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Back to Reality... |
For several months now, Burger King and
the Florida tomato growers' lobby have
joined forces to "debunk the
myth" of farmworker poverty, in
their effort to fight back against
workers demanding a raise in the picking
piece rate.
The piece rate -- defined as the price
paid to pickers for every 32-lb bucket
of tomatoes they pick -- has remained
effectively stagnant for nearly thirty
years. In 1980, the going piece rate
was 40 cents per bucket. Today, twenty
eight years later, workers are paid an
average of only 45 cents per bucket.
These pictures were taken in December
of 2007. They capture work and life as
a tomato picker in Immokalee as it is
today: Looking for work before dawn,
picking for 10 to 12 hours a day under
Florida's relentless sun, and returning
after a long day to the one-room
cinderblock apartments and broken-down
trailers that are home during
Immokalee's 8-9 month-long season.
Burger King and Florida's tomato
growers say farmworker poverty is a
"myth." The US Department of
Labor says farmworkers are "a labor
force in significant economic
distress," suffering "low
wages (and) sub-poverty annual
earnings."
What's myth and what's reality? We
hope these pictures can help you decide
for yourself.
43 photos | 25,663 views
items are from between 20 Dec 2007 & 21 Dec 2007.