|
99-10-05, Nike's answer on international letter
To all the signatories of the Clean Clothes Campaign's
open letter:
Thank you for your letter. As promised at Nike's Annual General
Meeting in Hilversum, Holland, I wanted to personally respond to
the open letter you addressed to me. From the content and length
of the letter, and from the list of signatories, it is obvious how
seriously you regard the issues we are trying to tackle. I also
see that we at Nike have a long way to go before we reach a point
where you feel confident about our intent, our commitment and our
actions when it comes to addressing the issues that face all global
manufacturers. It has taken two weeks to respond to your letter
because my team and I take these issues very seriously and we have
been searching for a way to propose constructive discussions.
I could go into a long list of all of the things we have done over
the past 17 months to continuously improve living and working conditions
for the 500,000 workers in our subcontracting factories. Instead,
our director for labor practices Dusty Kidd will provide an update
and address the specifics in the letter attached.
The current state of communications between us - in which your
organizations and supporters continue attacking Nike based on an
unchanging list of past incidents and Nike offering answers which
you clearly find unsatisfactory - is simply not advancing our understanding
of global labor practices or the ways in which we are each working
to improve them. We are searching for ways to better communicate
with a large NGO community of varying interests and perspectives.
Let's start where we have common ground. I think we can all agree
that we have a common goal of improving global manufacturing. I
think we can also agree that this is really about creating healthy,
empowering and rewarding employment for workers who support the
global economy in manufacturing jobs around the world.
I know some of you may oppose the very concept of the globalization
of the economy. We at Nike are a participant in it and believe that
if managed responsibly, globalization can provide opportunities
for everyone.
You might agree with us that there are companies that are working
hard toward this goal and those that aren't. I believe Nike is one
of the companies working toward this goal. However, I won't ask
you to believe my words but rather to look at our actions.
I committed us to six new initiatives back in May '98 so you could
judge Nike by our actions. These new initiatives included everything
from improving the air quality in our factories to raising our age
limits of workers. I'm proud of our team for the work we've done
over that last 17 months at Nike, and I challenge any company to
demonstrate a stronger record of real on-the-ground progress during
this same time period.
But this commitment is just a start. We are now an active participant
in the Global Alliance for Workers and Communities (www.theglobalalliance.org),
strongly support the Fair Labor Association as it begins its work
and continue to execute independent monitoring pilot projects with
the goal of developing a comprehensive system.
We have spent time engaged in dialogue with workers and NGOs trying
to build bridges so we can be more effective in improving the lives
and working conditions of Nike contract workers. So, rhetoric, history
and emotions aside, we are tackling these issues head on and focussing
on the work on the ground.
We know we have a long way to go but we are determined to improve
dialogue under appropriate circumstances with the concerned community
because it is critical to improving our work. The problem is that
the current process, in which we attempt to engage some of you in
bilateral conversations, is simply unsustainable - it is episodic,
repetitive and does not allow progress or mutual understanding.
In fairness to you and to the people in this company that are charged
with focussing on continuing to improve our supply chain working
conditions, I believe we need a more structured dialogue and a better
process for that dialogue.
I ask you to propose a process to us for dialogue in which we
ALL have a stake and common goal - improving how we deal with the
issues around global manufacturing. We look forward to hearing from
you and working with you on how we might accomplish this. I have
directed Maria Eitel, our vice president of corporate responsibility,
to work with a core team of individuals you designate as representative
of your collective interests. We are open to everyone's concerns
but it is simply impossible for us to sustain a dialogue with so
many interested organizations and individuals. The only precondition
we want to put on that dialogue is that it includes workers and
owner/manufacturers so those who are most affected have a voice
and important role in the process.
It is our commitment, and my commitment as the leader of this company,
to ensure we are making progress in this area. I hope - and I ask
of you - that from this point on we can establish a process for
talking together about this effort and its results.
Sincerely,
Philip H. Knight
October 11, 1999
To all the signatories of the Clean Clothes Campaign's open letter:
Phil Knight asked me to respond on his behalf to the letter posted
by Clean Clothes Campaign, Netherlands, and co-signed by other organizations
and individuals.
Nike will endeavor to send this response directly to all signatories,
but in the event we do not have the contact information, perhaps
you will be kind enough to forward this letter, on our behalf, to
all.
Your letter was helpful to Nike. In six pages you summarized what
seem to be the most important issues you individually and collectively
have with Nike with respect to labor practices. If that is not the
case, please send along an amendment so we can fully review and
respond to all the current issues you wish Nike to address.
We can go back historically as far as you would like, as we know
many issues from the past remain important. But the focus of Nike's
Labor Practices department necessarily is on the present and the
future, as we believe that is the most productive manner in which
to deal with these issues.
One exchange of letters cannot effectively deal with ongoing issues
and questions. Over the past three years Nike has engaged and exchanged
information with a number of organizations, including a number who
have signed your letter. We will continue to try to make those conversations
more effective, and to be more responsive and informative when issues
are raised with respect to specific factory or worker issues
Now to the substance of your letter to Phil:
Your letter begins with a basic point of view that 17 months after
his speech at the National Press Club, Phil Knight and Nike have
not followed through sufficiently on the pledges he made. It seems
only fair to review what he said on May 12, 1998 and what we have
done since that date.
That day, Nike raised our minimum age standards to 18 for footwear
and 16 for apparel and equipment manufacturing, to put as wide a
gap as practical between our global workforce and any possibility
of employment of children in that global supply chain. In the intervening
17 months, in the relatively few instances where our oversight has
found workers under those age limits, we have required management
to remove those workers from the factory, to place them in school,
to provide educational stipends, and to continue paying their full
basic wage.
We pledged to require and enforce the U.S. Occupational Health
and Safety Administration's permissible exposure limits for volatile
organic compounds (VOCs) in all of our footwear factories. You note
in your letter that Nike's program of replacing VOCs with other
forms of solutions using water or detergent make it less likely
that workers will suffer health impacts from the process of manufacturing
footwear. We agree and believe our program, combined with the testing
and remedial work done on other aspects of the factory, such as
ventilation, has had a positive impact on worker health and safety.
There is more work to do, and we are involving a number of organizations
in that process, including individuals and organizations from the
NGO community.
We promised that we would begin a systematic program of after-hours
worker education opportunities in footwear factories. In the past
17 months, we have seen 22 such programs come on line. Three thousand
workers are now receiving free education at factories in four countries.
Some have criticized that program as diverting funds that might
better be spent on higher wages. Nike believes the money invested
in education has an important impact on the workers' future outside
the factory and believes these skills will contribute to a better
life for them.
We expanded a pilot project to support local communities through
micro-enterprise and related developments. That program now reaches
families in three countries - Vietnam, Thailand and Indonesia -
including the families of some workers, and continues to expand.
Some people also criticize this program saying that companies ought
not to be in philanthropy, but ought to instead apply those investments
to the wage base. The dollars invested in micro-enterprise create
livelihoods for whole families, and in many cases we have observed,
other jobs as well. We will continue to be active in this work.
Nike committed to opening up our process to include public dialogue
on issues of corporate responsibility. Toward that end, in November
1998 we reviewed the results of our indoor air quality testing with
our competitors, media and NGOs at an open forum in Bangkok. We
are working on second and third forums, which will involve discussions
of women and their rights in the workplace. If any of you have interest,
please let Nike know and we will ensure you are involved in some
manner in that discussion.
Nike also committed to involve NGOs in our independent monitoring
process. Our labor practices staff has discussed this with a number
of individuals in the NGO community. We have begun working through
the process of building trust between Nike and some in the NGO community
who have expressed an interest in this work. In the meantime, we
are committed to active participation in the Fair Labor Association,
which will involve NGO participation and oversight. We are also
engaged in discussions with others in the NGO community on enhancing
local NGO expertise in areas of monitoring that require considerable
training - social auditing, bench auditing and health and safety
oversight. We believe all three are important aspects of monitoring
activity. We are committed to learning from pilot efforts at monitoring
in order to build a comprehensive system.
Additionally, we have begun the process of NGO participation in
the assessment of worker attitudes and issues through the Global
Alliance for Workers and Communities. The evolving Global Alliance
program will begin involving local organizations in Nike's overall
approach to factory labor issues management. This approach has two
parts: (1) worker-driven assessment of workplace/work-life issues;
(2) development of programs to address the issues and needs raised
by workers and assessors.
As with other aspects of Nike's overall oversight, the key goal
is to enhance the individual's work and life experiences. A critical
component of that concept is involving the worker herself, or himself,
in the dialogue. Each factory that enters the Global Alliance will
establish a project team that includes workers, managers, trade
union representatives and service professionals such as clinic and
kitchen staff. This project team, working with the local assessor,
will determine the schedule and direction of assessment steps, and
help keep employees informed as the work progresses.
Nike firmly believes that the process of monitoring, worker-driven
assessment and development is the strongest possible platform for
understanding and acting upon work/life issues.
Now that we have given you some background information on our efforts
to date, Nike would like to address the specific points raised in
your letter.
Worker dismissals. First, Nike would like to address your concerns
regarding the three workers who are said to have lost their jobs
in Vietnam based on participation in television interviews about
Nike.
This issue was first brought to Nike's attention in the spring
of 1998 via an e-mail from Mr. Tim Connor of Community Aid Abroad.
Mr. Connor raised the question as to whether a worker at Samyang
shoe factory in Vietnam, Ms. Lap Nguyen, had been treated unfairly,
demeaned, demoted and dismissed or forced to resign because of her
comments to an American television program about working conditions
at the factory.
The source of the allegation, according to Mr. Connor, was Mr.
Thuyen Nguyen of Vietnam Labor Watch. Nike's labor practices manager
in Vietnam, who like Mr. Thuyen is also Vietnamese-American, investigated.
He spoke to Ms. Nguyen, the trade union manager, factory management
and workers in the sections where Ms. Nguyen had worked. His conclusion
was that there were genuine work performance issues and that the
factory's decision not to renew Ms. Nguyen's contract was legitimate.
A Vietnamese Court heard Ms. Nguyen's case when she appealed for
review. The court, reviewing all the documentation, concluded that
the factory had acted properly.
In the fall of 1998, Mr. Connor visited me in Oregon, and asked
about that case, and the specifics of the investigation. I declined
to speak specifically about the case, or Ms. Nguyen, because we
are always reluctant to discuss any individual's work-related issues
with any person or organization that does not have standing to represent
that worker.
In May 1999, in a conversation with Nike Vice President Maria Eitel,
Ms. Medea Benjamin of Global Exchange expressed her concern that
Nike was not responding to issues of wrongful dismissals of workers
raised by Mr. Nguyen. In addition to Ms. Nguyen, whose circumstances
and issues we reviewed with Ms. Benjamin (and through e-mails with
Mr. Nguyen), she also raised what Mr. Nguyen said were the wrongful
dismissals of two other workers who had spoken to the American television
reporters. One was Ms. Khanh Chi, the other only identified as "Ms.
Hong."
Nike was first informed of the allegations of wrongful termination
with respect to Ms. Chi and Ms. Hong during Ms. Eitel's May 1999
discussion with Ms. Benjamin. Both were said by Mr. Nguyen (through
Ms. Benjamin) to have been dismissed in April or May of 1999. Our
labor practices manager again investigated, and found that Ms. Chi
had, by all accounts, resigned to pursue a job opportunity in Korea.
In fact, office staff remember her dropping by to say goodbye on
her final day of work. Additionally, Ms. Chi never alerted Nike,
the Samyang factory or the Confederation of Labor to any problem
she may have had. To this date, the only source of the issue
has been Mr. Nguyen and despite repeated attempts to get more information
from him, he has not responded to me or to anyone else in Nike's
Labor
Practices department.
As far as the third person, Ms. Hong, is concerned, the only worker
our
investigations have been able to identify with that name resigned
from
Samyang on April 30, 1999. We have asked Mr. Nguyen for any information
to
the contrary but have so far been unsuccessful in finding any.
Your letter cites the case of Mr. Haryanto, an Indonesian worker
and union
organizer who is alleged to have been dismissed for passing out
Nike Code
of Conduct cards to workers at P.T. Lintas, an Indonesian shoe factory.
While we will continue to investigate this matter, here are the
facts we
have discovered to date. Mr. Haryanto was hired to work at P.T.
Lintas in
mid-1996 and, in a factory accident later that year, lost two fingers
on
one hand. More than six months later, in March 1997, Nike first
became a
customer of P.T. Lintas.
In mid-1998, during a downsizing directly related to a fall in
Nike orders,
Mr. Haryanto was let go, along with 400 other workers. He appealed
his
termination to the Ministry of Manpower and, though he was awarded
a larger
termination package by the Ministry of Manpower and a local court,
both the
government agency and the court determined that his dismissal was
appropriate. Subsequently, factory management, in conversations
with Mr.
Haryanto and his attorney, offered to reinstate him at either P.T.
Lintas
or a sister factory P.T. Astra. We understand that he has refused
the
offer of reemployment. Attempts to contact Mr. Haryanto have been
unsuccessful, however, we have pursued this issue with Mr. Haryanto's
trade
union and will continue to do so.
HKCIC Research. Your letter cites May 1999 research by the Hong
Kong
Christian Industrial Committee and Asia Monitor Resource Center
of
allegations of abuse at a factory in Vietnam, the same factory cited
by Mr.
Nguyen as the site of worker dismissals. Nike has spoken a number
of times
to HKCIC researchers this year, but have to date not heard of any
such
research. We would appreciate any information about such allegations.
Your letter also cites what HKCIC's July research suggests are fire
safety,
overtime and worker safety issues at the Sewon footwear factory
in Qingdao,
China. One of our Asian labor directors, Mr. Todd McKean, would
be happy
to accompany HKCIC staffers to that factory and review those issues,
at
their convenience, on-site.
Dr. Ha Letter. Nike has repeatedly and publicly regretted that
private
comments made by Nike executive Dr. Joseph Ha were misinterpreted
as Nike's
corporate attitude towards human rights groups. In discussions with
NGOs
associated with the Apparel Industry Partnership who expressed their
concerns over those remarks, Nike agreed to take a number of steps.
Nike
wrote a letter to the Vietnamese government ministries concerned
reaffirming our belief that the NGO community offers things of great
value
to companies like Nike and to countries such as Vietnam. We gave
a copy of
the same letter to the Vietnamese newspaper that had published the
text of
Dr. Ha's original letter and asked the paper to print the letter
in order
to make our position clear in the same forum. Unfortunately, the
paper
declined to do so. In addition, we provided copies of that letter
to
international news agencies, and submitted a letter from our European
government affairs director outlining our company's posture on NGOs
and
Vietnam to the Financial Times of London, which that paper published
on
January 25, 1999. We also sent a delegation of senior Nike executives
to
Vietnam to personally brief senior officials there on our position.
The
only one of those steps that was not completed was publication of
the Nike
letter in the Vietnamese press - they declined to publish it.
Nike has worked - and will continue to work - extensively with
national
governments and a wide spectrum of human rights and labor groups
to design
programs aimed at improving labor conditions. We continue to urge
people
to judge Nike by our actions, not by the private correspondence
of one
employee.
Formosa. Your letter alleges that despite our oversight of labor
conditions at the Formosa factory in El Salvador, Nike has not effectively
uncovered abuses which are said to have been brought to light first
by the
National Labor Committee and, most recently, by Verite. We have
a copy of
the report by Verite, which indicates there are continuing issues
to deal
with, with respect to worker/management relations. Nike is working
with
the management of that factory to make it a better workplace, using
all
sources of information, including that most recent report.
There is work yet to be done but we believe, based on a considerable
amount
of oversight not only by Nike but through audits, monitoring and
visits
conducted by a half-dozen other buyers, that Formosa is improving
not
simply its physical facility, but also its people management. It
is
perhaps worthy of note that the same organization which two months
ago
publicly charged that we are leaving the factory now signs a letter
asking
us to continue making improvements. Nike would like the record corrected
here: Nike has been a customer of Formosa for a number of years,
has not
left that factory, and has no intention of doing so. We will continue
to
work with its management to make that workplace better, including
frequent
on-site visits by our labor practices manager for Latin America,
who is a
native Spanish speaker. It is critical we work to improve factories
rather
than leave them. Taking our business out of a factory would likely
translate into lost jobs. In many cases, the factory will simply
continue
manufacturing products for other companies under the same problem
conditions. Nike believes that working with the factories that are
trying
to improve is the best way we can help the workers.
Nikomas. Your letter references a visit to Nikomas, a factory in
Indonesia, by a delegation from the United States. The facts, as
we know
them, are as follows:
Representatives of two of the new unions being formed in the wake
of
Indonesia's recognition of ILO core conventions contacted the union
representative at Nikomas, and requested a factory visit to discuss
labor
issues. When the two delegates appeared at the factory, they were
accompanied by Jeffrey Ballinger of Press for Change, members of
United
Students Against Sweatshops and representatives of the Indonesian
Sportshoe
Monitoring Network. The factory union representative invited that
group
into the union office at Nikomas, and discussed labor issues for
about 45
minutes. When Mr. Ballinger asked for a tour, the union representative
contacted the senior factory manager present, who explained to the
group
that tours of the factory can be arranged by requesting permission
from
Nike.
The senior factory manager then spoke to the group and took their
questions
for about an hour. During that time, some members of the delegation
specifically asked about the presence of armed security. In a press
release issued not long after, members of the delegation claimed
that wage
talks at the factory had broken down, and the military was summoned.
This
is not true. First of all, security at this factory is not armed.
Secondly, negotiations over wages had reached the end of the negotiating
period. The factory requested, and received, an extension from the
Indonesian government to continue talks. And the negotiations continue
today.
In the meantime, Indonesia's civil order is again threatened. The
factory
in question has 23,000 workers and is, in effect, a small city.
Since it
opened in 1993, Nikomas has always had security personnel on site
to
control access to the factory grounds, to provide security for the
dormitories (where 13,000 men and women have free housing), to provide
security against theft and other crimes, and to protect the factory
in case
of civil disturbance, which as you point out is a continuing and
serious
threat to all of the people of Indonesia - students, workers and
managers
alike.
It is true that in Indonesia, there have been cases in the past
of the
military being summoned to factory strikes. And during the last
year, on
some occasions military units have been ordered to provide security
where
there are large concentrations of people - not only around factories,
but
also at office buildings and other such institutions. For example,
as
recently as Tuesday last week such forces were deployed in and around
the
UN building in downtown Jakarta. Any presence of military units
for the
purpose of suppression at any of our contract factories is something
we at
Nike abhor. We have specifically instructed factories not to allow
military personnel to be stationed on factory premises.
Jim Keady. You ask about Mr. Jim Keady, a former assistant soccer
coach
from St. John's, a school whose athletic teams are supplied by Nike.
If
his own statement at a rally in front of the U.S. Department of
Labor
headquarters is to be believed, Mr. Keady was not fired. He resigned
from
his position because of his conviction that, based on what he had
read of
our labor practices, he could not wear our products.
We will not, however, encourage factory management to hire Mr.
Keady or any
other signatory to your letter. To do so would make a mockery of
the very
concept of the value of a job. Any one person hired to work in a
factory
displaces someone else, and our number-one priority in this department
is
to ensure the people who need those jobs get them.
Homeworkers Code. Nike will not sign the Australian Homeworkers
Code of
Conduct for a very simple reason: we do not allow our contractors
in
Australia - or anywhere else - to use homework as a means of production.
Therefore we have seen no value in signing onto a standard for a
system we
do not use.
In 1995, Nike made a large mistake when we began to order soccer
balls for
the first time from a supplier in Pakistan. When our production
sourcing
group discovered that some portion of that work was performed through
contractors in villages and private homes, where children were in
some
cases employed, Nike immediately joined our manufacturing partner,
SAGA
Sports, in a process of converting all such production to stitching
centers. Homework, though a feature of production systems in many
parts of
the world, simply cannot be monitored with confidence. There are
too many
points on the ground, too many variables, and too many opportunities
for
abuse of age, wage, hours and benefits standards.
Wages. We appreciate your acknowledgement of the steps we have
taken on
wages in Indonesia. We continue to review that situation. It may
be
helpful to bring more clarity to what we and our suppliers - footwear
and
apparel - have done.
The agreed-upon full-cash minimum wage in Indonesia for footwear
workers is
Rp271,000/month for a 40-hour work week, plus a minimum of Rp61,000/month
in additional cash benefits, so that even the lowest paid worker
takes home
a minimum of Rp332,000/month before overtime. Non-cash benefits
such as
housing (where provided), food, transportation, clothing and other
benefits
are provided in addition to the cash wage.
Because we have less leverage in apparel factories, and their margins
are
generally lower, apparel factories have not been able to make that
much of
an adjustment. However, all but one of our apparel suppliers has
increased
its minimum wage base, with the lowest in that group providing at
least
Rp276,000/month to workers at the lowest skill levels working a
regular
40-hour week.
The current government mandated minimum wage in Indonesia is Rp231,000/month.
Nike is doing all we can to ensure that the 500,000 people around
the world
who manufacture our products are paid a fair wage, accompanied by
an
appropriate package of benefits. These benefits vary by country
but in
many cases factories do provide meals or meal subsidies, housing,
transportation, health care, child care, sick leave and cash bonuses.
We
are systematically studying the issue of overall compensation, country
by
country, through private research we have commissioned, by studying
the
work of others and by cooperating in surveys and other joint projects.
As a member of the White House Apparel Industry Partnership, for
example,
Nike will be reviewing a survey by the United States Department
of Labor of
wages and need in several countries. We will use this study, along
with
the other research and expert opinions we consult, to help us determine
the
best way to encourage our factories to compensate manufacturing
employees
around the world. Nike remains committed to ensuring that our partners
provide fair compensation that appropriately meets workers' needs.
We will continue to solicit input and work on this complicated
issue
through all means at our disposal.
There are a number of other issues your letter touched upon, and
I will try
to address those briefly here:
Protecting Women's Rights. Our Code of Conduct - to which we require
all
our manufacturing partners to adhere - explicitly states that "there
shall
be no discrimination based on race, creed, gender, marital or maternity
status, religious or political beliefs, age or sexual orientation."
The
accompanying standards also do not allow pregnancy testing, and
require
that women who are pregnant are provided specific additional considerations.
Ensuring the protection of women's rights is a priority for Nike
moving
forward. Toward this end, Nike has initiated programs to improve
the lives
of the women who work in factories manufacturing Nike products.
For
instance, Nike has established factory clinics that provide health
care and
counseling on childbearing issues and pre-natal care. In addition,
Nike
has instituted specific job limitations for pregnant workers to
minimize
the risk to the mother and unborn child. Outside the factory, Nike
works
with non-governmental organizations to conduct informal education
sessions
on important issues like prevention of sexually transmitted disease
and
life skills training on nutrition and personal finance.
Human Rights in China. We believe the best chance we have of impacting
human rights in China is to create safe and steady employment
opportunities, and a climate where business can flourish and people
are
more economically secure. The same philosophy applies to Indonesia,
where
we are concerned that some organizations have called for a boycott
on
Indonesian products - in effect bringing harm to the working people
who
make those products. We do not believe it would be constructive
to abandon
a manufacturing region like China, leaving thousands of employees
without
much-needed jobs. We all recognize that there are restrictions on
some
fundamental labor rights in China. Like some of the signatories
to the
letter, we also recognize that given that reality, we should work
constructively to try to create parallel processes, so that issues
normally
addressed in a more open labor environment can be addressed in China
as well.
Disclosure. Nike understands the public's desire to know that the
Nike
products they buy are made under safe and fair conditions. One way
of
making this known is by disclosing the locations of our factories
so that
independent monitors can inspect and evaluate them on a regular
basis.
Nike has committed to this in two ways.
First of all, as the Fair Labor Association (FLA) becomes an operating
system, Nike has agreed to allow oversight of our independent monitoring
of
factories (which in our current model has global monitoring of every
factory once each year, performed by PriceWaterhouseCoopers) as
well as
annual public reporting by the FLA. We will use monitors certified
by the
FLA to meet the organization's requirements. It is also our goal
to begin
to integrate NGO participants into the monitoring process, as well
as to
solicit their input in training our existing monitors. Anyone can
apply.
The FLA's goal is to develop and implement unified standards for
independent monitoring and progressive change in manufacturing facilities
around the world. Nike will disclose its factory locations to the
FLA for
monitoring purposes and each year the FLA will publish a report
detailing
their findings.
Nike is also the only company which has offered to disclose the
locations
of all factories where university licensed products are made, provided
the
university joins the FLA and requires its other licensees to disclose
their
factory locations. We believe this offer is a good first step. The
silence from others in the licensing community is deafening. Students
deserve to feel good about the sweatshirts and T-shirts and uniforms
bearing their university's logo.
Constructive Dialogue. We respect Clean Clothes Campaign's active
interest
in the work and lives of the people around the world manufacturing
Nike
products, and the interests and hard work of many other people and
organizations focused on the same issue. Our goal is to continuously
improve our work and the conditions in factories, and we look forward
to
discussing a process for dialogue that Phil proposed in his own
letter to
you.
As you have requested, we will work in good faith to ensure no
worker is
exploited and that jobs are good opportunities for workers to build
a
better life.
Sincerely,
Dusty Kidd
Labor Practices
Nike Inc.
|