
Fair Work for All People: Momentum Builds for Real Change
03/01/22 • 45 min
Momentum is building across the country and across industries for fair livelihoods and decent work for all people - including farmworkers, who have historically been excluded from too many protections. As this movement for fair work spreads, we catch up with Crispin Hernandez of Workers’ Center of Central New York.
Fair Trade USA’s new “fair trade” dairy label has been on Chobani’s Greek yogurt for nearly a year now, but little has changed for farmworkers. Instead, most of them don’t even know what “fair trade” is and haven’t seen the benefits that are getting sold to ethical consumers. But that’s not stopping Crispin and his allies from pushing for better protections for all farmworkers, including overtime pay at 40 hours/week.
Topics covered include:
- The history behind a 40-hour work week and how farmworkers have been unjustly excluded from those workplace protections.
- Growing momentum across the United States for farmworkers to be paid overtime after 40 hours of work.
- Almost one year after “fair trade dairy” appeared on store shelves, farmworkers’ still don’t know what fair trade is or what benefits and rights they should have.
- What “fair trade committees” are, how they’re described in the press, and what workers actually experience.
- Chobani’s commitment to charity, instead of changing the conditions that force people to depend on that charity.
- The real physical consequences of overwork on workers’ health and wellbeing - and how hard it is to get healthcare, even on a farm in the fair trade program.
- The Farm Laborer Fair Labor Practices Act in New York state and the campaign to lower the overtime threshold to 40 hours for farmworkers.
- How fear of retaliation continues under the fair trade program, and has far-reaching consequences
Do you work on a farm participating in the “Fair Trade Dairy” program? We want to hear your perspective. Send a message to [email protected] or call (800) 631-9980.
“Milked: Immigrant Farmworkers in New York State” is definitive research into the conditions on dairy farms in New York, presented by Workers’ Center of Central New York to Chobani: https://milkedny.files.wordpress.com/2017/05/milked_053017.pdf
Jacobin Magazine article highlighting the ways the new “fair trade” dairy program is failing workers: https://jacobinmag.com/2022/01/dairy-farmworkers-unions-safety-new-york-rwdsu-ufcw
Fair World Project’s report on the “fair trade dairy” label and the standards behind it: https://fairworldproject.org/choose-fair/certifier-analysis/fair-trade-usa-fair-trade-dairy-chobani-failings/
Margaret Gray’s op-ed on why so few farm worker voices were heard at the New York state wage board meeting: https://www.newsday.com/opinion/commentary/farmworkers-1.50487280
Report highlighting the connections between overtime for farm workers and workplace health and safety: https://oregonfarmworkerovertime.org/
More on the origins of farmworkers’ exclusion from workplace protections, and the worker-led movements for change: https://www.feministfoodjournal.com/post/power-to-the-people-how-worker-led-movements-are-changing-the-dairy-industry
A Farmer’s Guide to the New York state Department of Labor: https://dol.ny.gov/system/files/documents/2021/07/p130.pdf
Momentum is building across the country and across industries for fair livelihoods and decent work for all people - including farmworkers, who have historically been excluded from too many protections. As this movement for fair work spreads, we catch up with Crispin Hernandez of Workers’ Center of Central New York.
Fair Trade USA’s new “fair trade” dairy label has been on Chobani’s Greek yogurt for nearly a year now, but little has changed for farmworkers. Instead, most of them don’t even know what “fair trade” is and haven’t seen the benefits that are getting sold to ethical consumers. But that’s not stopping Crispin and his allies from pushing for better protections for all farmworkers, including overtime pay at 40 hours/week.
Topics covered include:
- The history behind a 40-hour work week and how farmworkers have been unjustly excluded from those workplace protections.
- Growing momentum across the United States for farmworkers to be paid overtime after 40 hours of work.
- Almost one year after “fair trade dairy” appeared on store shelves, farmworkers’ still don’t know what fair trade is or what benefits and rights they should have.
- What “fair trade committees” are, how they’re described in the press, and what workers actually experience.
- Chobani’s commitment to charity, instead of changing the conditions that force people to depend on that charity.
- The real physical consequences of overwork on workers’ health and wellbeing - and how hard it is to get healthcare, even on a farm in the fair trade program.
- The Farm Laborer Fair Labor Practices Act in New York state and the campaign to lower the overtime threshold to 40 hours for farmworkers.
- How fear of retaliation continues under the fair trade program, and has far-reaching consequences
Do you work on a farm participating in the “Fair Trade Dairy” program? We want to hear your perspective. Send a message to [email protected] or call (800) 631-9980.
“Milked: Immigrant Farmworkers in New York State” is definitive research into the conditions on dairy farms in New York, presented by Workers’ Center of Central New York to Chobani: https://milkedny.files.wordpress.com/2017/05/milked_053017.pdf
Jacobin Magazine article highlighting the ways the new “fair trade” dairy program is failing workers: https://jacobinmag.com/2022/01/dairy-farmworkers-unions-safety-new-york-rwdsu-ufcw
Fair World Project’s report on the “fair trade dairy” label and the standards behind it: https://fairworldproject.org/choose-fair/certifier-analysis/fair-trade-usa-fair-trade-dairy-chobani-failings/
Margaret Gray’s op-ed on why so few farm worker voices were heard at the New York state wage board meeting: https://www.newsday.com/opinion/commentary/farmworkers-1.50487280
Report highlighting the connections between overtime for farm workers and workplace health and safety: https://oregonfarmworkerovertime.org/
More on the origins of farmworkers’ exclusion from workplace protections, and the worker-led movements for change: https://www.feministfoodjournal.com/post/power-to-the-people-how-worker-led-movements-are-changing-the-dairy-industry
A Farmer’s Guide to the New York state Department of Labor: https://dol.ny.gov/system/files/documents/2021/07/p130.pdf
Previous Episode

Milking the Planet: Big Dairy Fuels the Climate Crisis
Industrial animal agriculture is fueling the climate crisis, with food and farming systems accounting for one third of global greenhouse gas emissions. And while big dairy operations are contributing to climate change, they are also impacting the health and economies of rural communities throughout the United States and globally.
And that is the model that Fair Trade USA has dubbed “fair trade dairy.”
In this episode, Shefali Sharma of the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy joins us to discuss the role of Big Dairy in fueling the climate crisis and hollowing out rural communities. She explains the need for transparency and real policy solutions to address industrial agriculture’s emissions – and protect the planet for future generations.
Topics covered include:
- How industrial animal agriculture is contributing to climate change.
- How Big Meat and Dairy hide their climate impact behind a lack of transparency.
- Manure lagoons, dead zones, and other environmental consequences for rural communities.
- “Net Zero” and other tricky language Big Dairy corporations use to hide their real impact on the planet.
- How environmental sustainability is a pillar of how fair trade farmer organizations represent their movement - and how it’s completely omitted from the new “fair trade dairy” label.
- The disproportionate impacts of the climate crisis on communities of color in the U.S. and globally.
- Regulating emissions, reducing production, and other solutions to address industrial animal agriculture’s disproportionate impact on our planet.
- Why worker-led solutions are a key component of climate justice.
- False solutions to look out for in the news, and in the grocery store.
Resources
The Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy’s report: Milking the Planet: How Big Dairy is heating up the planet and hollowing rural communities: https://www.iatp.org/milking-planet
More on the petition to the Environmental Protection Agency calling for regulation of industrial dairy and hog farming, citing the disproportionate impacts of industrial animal agriculture on communities of color and rural communities: https://www.foodandpower.net/latest/food-ej-groups-epa-hog-dairy-methane-petition
More on false solutions to the problems of industrial dairy: https://www.centerforfoodsafety.org/blog/6457/the-dairy-digester-dilemma-a-false-climate-solution
Impacts of the climate crisis on farmworkers and how organized workers are pushing for new heat protections under the law: https://inthesetimes.com/article/climate-change-heat-wave-pacific-northwest-workers-rights-unions-farm-construction
How worker-driven programs are able to respond nimbly to the challenges of a changing planet: https://ciw-online.org/blog/2021/08/relief-from-the-heat/
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