Students take stand against sweatshops

Marie Christensen

into Logan.

It’s called the Utah State University-United Students Against Sweatshops (USU-USAS). For the past four months, since the organization was formed, 22 students have been working to educate the university population and community about the working conditions of garment workers and the status of workers making USU apparel, said Rachel Carroll-Larson, USU-USAS president.

“We are deeply concerned about sweatshop conditions in factories that produce for companies that supply the USU bookstore,” Carroll-Larson said. “Workers making university apparel face sweatshop conditions, abusive treatment, excessive working hours, dangerous conditions and wages that are inadequate to meet basic needs.

Currently, members of the club are campaigning for USU to join the Workers Rights Consortium to ensure that factories producing clothing and other goods bearing the USU name or logo respect the basic rights of workers, Carroll-Larson said.

“Once people know what is going on, they can search out companies and stores who cater to sweat-free apparel and good and boycott the companies who promote sweatshops,” club member Edward Kotter said.

USAS began the Sweat-Free Campus Campaign during fall semester and is already endorsed by 650 professors across the nation, according to the USAS Web site.

“I like learning about what other people throughout the nation and world are doing to better the lives of our fellow human beings,” Kotter said.

The national organization is also working on two other campaigns: Ethical Contracting Campaign and National Campus Living Wage Campaign.

“Ultimately, we are using our power as students to affect the larger industry that thrives in secrecy, exploitation and the power relations that are in favor of profits and not people, especially workers,” Carroll-Larson said.

USU-USAS is still working with the administration and are waiting for a decision to make USU a sweat-free campus.

In the mean time, members of the organization are working to get USU affiliated with the Workers Rights Consortium. This is a non-profit organization aimed at assisting the enforcement of manufacturing Codes of Conduct adopted by colleges and universities.

“We feel that our campaigns have gone well so far,” Carroll-Larson said. “We have given students the opportunity to act on their concerns, to learn more about these issues, and gain skills in organizing, activism and research through participation in our club.”

For more information on joining USU-USUAS contact Carroll-Larson at 797-5237 or usu-usas@yahoogroups.com.

To visit the USAS Web site go to www.studentsagainstsweatshops.org. To visit the USU-USAS Web site go to http://groups.yahoo.com/group/usu-usas.

Students are also invited to attend the club’s weekly meetings every other Wednesday at 4:30 in the Quad Side Cafe in the Merrill-Cazier Library.

-mmackay@cc.usu.edu