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NGOの反論

2023年4月4日

著者:
Coalition of Immokalee Workers

Rejoinder from Coalition of Immokalee Workers to Wendy's re Fair Food Program

CIW Response to Wendy’s: The Coalition of Immokalee Workers (CIW) would note a simple and obvious flaw in Wendy’s statement: Wendy’s choice to source only from “indoor, hydroponic greenhouse farms” to avoid the risk of forced labor ignores the fact that forced labor and exploitative working conditions are just as possible under the roof of a greenhouse as they are in an open field.

Wendy’s statement briefly mentions the use of “third-party” auditors, but none of the auditors used by Wendy’s have the market-backed authority to both find and resolve the grievances they detect in Wendy’s supply chain. Instead, Wendy’s has chosen to allow its suppliers to pick-and-choose among conventional third-party social auditors, which have a documented history of failing to protect workers from systemic abuses...

For years, Wendy’s has claimed they do not join because there “is no nexus” between our farms and theirs, but that statement is a misdirection. When the CIW launched the Fair Food Program, there was no nexus between the buyers and the FFP either. The nexus emerged when leaders in the fast food industry signed agreements where they committed to only buying from growers who respect workers fundamental rights, thus bringing their supply chains into the FFP.

In other words, if Wendy’s wanted greenhouse growers to participate in the FFP, it would condition some of its purchases on FFP participation. That is the same type of condition that many FFP Participating Buyers agreed to for Florida tomatoes long before any Florida tomato farms had ever joined the FFP; that is how Walmart helped expand the FFP to tomato farms in new states in 2014; and that is how the FFP added the largest cut flower greenhouse on the East Coast as a new FFP Participating Grower in 2020.

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