In the News

Colombian Workers Pay High Price for Flowers

AFL-CIO NOW Blog
05/05/2009

Excerpt from article:

This Mother’s Day, remember the mothers in Colombia who grew, cut and trimmed the flowers you receive. Six days a week, Amanda Camacho and thousands of her co-workers at flower plantations in Colombia cut and trim at least 350 flowers an hour. In the weeks before holidays like Mother’s Day and Valentine’s Day, the work extends deep into the night—all for about $8 a day, less than the cost of a bouquet of carnations in the United States.

NYPD uniforms allegedly made in sweatshop

UPI
05/01/2009

Some New York Police Department dress uniforms were made by a company that had employees working long hours without overtime, investigators said.

Police Commissioner Ray Kelly said the department had generally been interested in the quality of the work and fabric used and did not investigate labor conditions, the New York Post reported Thursday.

The New York State Labor Department says Forest Uniform Corp. and a subcontractor, Technical Garment USA Co., owe $500,000 to 16 workers. One man who allegedly worked 70 to 80 hours a week may be owed $30,000...

May Day Fails its Promise to Workers

Huffington Post
05/01/2009

By Bama Athreya

Virtually no one in the US celebrates May Day, International Workers' Day - and yet it all started here, and we continue to export the violence faced by the workers it commemorates. Workers who sew our clothes, grow our flowers, mine the metals used in our cars and cellphones are still facing the same problems faced by US workers a century ago.

NYPD used a 'sweatshop'

New York Post
04/30/2009

 

Some dress uniforms worn by NYPD cops were stitched together in a Garment District sweatshop where workers toiled up to 80 hours a week without overtime, state officials said yesterday.

The Police Department said it was surprised at the news, and immediately "suspended" the company, Forest Uniform, from its list of companies authorized to outfit officers.

"Our criteria is, we examine their workmanship and the quality of their materials," said Police Commissioner Ray Kelly. He said the department had never checked on working conditions there...

Police Uniforms Seized in Raid on Manhattan Garment Factory

New York Times
04/29/2009

When state labor investigators raided a clothing manufacturer near the Flatiron Building on Tuesday night, they were surprised by what they found.

Dangling on hangers, ready for delivery, were rows of dress uniforms — complete with the familiar insignia, the gold buttons, the deep blue fabric — intended for use for formal occasions by New York City police officers.

Sweatshop for police uniforms busted

Crain's New York Business
04/29/2009

 

A Manhattan company that produces dress uniforms for the New York Police Department was busted Tuesday evening by the state Department of Labor for underpaying workers, concealing sweatshop conditions and failing to register as a garment manufacturer. The goods and equipment were confiscated from the Garment District factory by the Dept. of Labor’s Apparel Industry Task Force, which headed the investigation.

The unpaid wages for the 16 shop workers is estimated to be around $500,000...

Brazil slave labor complaints rise

Associated Press
04/29/2009

By Bradley Brooks

Reports of debt slavery reached record numbers in Brazil last year, and most of the cases were connected to the nation's booming sugarcane ethanol sector, according to a report released Wednesday by a watchdog group.

The report from the Catholic Land Pastoral, indicated there were 280 cases debt slavery reported in 2008, a 6 percent increase over 2007.

The report - relying on government data - also showed that 36 percent of those cases were linked to sugarcane production, which drives Brazil's much-lauded production of ethanol.

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