From Coalition of Immokalee Workers <[email protected]>
Subject Kroger called out in its hometown newspaper for repeated discoveries of forced labor in its supply chain
Date July 12, 2023 1:22 PM
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Gerardo Reyes Chavez, CIW in the Cincinnati Enquirer: “This latest horrific case of modern-day slavery in Kroger’s supply chain is a wake-up call… Tainted with forced labor in its supply chain twice in two years, Kroger’s record of social irresponsibility defies belief.”
“Given Kroger’s outsized presence in the retail economy, it is long past time for them to join the Fair Food Program, take on the great responsibility that comes with great power, and address the urgent human rights crisis in its supply chain by joining the Fair Food Program.”
For over a decade, while the Fair Food Program has steadily grown and emerged as the new gold standard for ending human rights violations in the agricultural industry, Kroger, one of the largest grocery store chains in the entire country, has steadfastly refused to join the FFP and ensure that the farmworkers who make its profits possible are protected by the program’s best-in-class monitoring and enforcement mechanisms.
And over that same time period, Kroger has been connected to not just one, but two forced labor operations discovered by law enforcement agencies in its supply chain.
When companies like Kroger, Publix, and Wendy’s refuse to join the Fair Food Program, their high volume produce purchases help reinforce the existence of two, parallel worlds within US agriculture: The world of dignity and respect under the protections of the Fair Food Program on the one hand, where farmworkers are the frontline monitors of their own rights backed by the purchasing power of the FFP’s 14 major buyers, and the world of grinding poverty and desperation outside the FFP on the other, where farmworkers toil in an atmosphere of fear and have little or no recourse when faced with abuse. Combined with the rise of forced labor in US fields — resulting, in part, from growers turning increasingly to the H-2A (or “guestworker”) program for labor in response to growing political pressure on the domestic immigrant workforce, and the near total lack of protections for H-2A workers, from their recruitment in Mexico to their employment here in the US — the continuing resistance of massive retail food chains like Kroger to worker-driven human rights programs like the FFP provides a market for low-bar producers and creates a ticking time bomb of forced labor prosecutions hidden behind the produce we buy every day in restaurants and grocery stores across the country.
One of those bombs exploded late last year when the US Department of Labor revealed that Kroger bought and sold watermelons harvested by workers trapped in a forced labor operation based in Florida. The workers from that case hid in the trunk of a car to escape from a labor camp in Pahokee, FL, and called the CIW for help. To demand justice for those workers and for all others who may be suffering silently in modern-day slavery, the CIW and our allies marched for five days and 50 miles from Pahokee to Palm Beach, calling on Kroger, Publix, and Wendy’s to do their part to end forced labor in US fields and join the Fair Food Program.
Last week, the CIW’s Gerardo Reyes amplified that call in the editorial pages of the Cincinnati Enquirer, the paper of record for Kroger’s hometown of Cincinnati, which published the op/ed the same week of Kroger’s annual shareholder meeting. We are sharing that op-ed here below:
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Kroger silent on human rights abuses in its supply chain | Opinion [[link removed]]
Gerardo Reyes-Chavez, published June 7, 2023
The competitive prices Kroger offers its customers can sometimes come at a terrible human cost − and it may soon get much worse.
Earlier this year, the U.S. Department of Labor publicly outed [[link removed]] Kroger as a buyer of watermelons harvested by workers trapped in a forced labor ring. In this multi-state forced labor conspiracy, farm bosses associated with Los Villatoros Harvesting held dozens of workers in debt bondage, kept them in crowded, decrepit housing, and threatened them with deportation − or worse − if they spoke out against their abuse. One worker later told prosecutors [[link removed]] , “All this time, I could not return to Mexico for fear that something would happen to me. That the Villatoros had paid someone to kill me.”
Their suffering was brought to light when two of the workers escaped from a forced labor camp in Pahokee, Florida by hiding in the trunk of a car and calling our organization, the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, for help. Though the abusive crew leaders of Los Villatoros Harvesting have since been convicted and sentenced − and a federal law enforcement agency directly connected those watermelons with Kroger’s produce aisle − Kroger never so much as issued a statement about the produce on its shelves made with forced labor, despite growing alarm from farmworkers [[link removed]] , human rights leaders [[link removed]] and journalists [[link removed]] .
To make matters worse, this is not the first but the second time [[link removed]] in the past two years that Kroger has been named in connection with forced labor abuses. Tainted with forced labor in its supply chain twice in two years, Kroger’s record of social irresponsibility defies belief.
At the same time, if antitrust concerns do not halt the planned merger with Albertsons, Kroger is set to become [[link removed]] the second-largest food retailer, controlling nearly a quarter of the entire grocery market in the U.S., all fed by a sprawling produce supply chain.
The festering human rights problem in its supply chain will only grow once the merger is complete. At the annual shareholder meeting held June 22, shareholders gathered to vote on Kroger’s future. Their decisions will impact not only consumers at checkout, but hundreds of thousands of farmworkers across the western hemisphere.
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Coalition of Immokalee Workers
110 S 2nd St
Immokalee, FL 34142
United States
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