Photobucket


La Vida Locavore
 Subscribe in a reader
Follow La Vida Locavore on Twitter - Read La Vida Locavore on Kindle

My son's school wants me to buy Tyson foods

by: desmoinesdem

Wed Aug 27, 2008 at 18:22:25 PM PDT


Bookmark and Share
( - promoted by Jill Richardson)

cross-posted at the EENR progressive blog and Bleeding Heartland

My son just started kindergarten in the Des Moines public system. His school has a wonderful and caring staff, and he is having a great time, as he did in the pre-school program there. Unfortunately, like almost all public schools these days, this school relies on fundraising by the parents' group to pay for essential school supplies.

The parents' group decided years ago not to have our kids sell chocolate or wrapping paper or some other overpriced product to raise money, and I appreciate that.

They have opted this year to participate in the Tyson Project A+ label collection program, which is sponsored by Tyson Foods, Inc.

desmoinesdem :: My son's school wants me to buy Tyson foods
A sheet went home with my son encouraging parents to clip and save Tyson Project A+ labels, which are worth 24 cents each for the school:

Through this program, we can raise as much as $12,000 for our school this year! The money we raise can go towards buying books or computers, making improvements to our buildings, or anything else that we want.

Here is a list of 53 Tyson chicken products with labels I can clip and collect for the school.

Most Tyson chicken products contain meat from birds that have been treated with antibiotics, which may be a leading contributor to drug-resistant bacteria.

Tyson fired several employees earlier this year following reports of excessive cruelty at two of its factories.

Two years ago, Tyson had to pay $1.5 million in back pay for hiring discrimination. In 2002, the U.S. Department of Labor sued the company for pay practices that violated the Fair Labor Standards Act. In 2005, Tyson Foods paid the state of Kentucky $184,515 to settle six cases related to worker safety, including one that stemmed from a fatal accident.

Tyson also has a history of profiting from the employment of illegal immigrants. In fact, some of its managers were involved in recruiting illegal immigrants to work at Tyson factories, which led to a

36-count federal indictment that prosecutors obtained against Tyson in December 2001. The company was charged in U.S. District Court in Chattanooga with having, among other things, engaged in an elaborate seven-year scheme to recruit hundreds, if not thousands, of illegal immigrants from Mexico and Guatemala for its poultry plants in at least 12 states. Six of Tyson's mid-level executives or plant managers were also indicted. But in the end, even though Tyson was benefiting from illegal workers laboring in its plants, the executives avoided conviction.

It was the most ambitious criminal immigration case ever against an employer. Prosecutors demanded $100 million as a forfeiture penalty that they said represented the company's ill-gotten gains. The transcript for the six-and-a-half-week trial ran 5,464 pages. On March 26, the jury rendered its verdict: not guilty on all counts.

The sting had caught several Tyson managers or their assistants on audiotape and videotape plotting to recruit and hire illegal aliens for several plants, including the one at Shelbyville. Seven Tyson employees, whom the company eventually fired, had quietly pleaded guilty to immigration-related offenses.

During the late 1990s, Tyson employed 67,000 workers at 55 poultry plants. Court testimony established that a number of those workers were illegal, some hired directly and some through temp agencies.

I buy chicken directly from sustainable farmers or from the Wholesome Harvest coalition of small organic family farmers, which has been endorsed by the Organic Consumers Association. I don't like feeling pressure to buy Tyson chicken products in order to pay for classroom supplies and school improvements.

Inadequate funding for public schools is the root of this problem. The parents' group organizes several fundraising projects during the year, including an chili supper and silent auction which is always a success. But it's not easy to raise significant funds without urging kids to sell products people don't need. A concert for the school, featuring a famous children's artist, lost money two years ago.

Programs like Tyson Project A+ probably seem like a good deal to parents who would be buying some of these foods anyway. For my part, I plan to donate $50 directly to the parents' group. I'd have to buy more than 200 Tyson products to raise an equivalent amount through this label collection program.

UPDATE: Bleeding Heartland commenter ragbrai08 noted that I forgot to mention Tyson's settlement with the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission in November 2006 "for $871,000 on behalf of black workers who alleged that they were racially harassed and retaliated against at a chicken processing plant in Ashland, Alabama."

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , (All Tags)
Print Friendly View Send As Email
Ughh... (4.00 / 2)
Sorry to hear that about your son's school.  And kindergarten, too?  They don't wait long to instill 'brand loyalty' in children these days, do they?

I remember crap like that in the public schools I attended, too - pretty sure it was collecting cutouts from cereal boxes to buy computers for the school.  And I can't recall which brand, but I'm sure it was one of the crappiest most sugar-laden ones out there.

What's next?  Collecting cans of Coke to pay for children's health care programs?

And isn't this cute - they even have games on that website.  I'm going to go out on a limb here and guess that those games aren't designed for the "Project A+ Volunteer Program Leaders" in each school.  

Of course, I think it would only be fair if somebody were to design one of those 'games' that reflects the reality of the conditions those happy little cartoon chickens would face if they were to live the life of a real Tyson chicken.  That would be educational...

And btw - wtf is an "Any'tizer"?  That doesn't even make sense!  The way these companies abuse the English language pisses me off almost as much as the 'food' they push on us, and their blatant attempts at turning every generation of American children into "loyal little consumers" at ever younger ages.

"The essence of the independent mind lies not in what it thinks, but in how it thinks." - Christopher Hitchens


IMHO it'd be a lot more ethical to just (4.00 / 2)
give the school a donation directly. Saves on buying crappy chicken products made with semi-slave labor. But I'd also give the school's administration a piece of my mind.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

in this case I think the parents' group (4.00 / 3)
made the decision, rather than the school administration.

And the funny thing is, Democrats and/or peaceniks dominate the parents' group attendees.  


[ Parent ]
they probably just don't know. (4.00 / 3)
I bet my parents don't know. Do you want a link to the write-up I did about a man who worked in a Tyson slaughterhouse? They wouldn't let him take a bathroom break and he wet his pants. Twice. A 40 year old man. It's just awful.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

[ Parent ]
Gack! (4.00 / 3)
All that processed junk!
Just say no. Loudly and often.
What is the matter with that parents' association?

they are good people (4.00 / 2)
They have tried a lot of different fundraising tactics in the past few years. They are trying to buy the equipment and materials the classrooms need, and this must have seemed like an easy way to raise a lot of money for the school.

I have already heard from other parents whose reaction was the same as mine--they refuse to buy Tyson products. I think the leaders of the parents' group just weren't aware of all the issues surrounding the corporate practices.


[ Parent ]
my parents wouldn't have known better (4.00 / 2)
they have advanced college degrees but they are mainstream consumers and just have no idea.

"I can understand someone from Iowa promoting corn and soy, but we are not feeding the world, we are feeding animals and soft drink companies." - Jim Goodman

[ Parent ]
Political Activism Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory
Menu

Make a New Account

Username:

Password:



Forget your username or password?


Notable Diaries
- The 2007 Ag Census
- Cuba Diaries
- Mexico Diaries
- Bolivia Diaries
- Philippines Diaries
- My Visit to Growing Power
- My Trip to a Hog Confinement
- Why We Grow So Much Corn and Soy
- How the Chicken Gets to Your Plate

Search




Advanced Search


Blog Roll
Blogs
- Beginning Farmers
- Chews Wise
- City Farmer News
- Civil Eats
- Cooking Up a Story
- Cook For Good
- DailyKos
- Eating Liberally
- Epicurean Ideal
- The Ethicurean
- F is For French Fry
- Farm Aid Blog
- Food Politics
- Food Sleuth Blog
- Foodgirl.ca
- Foodperson.com
- Ghost Town Farm
- Goods from the Woods
- The Green Fork
- Gristmill
- GroundTruth
- Irresistable Fleet of Bicycles
- John Bunting's Dairy Journal
- Liberal Oasis
- Livable Future Blog
- Marler Blog
- My Left Wing
- Not In My Food
- Obama Foodorama
- Organic on the Green
- Rural Enterprise Center
- Take a Bite Out of Climate Change
- Treehugger
- U.S. Food Policy
- Yale Sustainable Food Project

Reference
- Recipe For America
- Eat Well Guide
- Local Harvest
- Sustainable Table
- Farm Bill Primer
- California School Garden Network

Organizations
- The Center for Food Safety
- Center for Science in the Public Interest
- Community Food Security Coalition
- The Cornucopia Institute
- Farm Aid
- Farm and Ranch Freedom Alliance
- Food and Water Watch
-
National Family Farm Coalition
- Organic Consumers Association
- Rodale Institute
- Slow Food USA
- Sustainable Agriculture Coalition
- Union of Concerned Scientists

Magazines
- Acres USA
- Edible Communities
- Farmers' Markets Today
- Mother Earth News
- Organic Gardening

Book Recommendations
- Animal, Vegetable, Miracle
- Appetite for Profit
- Closing the Food Gap
- Diet for a Dead Planet
- Diet for a Small Planet
- Food Politics
- Grub
- Holistic Management
- Hope's Edge
- In Defense of Food
- Mad Cow USA
- Mad Sheep
- The Omnivore's Dilemma
- Organic, Inc.
- Recipe for America
- Safe Food
- Seeds of Deception
- Teaming With Microbes
- What To Eat

User Blogs
- Beyond Green
- Bifurcated Carrot
- Born-A-Green
- Cats and Cows
- The Food Groove
- H2Ome: Smart Water Savings
- The Locavore
- Loving Spoonful
- Nourish the Spirit
- Open Air Market Network
- Orange County Progressive
- Peak Soil
- Pink Slip Nation
- Progressive Electorate
- Trees and Flowers and Birds
- Urbana's Market at the Square


Active Users
Currently 0 user(s) logged on.

Powered by: SoapBlox