LANCE COMPA
The
factory collapse in Bangladesh that killed more than 1,100 workers
should be a pivot point for the global apparel industry, moving consumers to
demand more accountability from brand-name companies that subcontract
production to supply-chain factories around the world. Sadly, the history of
workplace tragedies in so many of these factories suggests that after consumers
in rich countries express horror and call for reforms, the demands for better
worker protections die down and the marketplace for cheap apparel abides. But
this cycle can finally be broken if demands for change start to focus on
workers’ right to form trade unions.
In the
wake of labor abuses and workplace tragedies exposed in the 1990s, many apparel
brands created in-house social compliance functions and joined
“multi-stakeholder groups” with detailed monitoring and certification programs.
But the one-day visits and checklist-style monitoring routine in such efforts
have not worked.
This is
where workers’ organizing comes in. Social compliance monitors might visit once
a year. Government inspectors might come once in 10 years from understaffed and
underfunded labor ministries common to most developing countries. But a real
trade union can provide the vigilance and voice that workers need for sustained
decency at their place of employment, including a workplace that is not a death
trap.
In Bangladesh and
many other countries, the challenge is getting real unions. Factory managers
routinely fire and blacklist workers thought to be union sympathizers. And
sometimes worse: In April 2012, apparel union organizer Aminul Islam was found tortured and killed after
meeting with workers near a garment manufacturing center outside Dhaka. The
crime remains unsolved.
In China and Vietnam , the official labor
movement is a branch of government. Unions exist, but the plant personnel
director is often the union president, and the unions’ role is to boost
production, not to defend workers. Widespread phony unions in Mexico insulate
factory owners against the few authentic unions that manage to survive. In many
countries, owners often shut down newly organized factories to warn workers
away from unions.
Despite
these challenges, apparel unions have a toehold in Central America and in other
regions and countries, including Bangladesh . But a toehold is not
enough to shift the balance of power. Without effective unions, trying to
tackle fire safety, living wages, child labor and other problems is a Sisyphean
job.
To
change the balance of power, consumer pressure, government policies,
international labor solidarity, new management policies and other support
mechanisms must focus on workers’ organizing and bargaining rights.
One
model is taking shape in Honduras .
In 2009, responding to U.S.
student protests of the closure of newly organized plant, allegedly for anti-union
reasons, Fruit of the Loom’s top management committed to honoring workers’
organizing rights. The Kentucky-based company reopened the factory where the
union dispute arose, rehired all employees, recognized the union and entered
into good-faith bargaining. Now the renamed “New Day”
facility has a collective bargaining agreement with higher wages, better
conditions, and a strong health and safety committee. Workers have maintained
high productivity levels, and the company has added employees.
Fruit of
the Loom management told workers in other Honduran factories that they too have
a right to organize and that the company will respect their choices. An
innovative nonprofit oversight committee coordinated by the nonprofit Global Works Foundation — which asked me to join as ombudsman
— is helping nurture positive labor relations in plants. The committee, whose
members are chosen by management and the union, provides training programs on
freedom of association and collective bargaining. It also helps mediate
workplace grievances.
Since
the oversight committee established its program, workers have formed genuine
unions with the General Confederation of Labour — known as CGT — in other Fruit
of the Loom factories with almost 5,000 employees overall. It is the world’s
first sustained, companywide independent union organizing in the apparel
manufacturing sector.
A
stereotype holds that young workers desperate for jobs at any salary will never
turn to unions. Some also peddle the “sweatshops are good” argument, saying
that they are better than any alternative and that unions would only make
factories uncompetitive. But workers belie such typecasting. In China and Vietnam , shop-floor leaders
organize strikes and other actions by going around clueless official unions.
Given a fair chance, independent unions in Mexico supplant “protection unions”
previously chosen by management. The CGT’s success in Fruit of the Loom plants
has led to a coordinating group of unions throughout Central
America aiming to persuade more firms to respect their organizing
rights.
Another
stereotype — in many cases all too accurate — has apparel factory owners and
managers demonizing unions and taking unbridled reprisals when workers try to
organize. The Fruit of the Loom-CGT model in Honduras sends a strong signal to
apparel brands and factory owners that companies and real unions can not just coexist
but thrive in a globally competitive environment. More important, in light of
the recent tragedies in Bangladesh ,
real unions defending employees inside the workplace can save lives.
First appeared in The Washington Post, 2013
Lance
Compa teaches international labor law at Cornell
University’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations
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