In the News

Business Groups Wary Of Labor Provisions In Finance Customs Bill

Inside U.S. Trade
11/06/2009

By Jamie Strawbridge

Business groups are worried by the potential effects of provisions banning the import of all goods made with convict labor, forced labor, or forced or indentured child labor that were included in a customs bill sponsored by Finance Committee Chairman Max Baucus (D-MT) and Ranking Member Charles Grassley (R-IA).

Shopping you can feel good about: Buying the union label

SEIU Blog
11/02/2009

Many consumers assume that if a car is "American-made," it must have been built by union-represented workers. Not true. The UAW has prepared a guide to provide information for consumers who want to purchase vehicles produced by workers who enjoy the benefits and protections of a union contract. The 2010 list includes cars, trucks, pickups, vans, SUVs and crossovers from U.S., European and Asian-based carmakers. 

“Reverse Trick-or-Treaters” Deliver Fair Trade Chocolate

Worldwatch Institute
11/02/2009

By Ben Block

..."One of the concerns we've seen is that some of the activities children are involved in are inappropriate to their age: carrying heavy loads, using machetes on farms," said Bill Guyton, president of the World Cocoa Foundation, a developer of several industry-supported training sessions in cocoa-growing regions of Africa, Southeast Asia, and the Americas. "Through farmer field schools, we explain to parents why activities are dangerous to young people."

Firestone in Liberia 'pollution'

BBC News
10/29/2009

An investigation by the government in Liberia has concluded that the Firestone Rubber Plantation Company has polluted local water sources.

The three-month investigation found that a plant south-east of the capital Monrovia was responsible for high levels of orthophosphate in creeks.

The report called on Firestone to improve its waste treatment facility.

Firestone said it believed it fully complied with environmental law and its waste water was not harmful to health.

Sample testing

Liberian study finds US rubber company polluting

Associated Press
10/29/2009

By Jonathan Paye-Layleh

Liberia's government says waste products from the American-owned Firestone Rubber Plantation Company are polluting nearby creeks.

Firestone spokesman Rufus Karmoh said Thursday that Firestone will continue to work with the country's Environmental Protection Agency to address the recommendations in the government's report. He declined to comment further.

Unilever, IUF Settlement Resolves Conflict over Precarious Work at Lipton Pakistan

IUF
10/26/2009

A negotiated settlement between Unilever and the IUF has resolved the long, difficult conflict over the rights of precarious workers at the company's directlly-owned Lipton/Brooke Bond tea factory in Khanewal, Pakistan. The negotiations took place under the auspices of the UK's National Contact Point responsible for the application of the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises.

In Proposals, ILO Puts Burden of Respecting Workers’ Rights on Arroyo Regime

Bulatlat
10/24/2009

By Marya Salamat

MANILA – For weeks now, alleged members of the military have been casing the offices in Cebu of the Center for Trade Union and Human Rights (CTUHR), a nongovernment group that documents human-rights violations committed against workers. The CTUHR’s staff has raised concern over the surveillance, knowing fully well that workers and labor organizers have been victims of harassment and extrajudicial killings perpetrated by state agents.

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