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Garment workers face another extended run in sweatshop suit.


When Guadalupe Hernandez added her name to a lawsuit against Forever 21 Inc. three years ago, she was fired from her job at a downtown sewing factory and hasn't worked in the garment industry since.

"All of the factory owners communicate with each other and I was put on a blacklist (1) A list of e-mail addresses of known spammers. See spam, spam filter, Blacklist of Internet Advertisers, greylisting and blackholing. Contrast with white list.

(2) A list of Web sites that are considered off limits or dangerous.
," said Hernandez, 29, of Highland Park Highland Park.

1 City (1990 pop. 30,575), Lake co., NE Ill., a suburb of Chicago on Lake Michigan; inc. 1869. It is a retail business and medical center for the North Shore area.
, describing in Spanish how she earned $4 an hour working 10 hours a day, six days a week, in a factory with no running water and one bathroom.

After three years of picketing Forever 21 stores on weekends and trying to organize other garment workers, Hernandez faces this: despite a recent victory, the prolonged legal battle against Forever 21 has gone virtually nowhere in three years.

Earlier this month, an appeals panel for the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals overturned a lower court ruling that had thrown out the garment workers' lawsuit two years ago.

That ruling paves the way for the garment workers to file their lawsuit again--this time in state court.

"It's a very slow and arduous process," said Julia Figueira-McDonough, a lawyer with the Asian Pacific American Legal Center of Southern California Southern California, also colloquially known as SoCal, is the southern portion of the U.S. state of California. Centered on the cities of Los Angeles and San Diego, Southern California is home to nearly 24 million people and is the nation's second most populated region, , which represents the garment workers.

"Some of the workers have been concerned because Forever 21 is such a force in the industry, they've been unable to get jobs because they've been branded as troublemakers," she said.

The lawsuit sought to hold Forever 21, a retailer with 125 stores, jointly responsible for the practices at sweatshops that make its private-label clothes.

Figueira-McDonough said the center will file a new lawsuit in Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  Superior Court in the next few months refocusing Noun 1. refocusing - focusing again
focalisation, focalization, focusing - the act of bringing into focus
 on California's unfair business practices statute, and alleged violations by Forever 21 in hiring sweatshops.

"Forever 21 contracts with these entities knowing full well that the contract prices are not enough to allow them to pay legal wages," she said. "It's a very conscious strategy to insulate the company from liability."

Forever 21 and its co-founders, Don Chang and Jin Sook Chang, have maintained they are not responsible for the working conditions at garment factories. The retailer does not own or operate the factories but rather hires contractors and vendors that oversee the piecework piecework, work for which the laborer is paid on the basis of the amount of work done. The system is best adapted to standardized operations in which quantity is preferred to quality. Its advocates maintain that it pays the worker according to his ability. .

"A federal trial judge said the case has no merit," said Wayne Flick, a partner at Latham & Watkins LLP LLP - Lower Layer Protocol , who represents Forever 21. "The 9th Circuit didn't disagree but decided it should be in state court. If their allegations are the same as they were in federal court, then they have no more merit in state court than they did in federal court. We will attack them in the same way."

Before the original lawsuit was dismissed, two of the garment factories agreed to settle claims and paid $175,400 in back wages and overtime to seven workers. Four of the six factories went out of business or changed names and owners.

Because of that, Forever 21 remained the only defendant in the federal case, even though the remaining claims against the retailer were primarily state claims.

Sowing resentment

The lawsuit has sown further resentment between Korean-owned garment factories and retailers, and Hispanic garment workers and a handful of anti-sweatshop groups that have tried to support them.

During the long-running legal battle, garment workers not only picketed in front of Forever 21 stores, they urged a boycott of the chain and even demonstrated in front of the owners' home in Beverly Hills Beverly Hills, city (1990 pop. 31,971), Los Angeles co., S Calif., completely surrounded by the city of Los Angeles; inc. 1914. The largely residential city is home to many motion-picture and television personalities. .

Just two days after their lawsuit was dismissed in 2002, Forever 21 filed a defamation suit against the 19 workers, three activists and three anti-sweatshop groups, claiming that the retailer was unfairly targeted in a public smear campaign smear campaign ncampaña de calumnias

smear campaign ncampagne f de dénigrement

smear campaign smear n
 that led to lost business.

"They were suing people who are destitute des·ti·tute  
adj.
1. Utterly lacking; devoid: Young recruits destitute of any experience.

2. Lacking resources or the means of subsistence; completely impoverished. See Synonyms at poor.
 and who claimed they were working in sweatshop sweatshop: see sweating system.  conditions," said Carol Sobel, a lawyer for one of the activists. "To turn around and sue them reflected extreme callousness cal·lous  
adj.
1. Having calluses; toughened: callous skin on the elbow.

2. Emotionally hardened; unfeeling: a callous indifference to the suffering of others.
."

Though the defamation claims against the 19 workers were later dropped, three activists and three watchdog groups are anxiously waiting for an appeals court decision within the next 90 days.

The three activists are: Kimi Lee, director of Garment Worker Center; the center's organizer, Joann Lo; and Victor Narro, a former co-director of Sweatshop Watch who also worked at the Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights in Los Angeles.

Narro, who is now project director at UCLA's downtown Labor Center, said the suit has hung over his head for the past two years.

"They saw me carrying workers in a van and they went after me because I was able to get the permits that allowed the workers to march," he said.

Others in the garment industry believe that the defamation suit has had its intended effect-to silence garment workers.

Hernandez, who works part-time organizing at the Garment Worker Center, sees little change in the three years she's been struggling to improve labor conditions.

"If anything, it's become worse," she said. "Due to NAFTA NAFTA
 in full North American Free Trade Agreement

Trade pact signed by Canada, the U.S., and Mexico in 1992, which took effect in 1994. Inspired by the success of the European Community in reducing trade barriers among its members, NAFTA created the world's
, a lot of factories are moving and usually the owners that contract with Forever 21 pay workers even less now."

Amanda Bronstad contributed to this story.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Up Front; Forever 21 Inc.
Comment:Garment workers face another extended run in sweatshop suit.(Up Front)(Forever 21 Inc.)
Author:Berry, Kate
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Mar 29, 2004
Words:845
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