Tuesday, November 1, 2011

October was the 8th Annual Fair Trade Month


October was the 8th annual Fair Trade Month in the United States. Fair Trade month was started by Fair Trade USA, Fair Trade Federation and Fair Trade Resource Network to raise awareness of the positive impact purchasing fair trade products has. The main reasons why fair trade is important, is the opportunities it offers to producers (mainly in developing countries) to earn a sustainable wage and invest in the social development of their communities while decreasing the environmental harm caused by other production methods.

Generally throughout the month, fair trade and ethically minded consumers and  fair trade vendors join forces to celebrate and promote Fair Trade. Numerous education events, and other product focused activities proliferate during the month to help increase awareness and sales of Fair Trade Certified products, with the end goal of improved livelihoods for farmers and workers in developing countries. A few highlights included:

  • Reverse Trick-or-Treating: Tables were turned and trick-or-treaters handed Fair Trade chocolate back to adults, with informational cards attached, to explain the problems of the cocoa industry and how Fair Trade presents a solution.
  • Fair Trade Finder App: the first-of-its-kind crowd-sourced directory that lets you find, add, tag and photograph Fair Trade Certified products wherever you are. The new “Fair Trade Finder” Facebook and mobile (iPhone and Android) application is FREE and can be downloaded at Android and iTunes.
  • La Mesa Fair Trade Gift Faire:  We had a wonderful turn out and would like to thank vendors: Around the World Fair Trade Gifts, Ben & Jerry's Fair Trade Ice Cream, 7 Hopes United Fair Trade Gifts, Revisit Sustainable Fair Trade Gifts, Dr. Bronners Fair Trade Soaps, Angell Organic Fair Trade Candy Bars, Spacebar Internet Cafe for Fair Trade ACAI, Pallas Athene Soaps, Cafe Virtuoso-Fair Trade Coffee, Plant with Purpose, 5th grade parents for support of Fair Trade as a fundraiser and the Guatemala Project.



Saturday, October 8, 2011

Fair Trade Towns Resolution

Join us on Tuesday October 11th at 4pm as the La Mesa City Council discusses our Fair Trade Towns Resolution proposal and to hear from all of us about how important fair trade is!


Getting a city council resolution is the crucial step in having a town declared Fair Trade. Wear your Fair Trade T-shirts and please sign a card to speak if you wish. The more the merrier!

City Council Chambers La Mesa City Hall
8130 Allison Avenue
La Mesa, CA
4pm

Saturday, August 20, 2011

"Before you've finished your breakfast this morning, you'll have relied on half the world"   - Martin Luther King Jr.

Stop and ponder the relationship we have with the unseen producers, artisans and farmers across the globe - the people who sewed your shirt, picked your coffee beans, crafted your jewelry, cultivated your cocoa and picked your morning banana.  Do you think they received a fair wage, had the privilege of decent working conditions or could provide their children with an education?  Unfortunately, the answer in most cases is no.

There are an estimated 1.4 billion people living in poverty and existing on less than $1.25 per day.  Did you know that 15,000 children aged 9 to 12 in the Ivory Coast alone have been sold into forced labor on  conventional cotton, coffee, and cocoa plantations and that 284,000 children in the Ivory Coast, Ghana, Nigeria and Cameroon are working in hazardous tasks on conventional cocoa farms?  Good news is that you can do something about this!