Printable Version
Tell a friend
Smithfield Workers Take Battle to Streets of Williamsburg
Tuesday, September 4, 2007
The quaint, quiet streets
of historic Williamsburg, VA reverberated with
noisy chants of "Hey, hey, ho, ho, unionbusting
has got to go!" on Wednesday as hundreds of
workers, clergy, and activists - including a
busload from the Metro DC area - protested
Smithfield's unionbusting tactics outside the
company's shareholder meeting. After debarking
buses and a quick lunch, participants packed
the pews and aisles of the First Baptist Church
of Williamsburg for a pre-march rally. "Is it
moral to treat workers like animals?" asked
UFCW Local 400 President James Lowthers. "Is it
moral to deprive children of food and
healthcare? No!" Carlos Jimenez, Student Labor
Action Project National Coordinator and a
member of the DC delegation, reminded the crowd
that "Martin Luther King once said that an
injustice anywhere is a threat to justice
everywhere. I want to thank the (Smithfield)
workers for
standing up and showing
courage. This is not just your fight but our
fight as well." North Carolina State NAACP
President Rev. Dr. William Barber II revealed
that Smithfield had tried to "buy off" the
Fayetteville NAACP chapter with a $1,000
contribution. "They sent the check back,"
Barber said, to cheers from the crowd. "We
don't want pork money, we want people to be
treated decently. Twelve years is long enough."
Smithfield worker Vanessa Reeves recounted how,
after a hog fell on her and caused her to
miscarry, Smithfield fired her for not calling
in. "Last week, once again, the rights' of
workers were stepped on by immigrant
authorities," reported Gabriel Rivera-Lopez,
another Smithfield worker. "This situation not
only affects Latino communities but all
communities." Members of the DC Labor Chorus
sent the fired-up activists out into the
streets with a performance of "Solidarity
Forever.” The large and spirited crowd
marched past tourists, chanting
and blowing whistles.
After a brief stop to rally in front of an
unfinished Smithfield store, the marchers wound
up outside the Smithfield shareholder meeting
in solidarity with worker representatives who
were meeting inside with company officials. The
Smithfield representatives "are scared of us"
reported Rev. Dr. Luther Holland National
Treasurer of the Ministers for Racial, Social
and Economic Justice after the meeting. "We
stood before the board and reminded them why we
are in this fight: to get workers the right to
organize." Workers have rejected a company
offer to hold another secret ballot union
election because of Smithfield's record of
intimidation and harassment during previous
elections, vowing to continue the fight until
the company agrees to card check recognition.
-Report/photos by Andy
Richards
