STATEMENT ON FORCED LABOR AND CHILD LABOR, HUMAN TRAFFICKING, AND MODERN SLAVERY FOR FISCAL YEAR 2024

 

This statement is furnished pursuant to the California Transparency in Supply Chains Act of 2010 (SB 657), the UK Modern Slavery Act (2015), and the Fighting Against Forced Labour and Child Labour in Supply Chains Act (Bill S-211).

1. Background

At Workwear Outfitters, we respect human rights in our operations and extended value chain, and conduct business ethically and sustainably.  Workwear Outfitters supports human rights as defined by the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, which recognizes that “all human beings are born free and equal in dignity and rights.”  We work to elevate human potential through our products, partnerships, and operations.  We expect the same from our suppliers, and we focus on working with long-term, strategic suppliers that demonstrate a commitment to engaging their workers and providing safe working conditions.  This includes working to combat risks of forced labor.

Pursuant to the California Transparency in Supply Chains Act of 2010 (SB 657) (“CTSCA”), the UK Modern Slavery Act of 2015 (“MSA”), and the Fighting Against Forced Labour and Child Labour in Supply Chains Act (Bill S-211) ("Bill S-211”), Workwear Outfitters publishes this statement to discuss our global business practices to address forced labor.  As used in this statement, forced labor includes modern slavery, prison labor, indentured labor, bonded labor, human trafficking, child labor or other similar conduct.

II. Policies on Forced Labor, Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking

In 2010, the California legislature passed the California Transparency in Supply Chains Act (SB-657) with the goal of informing consumers and businesses about companies’ efforts to address slavery and human trafficking in their supply chains.  In 2015, the UK implemented the UK Modern Slavery Act to also combat the issues of forced labor in supply chains. In 2024, Canada enacted the Fighting Against Forced Labour and Child Labour in Supply Chains Act (Bill S-211) to prevent and reduce the risk that forced labor or child labor is used at any step of the production goods.  In compliance with the CTSCA, MSA and Bill S-211, this document outlines Workwear Outfitters’ stance and policies relating to forced labor and our annual report under Bill S-211 is available here. Workwear Outfitters takes seriously and fully supports national and international efforts to end forced labor.

Workwear Outfitters has adopted the following broad definition of slavery: “a person who is forced to work, without pay, under threat of violence, who cannot walk away,” as defined by the international non-governmental organization, Free the Slaves (see http://www.freetheslaves.net/about-slavery/faqs-glossary/).  Additionally, Workwear Outfitters has adopted the following broad definition of human trafficking: “any recruitment, harboring, transportation, provision, or obtaining of a person for labor services, through the use of force, fraud, or coercion for the purpose of subjection to involuntary servitude, peonage, debt bondage, or slavery” as defined in the Victims of Trafficking and Violence Protections Act of 2000.

Workwear Outfitters respects the ILO Core Conventions, the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and the ten principles of the United Nations Global Compact.  These standards are the foundation for Workwear Outfitters’ labor-related policies.

Workwear Outfitters operates under a Business Code of Conduct, which sets forth the key principles under which Workwear Outfitters, and any individual or entity working for or on behalf of Workwear Outfitters, is required to operate. The Business Code of Conduct expressly states that business conduct with employees, customers, consumers, suppliers, and all others shall be on an honest, fair, and equitable basis.  It has been, and will continue to be, our company’s policy to obey the laws of each country and to honor our obligations to society by being an economic, intellectual, and social asset to each community and nation in which Workwear Outfitters operates.

Additionally, Workwear Outfitters operates under a Terms of Engagement, which sets forth the high standards with which Workwear Outfitters expects its contractors, suppliers, facilities, and other business partners to operate.  As part of these standards, Workwear Outfitters will only do business with contractors, suppliers, and other business partners who operate within a set of ethical standards compatible with Workwear Outfitters’ Business Code of Conduct and global compliance principles.  Additionally, Workwear Outfitters requires each contractor, supplier, and/or business partner, working for or on behalf of Workwear Outfitters, to, at all times, comply with all applicable local, state, federal, national, and international laws, rules, and regulations, including those related to wages, hours, employment, labor, health and safety, the environment, and immigration.  Workwear Outfitters requires each of its authorized facilities to sign, as part of the Terms of Engagement, a statement agreeing to comply at all times with our global compliance principles – which include a section prohibiting the use of forced labor, including human trafficking.

Below, you will find additional specific steps which Workwear Outfitters takes to address human trafficking, slavery, and forced labor in our business and supply chain practices.  For these reasons, Workwear Outfitters assesses our risk of slavery, forced labor, and human trafficking as low.

A. Verification

With the use of Workwear Outfitters’ Master Manufacturing Agreement, found within each individual Product Order, Workwear Outfitters requires all company owned facilities and Tier 1 suppliers to verify that their goods were not produced using forced labor.  Further, and as mentioned above, Workwear Outfitters’, through the use of its Terms of Engagement, requires all company owned facilities and Tier 1 suppliers to verify, in a signed writing, that their facilities provide workers with a safe and healthy work environment and that the supplier is in compliance with all applicable occupational health, safety, and environmental protection laws.  The Terms of Engagement is signed by each Tier 1 supplier when they are first set-up in Workwear Outfitters’ systems.  Moreover, Workwear Outfitters partners with a 3rd party vendor in the further verification of our company owned facilities and Tier 1 suppliers regarding how products were produced in accordance with our Global Compliance Principles.

B. Audits

Workwear Outfitters partners with a 3rd party vendor to conduct audits of company owned facilities and Tier 1 suppliers to evaluate supplier compliance with Workwear Outfitters’ standards for forced labor in supply chains.  As mentioned above, Workwear Outfitters operates under a Business Code of Conduct, which sets forth the key principles under which our company, and any individual or entity working for or on behalf of our company, is required to operate.  Our Business Code of Conduct states that factories must not use forced labor of any kind.  For clarification, human trafficking and slavery fall under the categorization of “forced labor.”

Each of Workwear Outfitters’ contractors and suppliers agrees that, by accepting orders from Workwear Outfitters, it will abide by and implement the Workwear Outfitters Terms of Engagement, which expressly requires all authorized facilities or factories to maintain, on site, all documentation necessary to demonstrate compliance with Workwear Outfitters’ Global Compliance Principles.  All factories or facilities, with whom we do business, must allow Workwear Outfitters and/or its representatives unrestricted access to conduct announced and unannounced on-site inspections of its facilities and permit unrestricted access to all relevant records at all times during regular business hours.

In accordance with Occupational Health and Safety Administration (“OSHA”) regulations and internally defined safety and health requirements, which may exceed OSHA requirements in some circumstances, Workwear Outfitters has implemented a program entitled the Ideal Plant Model (“IPM”) for our company owned factories, which defines the expectations for safety performance and other conservation standards. 

C. Certification

Workwear Outfitters partners with Worldwide Responsible Apparel Productions (“WRAP”) for a large portion of our 3rd party audits of company owned facilities and Tier 1 suppliers. This organization is committed to the principles of fair treatment of workers and humane working conditions. These standards prohibit use of child labor, forced labor, harassment, or discrimination. Factories that undergo the WRAP audit must adhere to all laws of the jurisdiction where the plant is located. Workwear Outfitters enforces these standards not only in its own factories, but in every factory which makes product on its behalf.

WRAP certification is achieved through a three-step process:

  1. Self-Assessment;
  2. Independent monitoring by an outside inspector approved by WRAP; and
  3. Final certification and agreement to allow unannounced factory inspections.

More information about WRAP can be found at the official WRAP web site: https://wrapcompliance.org/en/

Further, Workwear Outfitters mandates that all factories producing our products operate in full compliance with the laws of their respective countries, including those relating to forced labor.  Any facility operating on behalf of Workwear Outfitters certifies its compliance with the Workwear Outfitters Terms of Engagement, which, as mentioned above, specifically prohibits forced labor and human trafficking in business and supply chain operations.  With each Product Order, facilities and Tier 1 suppliers certify, through our Master Manufacturing Agreement, that products are made in accordance with all applicable laws and regulations, as well as all internal Workwear Outfitters policies.

D. Internal Accountability

Workwear Outfitters maintains internal accountability standards and procedures for employees, contractors, and facilities who fail to meet Workwear standards regarding forced labor.  Failure of a Workwear employee or contractor to abide by our Business Code of Conduct, Global Compliance Principles, or Terms of Engagement may result in corrective action, including termination of employment or contractor relationship.  Failure of factories to abide by our Business Code of Conduct, Global Compliance Principles, or Terms of Engagement may result in corrective action, including termination of business.

E. Training

Workwear Outfitters has a training program for its employees that have direct responsibility for supply chain management, training on human trafficking.  This training focuses particularly on mitigating risks within the supply chain for our products.

III. Looking Ahead

Workwear Outfitters will continue to assess its business and supply chains to identify potential risks and target those areas with policies, procedures, and trainings to ensure it maintains appropriate safeguards against the mistreatment of persons.

This statement covers January 1, 2024 to December 31, 2024 and was approved and signed by the undersigned, the CEO of Workwear Outfitters, on January 1, 2024.

Signature of Chris Holcombe, CEO 
 

Chris Holcombe
CEO, May 17, 2024

I have the authority to bind Workwear Outfitters, LLC, Imagewear Canada Co Ltd. and Kodiak Group Holdings Co.


 
 
 

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