Food. Justice. Work. 

The Checkout centers the voices and efforts of essential workers on the frontlines of our food system. Now more than ever, our food system is in a constant state of flux, radical change and crisis. From political economy and supply chain analysis to public policy, labor organizing and community struggles, The Checkout will expand the horizon of what is necessary to create a just, equitable and progressive food system.

The Checkout is a proud member of the Labor Radio Podcast Network.

Episode 44: The Weekly Special. Plant Based Foods, Labor Organizing & more. Dedicated to Jay Brito, RIP.
Podcast Errol Schweizer Podcast Errol Schweizer

Episode 44: The Weekly Special. Plant Based Foods, Labor Organizing & more. Dedicated to Jay Brito, RIP.

Welcome to The Checkout’s Weekly Special, where we discuss some of the top issues in food retail, CPG and policy. This week’s episode covers industry happenings from the week of April 5th, 2021, including plant-based foods, labor organizing, food access and our weekly inspirations. This episode is dedicated to Jay Brito of Bronx House JCC on the ten year anniversary of his passing. Rest in Peace.

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Episode 39: Why We Need A Public Food Sector
Podcast Errol Schweizer Podcast Errol Schweizer

Episode 39: Why We Need A Public Food Sector

In the wake of Covid-19 and Winter Storm Uri, retail and wholesale food supply chains were continuously strained and broken in Austin, Texas, leaving grocery shelves empty. So why are we still dependent on the private sector for our food supply?

Errol Schweizer, Host of The Checkout and a 25+ year veteran of food retail and CPG, shares an overview of how things work in the corporate-owned food supply chain, from retailers to distributors to charitable networks, as well as an outline of what a public sector food system could look like. With an eye towards food sovereignty and food security, we discuss food utilities, public cafeterias, publicly owned manufacturing and cooperative delivery platforms.

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Episode 38: The Weekly Special. Pass the PRO-Act & more.
Podcast Errol Schweizer Podcast Errol Schweizer

Episode 38: The Weekly Special. Pass the PRO-Act & more.

Welcome to The Checkout’s Weekly Special, where we discuss some of the top issues in food retail, CPG and policy.

Hosted by Errol Schweizer.

This week includes: Why we must Pass The PRO-Act; Alt-Meat Craziness; Senator Tester’s Class Bias; Essential Worker Policies & Weekly Inspiration.

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Episode 37: Amazon’s Racial Capitalism: The Cost of Free Shipping
Podcast Errol Schweizer Podcast Errol Schweizer

Episode 37: Amazon’s Racial Capitalism: The Cost of Free Shipping

Dr. Ellen Reese is Professor of Sociology and Chair of Labor Studies at the University of California, Riverside. Her research focuses on gender, race, and class, welfare state development, social movements, and poverty and work. She is author of They Say Cutback; We Say Fightback! Welfare Activism in an Era of Retrenchment (2011, American Sociological Association’s Rose Series) and Backlash Against Welfare Mothers: Past and Present (2005, University of California Press). She is also co-author of The World Social Forums and the Challenges of Global Democracy (2007, Paradigm Publishers) and co-editor of The Wages of Empire: Neoliberal Policies, Repression, and Women’s Poverty (2007, Paradigm Publishers) and A Handbook of World Social Forum Activism (2012, Paradigm Publishers). ellen.reese@ucr.edu

Dr. Jake Alimahomed-Wilson is a Professor of Sociology at California State University at Long Beach. His research explores the ways that racism and labor exploitation intersect. He is particularly interested in the global logistics industry and the workers who move goods around the world. His current research examines the impact of e-commerce (i.e. Amazon) on work and labor. His newest co-edited (with Ellen Reese) book, The Cost of Free Shipping: Amazon in the Global Economy, was released in 2020 by Pluto Press (Wildcat Series). This book provides a rich and interdisciplinary collection of critical essays by scholars, activists, and labor and community organizers that interrogates the global significance of Amazon’s rise and the growing popular resistance to it around the world. jake.wilson@csulb.edu

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Episode 36: Montserrat Garibay
Podcast Errol Schweizer Podcast Errol Schweizer

Episode 36: Montserrat Garibay

Reginaldo Haslett-Marroquin began working on economic development projects with indigenous Guatemalan communities in 1988. He served as a consultant for the United Nations Development Program’s Bureau for Latin America and as an advisor to the World Council of Indigenous Peoples. He was a founding member of the Fair-Trade Federation in 1994.

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Episode 35: Marita Canedo of Migrant Justice on “Milk With Dignity”
Podcast Errol Schweizer Podcast Errol Schweizer

Episode 35: Marita Canedo of Migrant Justice on “Milk With Dignity”

https://migrantjustice.net/about The mission of Migrant Justice is to build the voice, capacity, and power of the farmworker community and engage community partners to organize for economic justice and human rights. We gather the farmworker community to discuss and analyze shared problems and to envision collective solutions. Through this ongoing investment in leadership development, members deepen their skills in community education and organizing for long-term systemic change. From this basis our members have defined community problems as a denial of rights and dignity and have prioritized building a movement to secure these fundamental human rights to: 1) Dignified Work and Quality Housing; 2) Freedom of Movement and Access to Transportation; 3) Freedom from discrimination; 4) Access to Health Care.

Milk With Dignity: https://migrantjustice.net/about-the-milk-with-dignity-program

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Episode 17: Cristina Tzintzún Ramirez On Organizing Essential Workers
Podcast Errol Schweizer Podcast Errol Schweizer

Episode 17: Cristina Tzintzún Ramirez On Organizing Essential Workers

“We have a system that is happy to accept undocumented workers’ labor but not their full humanity…

“ We can create a system that understands essential work should be paid as such, that if you risk your life to take care of society, you should be paid more.”

From https://www.cristinatzintzun.org: Cristina Tzintzún Ramirez founded and led two of Texas’ largest voting and civil rights organizations: Jolt, a Texas-wide organization focused on energizing the Latino vote, and Workers Defense Project (WDP), winning the passage of local and state laws protecting the rights of hundreds of thousands of workers. Cristina is a former 2020 US Senate candidate. She was named “Hero of the New South” by Southern Living Magazine and her work has been featured on NPR, Vogue, The New York Times, MTV, USA Today, Univision, MSNBC’s Up Late with Alec Baldwin, among others.

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