Based in Germany, Jack Wolfskin sold €351 million in outdoor apparel, footwear and equipment in 2012. The company or its outside auditing firm conducted a total of 71 audits and 22 follow-up visits in 2012. The audits covered all countries where the company manufactures, all three of the company’s product divisions as well as existing and new suppliers and their sub-manufacturers. All of the company’s suppliers have been audited by independent auditors at least once, and often two or three times, during the past three years.
The company’s 52-page report for 2012 shows that nearly half of
Jack Wolfskin’s suppliers received between 7 and 10 points for their
overall performance, 30 percent scored 5 to 6 points. The remaining 23
percent scored 4 or fewer points and were required to participate in
remedial action plans in 2013.
In an ironic but not surprising twist, audits in China found there
was serious need for improvement in the areas of management methods,
working hours/pay and the right to collective representation.
“As a result, Jack Wolfskin will attempt to encourage as many
suppliers as possible to take part in “Workplace Education Training”
offered by the Fair Wear Foundation in 2013,” the report reads. That
coursework includes instruction on grievance procedures and the rules
for establishing and governing trade unions as well as conflict
resolution.
In July, 2012, Jack Wolfskin offered Chemical Health and Safety
training sessions to its Chinese footwear suppliers to address
continuing health and safety issues uncovered in its audits.
In India, Jack Wolfskin ended a partnership with a supplier in
mid-2012 after three years of audits and collaboration failed to produce
satisfactory results. It added a new supplier and continues to work
with four other facilities.
Three of 18 textile processing facilities in Vietnam received a
compliance rating of 1 to 3 for poor compliance with the company’s
standards for working hours, pay, health and safety/safe working
conditions. In Thailand, where the company works with five contractors,
auditors found a lack of transparency in hour and wage records likely
attributable to the employment of undocumented immigrants.
In Indonesia, where wages have risen as much as 40 percent since
2012, it continued to see restrictions on workers’ collective bargaining
rights. It praised its partners in Cambodia, including one
participating in the Better Work Cambodia project, which was set up
under a trade agreement with the United States and is administered by
the International Labour Organization.
By press release through sportsonesource
By press release through sportsonesource
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