PHOTO REPORT: Southeast and Midwest ‘Behind the Braids’ Tours take off!

Spreading consciousness about the Wendy’s Boycott to thousands of consumers throughout the fall (and bringing people together in powerful actions along the way), the upcoming six ‘Behind the Braids’ tours are set to ramp up the Wendy’s Boycott in over 20 cities across the country. And this past weekend, teams of farmworkers and allies from Immokalee packed their bags and hit the road, setting off on the first two tours throughout the Southeast and Midwest. Below are the take-off reports, hot off the presses, from the teams on the ground: 

Southeast Tour

The ‘Behind the Braids’ Southeast Tour began bright and early Sunday morning in Nashville, as faith leaders of New Covenant Christian Church and Woodbine United Methodist Church welcomed CIW’s Nely Rodriguez to speak at their morning service on Wendy’s unconscionable moral failure in evading its responsibility to protect farmworkers human rights.   Later on that evening, members of Nashville Fair Food set up a convivio and art-building session to welcome CIW, and together, we inaugurated Fair Food fighter Brenda Ayala as the group’s first part-time organizer!  

We spent the next couple of days in classroom after classroom at Tennessee State University, Vanderbilt University and Trevecca Nazarene University, educating students on the CIW’s long history of struggling for human rights and strategizing on how to continue building support on campus this fall for the Wendy’s Boycott — and of course, animating students to take action on Tuesday afternoon!

When action time came around, we were met with over 50 energized allies at Wendy’s right off of TSU’s campus – including stalwart members of Nashville Fair Food, Vanderbilt Food Justice, members of New Covenant Christian Church and the unstoppable Rev. Dr. Judy Cummings, and of course, our friends from Workers’ Dignity – all of whom were fired up and ready to boycott Wendy’s!  

As boycott chants echoed throughout the highly-trafficked intersection and allies zipped through the streets passing out boycott flyers to passersby, a community delegation entered Wendy’s and delivered a letter to the friendly manager who agreed to pass it along to corporate. 

During the delegation reportback, Rev. Dr. Judy Cummings addressed the crowd: “When we talked about how Wendy’s — rather than coming on board with the Fair Food Program —  would rather take their business to Mexico to further exploit workers, [the manager] was confounded.  I think we truly made progress here today, and I’m certain corporate headquarters will be hearing about this.  We are the ones who will continue to speak out until justice is done. God is on the side of justice. And we are on God’s side, so we will win!” 

Nely wrapped up the picket, capturing Nashville’s excitement and commitment to continue boycotting Wendy’s: “It is not the last time we will be here in Nashville… We will continue to put pressure on Wendy’s because that’s what it’s going to take to win this boycott.  That’s what it takes when corporations like Wendy’s evade their corporate responsibility and disrespect workers at the bottom of their supply chain.  Justice is not bought, justice is not simply given, justice is won and defended!”

At the crack of dawn, the Immokalee team headed South for our next stop along the tour: the quaint, yet bustling town of Athens, Georgia.  For weeks, a coalition of local organizations dedicated to creating an inclusive and unified community in Athens organized a full day of events to bring the Wendy’s Boycott to town.  A series of presentations with professors and students from the University of Georgia’s Center for Social Justice, Human and Civil Rights and School of Social Work set the stage for a lively, creative Boycott Wendy’s march with dozens of newly-animated UGA students and community members. 

The high-energy march – led by members of Athens for Everyone, Real Food Challenge UGA, Amnesty International UGA, Daily Groceries Co-op and Bombs Away Collective – blasted the message of the Wendy’s Boycott to scores of people walking to class, heading in to work and even those leaving the Wendy’s drive-thru. 

Finally, after the action, over 40 people attended a screening of the award-winning documentary Food Chains, including several Fair Food veterans from the days of the Taco Bell boycott!  The day wrapped up with a special and savory community meal hosted by Bombs Away Collective to celebrate the tour stop’s success.  Our main take-away from the energizing visit:  Athens is ready to take up the Fair Food banner in the Wendy’s Boycott! 

Midwest Tour

As the first Midwest arm of the ‘Boot the Braids’ tours took off on Monday, both farmworkers from Immokalee and allies in Ohio, Kentucky and Michigan had one thing in mind: bring the message of the Wendy’s Boycott to the heartland of the fast-food giant.  

Starting off in Wendy’s home state of Ohio, members of the Cincinnati Interfaith Worker Center, the First Unitarian Church of Cincinnati, the Greater Cincinnati Homeless Coalition and other local organizations greeted CIW members this past Tuesday with a warm welcome befitting of the Mid-South Queen City. 

After an in-depth interview and call to action on the local radio station, La Mega, with hundreds tuning in, the CIW and CIWC headed off to protest at the Camp Washington Wendy’s, sending in a delegation of brand-new Fair Food allies to ask the manager to alert his higher-ups that the Wendy’s Boycott was growing.   

CIW’s Oscar Otzoy closed the protest with these words: “I hope our friends on the rest of the ‘Behind the Braids’ tours have the same beautiful experience we had here today, and that our dreams become reality — that the corporate executives become just as receptive to us as the Wendy’s workers we encountered at the restaurant today were.  Don’t lower your protest signs yet, because sooner or later we are going to win — and when we do, we will celebrate.”

As the protest came to a close, the Midwest Immokalee team divided into two directions — one group headed for Louisville (stay tuned for next week!) and the other to Cleveland, where longtime allies in the Inter-Religious Task Force on Central America and students at John Carroll University joined us for a high-energy action in Shaker Heights.  The action was buoyed both by IRTF’s tenacious commitment to solidarity with the CIW as well as people’s movements against injustice in Central America, and by John Carroll students’ budding excitement to organize on their campus.  

An unstoppable team passed out boycott flyers to hundreds of passersby, many of whom had pulled over out of curiosity. 

When a delegation attempted to enter the Wendy’s store, the manager refused to even accept a letter explaining why protestors were there — but the group, many new to the Wendy’s Boycott, left inspired to continue organizing in Cleveland to bring more and more people to support.

What a whirlwind of action – and we’re only just getting started! Stay tuned as the ‘Behind the Braids’ tours continue storming the country with a clear message for Wendy’s: Consumers nationwide will continue boycotting your restaurants, until you join the Fair Food Program! 

SIGN & SHARE: Join SFA at Ohio State University in asking administration to deny Wendy's a lease on campus!

For the past several months, Student/Farmworker Alliance members at the Ohio State University have been attempting to hold a meeting with administration to talk about the upcoming contract renewal between the University and Wendy’s. OSU SFA, in partnership with Ohio Fair Food, has remained firm and clear that the Wendy’s on campus needs to be removed until the fast-food giant joins the Fair Food Program. 

Throughout this time, the administration has been silent and ignoring students’ requests for having a meeting. And as scores of farmworkers, OSU students, people of faith and Ohio-area allies prepare to take on Wendy's at OSU tomorrow at 3 p.m. as part of the Columbus leg of the 'Behind the Braids' Midwest Tour, we’re calling on YOU to support OSU SFA’s Boot the Braids campaign! Send an email to OSU President Drake and CEO of the OSU Wexner Medical Center Dr. Sheldon – where Wendy’s is located – to not only listen to students’ concerns, but to take the necessary step of denying Wendy’s business on campus until they do their part to protect human rights for farmworkers in their supply chain. 

We share with you below a message from OSU SFA. Support this student-led campaign tomorrow and spread the word!

Ohio State University Student/Farmworker Alliance and Ohio Fair Food are organizing to kick Wendy’s off of Ohio State’s medical center campus. OSU administrators have been ignoring student demands to remove Wendy's from campus until the fast-food giant joins a real solution to farmworker exploitation: the Fair Food Program. Instead, they have been refusing to meet with us, using as an excuse a pending meeting with Wendy’s to hear more about their fake Code of Conduct.

With the Wendy’s contract with the University up for renewal at the end of the semester, now is a crucial time to push OSU to do the right thing. Please sign and share our letter to University Hospital CEO Sheldon M. Retchin and President Michael V. Drake asking them to not renew OSU’s contract with Wendy’s until they join the Fair Food Program.

Let’s #BootTheBraids from OSU, and get Wendy’s on board with the Fair Food Program!

Bring Wendy’s to the table! 

Coming soon, the Fair Food Nation takes action during Southeast, Midwest ‘Behind the Braids’ tours!

Building on last week’s first-ever Wendy’s Boycott Summit in Immokalee, farmworkers and allies from coast to coast are animated by a full weekend of skill-building, strategizing, and taking action – and now, the Fair Food Nation is setting its sights on the next big thing on the horizon:  six national Behind the Braids tours to take the Wendy’s Boycott to communities across the country!

Next week, the CIW will embark on the first two of these tours: one criss-crossing the Southeast, and the other heading to straight into the heart of Wendy’s territory in the Midwest.  Already, teams of farmworkers and allies in Immokalee are preparing to hit the road this weekend and putting finishing touches on plans for the upcoming journey.

Check out the seven Wendy’s actions taking place in cities across Georgia, Tennessee, Ohio, and Kentucky. If any of the Behind the Braids tours are heading your way, make sure to get in touch and catch the wave of actions sweeping the nation!

TUESDAY, October 4
Wendy’s Protest in Cincinnati, OH
4:30 PM@ Wendy’s (1246 Hopple St, Cincinnati)
Contact: shelby (at) allianceforfairfood.org

TUESDAY, October 4
Wendy’s Protest in Nashville, TN
5:30 PM @ Wendy’s (1045 28th Ave N)
Contact: carmen (at) allianceforfairfood.org

WEDNESDAY, October 5
Wendy’s Protest in Cleveland, OH
4:30 PM @ Wendy’s (13246 Cedar Rd.)
Contact: shelby (at) allianceforfairfood.org

WEDNESDAY, October 5
Wendy’s Protest in Athens, GA
5:30 PM @ Daily Coop (523 Prince Ave)
Contact: carmen (at) allianceforfairfood.org

THURSDAY, October 6
Wendy’s Protest in Louisville, KY
12:00 PM @ University of Louisville Library
Contact: shelby (at) allianceforfairfood.org

FRIDAY, October 7
Wendy’s Protest in Columbus, OH
3:00 PM @ Wendy’s (2004 N High St.)
Contact: shelby (at) allianceforfairfood.org

SATURDAY, October 8
March to Wendy’s in Atlanta, GA
1:30 PM @ Piedmont Park Charles Allen Entrance
Contact: carmen (at) allianceforfairfood.org

Stay tuned for beautiful photos, waves of press, and exciting report backs from Gainesville to New York City to Columbus in the action-packed weeks ahead! For more information on the different actions happening across the country, visit the Behind the Braids website

Wendy’s Boycott Summit kickstarts campaign organizing for the year ahead!

This past weekend, nearly 90 allies from across the Alliance for Fair Food’s vibrant national network of students, youth, people of faith, food justice advocates, and grassroots organizations came together in Immokalee for a successful, first-ever Wendy’s Boycott Summit. Hailing from nearly 20 different states and from dozens of high schools, universities and congregations from coast to coast, participants gathered at the heart of the movement for Fair Food to build skills, relationships and, of course, develop a winning strategy for a victory in the Wendy’s Boycott!

The Summit’s timely confluence of experience, fresh ideas and commitment takes place at a critical moment in the Campaign for Fair Food. The dozens of committed allies attending the Summit, and the hundreds upon hundreds they represent nationwide, understand the urgency behind the CIW’s second-ever call for a national consumer boycott of a major food retailer: the Fair Food Program has taken root and is successfully guaranteeing verifiable human rights to tens of thousands of farmworkers across the East Coast, yet Wendy’s stubborn, drawn-out refusal to commit to the Fair Food Program and decision to shift purchases outside of Florida continues to provide an alternative market for growers who, outside the Program, perpetuate abuses with impunity.

The weekend began with a beautiful opening ceremony at the CIW’s community center in Immokalee as allies were warmly welcomed by the CIW’s Women’s Group, and an important reflection on planting seeds of consciousness to harvest fruits of dignity and justice. Over the next couple of days, participants dove into skill-building workshops about community organizing, press, art, and more; campaign history sessions that drew insightful connections between the seminal Taco Bell boycott to the current boycott of Wendy’s; and group discussions about the importance of standing shoulder-to-shoulder in the struggle for farmworker justice.

Strategy development sessions made up the heart of the weekend, during which participants split into breakout discussions based on geographical region and constituency. As students made plans for strengthening and growing the Boot the Braids campaign to cut university contracts with on-campus Wendy’s – including at The Ohio State University in Wendy’s hometown of Columbus, OH – people from the nine Christian, Jewish and Muslim faith traditions present strategized to mobilize their congregations and institutions to take action and provide support for the Wendy’s Boycott. Fair Food Groups based in cities across the country also put their heads together to map out a vision for stronger locally-based organizing in the Wendy’s Boycott.

On Saturday, the group loaded onto buses and headed into Naples, where they were met with an energized contingent of farmworkers and their families from Immokalee and dozens more Southwest Florida allies to picket outside a prominent Wendy’s location. The 150-strong protest went far from unnoticed by Wendy’s management and the cars passing by on busy U.S. 41, drawing on the strength, excitement and commitment of the farmworkers and allies that throughout the year and throughout the weekend had been working together to bring Wendy’s to the table with the CIW.

The Summit weekend concluded with participants conscious, committed and ready to hit the ground running with a long, concrete list of plans to take back to their home bases and turn up the heat on Wendy’s!

The upcoming Behind the Braids regional fall tours, which will bring the boycott to thousands of consumers in over 20 cities, and culminating with a national weekend of action from Nov. 11-13, is only the beginning. After an entire season of university, congregational, and community organizing that will undoubtedly swell support for the Wendy’s Boycott nationwide, it’s only a matter of time before Wendy’s realizes the only way forward is joining the Fair Food Program!

Check out the ‘Behind the Braids’ fall schedule to attend or plan an action in your city!

Become a founding member of the Fair Food Sustainer Program!

Over the last decade and a half, farmworkers and their steadfast allies have fought to make the dream of enforceable human rights for farmworkers a reality. Today, that reality is the Fair Food Program. Now, the support of the Fair Food Nation is essential to bringing these critical human rights to thousands of workers in new crops and regions by sustaining the three core elements of this work: the leadership and community organizing of farmworkers, the commitment of allies working in partnership with the CIW, and the essential monitoring work of human rights investigators.

Fifteen years ago, a small group of farmworkers and consumers stood on the side of State Road 41 in Ft. Myers, Florida, carrying an oversized papier-mâché tomato.  They gathered there, squeezed between strip malls and rush-hour traffic, to declare a national boycott of Taco Bell. Outside of Florida, only a handful of people had ever heard of the Coalition of Immokalee Workers. And outside of the CIW members and their few faithful allies gathered that day, no one gave the Taco Bell boycott a ghost of a chance.

Yet here farmworkers and consumer allies stand together today, having won the Taco Bell boycott, and

•    Thirteen more agreements with major food retailers from McDonald’s to Walmart;
•    The partnership of over 90% of the Florida tomato industry, and;
•    Verifiable human rights protections for 35,000 farmworkers and their families through the groundbreaking Fair Food Program, which is expanding and now operates in six new states and two new crops since its launch in 2011.

Gone is the daily barrage of sexual harassment, discrimination, and dangerous working conditions. Gone, too, are three decades of falling wages. Today, thanks to the Fair Food Program, workers can stand up for their rights without fear of being fired, and the Florida tomato industry is a model of social responsibility recognized around the country and around the world.

None of these historic changes would have happened without the unwavering commitment of thousands of people of faith, students and youth, food justice advocates, grassroots organizations, and every individual who has supported the CIW's vision of justice for farmworkers over the course of the Campaign for Fair Food.

But in many ways, this work is just getting started.

Calls for the expansion of the Fair Food Program to new crops and new states come in weekly; the only real limit to expansion are the resources necessary to sustain growth with the kind of integrity that has become the Program’s hallmark. The growing Campaign for Fair Food represents a central pillar on which the Fair Food Program rests, bringing on board major food retailers and holding them accountable to the conditions faced by workers in their supply chain. Further, the Fair Food Program is proof of a new concept in human rights, Worker-driven Social Responsibility (WSR), with the potential to bring verifiable human rights protections to millions of workers in even more industries.

To sustain and expand each of these pieces of our collective work, the CIW, the AFF, and the Fair Food Standards Council are calling on the national network of allies that has fought for fifteen years in the streets to make the Fair Food Program a reality—not just for support in action, but for financial support, too.

So today, we are launching the Fair Food Sustainer Program.

With a steady stream of monthly contributions, the Alliance for Fair Food can sustain and expand the three core elements of our work in conjunction with the CIW and the Fair Food Standards Council:

•    The leadership of farmworkers through community organizing, worker-to-worker education, and frontline monitoring of their own rights in the fields,
•    The commitment of consumer allies through action holding retail food companies accountable for labor conditions in their supply chains, and
•    The essential monitoring work of investigators though complaint investigations and field audits ensuring compliance with the Fair Food Code of Conduct.

And from the base of an ever more successful Fair Food Program, the Worker-driven Social Responsibility model can develop and take root in more and more communities of low-wage workers across the country and around the globe.

Whether it is with a sustaining donation of $500 or $5 a month, with the partnership of the thousands upon thousands of people that make up the vibrant Fair Food Nation, there is nothing we cannot do together!

Become a founding member of the Fair Food Sustainer Program today.

CIW and AFF announce ‘Behind the Braids’ national truth tours, weekend of action this fall!

As the Wendy’s Boycott swells with support from groups and individuals nationwide – including last week’s endorsement by the National Council of Churches and the nearly 50,000 petition supporters on Change.org – farmworkers in Immokalee are ready to hit the road this fall with the truth about Wendy’s and its callous disregard for human rights!

Starting the first week of October, just as the harvest season and organizing in the farmworker community begins to pick up here in Immokalee, CIW members will join thousands of consumer allies for powerful actions, film screenings, presentations, workshops, and interviews in nearly two dozen cities around the country, from the Southeast to the Midwest. To culminate the busy season of tours, the Fair Food Nation will come together for a national weekend of action just ahead of Thanksgiving, Nov. 11-13, amplifying the Wendy’s Boycott from coast to coast.

Check out the ‘Behind the Braids’ tour schedule and join us this fall to demand full respect for the human rights of farmworkers in Wendy’s supply chain!

Southeast (Oct. 2-12): Nashville, Atlanta, Athens, Gainesville

Midwest (Oct. 4-10): Cincinnati, Cleveland, Louisville, Columbus, Ann Arbor

Northeast (Oct. 14-24): NYC, Providence, Boston

Texas (Oct. 23-Nov. 3): McAllen, Austin, San Antonio

Mid-Atlantic (Oct. 24-30): Philadelphia, Baltimore, Washington, D.C.

Midwest (Nov. 6-15): Chicago, Milwaukee, Madison

National Weekend of Action (Nov. 11-13)

This October and November, the CIW will set out across the U.S. with the truth about Wendy’s flight from the Fair Food Program and real, Worker-Driven Social Responsibility in Florida and the company’s decision to move tomato purchases to Mexico, where endemic human rights violations – from child labor to modern-day slavery – go largely unchecked. The six ‘Behind the Braids’ regional tours will spread the news of Wendy’s human rights hypocrisy to tens of thousands of consumers from Boston, Massachusetts, to Austin, Texas.  

The truth behind Wendy’s well-groomed braids is already out -- and from now until Wendy’s steps up to take responsibility for its supply chain practices, the Fair Food Nation will make sure that truth resonates loud and clear for Wendy’s consumer base from coast to coast to take note, and join the growing boycott.

Check out the Behind the Braids webpage for a schedule and map for the six ‘Behind the Braids’ tours. We’ll be updating it in the coming weeks with action details in each tour stop, and adding mobilizations organized by allies for the Nov. 11-13 weekend of action as they’re confirmed.

If we’re stopping near you or you’d like to participate in the weekend of action, get in touch (organize@allianceforfairfood.org) to figure out the best way to bring the Wendy’s Boycott to your campus, congregation, or community!

Take action with your congregation this Labor Day weekend!

Though it has become synonymous with cook-outs and the end of summer, Labor Day’s meaning is rooted in the value and importance of workers and their labor. For allies of faith in the Fair Food Nation, Labor Day (Sep. 2-4) represents an opportunity to amplify the Coalition of Immokalee Workers’ longstanding struggle for justice in the fields. With the CIW’s second-ever corporate boycott in full swing, Labor Day also provides a platform to take meaningful action in response to Wendy’s unconscionable refusal to commit to the Fair Food Program, the groundbreaking worker-driven human rights program that’s bringing an end to the exploitation and poverty that were for decades the hallmark of agricultural labor in this country.

Wendy’s participation in the Fair Food Program is necessary in order to shrink the market for growers that continue to abuse workers with impunity, and make human rights and worker-driven social responsibility an industry standard – therein lies the urgency of our call. As people of diverse faith traditions, and as people of conscience, we stand behind farmworkers’ unrelenting and righteous pursuit of justice.

During Labor Day weekend this year, the CIW invites allies of faith to incorporate the fight for Fair Food and the Wendy’s Boycott into the weekend’s religious services – through sermon, ritual, prayer, or another avenue – and then take action with a community photo petition to show Wendy’s that the longer they stall, the longer they delay – and thereby deny – justice, the louder and more insistent our call will be.

In the coming week, we’ll be updating this page with resources and materials you can use to plan your own Labor Day service and action. Including:

+An interfaith worship guide, including a sample service elements, sermon points, and links to supplemental texts and readings
+A customizable photo petition template

If you plan to participate, let us know at organize@allianceforfairfood.org! We’d love to hear your ideas and support you in planning. After Labor Day weekend, be sure to send us your congregation’s photos and a report of how things went!

SIGN & SHARE: CIW launches Wendy’s Boycott petition on Change.org!

The national Wendy's Boycott is about to go viral! With over 100 million petition starters and supporters in more than 196 countries, Change.org is the prime platform for CIW to launch a far-reaching petition calling on consumers to stand with farmworkers in boycotting the final fast food holdout until they join the Fair Food Program.

Sign the petition – and then share it far and wide! 

It’s been almost six months since the Wendy’s Boycott took off during the Workers’ Voice Tour in March – and though thousands upon thousands of consumers of conscience have since then protested, marched, phoned, emailed, organized, and pledged to boycott Wendy’s until the fast food giant commits to respecting human rights for farmworkers, the corporation continues to ignore the growing calls for justice.

But with a brand-new petition live on one of the most successful online campaign sites in the country and a fresh season full of student, faith and community organizing – starting with the Wendy’s Boycott Summit in Immokalee in late September – kicking off, the Fair Food Nation is ready to ramp up the pressure on Wendy’s!

So head over to Change.org to be among the first to add your name to the boycott petition!

Be sure to check out the tools below to spread the word widely with your friends, family and networks to grow support for the Boycott Wendy's petition! 

Sharable graphics for social media:

Sample tweets: 

Stand with @ciw in boycotting @Wendys until they agree to protect the human rights of farmworkers! change.org/boycottwendys #BoycottWendys

.@Wendys: If you want our business, you must join @FairFoodProgram! change.org/boycottwendys #BoycottWendys 

Donate to make this year’s AFF Wendy’s #BoycottSummit a success!

We’re only two short months away from the 2016 AFF Wendy’s Boycott Summit, a long weekend of working alongside the CIW to develop creative strategy to advance the Wendy’s Boycott and strengthen all that we’ve fought for and won together. (If you haven’t already, apply to participate in this year’s Summit!)

AFF dedicates itself to providing this powerful opportunity to those who are committed to this vibrant and diverse network and organizing in the Campaign for Fair Food. That's why we're raising funds to offset the tremendous costs of hosting the Boycott Summit.

We’re calling on folks across the Fair Food Nation to help us raise funds to make this year’s unique gathering a success!

Our goal is to raise $3,000 to offset some of the Boycott Summit’s many costs. Your donation will go a long way in supporting folks traveling hundreds of miles to join us in Immokalee; contributing to food, housing and meeting space needs for over 100 allies; pitching in for printed materials and resources; and more. Every contribution will help us strengthen and grow the movement for Fair Food and bring us one step closer to victory in the Wendy's Boycott. 

So head over to our online YouCaring fundraiser and make your donation today. Don’t forget to share the fundraiser with your family, friends and community to help us quickly reach our goal and make this year’s Summit one for the books!

Announcing the AFF Wendy's Boycott Summit, Sept. 22-25 in Immokalee, FL

As a movement allying with the Coalition of Immokalee Workers, we find ourselves at a crossroads: With human rights for farmworkers gaining ground in tomato fields up the East Coast and in Florida strawberries, the CIW has launched a boycott of Wendy’s in a struggle to strengthen and expand all we have fought for and won together, with the tremendous leadership of the CIW.  

At the same time, we are in merely the second year of the existence of the AFF as an organization seeking to best channel resources to support and connect the ally network to the farmworker-led movement in Immokalee. From Seattle to Miami, from the RGV to NYC, we’re shifting and growing as a network as the CIW grows and shifts, too — and together we continue to dream of and work towards realities of justice and dignity for all in the fields and far beyond. In a society where corporations hold such massive power — not only in the agricultural industry, but in countless arenas — victory in the Wendy’s boycott is essential. And it is not a question of if, but of when.  

At this crossroads, we’ve been thinking about how we can best equip ourselves as a movement to win the boycott against Wendy’s and fortify ourselves for the longterm organizing that is sure to follow. For this reason, we’ve decided to call together a Wendy’s Boycott Summit here in Immokalee — a long weekend of working together with CIW to develop short-term and longterm strategy in the national Wendy's Boycott, and building our skills and leadership, all the while growing our connection as a community to the CIW and with each other before we fan out across the country again. 

This Summit will build off of the Student/Farmworker Alliance’s annual tradition of holding a fall student and youth Encuentro (and will happen in its stead just this year), and it will bring together people from every corner of our network — students and youth, worker-led and grassroots organizations, people of faith, Fair Food Groups, and people from many walks of life. This weekend is for anyone who plans to actively build support for the Wendy’s boycott in their communities.  

If you’re interested in attending the Wendy’s Boycott Summit, please fill out an application — or pass it along to someone who would be interested in attending. We’ll be sending more information in the coming days — but for now, save the date!  

We are so excited to welcome you to the heart of the Campaign for Fair Food.

What: Alliance for Fair Food Wendy’s Boycott Summit
Where: Immokalee, Florida
When: September 22-25, 2016
Submit your application!

For more information, contact us at organize@allianceforfairfood.org.

See you in September!

- The Immokalee Crew