Whose garment is covered with dust?
Answers
Answer:
Cutting and sewing clothing is hard on the body. But low wages, fast
production lines, unsafe conditions, lack of unions, and harassment hurt
workers even more (see Part 4: Social Dangers and Solutions).
Garment work can be designed and organized to protect workers’ health by
ensuring high standards in all factories for:
• good ventilation (see chapter 17) and the right personal protective
equipment (PPE, see chapter 18).
• fire exits, fire prevention measures that include sprinklers and fire
extinguishers, and emergency evacuation plans (see chapter 11).
• freedom to organize unions and health and safety committees
(see chapter 2).
• maintainance of equipment and worker and management trainings on
health and safety.
• respectful treatment including a living wage and social benefits required
by law (see chapter 19).
Achieving these basic human rights is still a struggle in most factories. The
challenge is to connect and organize with other workers and consumers to win
these changes from the factory owners, the international corporations that
contract them (the “brands”), and the government.
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