Smoking out the tobacco barons
By Eduardo Soriano-Castillo, Labor Notes
Four years of pressure forced cigarette manufacturer Reynolds
American to agree in May to meet with the Farm Labor Organizing
Committee to discuss working conditions in its supply chain.
FLOC President Baldemar Velasquez called Reynolds "one of the most
anti-worker companies in the field," citing its subminimum wages as well
as illnesses and heat-stroke deaths among tobacco pickers. They're
brought on by a relentless work pace, pesticides, and acute nicotine
poisoning caused by a lack of protective clothing and training.
Until now, Reynolds had resisted FLOC's picket lines. So FLOC
targeted JP Morgan Chase, one of Reynolds' main lenders. In September,
Auto Workers President Bob King announced the UAW had divested hundreds
of millions of dollars from Chase in solidarity with farmworkers.
FLOC joined with community allies and religious leaders for a second
nationwide protest in February, calling attention to the mistreatment of
farmworkers and foreclosed-on homeowners at almost 200 Chase locations.
Enter the Shareholders
Reynolds agreed to meet with FLOC after 150 workers and community
supporters rallied on May 6 at the company's shareholders meeting in
Winston-Salem, North Carolina.
Fifty entered the meeting and distributed a report from Oxfam titled, "A State of Fear: Human rights abuses in North Carolina's tobacco
industry."
Earlier, executives of British American Tobacco, which owns 42
percent of Reynolds, had agreed to meet with FLOC after protests outside
U.K. embassies in 10 U.S. cities.
Reynolds pledged to use an independent monitor to assess working
conditions at its farms, and to create a council of tobacco
manufacturers, growers, labor officials, agricultural scientists,
farmworkers, and their representatives, including FLOC.
The offers show that Reynolds' defenses are cracking, organizers said.
"We're not operating on their timeline," Velasquez said. "One way or another, our voices will be heard."
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