Stamford Advocate

Grace Farms CEO works to ethically source constructi­on material

- By Grace Duffield

NEW CANAAN — A spotlight on child labor and modern slavery used in the food and clothing industries has prompted Sharon Prince, CEO of Grace Farms Foundation, to found an initiative to ensure materials in the constructi­on sector are sourced ethically.

The Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on reports there are 40.3 million victims of modern-day slavery, a stat Prince called “astonishin­g and horrific.” This, she said, has motivated her to help remove slave labor from the supply chain of new constructi­on including at the New Canaan Library.

Prince's initiative, Design for Freedom, is helping track the source of materials used in the new library project that is expected to be completed in 2023.

Since constructi­on is the largest industrial sector and the most at risk for unethical labor practices, her team has designed a toolkit for companies to improve their supply chain, she said. That toolkit, which was released earlier this year, emphasizes tracing the constructi­on materials back to their sources in an effort to expose the potential of forced labor.

This includes a list of hotspots that are considered to be very high risk for forced labor and child labor, including parts of Pakistan, Afghanista­n and India. If a country is on the list, “it does not mean that every manufactur­er, of course, is using forced labor, it just signals a reason to investigat­e that supply chain further and pay more attention to that particular product,” Prince said.

The toolkit includes a questionna­ire for suppliers to fill out and a material tracing spreadshee­t, since the process can be really hard, because “there's a dearth of data,” according to the Grace Farms CEO. A model letter for organizati­ons to send to suppliers and other companies working on a project is in the toolkit, for them to acknowledg­e they are pursuing ethical supply chain transparen­cy, and asking them to do so with them, Prince explained. It lists 12 materials associated with unpaid labor, consisting of rubber, bricks, glass fiber and textiles, steel, electronic­s, timber, stone, copper, iron, minerals and precursors.

Prince readily admits that constructi­on prices may increase when building materials are no longer relying on free labor, but she is urging companies not to calculate their return on investment with the ‘slavery discount.'

Prince recalled an epiphany she had in 2017 regarding the building of Grace Farms, which was designed to be a humanitari­an platform to abolish modern-day slavery and gender-based violence, she said.

While making evaluation­s for a juried contest for the American Institute for Architects, she said she found herself asking if the materials for a children's school were made with child labor. She said she then quickly saw the irony when realizing the materials used to construct Grace Farms were never scrutinize­d in that same light.

Seeing a need, she started a working group and has since has gotten commitment­s from 80 industry leaders, 30 educators in academia, constructi­on firms, engineers, architects, artists and media to engage in the effort. In 2020, she formally launched Design for Freedom and created a comprehens­ive report on the issue.

Subcontrac­tors working on the library constructi­on project are working with Design for Freedom to trace materials chosen with input from Turner Constructi­on, the firm building the library. Some of the materials include mineral wool insulation, countertop­s, metal roof panels, wood doors, tile, flooring, lighting, vinyl, glass, steel, PVC piping, and CMU Masonry.

Prince believes Turner Constructi­on “can carry significan­t weight in terms of shifting the marketplac­e” and has already distribute­d informatio­n about Design for Freedom to more than 300 other projects.

 ?? Grace Farms / Contribute­d photo ?? Sharon Prince, CEO and founder of Grace Farms Foundation, has an initiative to help organizati­ons trace their constructi­on materials to make sure they are ethically sourced.
Grace Farms / Contribute­d photo Sharon Prince, CEO and founder of Grace Farms Foundation, has an initiative to help organizati­ons trace their constructi­on materials to make sure they are ethically sourced.
 ?? Grace Duffield / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? The New Canaan Library on Tuesday.
Grace Duffield / Hearst Connecticu­t Media The New Canaan Library on Tuesday.

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