S. farmworker earns a little more than $10,000 a year. They are excluded from the protections of the nation's employment laws, and they are prevented from legally organizing.

As a result of such inhumanity and exploitation, American consumers can enjoy cheap, fresh and attractive produce. Companies such as Tropicana, Minute Maid, Taco Bell, Wendy's, Burger King, McDonald's, Kroger and Wal-Mart profit from so-called "everyday low prices" made possible on the backs of abused workers.

As individuals, we are morally obligated to demand economic justice for those who harvest our food. George Orwell, who wrote extensively about poverty in England, said: "Economic injustice will stop the moment we want to stop it, and no sooner, and if we genuinely want it to stop the method adopted hardly matters."

One person I know who is trying to get consumers to see that their buying habits directly contribute to the hardships of farmworkers is the Rev. Aaron McEmrys, a Unitarian Universalist minister in Santa Barbara, Calif. I recently met McEmrys, a former union organizer, when he participated in a farm-worker seminar in Fort Lauderdale.

I quote him at length: "The things we do and the ways we live affect our fellow beings in ways that are often hard to see. Sometimes, even things that seem small and innocent to us can do terrible damage to others in the wider world. As long as we remain blissfully ignorant, we might be passively complicit in the suffering of others, but we are not knowing, willing participants. We are just ignorant.

"Once we know, however, really know, about how our choices or our lifestyles can hurt and oppress others, we have some real choices to make. We can either change our ways to stop hurting people or we can go on as we always have. But with one big difference: We aren't innocent anymore. We are still complicit, but now actively so. We have chosen to live in such a way that pushes people down instead of lifting them up, that strips away our humanity and theirs instead of celebrating our shared humanity.

"We all agree that slavery is an abomination — a sin — a crime against humanity. And yet this kind of oppression is exactly what the people who pick our tomatoes have to live with every day. The tomatoes that nourish our bodies and add flavor to so many of our meals come with a price tag. They come at the cost of human dignity, human freedom. Once we know this, we have some real choices to make: We can either change our ways or we can go on eating those cheap tomatoes knowing that we have chosen, by default, to be fed by the suffering of other human beings — human beings just like us.

"It's not a question of whether we should get involved. If we eat tomatoes, then we are already involved. The only real questions are: What are we going to do about it? How will we be involved from here on out?

"Here is a real truth: When we do the right thing, when we change our ways, even just a little, to live in such a way as to lift up the best in ourselves and others, the tomatoes will taste better. I guarantee it."

American consumers have a moral duty to stop the exploitation of farm workers. If we do not, as McEmrys argues, we enable servitude and are guilty of the "sin of complicity."