The pickers are illegals and the farmers are greedy. End of story. They can bring them here on visas if Americans really do not want to do that job. Then they would have to follow labor laws as opposed to treating works like slaves.

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/local/ ... 5691.story

Farm workers protest outside Fort Lauderdale Publix
Tomato pickers demand higher pay, better conditions

Fort Lauderdale By Brian Haas, Sun Sentinel

December 19, 2009
E-mail Print Share Text Size

Almost 100 people, most of them farm workers, protested outside a downtown Publix on Saturday afternoon, demanding better wages for tomato pickers in the state.

At least 60 farm workers from the Coalition of Immokalee Workers marched in a circle outside the Publix at 601 S. Andrews Ave. with signs reading "End the Poverty" and "Honk for a living wage."

Workers are asking Publix and tomato growers for an additional penny per pound as well as guarantees aimed at curbing potential abuses of farm workers.

"Publix as a large tomato buyer uses large volume buying to demand the lowest possible prices on tomatoes," said Gerardo Reyes, 32, a farm worker from Immokalee. "This in turn creates sub-poverty wages for farm workers and abusive working conditions."

Reyes said farm workers receive the same wages they received in 1978 for one of the hardest jobs in Florida.

Publix responded with a written statement referring to the matter as a "labor dispute" between workers and growers.

"We do pay fair market value for tomatoes," Publix stated. "It's just not our place to determine what that rate should be, which is why this is a labor dispute that should be settled between the workers and the growers. We urge them to come to an immediate resolution."

Similar campaigns by farm workers have been successful in getting McDonald's, Burger King and the company that includes the Taco Bell and Kentucky Fried Chicken brands to assent to wage increases and better working conditions for pickers. News reports indicate the majority of those deals have yet to reach farm workers' pockets.

The Associated Press has reported the Florida Tomato Growers Exchange — a group that represents growers — threatened to fine any grower that goes along with the farm worker agreement $100,000.

The group contends tomato pickers earn more than $12 per hour on average, well more than the minimum wage.