Adding
to corporation’s woes, nation’s largest teachers union rejects McTeacher’s
Nights, marketing in schools
BOSTON, MA –The National Education Association (NEA) and more than 50 state and local teachers unions challenged McDonald’s CEO Steve Easterbrook to end McTeacher’s Nights, the corporation’s most exploitative form of kid-targeted marketing.
The
call, issued in a letter written and organized by Corporate Accountability
International (CAI) and Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood (CCFC), comes
as McDonald’s struggles to climb out of seven consecutive quarters of
nose-diving sales in the US and continues to lose families—its core customer
base.
The letter builds upon a growing movement of parents and health
professionals who are demanding McDonald’s end its kid-targeted marketing, and
an increasing number of institutions—most recently the Cleveland Clinic—that
are severing ties with the corporation.
On
McTeacher’s Nights, McDonald’s recruits teachers to “work” behind the counter
and serve burgers, fries, and soda to their students and their students’
families. The corporation heavily brands the events, even going so far as to
provide uniforms and branded shirts for teachers to wear behind counters.
At
McDonald’s most recent shareholders’ meeting, the Chicago Teachers Union
denounced the practice on behalf of teachers in the corporation’s own urban
school district.
“It
is wholly inappropriate for McDonald’s to exploit cash-strapped schools to
market its junk food brand, while miring its workers in poverty, effectively
hollowing out the tax base for our schools,” said Jesse Sharkey, vice president
of the Chicago Teachers Union.
“In Chicago we face potentially devastating cuts
to our schools, yet one of the world’s richest corporations operating in our
backyard is exploiting this situation by eroding the school food environment
and our students’ health in the long-run.”
Not
only are McTeacher’s Nights harmful for children’s health, they are also
chronically poor fundraisers. Schools typically receive only 15 to 20 percent
of the event’s proceeds, often amounting to only one to two dollars per
student. According to research conducted by CCFC, of 25 schools that
participated in McTeacher’s Night events, only five raised more than $1,000.
“Frankly,
it’s disrespectful for a multi-billion dollar corporation such as McDonald’s to
throw pennies at our schools while it uses our teachers to market its
products,” said Melinda Dart, vice president of the California Federation of
Teachers and president of the Jefferson Elementary Federation of Teachers. “At
a time when we are working hard to help our youth adopt healthy habits, this
corporation and its junk food simply have no place in our schools.”
In
public statements, executives have waffled around the scope of McDonald’s
marketing in schools. For instance, shortly after executives publicly denied
putting Ronald McDonald in schools, McDonald’s USA President Mike Andres told
investors on a December 2014 investor call that McDonald’s has to be “in the
schools.” During that call, Andres also cited a presence in schools as part of
the corporation’s “heritage.”
Despite
executives’ statements, McDonald’s continues to market directly in schools by
sponsoring McTeacher’s Nights and sending Ronald McDonald into schools under
the guise of physical education and reading programming. It has also sold
branded fast food in school cafeterias.
The call was backed by authorities in the field of education, including Diane
Ravitch, Ph.D., Research Professor of Education at New York University; Nancy
Carlsson-Paige, Professor Emerita at the Graduate School of Education at Lesley
University; and Kevin G. Welner, Professor and Director, National Education
Policy Center, University of Colorado Boulder.
Michelle
Obama and the USDA have announced new proposals to stop the practice of
promoting junk food in schools. The American Academy of Pediatrics and four
federal agencies have also recommended restricting junk food marketing to kids.
Since
2013, more than 360 McTeacher’s Night events have been documented in more than
30 states.
Institutions
calling on McDonald’s to end McTeacher’s Night events include:
●
National Education Association
● National Education Association Healthy Futures
● National Education Association Healthy Futures
●
National Education Association state affiliates
○ California
○ Florida
○ Vermont
○ California
○ Florida
○ Vermont
●
National Education Association local affiliates
○ Los Angeles
○ Milwaukee
○ Los Angeles
○ Milwaukee
●
American Federation of Teachers state affiliates
○
California
○ Georgia
○ Michigan
○ Missouri
○ Ohio
○ Oklahoma
○ Pennsylvania
○ Utah
○ Vermont
○ West Virginia
○ Georgia
○ Michigan
○ Missouri
○ Ohio
○ Oklahoma
○ Pennsylvania
○ Utah
○ Vermont
○ West Virginia
●
American Federation of Teachers local affiliates
○
Albuquerque
○ Atlanta
○ Birmingham
○ Boston
○ Chicago
○ Houston
○ Los Angeles
○ Savannah
○ Atlanta
○ Birmingham
○ Boston
○ Chicago
○ Houston
○ Los Angeles
○ Savannah