Edmonton Journal

Loblaw will pay Bangladesh families

- DIANA MEHTA

TORONTO — The only Canadian retailer to publicly acknowledg­e it used a manufactur­er in a poorly made Bangladesh­i building that collapsed and killed hundreds last week said Monday it will pay compensati­on to the families of victims.

Loblaw Inc. — which had some products for its Joe Fresh clothing line made in one of the garment factories in the building — said it aimed to ensure victims and their families “receive benefits now and in the future.”

“We are working to ensure that we will deliver support in the best and most meaningful way possible,” company spokeswoma­n Julija Hunter said.

“Our priorities are helping the victims and their families, and driving change to help prevent similar incidents in the future.”

At least 382 people died after the illegally constructe­d eightstore­y Rana Plaza collapsed in Savar, Bangladesh, on Wednesday. About 2,500 people survived.

Loblaw had already said it was working with other retailers to support local efforts and provide aid in Bangladesh. The company was also sending senior officials to Bangladesh to get answers on what caused the collapse.

Loblaw’s announceme­nt came hours after British retailer Primark, which has ties to the Weston family which controls Loblaw, also said it was providing emergency aid and compensati­on to victims. Wittington Investment­s Ltd, a company owned by the Garfield Weston Foundation and members of the Weston family, owns a controllin­g stake in Associated British Foods, the company which owns Primark.

Loblaw and other companies met with the Retail Council of Canada’s responsibl­e trade committee on Monday to discuss how to prevent similar tragedies in the future. Retail Council president and CEO Diane Brisebois has said one of the challenges has been that Canadian agencies don’t have the power to mandate that certain codes or regulation­s are followed in another country.

Loblaw has said its vendor standards were designed to ensure that products are manufactur­ed in a socially responsibl­e way, but that current measures do not address the issue of building constructi­on or integrity.

Some observers hoped the gathering would help companies figure out how to push manufactur­ers to provide safe workplaces and allow for the empowermen­t of employees. Some even suggested the federal government could make retailers list third-party certificat­ions on product labels so shoppers know their purchases were made under conditions that met a certain standard.

“What’s needed is enhanced oversight by Canadian retailers,” said Kernaghan Webb, a law professor who heads Toronto’s Ryerson Institute for the Study of Corporate Social Responsibi­lity. “They could use this as an opportunit­y to say ‘Lets take a fresh look at our entire set of commitment­s on everything’ — minimum wage, issues of whether or not workers can unionize, health and safety — and they could revise those.”

Webb suggests the Retail Council reach out to Ottawa to discuss a law that would require companies to list on their labels and websites whether they are certified by third parties which ensure certain workplace standards are met.

Adriana Villasenor, of Torontobas­ed retail adviser J.C. Williams Group, agreed, saying consumers didn’t have sufficient tools to determine whether their products were ethically sourced. A low price, she added, does not necessaril­y indicate the conditions in which an item was made as it could just signal oversupply, good supply chain management, or a special promotion by a retailer.

“Right now the only informatio­n is a label where it was made and probably the price, and that is not enough for us to see what were the conditions.”

The Maquila Solidarity Network, a Canadian labour rights organizati­on which works to support workers in global supply chains, said the factory collapse should jolt retailers into taking action.

“This isn’t the time for yet another study group or task force. It’s the time for some clear unequivoca­l steps on the part of Canadian retailers,” said director of advocacy Kevin Thomas. “It’s not a bad thing that companies are sourcing goods from Bangladesh, it’s only bad if they aren’t taking steps to make sure that those are produced under fair and safe working conditions.”

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