
While
the Hershey Company hosts its Annual General Meeting Tuesday, May 1st,
in Hershey, PA, as many as one hundred activists from Global Exchange,
Green America, International Labor Rights Forum, all from the Raise The
Bar Campaign to make Hershey
fair trade,
will join together with activists from the National Guestworker
Alliance (NGA) as well as Metropolitan Community Church of Philadelphia
(MCC-Philadelphia), ACT UP Philadelphia, AIDS Healthcare Foundation
(AHF), protesting Hershey over an incident of AIDS discrimination at the
Milton Hershey School, will descend on Hershey, PA to host a lively
protest outside the company's AGM. The protest is set for Tuesday, May
1st from 9:30am to 11:30am (Eastern).
"Hershey needs to take
corporate responsibility for their practices and we are demanding
Hershey executives and trustees to stop exploiting children, students
and workers as well as that the Milton Hershey School--funded by
Hershey--reverse its decision to deny admission to an HIV-positive
teen," said Jessica Reinhart, Grassroots Community Manager for AIDS
Healthcare Foundation and a leader of several protests against Hershey
over its AIDS discrimination. "We are honored to join again with MCC and
Act Up Philadelphia to protest Hershey's AIDS discrimination and with
the groups running Raise The Bar campaign targeting Hershey over fair
trade and
child labor
issues as well as with NGA in their quest to protect Hershey workers
and create local living wage jobs at the company in dignified
conditions."
Background on Hershey School AIDS Discrimination
The
Milton Hershey School--a boarding school for low-income students funded
by the Hershey Company--recently rejected the boy for admission citing
his HIV-positive status as the reason, misguidedly calling him a "direct
threat to the health and safety of others." AHF has also launched a
website www.EndHIVStigma.org where the public can learn more about the
case, learn the facts about HIV/AIDS and send e-letters to three Hershey
Company board members who also sit on the board of the Milton Hershey
School Trust, urging them to denounce the discrimination and facilitate
the boy's admission into the school.
"The blatant
discrimination and ignorance displayed by Hershey in this case is simply
unacceptable. Ultimately, it is the Hershey Company itself, as the main
funder of the school, that must answer for the decision not to admit
the boy--a decision fueled by prejudice and fear," said Michael
Weinstein, President of AIDS Healthcare Foundation. "If Hershey is truly
a company that believes in its social responsibility creed of
'commitment to consumers, community and children,' it will denounce this
illegal and repugnant discrimination and immediately facilitate the
enrollment of the boy at the school."
"It's appalling that
Hershey Company would sit by and let AIDS stigma dictate school policy
at the Milton Hershey School," said Rev. Jeffrey Jordan, pastor of
MCC-Philadelphia. "We want to see the Hershey Company use their leverage
as Board members to change the policy at the school for good."
According
to the Associated Press (claim:Hershey School Rejects HIV-Positive Pa.
Boy)(claim:By Peter Jackson)(claim:12/1/11): "A private boarding school
connected with the Hershey chocolate company says it was trying to
protect other students when it denied admission to a Philadelphia-area
teenager because he is HIV-positive. The AIDS Law Project of
Pennsylvania filed a lawsuit on behalf of the unidentified boy in U.S.
District Court in Philadelphia on Wednesday, claiming the Milton Hershey
School for disadvantaged students violated the Americans with
Disabilities Act. School officials acknowledged that the 13-year-old boy
was denied admission because of his medical condition. They said they
believed it was necessary to protect the health and safety of the 1,850
others enrolled in the residential institution, which serves children in
pre-kindergarten to 12th grade and where students live in homes with 10
to 12 others."
"The ignorance displayed by the Hershey
School's leadership is unacceptable and demonstrates just how much work
there is still to be done to dismantle the fear and misinformation that
still surrounds this disease more than 25 years after Ryan White," said
Jessica Reinhart, Grassroots Community Manager for AIDS Healthcare
Foundation.
Ryan White was an American teenager from Kokomo,
Indiana who, in the mid-1980s, was expelled from middle school because
he was HIV-positive. A lengthy legal battle with the school ensued and
White became a galvanizing force in educating the country about HIV
& AIDS at a time when misinformation about the disease was
widespread. After his death in 1990, the U.S. Congress passed a major
piece of legislation named in his honor, the Ryan White CARE Act, which
provides funding for HIV/AIDS programs for low-income Americans.
AIDS
Healthcare Foundation (AHF), the largest global AIDS organization,
currently provides medical care and/or services to more than 166,000
individuals in 25 countries worldwide in the US, Africa, Latin
America/Caribbean, the Asia/Pacific Region and Eastern Europe.
www.aidshealth.org
source:
http://www.marketwatch.com/story/ahf-protesters-target-hershey-at-may-1st-annual-meeting-over-child-laborfair-trade-violations-and-aids-discrimination-2012-04-30