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International Solidarity Commssion (ISC) of the IWW - All Star 2007, Community Collective Bargaining with the Home Team

July 11, 2007 marks one year since the Pirates Baseball Club hosted  the All Star Game and promised the people of Pittsburgh that they  would investigate working conditions in the factories sewing Pirates’  apparel. As the Pittsburgh General Membership Branch of the IWW  reminds the Pirates at their July 8 game at PNC Park against the  Chicago Cubs, Pittsburgh has high standards for workers’ rights. The  City’s Sports and Exhibition Authority has recommended the  investigatory protocols of the Workers Rights Consortium (WRC),  disclosure of wages and factory locations, truly independent  investigations, and a commitment to the factories where investigations  take place.

The International Solidarity Commission of the Industrial Workers of  the World stands alongside the Pittsburgh Anti Sweatshop Community  Alliance and SweatFree Communities in requesting that all unions and  solidarity organizations support workers sewing their Major League  Baseball (MLB) teams’ apparel by holding their Home Teams – rather than MLB -- accountable for workers’ rights. MLB is amongst the  largest licensers of copyrighted logos in the world. If MLB had any  sincere concern workers rights, it would already be following WRC  protocols, and previous investigations would have been more substantial than the public-relations-white-washes workers have  experienced thus far. The Home Teams represent the people in their  respective cities, and it is the Home Teams that will be held  accountable for the working conditions in factories sewing team apparel.

It is up to each community to hold its Home Team accountable for  sweatshop conditions in factories sewing team apparel. The ISC extends  greetings of solidarity to all workers sewing baseball merchandise.  The ISC will receive testimony from workers sewing apparel with any of  the team logos and distribute that testimony to unions and solidarity organizations for presentation to their respective baseball teams. To  that end, the ISC wants to familiarize workers with the MLB logo that  appears on all licensed merchandise.

The National Garment Workers Federation of Bangladesh and the  Bangladesh Center for Worker Solidarity have already provided specific  testimony about the factories in which their members work sewing  Pirates/Major League Baseball apparel. One year after the Pittsburgh  Pirates promised to investigate working conditions, the team has  dropped the ball, which makes the occasion of the 2007 All Star Game a  sad day for the people of Pittsburgh.

At the pinnacle of the baseball season, when all eyes are focused on  San Francisco, the ISC urges baseball fans, unions and solidarity  organizations to leverage each team’s efforts to represent them and  hit a home run for workers rights. By community collective bargaining  with the Home Teams, we can set a new standard for accountability in  the global apparel industry.

The ISC invites unions and solidarity organizations to join us in  Chicago on Labor Day weekend for a SweatFree Baseball strategy  session. We invite union activists to draw on the ISC as a resource  when preparing apparel industry solidarity trips to Latin America and  the Caribbean.

Contact: [email protected]

IWW SweatFree Baseball link (for information on New Era and Majestic) www.SweatFree.org/Baseball