Bill Text: NY S04334 | 2017-2018 | General Assembly | Introduced


Bill Title: Directs the state university trustees to promulgate and enforce a sweat-free code of conduct for the licensing and purchase of apparel at colleges and universities of the state university; requires provision in contracts with apparel manufacturers providing for the termination thereof if the manufacturer uses a sweatshop; requires that at least one member of the special task force on the apparel industry be a representative of the state university of New York.

Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2018-01-03 - REFERRED TO HIGHER EDUCATION [S04334 Detail]

Download: New_York-2017-S04334-Introduced.html


                STATE OF NEW YORK
        ________________________________________________________________________
                                          4334
                               2017-2018 Regular Sessions
                    IN SENATE
                                    February 10, 2017
                                       ___________
        Introduced  by  Sen.  BAILEY -- read twice and ordered printed, and when
          printed to be committed to the Committee on Higher Education
        AN ACT to amend the education law, in relation to establishing a  sweat-
          free  code of conduct for apparel licensed by the colleges and univer-
          sities of the state  university;  and  to  amend  the  labor  law,  in
          relation to the special task force for the apparel industry
          The  People of the State of New York, represented in Senate and Assem-
        bly, do enact as follows:
     1    Section 1. Short title. This act shall be known and may  be  cited  as
     2  the "ethical business conduct in higher education act".
     3    §  2.  Legislative intent. The legislature hereby finds that the state
     4  university of New York has not responded to decades  old  requests  that
     5  its  campuses  disaffiliate their business relationships with sweatshops
     6  in the production and licensing of campus apparel. It is now clear  that
     7  voluntary action by each campus is no longer an option and that the time
     8  has come to require a system-wide set of rules and regulations be put in
     9  place by the chancellor and board of trustees of the state university of
    10  New York.
    11    For years, lawmakers, religious and labor groups have criticized state
    12  university  campus'  affiliations  with  apparel  manufacturers  who are
    13  indifferent to the fact that  workers  making  university  apparel  face
    14  abusive  treatment,  excessive  working  hours, dangerous conditions and
    15  wages that are inadequate to meet basic needs.
    16    There continues to be  a  strong  demand  that  all  state  university
    17  campuses  diligently  adopt  sweat-free  standards  in  the  purchase of
    18  athletic apparel and in the licensing of campus  merchandise.  Advocates
    19  on  behalf  of working people deplore the repression and exploitation of
    20  apparel workers in Latin America and elsewhere in the world. The univer-
    21  sities and colleges of the state   university of New York  should  be  a
    22  model  for  ethical  business  conduct,  both for their students and the
    23  broader public. It is past time for the state university system adminis-
         EXPLANATION--Matter in italics (underscored) is new; matter in brackets
                              [ ] is old law to be omitted.
                                                                   LBD08702-01-7

        S. 4334                             2
     1  tration and all its campuses to affiliate with the sweat-free and worker
     2  rights work of the Worker Rights Consortium and the Designated  Supplier
     3  Program  and  end their business relationships that are de facto support
     4  for sweatshop conditions.
     5    Presently  60  of the 64 state university campuses have failed to take
     6  the example or lead of the universities at  Albany  and  Buffalo,  which
     7  have  adopted  the  Designated Supplier Program, and the colleges at New
     8  Paltz and Cortland, all four of which have affiliated  with  the  Worker
     9  Rights Consortium to ensure sweat-free manufacturing.
    10    It  is obvious that where there has been strong leadership and commit-
    11  ment to protecting worker rights this issue has been resolved.  However,
    12  we cannot wait indefinitely for the  other  60  campuses  to  engage  in
    13  ethical  business  behavior  that  demonstrates our national respect for
    14  human rights, worker rights and anti-child labor rights.
    15    It is well understood by organized labor, religious organizations  and
    16  social  justice  groups  that  the apparel industry continues to operate
    17  under a paradigm of cost-cutting without respect to  human  consequence,
    18  the tragic results of which are the sweatshop conditions that plague the
    19  supply  chains  of  university  licensed  apparel.  All state university
    20  campuses that have not already done so must adopt  sweat-free  codes  of
    21  conduct to which apparel manufacturers producing university apparel must
    22  adhere.
    23    It  is the finding of the legislature that in order to comprehensively
    24  remedy this situation it must be  required  that  the  state  university
    25  administration  put  in  place strict policies for all its campuses with
    26  regard to how their apparel is manufactured.  It  is  unacceptable  that
    27  after  all  the years of calls to end such practices, campus administra-
    28  tors continue to ignore the violations of human rights that  take  place
    29  in order for their campus apparel to be manufactured and sold.
    30    §  3. The education law is amended by adding a new section 362 to read
    31  as follows:
    32    § 362. Sweat-free code of conduct.  1.   The chancellor of  the  state
    33  university  shall, on or before January thirty-first, two thousand eigh-
    34  teen, develop and draft a sweat-free code of conduct  for  the  purchase
    35  and  licensing  of apparel by state-operated institutions. Such code, to
    36  the extent practicable, shall meet or exceed the  labor  standards,  and
    37  business and factory disclosure requirements enumerated in Worker Rights
    38  Consortium's  Model  Code of Conduct. The code shall require each state-
    39  operated institution to affiliate with the Worker Rights Consortium  and
    40  participate in the Designated Supplier Program for the purpose of effec-
    41  tively  enforcing  the provisions of such code.  Furthermore, the sweat-
    42  free code of conduct shall provide that every contract between a  state-
    43  operated  institution  and  any  apparel  manufacturer  shall  include a
    44  provision providing  for  the  termination  and  nullification  of  such
    45  contract  upon  any  finding  of  a  violation of the sweat-free code of
    46  conduct in facilities that such manufacturer operates or from whom  such
    47  manufacturer  purchases  products.    Such code of conduct shall provide
    48  that notice of any such violation may be provided by the  Worker  Rights
    49  Consortium.  The  sweat-free code of conduct shall provide for a remedi-
    50  ation process whereby any such manufacturer may be granted the  opportu-
    51  nity to take corrective action prior to contract termination. Such reme-
    52  diation  process,  to  the extent practicable, shall reflect the process
    53  described in the Model Code of Conduct of the Worker Rights Consortium.
    54    2. Such chancellor shall, on or before January thirty-first, two thou-
    55  sand eighteen, submit to the  state  university  trustees  the  code  of
    56  conduct  developed  and  drafted  pursuant  to  subdivision  one of this

        S. 4334                             3
     1  section. Such code of conduct shall be adopted by the  state  university
     2  trustees  on  or before March thirtieth, two thousand eighteen, as rules
     3  and regulations applicable to all  state-operated  institutions.    Such
     4  rules and regulations shall include provisions for the enforcement ther-
     5  eof to ensure full compliance therewith by state operated institutions.
     6    3. On or before September first, two thousand eighteen, the chancellor
     7  of  the state university shall submit a preliminary report to the gover-
     8  nor and the legislature which shall include a list of the state-operated
     9  institutions which have come into compliance with the sweat-free code of
    10  conduct, and when any purchasing and licensing agreements  with  apparel
    11  manufacturers  which  have  failed to comply with the provisions of such
    12  code of conduct, will expire.  Such preliminary report shall  include  a
    13  list  of  each  state-operated  institution that has affiliated with the
    14  Worker Rights Consortium and participates  in  the  Designated  Supplier
    15  Program.
    16    4.  The chancellor of the state university shall, on or before January
    17  thirty-first, two thousand nineteen, submit a final report to the gover-
    18  nor and the legislature which shall include a list of the state-operated
    19  institutions which have come into compliance with the sweat-free code of
    20  conduct, a list of each state-operated institution that  has  affiliated
    21  with  the  Worker  Rights  Consortium and participates in the Designated
    22  Supplier Program, and when any purchasing and licensing agreements  with
    23  apparel manufacturers which have failed to comply with the provisions of
    24  such code of conduct, will expire.
    25    5.  The  chief  executive  officer  of each state-operated institution
    26  which has failed to comply with the code of conduct  or  affiliate  with
    27  the  Worker Rights Consortium and participate in the Designated Supplier
    28  Program on or before March first, two thousand nineteen,  shall  submit,
    29  by first class mail, to the governor, each member of the legislature and
    30  each  member  of the state university trustees a detailed explanation of
    31  the delay in compliance and/or affiliation, and  when  full  compliance,
    32  affiliation and/or participation will be completed.
    33    6.  On  or  before  September  first, two thousand nineteen, the state
    34  university trustees shall report to the governor and the legislature  on
    35  the  actions  that  have  been  taken  to  enforce  compliance  with the
    36  provisions of the code of conduct.
    37    7. No provision of this section, or any rule, regulation  or  code  of
    38  conduct adopted pursuant thereto, shall be deemed to establish any power
    39  or duty in violation of any federal law, rule or regulation.
    40    § 4. The opening paragraph of section 342 of the labor law, as amended
    41  by chapter 41 of the laws of 2004, is amended to read as follows:
    42    The  commissioner  is authorized to establish a special task force for
    43  the purpose of concentrating enforcement  of  the  labor  law  affecting
    44  production  employees  in  the  apparel  industry  in New York state and
    45  otherwise exercising the duties and powers set forth in  sections  three
    46  hundred  forty-three  and three hundred forty-four of this article.  Not
    47  less than one member of such task force shall be a representative of the
    48  state university of New York. Such special task force shall be empowered
    49  to investigate and conduct inspections at  locations  where  an  apparel
    50  industry contractor is operating.
    51    § 5. This act shall take effect immediately.
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