Houston Chronicle Sunday

Child labor report eyes Chicago railcars

- By Mary Wisniewski

CHICAGO — The Chicago Transit Authority is asking a Chinese manufactur­er for more details about its supply chain after a news report that children are being used to mine materials in Africa that might be used in “L” car production.

The report said that children as young as 4 from poor families in Madagascar are mining for mica, which is a type of mineral used in cosmetics, electronic­s and other products. The NBC report said that the materials end up in goods sold by companies such as Panasonic and CRRC, a Chinese government-owned car rail company whose U.S. subsidiary, CRRC Sifang America, has a $1.3 billion contract to produce “L” cars for the CTA.

“Due to our concerns about some recent media reports, CTA has requested that CRRC provide more detailed informatio­n about its supply chain for the new 7000-series rail cars, specifical­ly about materials providers and their sources,” CTA spokesman Brian Steele said in a statement on Friday.

In a statement, Dave Smolensky, a spokesman in Chicago for CRRC Sifang, said that the company “expressly prohibits” the use of child labor in the making of any of the components used in the assembly of its rail cars.

“The majority of components used in the production of our railcars are sourced from U.S. suppliers,” Smolensky said in the emailed statement. “We expect all our suppliers to treat their workers with dignity, respect and responsibl­e employment practices.”

The November 18 NBC story said that mica mined by “an undergroun­d army” of children in the island African nation “make their way through an opaque supply chain from Africa to Asia before landing in millions of products — electronic­s, appliances, even trains — that wind up in America.”

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