Driscoll’s
may be the U.S. ’s most recognizable brand name on
strawberry, raspberry, blueberry and blackberry cartons. Its conventional and
organic berries can be found year-round everywhere from Sam’s Club to Whole
Foods. To keep its berries stocked far and wide, the company uses a vast
supplier network stretching from Canada to Argentina .
But some of
those suppliers are coming under fire for allegedly abusing workers, in the U.S. and Mexico . One Driscoll’s grower has spent
weeks embroiled in a major farmworker protest, while a nearly two-year boycott
against another grower recently intensified. Workers in both disputes have
called for a boycott against the company.
Poverty wages in Baja
While
Driscoll’s is a family-owned company, it’s no mom-and-pop operation. According to its website,
over 40,000 people are involved in its berry production worldwide. The company
has a code of conduct for its suppliers, called the “Promise for Workforce
Welfare,” which includes obeying minimum legal requirements and avoiding
egregious labor violations like human trafficking and conditions “posing
immediate risk to life or limb.” Driscoll’s says it is committed to hiring
suppliers that “show a sincere commitment” to such principles.
But
Bonifacio Martinez questions whether those requirements are enough. Martinez picked strawberries and
blackberries destined for Driscoll’s boxes for 10 years. Now he’s a leader
in the farmworker movement that erupted last month in the fields of San
Quintin, in the Mexican state of Baja California . Thousands
of farm laborers picking multiple crops stopped work for nearly two
weeks, demanding higher wages and legally required benefits, among
other protections.
“The
principal demand is for [growers] to actually respect the workers’ rights,”
says Martinez . He wants them to honor labor laws that are, at the moment,
he says, just “dead words.” Those include health benefits and freedom from
sexual harassment.
Many of the
San Quintin protesters are indigenous people from some of Mexico ’s poorest states, like Oaxaca and Guerrero. Indigenous people
make up more than half of Mexico ’s agricultural workers.
The
striking pickers initially wanted wages increased to 300 pesos a day, then
lowered the demand to 200 pesos, about $13. Most of them earned $7 to $8 a day
before the strike.
Protests
turned acrimonious when demonstrators threw rocks at government vehicles and
police responded with tear gas and rubber bullets, reported the Los
Angeles Times. Workers also blocked 56
miles of the Trans-Peninsular Highway . By April, the strike had
effectively ended after growers signed agreements raising wages 15 percent—far
less than the pickers demanded.
The leaders
of the movement rejected the meager increase, saying the unions that signed
those agreements, which are affiliated with the Partido Revolucionario
Institucional (PRI), which held power for nearly three-quarters of the 20th
century and has strong connections to many unions throughout the country, do
not represent workers. The workers continue protesting even as many have
returned to the fields.
Although
the dispute involved various crops and growers, a primary target of the strike
was BerryMex, one of Driscoll’s largest suppliers in the region. Last
week, on the anniversary of the death of agrarian revolutionary Emiliano
Zapata, the farmworkers called
for a boycott against Driscoll’s and “all the companies that make a
profit by exploiting our labor.”
According
to statements by Driscoll’s and BerryMex,
following the strike BerryMex increased the “earning opportunity” for its more
than 4,000 workers to $5 to $9 an hour—well above the strikers’ demands and the
growers’ concessions. “This pay increase means that each individual now has an
average earning potential of six to 10 times of Mexico’s minimum
Federal wage and as much as 16 times for higher performing workers,” the
statements read.
“This is a
terrible lie,” says Martinez . He says BerryMex has raised
its wages more than some of its peer growers, but only to 180 pesos a day,
about $12. That’s a far cry from $5 to $9 dollars an hour. Others familiar with
the protests expressed skepticism of the calculation as well. Pickers are
paid based on how much they pick, not by hour. That means hourly rates for fast
pickers under optimum conditions can far exceed average rates. In that case,
the “earning opportunity” will not be the earning reality for most laborers.
BerryMex is
not just any Driscoll’s supplier. It is part of Reiter Affiliated Companies (RAC),
which says it is “the largest fresh, multi-berry producer in the world.”
Driscoll’s is RAC’s only customer. And RAC’s CEO, Garland Reiter, is
the brother of Driscoll’s CEO Miles Reiter.
From San Quintin to Skagit County
Driscoll’s
responded swiftly to the BerryMex fracas. But it was not as quick to act to
resolve a dispute that escalated while the San Quintin protests raged: a bitter
labor fight in Burlington , Washington .
Familias
Unidas por la Justicia (FUJ), which says it represents over 400 berry pickers,
has been locked in a labor struggle with Driscoll’s supplier Sakuma Brothers
Farms since 2013. FUJ has long held a boycott against Sakuma berries and
its largest customers, Driscoll’s and Häagen-Dazs. On March 24, it doubled down
on the boycott when the fair trade advocacy organization Fair World Project
sent a letter to
Driscoll’s, signed by nearly 10,000 consumers, asking it to suspend buying from
Sakuma Brothers until the dispute is resolved. The signatories pledged not
to buy Driscoll’s berries until then.
FUJ’s list
of complaints is long: poor wages, squalid labor camps, firing and
retaliating against workers for organizing and hiring guestworkers from Mexico to replace FUJ’s members. The H-2A
guestworker program Sakuma Brothers participated in is meant to be used
only when there aren’t enough workers domestically. FUJ says it had plenty
of willing workers, but that Sakuma Brothers used guestworkers to avoid hiring
back FUJ’s members.
“The only
thing we want is a fair contract for both of us,” says FUJ president Ramon
Torres.
Sakuma
Brothers denies that
FUJ represents the berry pickers, calling them “outside agitators” who “have
attempted to fabricate the impression that this is a worker movement.” Danny
Weeden began his tenure as the company’s CEO just this year and says FUJ’s
campaign is hard to understand.
“We’re
really doing everything and more than what they’re asking, but they just
continue to misrepresent the facts,” he says.
Weeden says
that starting this season, the company will pay workers $10 an hour plus a
generous bonus for each pound of berries picked. He says the housing is
continually upgraded and that the company does suffer from a labor shortage.
After
nearly two years of deadlock, the Fair World Project and its nearly 10,000
consumer signatures finally prompted Driscoll’s to respond. In a
statement, the company said it had hired “an independent, leading worker
welfare organization” to audit Sakuma Brothers, and that the final audit showed
that the company had “properly addressed any potential claims” of worker
mistreatment.
Felimon
Pineda, FUJ’s vice president, doubts the audit’s accuracy. “If it’s true that
people from Driscoll’s came to check Sakuma farms, the first thing they should
have done was ask the farmworkers,” he says. “Because they’re the ones who feel
the pain. They’re the ones who know the working conditions.
Pineda, who
is from Oaxaca , is a link between
San Quintin and Burlington . For him, the connection between
them runs deeper than boycotting Driscoll’s. He got his start picking
strawberries at the age of 13 in a town in Baja California right next to the current
protests. “I’m in solidarity with these people because they’re my people,”
he says.
Like many
of the Baja workers, Pineda is indigenous. “The valley of San Quintin is full of people from Oaxaca and Guerrero who speak Mixteco like
me,” he says, referring to an indigenous language spoken in the region. He
says his own brother is part of the protests in Mexico . “I remember my people because
I also suffer from the company. … It didn’t seem right that the folks in San
Quintin would be on strike and I would just be quiet.”
The
connection makes sense, says Gaspar Rivera, a binational advisor to the Frente
Indigena de Organizaciones Binacionales and researcher at the UCLA Labor Center . Indigenous people have a
history of picking berries, one of the hardest and least desirable farm jobs.
Once they acquired berry-picking know-how in Mexico , many migrated all the way up to Washington to do the same work.
“They’re
working on both sides of the border for this international company,” Rivera
says. “Driscoll’s has managed to develop a production system that extends from Baja California all the way to Washington to be able to supply the U.S. market, and other markets, with
strawberries all year round.”
Workers on
both sides of the border are now leading boycotts against Driscoll’s, but it’s
unclear whether the company’s actions will go beyond issuing statements.
Although Driscoll’s requires its suppliers to commit to the Promise for
Workforce Welfare, it says it will not intervene in labor negotiations.
“Driscoll’s
does not have a role in any labor negotiations between farmers and
farmworkers,” the company says. “Our focus and responsibility is on worker
welfare and ensuring legal compliance is adhered to by all our independent
growers.” The company says it has never terminated a supplier for labor
violations.
Rivera
thinks Driscoll’s hands-off approach is disingenuous. “It’s more like the
Walmart model of shifting the risk to these growers,” he says. “This has
been Driscoll’s line, [that it is] not responsible about the working
conditions. Which is partially true but partially false. Ultimately they have a
lot of power over these growers because they can say, Hey, if you don’t shape
up and employ workers in a fair way, we’re going to stop buying.”
>> The article above was written by Rachel Luban and is reprinted from In These Times.
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