-Caveat Lector-

Subject: [usas] PriceWaterhouse monitoring slammed in BusinessWeek


Inside a Chinese Sweatshop: "A Life of Fines and Beating"
Wal-Mart's self-policing in the Chun Si factory was a disaster. What kind of
monitoring system works?

Liu Zhang (not his real name) was apprehensive about taking a job at the Chun
Si Enterprise Handbag Factory in Zhongshan, a booming city in Guangdong
Province in southern China, where thousands of factories churn out goods for
Western companies. Chun Si, which made Kathie Lee Gifford handbags sold by
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT) as well as handbags sold by Kansas-based
Payless ShoeSource Inc. (PSS), advertised decent working conditions and a fair
salary. But word among migrant workers in the area was that managers there
demanded long hours of their workers and sometimes hit them. Still, Liu, a
32-year-old former farmer and construction worker from far-off Henan
province, was desperate for work. A factory job would give him living quarters
and the temporary-residence permit internal migrants need to avoid being
locked
up by police in special detention centers. So in late August, 1999, he signed
up.

Liu quickly realized that the factory was even worse than its reputation. Chun
Si,
owned by Chun Kwan, a Macau businessman, charged workers $15 a month
for food and lodging in a crowded dorm--a crushing sum given the $22 Liu
cleared his first month. What's more, the factory gave Liu an expired
temporary-resident permit; and in return, Liu had to hand over his personal
identification card. This left him a virtual captive. Only the local police
near the
factory knew that Chun Si issued expired cards, Liu says, so workers risked
arrest if they ventured out of the immediate neighborhood.

HALF A CENT. Liu also found that Chun Si's 900 workers were locked in the
walled factory compound for all but a total of 60 minutes a day for meals.
Guards regularly punched and hit workers for talking back to managers or even
for walking too fast, he says. And they fined them up to $1 for infractions
such as
taking too long in the bathroom. Liu left the factory for good in December,
after
he and about 60 other workers descended on the local labor office to protest
Chun Si's latest offenses: requiring cash payments for dinner and a phony
factory
it set up to dupe Wal-Mart's auditors. In his pocket was a total of $6 for
three
months of 90-hour weeks--an average of about one-half cent an hour. ''Workers
there face a life of fines and beating,'' says Liu. Chun Kwan couldn't be
reached,
but his daughter, Selina Chun, one of the factory managers, says ''this is not
true,
none of this.'' She concedes that Chun Si did not pay overtime but says few
other
factories do, either. In a face-to-face interview in August, she also admitted
that
workers have tried to sue Chun Si.

Liu's Dickensian tale stands in stark contrast to the reassurances that
Wal-Mart,
Payless, and other U.S. companies give American consumers that their goods
aren't produced under sweatshop conditions. Since 1992, Wal-Mart has
required its suppliers to sign a code of basic labor standards. After exposes
in
the mid-1990s of abuses in factories making Kathie Lee products, which the
chain carries, Wal-Mart and Kathie Lee both began hiring outside auditing
firms
to inspect supplier factories to ensure their compliance with the code. Many
other companies that produce or sell goods made in low-wage countries do
similar self-policing, from Toys 'R' Us to Nike and Gap. While no company
suggests that its auditing systems are perfect, most say they catch major
abuses
and either force suppliers to fix them or yank production.

What happened at Chun Si suggests that these auditing systems can miss serious
problems--and that self-policing allows companies to avoid painful public
revelations about them. Allegations about Chun Si first surfaced this May in a
report by the National Labor Committee (NLC), a small anti-sweatshop group in
New York that in 1997 exposed Kathie Lee's connection to labor violations in
Central America. For several months, Wal-Mart repeatedly denied any
connection to Chun Si. Wal-Mart and Kathie Lee even went so far as to pass
out a press release when the report came out dismissing it as ''lies'' and
insisting
that they never had ''any relationship with a company or factory by this name
anywhere in the world.''

But in mid-September, after a three-month BUSINESS WEEK investigation that
involved a visit to the factory, tracking down ex-Chun Si workers, and
obtaining
copies of records they had smuggled out of the factory, Wal-Mart conceded that
it had produced the Kathie Lee bags there until December, 1999. Wal-Mart
Vice-President of Corporate Affairs Jay Allen now says that Wal-Mart denied
using Chun Si because it was ''defensive'' about the sweatshop issue.

Wal-Mart Director of Corporate Compliance Denise Fenton says its auditors,
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PWC) and Cal Safety Compliance Corp., had
inspected Chun Si five times in 1999 and found that the factory didn't pay the
legal overtime rate and had required excessive work hours. Because the factory
didn't fix the problems, she says, Wal-Mart stopped making Kathie Lee bags
there. Kathie Lee, who licenses her name to Wal-Mart, which handles
production, concurred with the chain's action at Chun Si, says her lawyer
Richard Hofstetter. Payless also stopped production there after an
investigation,
a spokesman says.

Still, the auditors failed to uncover many of the egregious conditions in the
factory
despite interviews with dozens of workers, concedes Fenton. Charges NLC
Executive Director Charles Kernaghan: ''The real issue here is why anyone
should believe their audits.''

A SECOND LOOK. And it's not just Wal-Mart. The NLC's report, entitled
Made in China, detailed labor abuses in a dozen factories producing for
household-name U.S. companies (www.nlcnet.org). After it came out,
bootmaker Timberland Co. asked its auditors to revisit its plant, also in
Zhongshan. They found that the factory hadn't fixed most of the violations
cited
the first time, despite repeated assurances to Timberland that it had (table).
Similarly, in mid-September, Social Accountability International (SAI), a New
York group that started a factory monitoring system last year, revoked its
certification of a Chinese factory that makes shoes for New Balance Athletic
Shoe Inc. after auditors reinspected the plant following the NLC report. ''The
auditors found that indeed there were many violations they had not picked up
the
first time,'' says SAI President Alice Tepper Marlin.

Because such efforts to reassure consumers have proven so unsatisfactory, a
handful of companies, including Nike Inc. and Reebok International Ltd.--so
far,
the companies most tarnished by anti-sweatshop activists--have concluded that
self-policing isn't enough. They--along with Kathie Lee--helped form the Fair
Labor Assn., created in 1998 after a White House-sponsored initiative. The
FLA now has a dozen members and is setting up an independent monitoring
system that includes human rights groups.

Wal-Mart and many other companies, though, reject such efforts, saying they
don't want to tell critics or rivals where their products are made. Yet
without
independent inspections, such companies leave themselves open to critics'
accusations that self-policing doesn't work. ''The big retailers, such as
Wal-Mart,
drive the market today, yet...they're not committed to changing the way they
do
business,'' says Michael Posner, head of New York-based Lawyers Committee
for Human Rights and an FLA board member. Wal-Mart's Allen says that after
three years of talks, the company may soon set up independent monitoring with
the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, a religious group in New
York
City.

Certainly, what happened at Chun Si illustrates the inadequacy of many
labor-auditing systems in place today. Wal-Mart uses nine auditing firms,
including PWC. Like other big accounting firms, PWC has a booming
labor-auditing business inspecting many of the thousands of factories making
toys
and clothes made by Wal-Mart and other companies. After Kathie Lee's
drubbing by sweatshop critics, she hired Cal Safety, a Los Angeles-based
labor-auditing firm, to do separate audits of the factories that produce the
clothing and accessories bearing her name. According to Wal-Mart's Fenton,
Cal Safety inspected the factory four times from March to December of last
year, and PWC inspected it once, in September. The auditors found that Chun Si
had numerous problems, including overtime violations and excessively long
hours,
says Fenton.

But otherwise, concedes Fenton, the audits missed most of the more serious
abuses listed in the NLC report and confirmed by BUSINESS WEEK, including
beatings and confiscated identity papers. (Wal-Mart declined to allow
BUSINESS WEEK to talk in detail to Cal Safety or PWC, citing confidentiality
agreements. Randal H. Rankin, head of PWC's labor practices unit, insists his
audit did catch many of the abuses found by the NLC, though he wouldn't
provide specifics, also citing Wal-Mart's confidentiality agreement. Cal
Safety
President Carol Pender says her firm caught some, though not all, of the
abuses.)

All the while, evidence was piling up at the local labor office in Zhongshan.
There, officials received a constant stream of worker complaints--several a
month since the factory opened 10 years ago, says Mr. Chen, the head of the
local labor office, who declined to give his full name. ''Since they opened
their
factory, the complaints never stopped,'' he says. Officials would call or go
to the
factory once a month or so to mediate disputes, but new complaints kept
arising,
he says. Neither Wal-Mart's nor Kathie Lee's auditors discovered this history.

Chun Si also tried to hoodwink the auditors, according to the workers
BUSINESS WEEK interviewed. After Cal Safety's initial inspection in March,
1999, Wal-Mart (through its U.S. supplier, which placed the order with the
factory) insisted that Chun Si remedy the violations or it would pull the
contract.
Cal Safety found little improvement when it returned in June, as did PWC in
September.

DOUBLE STANDARD. Chun Si then took drastic steps, apparently in an
effort to pass the final audit upon which its contract depended. In early
November, management gave a facelift to the two attached five-story factory
buildings, painting walls, cleaning workshops, even putting high-quality
toilet
paper in the dank bathrooms, according to Liu and Pang Yinguang (also not his
real name), another worker employed there at the time whom BUSINESS
WEEK interviewed in mid-September. Management then split the factory into
two groups. The first, with about 200 workers, was assigned to work on the
fixed-up second floor, while the remaining 700 or so worked on the fourth
floor,
leaving the other floors largely vacant. Managers announced that those on the
fourth floor were no longer working for Chun Si but for a new factory they
called
Yecheng. Workers signed new labor contracts with Yecheng, whose name went
up outside the fourth floor.

The reality soon became clear. Workers on the fourth floor, including Liu and
Pang, were still laboring under the old egregious conditions--illegally low
pay,
14-hour days, exorbitant fees for meals--and still making the same Kathie Lee
handbags. ''It felt like being in prison,'' says Pang, 22. But those on the
second
floor now received the local minimum wage of $55 a month and no longer had to
do mandatory overtime. A new sign went up in the cafeteria used by workers on
all floors explaining that the factory was a Wal-Mart supplier and should live
up
to certain labor standards. Liu says there was even a phone number workers
could call with problems: 1-800-WM-ETHIC. ''When we saw the Wal-Mart
statement, we felt very excited and happy because we thought that now there
was a possibility to improve our conditions,'' says Liu.

LAST STRAW. Instead, they got worse. On Nov. 28, a second notice went up
stating that starting on Dec. 10, all workers would be required to pay cash
for
dinner rather than just have money subtracted from their paychecks as before,
say Liu and Pang. With up to 80% of workers already skipping breakfast to save
money, the upper-floor employees were aghast, says Liu. ''If we had left the
factory then, we wouldn't have had even enough money for a bus ticket home,''
he says. ''But if we stayed, we knew we wouldn't have enough money to eat.''

A group of workers, including Liu and Pang, met around a small pond on the
factory grounds on one of the following evenings. They knew that workers had
fruitlessly complained before to the local labor office. So they decided on a
plan
to smuggle out documents to prove Chun Si's illegal fees and subminimum wages.
On Dec. 1, 58 workers overcame their fears of retaliation and marched out the
factory gates, down to the labor office.

Faced with the throng of workers, local labor officials visited Chun Si and
forced
the factory to immediately pay the workers and return the illegally collected
fees.
But the officials also told these workers they would have to give up their
jobs at
Chun Si. Days later, some 40 labor officials returned, ordered Chun Si to
properly register or shut down the so-called Yecheng factory, and fined the
company about $8,500. Shortly after the blow-up, Wal-Mart ended production
at Chun Si.

Kernaghan and other labor activists concede that Chun Si is an extreme example
of working conditions in China today. Yet many experts think most factories in
China producing for Western companies routinely break China's labor laws.
Some Western companies' monitoring efforts do catch and fix some of these
problems. But unless companies and governments alike take more serious steps,
labor watchdogs will give little credence to company claims that they're doing
the
best they can.

By Dexter Roberts in Zhongshan and Aaron Bernstein in Washington



What Are the Auditors Missing?


Wal-Mart and other U.S. companies use outside auditing firms to inspect
factories abroad. Critics claim company-sponsored audits often miss labor
abuses. Here are three factories in China where problems were found following
a
report by the National Labor Committee:

CHUN SI HANDBAG FACTORY, ZHONGSHAN
Kathie Lee handbags for Wal-Mart

-- Guards beat workers, according to employees' complaints.

-- Workers had to pay illegal up-front deposits to cover first month's food,
and
lodging in factory dorm.

-- Many workers still owed the factory money after several months, due to
penalties and charges.


LIZHAN FOOTWEAR FACTORY, DONGGUAN
New Balance shoes

-- Payroll violations, such as fining workers late for work, says Social
Accountability International.

-- Half-dozen safety violations, such as not employing a plant safety
official, as
required by Chinese law.

-- Several wage violations, such as not paying double-time for Saturday work,
as
required by Chinese law.


POU YUEN FACTORY V, ZHONGSHAN
Timberland shoes

-- After more than a year, the factory had not stopped many serious violations
auditors had found in 1998, says Timberland. These include not paying overtime
for 14- to 16-hour days and forcing workers to use toxic glues and solvents
without gloves. Timberland is now working with the factory to address the
problems.

DATA: BUSINESS WEEK
--
============================
-- CUT OUT THE MIDDLEMEN --
JUST VOTE FOR A CORPORATION
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