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No sweat goods
BY JIM HIGHTOWER
If
you wish there was something you could do about some of the worst
abuses of corporate globalization, check out a fast-spreading grassroots
movement called SweatFree Communities.
Its concept is simple: While one shopper can’t make a dent
in the ethics of global manufacturers, each of us can have an impact
if we team up as citizens to harness the purchasing power of our
city and county governments, getting them to reject products made
with sweatshop labor. We often forget that the biggest consumer
in most places is local government, which buys huge quantities of
uniforms, computers, office furniture and such from various corporations.
We can say to these vendors: No public dollars for sweatshop goods.
In my town of Austin, the City Council recently voted unanimously
to join about 170 other localities across the country in the SweatFree
network. These cities, school districts and other public entities
have committed to buy only from contractors and subcontractors that
do not engage in such sweatshop abuses as the use of child labor,
poverty wages, toxic workplaces, etc.
To enforce the “no sweat” commitment, the consortium
sends independent monitors directly to the factories for periodic,
unannounced reviews of labor conditions. The shared cost is minimal—Austin’s
share, for example, is only about $17,000 a year. In turn, the assurance
that the city’s purchases reflect our people’s sense
of justice is priceless.
SweatFree Communities was founded in 2003 and is supported by a
wide range of churches, student organizations, unions, advocacy
groups, and community leaders. The notion is that there is power
in numbers—with each new community that signs on, new strength
is added to change industry practices... and end the shame of sweatshop
labor.
To learn more, call 207-262-7277
or go to sweatfree.org
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