For Immediate Release, March 24, 2016 
            
              
                | Contacts:  | 
                Stephanie Feldstein, Center for Biological Diversity, (734) 395-0770, [email protected]  
Mike Rodriguez, Restaurant Opportunities Center-United, (206) 409-3057, [email protected]  
Amey Owens, Animal Welfare Institute, (202) 446-2128, [email protected]  
Jose Oliva, Food Chain Workers Alliance, (773) 612-2559, [email protected]  
Kari Hamerschlag, Friends of the Earth, (510) 207-7257, [email protected]  
Elizabeth Jardim, Green America, (202) 872-5309, [email protected]  
Phillip Hamilton, Unitarian Universalist  Service Committee, [email protected]  | 
               
             
          
            Largest U.S. Restaurant Company Targeted Over Treatment  of 
              Workers, Animals, Environment 
            50 Organizations Urge  Olive Garden, Darden Restaurants to Improve Practices 
            WASHINGTON— A coalition of  environmental, social-justice and animal-welfare groups announced a campaign  today calling on Olive Garden and its parent  company, Darden Restaurants, Inc., the nation’s  largest full-service restaurant employer, to do more to protect animals, the  environment and workers by substantially improving their food sourcing and  labor practices.   
            “As the leading casual-dining operator with  $6.7 billion in sales and more than 1,500 restaurants worldwide, including  Olive Garden, Darden has a unique opportunity and responsibility to use its  considerable purchasing power to support a healthier, fairer and more  sustainable food system,” said the coalition in a collective statement. “It is clear there is a major gulf between the company’s  rhetoric on strong animal and social welfare, workers’ rights and environmental  protection, and the actual impacts of its food sourcing and labor management  practices.  We ask Darden to adopt better labor practices and greener menus that support  the well-being of its customers, its workers, farmers, animals and our  environment.”  
            The “Good Food Now!” campaign is a partnership of Restaurant Opportunities  Center-United, the Food Chain Workers Alliance, the Center for Biological  Diversity, the Unitarian Universalist Service Committee, Friends of the Earth, Green America  and the Animal Welfare Institute. More than 50 organizations have signed onto a letter calling for Darden  to improve its labor practices and make a commitment to source 20 percent of  its purchases under environmental, health, labor and animal-welfare criteria  aligned with the Good  Food Purchasing Policy, including  reducing meat and dairy purchases by 20 percent; sourcing meat from producers  that adhere to verifiable, higher-than-industry animal welfare standards; and  increasing local and organic options.  
            The organizations are focusing on Olive  Garden because the chain accounts for a majority of the sales generated by  Darden Restaurants, which also owns Bahama Breeze, Longhorn Steakhouse, Seasons  52 and other popular restaurants.  
            “Darden  claims to be committed to ‘people, planet and plate’ but the reality of its  impact on workers, the environment and the food system have fallen short,” said  Stephanie Feldstein, population and sustainability director with the Center for  Biological Diversity. “We’re asking Olive Garden and  all Darden restaurants to take concrete steps to reduce the environmental  impact of their  menu — steps like serving smaller meat portions, adding plant-based  options and increasing organic foods.”  
            “Olive Garden’s and Darden have the power to raise  millions of workers and their families out of poverty,” said Jose Oliva,  co-director of the Food Chain Workers Alliance. “As  the largest restaurant employer, with a workforce of more than 150,000, we are  urging Darden to raises wages and provide sick leave for its many frontline  employees.”  
            The groups are asking their supporters to  take action today by calling Olive Garden’s parent company Darden at 1-800-331-2729  to demand “Good Food Now!” and to spread the campaign on social media using  #GoodFoodNow.  
            “Darden claims it values and respects  animals, but has shown little public commitment to improving animal welfare  throughout its supply chain,” said Michelle Pawliger, farm animal policy  associate at the Animal Welfare Institute. “We are asking  Darden to become a leader in the restaurant arena and source its meat and dairy  from producers that adhere to verifiable higher welfare standards.” 
            The organizations previously contacted  Darden in October and November 2015, asking for a meeting to discuss the  campaign. However, in a written response issued in December, Darden failed to  grant the meeting or acknowledge many of the key issues raised by the  organizations. Core members of the campaign issued a detailed response outlining the specifics on how the  restaurant company could fulfill its rhetoric on social and environmental  responsibility contained in the company’s 2014 social responsibility report.  
            For more information on the campaign,  visit www.Good-Food-Now.com.  
            Additional coalition member statements  
              “This  historic campaign is the first of its kind to bring environmental, worker  justice, animal-welfare and public-health concerns under one umbrella,” said  Kari Hamerschlag, senior program manager with Friends of the Earth. “We urge Olive  Garden and Darden to meet the growing demand for better meat raised without  routine antibiotics and to reduce its carbon and water footprint by putting  more plant-based foods on the menu.” 
            “As  the world's largest full-service restaurant  and the world's largest employer of tipped workers, Darden could be a leader in advocating for a fair wage for all workers,  but instead spends millions lobbying to keep the minimum wage for tipped  workers at $2.13,” said Saru  Jayaraman, co-founder and co-director of  ROC United. “As a result we  subsidize many Olive Garden and Darden workers wages  with our tips, and spend billions on taxpayer-funded public assistance to  support their workers’ survival.”  
            “Consumers  are increasingly concerned about where their food comes from and how it was  made, and restaurants are no exception," said Elizabeth Jardim, director  of consumer advocacy at Green America.  “Olive Garden needs to meet consumer  demand by sourcing more ingredients from local  farmers and paying all workers, including those in its supply chain, fairly.”  
            “As  a major player in the restaurant industry, Olive Garden and its parent company  Darden can spearhead reforms that not only improve the working conditions for  their employees, but make waves across the entire industry through leading by  example,” said Phillip Hamilton, associate for UUSC’s economic justice program. 
            The Center for Biological Diversity is a national, nonprofit  conservation organization with more than 990,000 members and online activists  dedicated to the protection of endangered species and wild places. 
            
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