May your love for berries never be greater than your love for people. Let's help these workers who are being exploited. Please, share! #BoycottDriscolls +info: https://itsgoingdown.org/clarify-reiterate-driscolls-boycott-full-force/
seen from Brazil

seen from United States
seen from Finland
seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Germany
seen from United States
seen from Germany

seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from Germany

seen from United States

seen from Germany
seen from Germany
seen from Indonesia
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States
May your love for berries never be greater than your love for people. Let's help these workers who are being exploited. Please, share! #BoycottDriscolls +info: https://itsgoingdown.org/clarify-reiterate-driscolls-boycott-full-force/
July 29, 2017
“BOYCOTT DRISCOLLS”
by LMNOPI
Speaking out against what some of them refer to as "legalized slavery" several groups as well as many markets and co-ops joined together in 2016 to support the cause of farmworkers. As part of the protest Watsonville, California company Driscoll's Berries was singled out for their support of growers accused of human rights violations. On 12th Street in Astoria, Queens, for the 7th Annual Welling Court Mural Project, talented activist artist LMNOPI painted this mural to bring public attention to the situation faced by farmworkers. Living in Brooklyn, NYC, LMNOPI says her art tells the story of resistance and the spirit of revolution, giving voice to the voiceless through art. Equally concerned with environmental and social issues she says "She stands with the Trees, the Rivers and the Bees." @lmnopimaize @wellingcourtmuralproject
Pesticides News Conference at Driscoll's Headquarters
Enough is Enough! Pesticides News Conference
What has Driscoll's and Ag Commissioner done to protect us?
June 17, 2026 12:00 pm Driscoll's Headquarters 345 West Ridge #Watsonville, CA 95076
What has Driscoll's and Ag Commissioner done to protect:
Our Community
Our Youth
Teachers & Schools
Our Farmworkers
Our Mother Earth
Our Air & Water
Pajaro Valley come support and show up for your community!
No More Pesticides!
One mile buffer zone near schools!
Driscoll's, you can make a change. Choose people over profit!
Our Health. Our Future. Our Community. Together, we can create a healthy, just future!
Boycott Driscoll's 🚫🍓✊🏼
Strawberry Festival 4 Miles From Chemical Leak
Garden Grove Strawberry Festival stays open for business, four miles away from a leaking toxic chemical tank which has been declared a state of emergency. #BoycottDriscolls always and forever. 🚫🍓✊
California Gov. Gavin Newsom proclaimed a state of emergency in Orange County on Saturday as officials desperately search for a safe resolution to a leaking toxic chemical tank at an aerospace facility.
"The safety of Orange County residents is the top priority," Newsom said. "We are mobilizing every state resource available to support local responders and make sure the community has what they need to stay safe."
According to Orange County Fire Authority Chief Craig Covey, temperatures inside the tank continue to rise, creating a "significantly dangerous" situation spurring the evacuation of more than 50,000 residents, officials said.
Omar Dieguez shares updates on day 11 of a 30-day hunger strike against pesticides in the Pajaro Valley. Reporting by Nik Altenberg at Santa Cruz Local
#BoycottDriscolls 🚫🍓
Support the Hunger Strike! Boycott Driscoll's!
Pajaro Valley for Ethnic Studies and Justice: We are calling on our communities near and far to stand in solidarity with the Pajaro Valley community and the brave hunger strikers led by Omar Dieguez and CORA. Pledge to BOYCOTT DRISCOLL’S BERRIES until they stop spraying harmful and cancer-causing pesticides near our schools and homes!
Watsonville supplies strawberries to the world, but our community suffers from high childhood cancer rates and other disabilities and illnesses due to the unethical use of harmful pesticides in the places where we live, work, and go to school. Driscoll’s is the largest berry corporation in the world and has the capacity to transition its fields to organic.
Hunger strike aims to stop toxic pesticides
By Todd Guild (pajaronian.com) -September 5, 2025
About 50 people gather in front of Driscoll’s headquarters on Westridge Drive in Watsonville to protest pesticide use in area agricultural fields. (Tarmo Hannula/The Pajaronian)
Watsonville activist Omar Dieguez and a group of community leaders announced a hunger strike and started the movement with a protest outside of Driscoll’s headquarters Tuesday in Watsonville.
About 50 people were protesting the use of toxic pesticides near homes and schools in Watsonville and the Pajaro Valley.
Dieguez announced that he began his fast on Sept. 1 and will continue for 30 days. He is being joined by several community leaders who will fast for various lengths of time.
Dieguez released a public statement to Driscoll’s and California Giant Berry owners, urging them to transition their fields near homes and schools to organic and stopping the use of toxic pesticides.
“Enough is enough,” the statement reads. “For too long, you have poisoned our community with toxic pesticides that harm our farmworkers, our immigrant and Indigenous families, our youth, and all of Pajaro Valley. You are contaminating our water, our land, our oceans, and the very air we breathe. This must stop now.”
Dieguez says in the statement that, as a young boy growing up near the fields, he acquired acute asthma.
“Many of my friends have suffered from cancers and other health problems that many of the same chemicals used in your berry fields are known to cause,” he says.
Dieguez says that the companies have the resources and capabilities to end pesticide use immediately and transition to safer practices.
“Impacts from pesticides go on for decades,” Gabe Medina, Pajaro Valley Unified School District board member, told the crowd. He spoke of family members who were sprayed “directly” while working area fields, and of cancer and strokes that have affected his family.
“This is what pesticides do to us: They impact us physically and mentally,” Medina said. He demanded proper screening of students at schools for added protection and spoke strongly of area leaders coming forward and standing up for what is right “and challenging corporations that see us as disposable units in order for them to make profits.”
Adam Scow of Campaign for Organic and Regenerative Agriculture, a grassroots organization of residents of the Monterey Bay, stated: “Local activists are coming together to put their bodies on the line in support of the movement to stop toxic pesticides. Our region is actually a leader in organic agriculture with nearly 20 percent of the Pajaro Valley being organic. So we need more of it in the right places.”
The specific fields near Pajaro Valley homes and schools are illustrated on a map released by the Campaign for Organic & Regenerative Agriculture, available at the website link here:
The Pajaronian has also reached out to California Giant Berry for a statement.
Is Driscoll's still currently under boycott?
Yes, as of September 2025.
SIGN THE PLEDGE - Boycott Driscoll's berries in solidarity with Watsonville hunger strikers https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2025/09/02/18879507.php