The Oregonian: Activist Jim Keady of Team Sweat monitors Nike-contracted factories in Indonesia

July 27th, 2011

Published: Tuesday, July 26, 2011, 7:29 PM     Updated: Wednesday, July 27, 2011, 10:04 AM

keadypic.JPG
View full size
Jim Keady, executive director of the nonprofit organization
Team Sweat, speaks with a factory worker in Serang, Indonesia. 
When news emerged recently that workers at an Indonesian factory making shoes for Nike’s Converse brand were abused by their supervisors, Jim Keady was reminded that his work matters.

Keady is an activist who has been turning a spotlight on Nike’s overseas production since 1997 when he was a graduate student at St. John’s University in New York.

Since then, he has traveled to Indonesia, stayed in workers’ homes, lectured at U.S. colleges and participated in numerous news stories about his work. Though he struggles to meet basic living expenses, let alone finance trips to Indonesia, the 39-year-old New Jersey native says he does not envision slowing down.

“He’s very passionate about what he does and what he believes,” says a friend, Father Paul Grubb,a theology instructor at Jesuit High School in Portland.

The Associated Press report was among the latest news stories using Keady’s tips. Published July 13 in The Oregonian, the news service story quoted workers — who make Converse sneakers at two factories under contract to Nike — complaining about several abuses by their supervisors.

Nike, which has owned the Converse brand since 2003, said its investigation also showed abuses by the supervisors.

Jim Keady
Age: 39
Title: Executive director, Team Sweat
Born: Belmar, N.J.
Education: Saint Joseph’s University, Philadelphia, for undergrad degree; St. John’s University, New York, for graduate degree
Personal: Single; 3-year-old daughter

Keady says he told an AP staff member about the workers’ complaints after participating in a panel discussion at the Jakarta Foreign Correspondents Club. He later directed a reporter to workers to interview.

Keady sees a continuing need for his activist work in Indonesia.

Nike says the country is its third largest manufacturing base, behind China and Vietnam, with 140,000 workers in 14 factories.

Regardless of Keady’s work, a Nike spokeswoman says the company is improving its business practices in Indonesia. In June, the company participated in creating an agreement that strengthened the ability to form or join a union in the country, spokeswoman Erin Dobson said.

Nike has attempted to monitor and audit its factory practices for nearly a decade.

“However,” Dobson said in an email, “monitoring and auditing alone will not completely address the challenges in our supply chain. The root cause of the issues must be addressed and it will require bringing together a wide spectrum of stakeholders to develop innovative solutions to solve these very complicated issues.”

Keady acknowledges allegations of abuse can be found at other sneaker makers’ factories. But he says his work is most effective focusing only on Nike because the sports apparel giant based near Beaverton is the world’s biggest.

Keady got his start as a human rights activist while pursuing a master’s degree in pastoral theology at St. John’s University in New York. He once played semi-professional soccer as a goalie and assisted in coaching the St. John’s men’s soccer team.

For his graduate thesis, Keady wrote a paper, “Nike and Catholic Social Teaching: A Challenge to the Christian Mission at St. John’s University,” examining the company’s business practices and challenging the university’s sponsorship agreement with Nike.

Keady says as a matter of conscience he wouldn’t wear school apparel made by Nike. When he refused, he says he was forced to resign in June 1998. The incident was the subject of an HBO documentary. St. John’s officials have challenged Keady’s account in other news stories, but a school official said on Tuesday, “We have nothing more to say about this matter.”

The HBO story prompted colleges to seek him out as a speaker. Keady formed a non-profit organization, Team Sweat, to bring public attention to the conditions in factories in Indonesia. Keady is essentially the only employee in the organization, which functions with the help of donations.

In summer of 2000, he moved to Tangerang,Indonesia, a village where workers lived.

“For one month I tried to live like a Nike factory worker,” living on the daily wages of a worker, Keady says.

“In one month I lost 25 pounds,” says the 6-foot-4 Keady who normally weighs 220 pounds.

He rejects the notion that the presence of Nike and other corporations employing contracted factories could be responsible for actually improving living conditions in the impoverished country.

Instead, he sees the presence of multi-national corporations as the latest exploitation of the Indonesian people, preceded in history by the Dutch, Portuguese and Japanese.

“I’ve got a problem as an American with us going out and exercising American imperialist values,” he said.

Instead, he believes that by bringing continued public attention to factory conditions, consumers eventually will be willing to pay more so workers can earn more.

– Allan Brettman;
twitter.com/abrettman

Related topics: jim keady, nike
Posted in News

PETITION: Tell Nike Shareholders the Truth About Sweatshop Abuses

July 27th, 2011

nike_sign-with-barbed-wire

You love your Converse Chuck Taylors right? Did you know that Nike owns Converse? Yep, Nike acquired Converse back in 2003. So is it any surprise that your favorite high tops are made in sweatshops?

Under Nike’s leadership, the Converse brand describes itself as “a story of legends, heroes, and innovators tied together by the love of sport.” But “sport” doesn’t include throwing sneakers at factory workers, right?

Did you know that supervisors at the Indonesian factories which produce Converse shoes regularly throw sneakers at their employees? Maybe Nike needs to learn that sneakers aren’t for throwing, and employees aren’t for slapping or calling pigs and dogs. Recent reports compiled by the Associated Press show that Nike’s Converse factories are operating far below the standards it had set for itself ten years ago. Nike confirms these reports, stating that ⅔ of the factories fail to meet Nike standards. But they cannot address these problems, they insist, since these contracts were set before Nike bought Converse in 2003.

Then how does Nike explain the Pou Chen Group factory in Sukabumi, 60 miles from Indonesia’s capital of Jakarta which didn’t start producing Converse products until 2007? At this plant, workers are kicked, slapped, scratched, fired for taking sick days and paid fifty cents and hour. At another plant outside the nation’s capital, a supervisor forced six women to stand unprotected under the sun for two hours for failing to produce the targeted 60 dozen pairs of shoes on time.

Hannah Jones, Nike’s VP of Sustainable Business and Innovation who oversees the company’s efforts to improve working conditions, confirms these findings but states that “We do see other issues of that similar nature coming up across the supply chain but not on a frequent level,” she said. “We see issues of working conditions on a less egregious nature across the board.”

How many sneakers have to be thrown for working conditions to be considered egregious Ms. Jones? How many workers abused or humiliated?

Nike claims that upon hearing of these abuses, “immediate action was taken,” but the reality is that Nike has still not addressed the structural causes of sweatshop abuses in their overseas factories.

One of the key reasons that these abuses continue is because of decisions made by Nike’s Board of Directors and Senior Management in the drive to maximize profits at all costs for Nike shareholders.

It is time that the Nike Board of Directors and Nike shareholders learn the truth about how their decisions impact workers in places like Indonesia.

Will you join us in our efforts to bring the truth to Nike by signing on to the following letter to Ms. Jones and Nike CEO, Mark Parker?

CLICK HERE TO SIGN THE LETTER!

Posted in News

THE JAKARTA POST: NIKE FACES NEW WORKER ABUSE CLAIMS

July 15th, 2011

Niniek Karmini and Stephen Wright

Associated Press, Sukabumi | Wed, 07/13/2011 6:34 PM

Factory life: In this photo taken May 26, 2011, workers leave a factory that make Converse shoes, in Gunung Putri, West java, Indonesia. Workers making Converse sneakers in Indonesia said supervisors throw shoes at them, slap them in the face and call them dogs and pigs. (AP/Achmad Ibrahim)

Factory life: In this photo taken May 26, 2011, workers leave a factory that make Converse shoes, in Gunung Putri, West java, Indonesia. Workers making Converse sneakers in Indonesia said supervisors throw shoes at them, slap them in the face and call them dogs and pigs. (AP/Achmad Ibrahim)

Workers making Converse sneakers in Indonesia say supervisors throw shoes at them, slap them in the face and call them dogs and pigs. Nike, the brand’s owner, admits that such abuse has occurred among the contractors that make its hip high-tops but claims there was little it could do to stop it.

Dozens of workers interviewed by The Associated Press and a document released by Nike show that the footwear and athletic apparel giant has far to go to meet the standards it set for itself a decade ago to end its reliance on sweatshop labor.

That does not appear to explain abuses that workers allege at the Pou Chen Group factory in Sukabumi, some 100 kilometers (60 miles) from Jakarta - it didn’t start making Converse products until four years after Nike bought Converse. One worker there said she was kicked by a supervisor last year after making a mistake while cutting rubber for soles.

“We’re powerless,” said the woman, who like several others interviewed spoke on condition of anonymity out of fear of reprisals. “Our only choice is to stay and suffer, or speak out and be fired.”

The 10,000 mostly female workers at the Taiwanese-operated Pou Chen plant make around 50 cents an hour. That’s enough, for food and bunkhouse-type lodging, but little else. Some workers interviewed by the AP in March and April described being hit or scratched in the arm - one man until he bled. Others said they were fired after filing complaints.

“They throw shoes and other things at us” said a 23-year-old woman in the embroidery division. “They growl and slap us when they get angry.

“It’s part of our daily bread.”

Mira Agustina, 30, said she was fired in 2009 for taking sick leave, even though she produced a doctor’s note.

“It was a horrible job,” she said. “Our bosses pointed their feet at us, calling us names like dog, pig or monkey.” All are major insults to Muslims. Indonesia is the world’s most populous Muslim nation.

At the PT Amara Footwear factory located just outside Jakarta, where another Taiwanese contractor makes Converse shoes, a supervisor ordered six female workers to stand in the blazing sun after they failed to meet their target of completing 60 dozen pairs of shoes on time.

“They were crying and allowed to continue their job only after two hours under the sun,” said Ujang Suhendi, 47, a worker at a warehouse in the factory. The women’s supervisor received a warning letter for the May incident after complaints from unionized workers.

The company’s own inquiries also found workers at the two factories were subjected to “serious and egregious” physical and verbal abuse, including the punishment of forcing workers to stand in the sun, said Hannah Jones, a Nike executive who oversees the company’s efforts to improve working conditions.

“We do see other issues of that similar nature coming up across the supply chain but not on a frequent level,” she said. “We see issues of working conditions on a less egregious nature across the board.”

Nike, which came under heavy criticism a decade ago for its use of foreign sweatshops and child labor, has taken steps since then to improve conditions at its 1,000 overseas factories. But the progress it has made at factories producing gear with its premier “swoosh” logo is not fully reflected in those making Converse products.

Daily chores: In this May 17, 2011 photo, a janitor sweeps the floor outside a Nike store at a shopping mall in Jakarta, Indonesia. (AP/Dita Alangkara)

Daily chores: In this May 17, 2011 photo, a janitor sweeps the floor outside a Nike store at a shopping mall in Jakarta, Indonesia. (AP/Dita Alangkara)

An internal report Nike released to the AP after it inquired about the abuse show that nearly two-thirds of 168 factories making Converse products worldwide fail to meet Nike’s own standards for contract manufacturers.

Twelve are in the most serious category, indicating problems that could range from illegally long work hours to denying access to Nike inspectors. A Nike spokeswoman said the company was not aware of physical abuse occurring at those factories. Another 97 are in a category defined as making no progress in improving problems ranging from isolated verbal harassment to paying less than minimum wage. A further six factories had not been audited by Nike.

Nike blames problems on pre-existing licenses to produce Converse goods that it says prevent the parent company from inspecting factories or introducing its own code of conduct.

It says the situation is further complicated because the license holders themselves usually farm out the production work to a subcontractor. Most of the agreements have come up for renewal in the past five years. But it is only the past two years that it has made a concerted effort to incorporate Converse factories into the monitoring program that applies to Nike factories.

“We have been working every time we can to renew those agreements or change those agreements or to cease those agreements and to ensure that when we do new agreements we get more ability to influence the licensee and their subcontractors much more directly,” Jones said.

Some corporate experts question whether the company is doing all it can.

“I simply find it impossible that a company of the size and market power of Nike is impotent in persuading a local factory in Indonesia or anywhere else in meeting its code of conduct,” said Prakash Sethi, a corporate strategy professor at Baruch College at the City University of New York.

Critics of outsourcing manufacturing to the lowest-cost countries say it keeps prices down but allows apparel, electronics and toy companies to reduce their accountability for the conditions in such factories. Even as concern about sweatshop labor has grown, some contractors have simply moved operations to more remote areas, farther from the prying eyes of international and local watchdogs.

Indonesia is Nike’s third-largest manufacturing base, after China and Vietnam, with 140,000 workers at 14 contract factories. Of those, 17,000 produce its Converse line at four factories.

Pou Chen, the largest of the four Converse factories, is located in a hilly city where the minimum wage is well below the national average. Sukabumi can only be reached by car - a five-hour journey across bumpy, winding roads. The plant started making Converse products in 2007.

The Taiwanese contractor said it fired one supervisor after being told workers had spoken to The AP earlier this year.

Others involved in mistreatment, however, have been allowed to keep their jobs, according to Pou Chen.

Nike says the factory is developing programs to teach managers cultural sensitivity and leadership skills.

It says it also is closely monitoring the PT Amara factory.

After years of criticism over its labor practices at factories abroad, Nike in 2005 became the first major apparel company to disclose the names and locations of hundreds of plants that produce its sneakers, clothes and other products.

It admitted finding “abusive treatment” - either physical or verbal - in many of the Nike plants. The complaints ranged from workweeks that exceeded 60 hours to being forbidden to go to the bathroom.

The Beaverton, Oregon-based company has since invested heavily in training managers and more closely monitoring their activities.

Nike has not published the locations of all factories making products for affiliate companies, which includes Converse, but plans to by the end of the year.

Posted in News

Subscribe Unsubscribe