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University Of Wisconsin, Nike Cut Ties: Labor Concerns Spur Split

RYAN J. FOLEY   04/ 9/10 11:44 PM ET   AP

Nike University Of Wisconsin

MADISON, Wis. — The University of Wisconsin canceled its licensing agreement with Nike Inc. on Friday, becoming the first university to take that step over concerns about the company's treatment of workers in Honduras.

Chancellor Biddy Martin said Nike hasn't done enough to help workers collect severance payments they are owed at two factories that abruptly closed last year.

"Nike has not developed, and does not intend to develop, meaningful ways of addressing the plight of displaced workers and their families in Honduras," Martin said. "It has not presented clear long-range plans to prevent or respond to similar problems in the future. For this combination of reasons, we have decided to end our relationship for now."

Nike expressed disappointment with the university's decision in a statement released Friday night, while noting the factories were operated by subcontractors. Under Nike policy, subcontractors are responsible for compensation of their employees.

Wisconsin's code of conduct requires the 500 companies that make products bearing its name or logos to take responsibility for the subcontractors' actions. Its contract with Nike generated $49,000 in royalty income for the university last year.

Nike said no Wisconsin-branded products were made at the two Honduras factories.

"We have been engaged with the University of Wisconsin-Madison over the past few months while working with stakeholders in Honduras to better understand the particular issues facing the former workers," Nike's statement said.

Anti-sweatshop activists said they hoped Wisconsin's decision would resonate at several other universities across the country where students are pushing for similar actions and put pressure on Nike to fix the Honduras situation.

"It's a major, major victory nationally," said Jonah Zinn, 19, a Wisconsin sophomore who was part of a student campaign urging Martin to cancel the contract. "We're hoping that our victory here really propels them forward and pushes those universities to make the right decision."

Nike hired the factories, located in Choloma and San Pedro Sula, as suppliers to produce apparel. They closed without notice in January 2009 with the workers being owed $2.6 million in severance payments required under Honduran law.

Nike has offered to provide job training and give workers priority for jobs at nearby factories. But the Worker Rights Consortium, a labor rights watchdog, told college leaders in a report last month the company's response has been insufficient.

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MADISON, Wis. — The University of Wisconsin canceled its licensing agreement with Nike Inc. on Friday, becoming the first university to take that step over concerns about the company's treatment of ...
MADISON, Wis. — The University of Wisconsin canceled its licensing agreement with Nike Inc. on Friday, becoming the first university to take that step over concerns about the company's treatment of ...
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10:42 AM on 04/13/2010
Well done, Univ. of Wisconsin!

If only more of us held companies accountable like this, it would be a better world.

Thank gawd, someone still stands up for and demands ethical behavior and maintains a moral standard. Great example for these young students.....and all of us.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
idisVA
11:32 PM on 04/12/2010
Proud of my Alma Mata.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
The Cause Endures
10:49 PM on 04/12/2010
Wisconsin for President!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Barbie and Ken forever
09:37 PM on 04/12/2010
Wow I'm truly surprised
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09:17 PM on 04/12/2010
Good!
07:24 PM on 04/12/2010
If Nike chose not to end their relationship with their money maker Tiger Woods after his numerous extramarital affairs how can we trust a company like Nike to make social and morally correct business deals with third world labor. Thank the University of Wisconsin for standing up to this corporate giant and refusing to be associated with them. Nike will now pay for their greedy decisions when other institutions follow the University of Wisconsin's code of conduct action. Nike needs to review their business code of conduct and immediately enroll themselves into a corporate greed rehab clinic.
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DavidWyld
Professor of Management
07:19 PM on 04/12/2010
This could be the start of a major trend, as university administrators will indeed be pressured to follow Wisconsin's lead. However, with athletic budgets being under tremendous pressures these days, it will take administrators with some very real courage (and cajones) to do so!

David http://wyld-about-money.blogspot.com/
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07:02 PM on 04/12/2010
I have been boycotting Nike since the first labor issues were brought up long ago. Nike keeps on doing the same thing that has gotten them into trouble, but they just use the "subcontractor" clause. One of these days they will take responsibility for the manner in which their products are manufactured.
07:02 PM on 04/12/2010
What a cop-out by Nike saying the factories were sub-contracted as if that absolves them of responsibility. One of the most overrated brands on earth as it is.
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Katco
Misogyny: hard to spell, easy to practice
07:02 PM on 04/12/2010
Good on you University of Wisconsin! Nike needs to held accountable.
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Flokk
This is embarrassing... I mean, I'm Quickman!
06:47 PM on 04/12/2010
"--but the sneakers don't seem that much cheaper... why are we paying so much for sneakers when you got them made by little slave kids, what are your overheads?" --FOTC
06:25 PM on 04/12/2010
Coach K won't put up with that shiite.
05:54 PM on 04/12/2010
just when you think this nation is morally corrupted and it will stop at nothing in exploiting those less fortunate, people with conscious will stand up and take a stand against it. beautiful!
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mountainweb
Conservative Commonsense
06:48 PM on 04/12/2010
Sadly, it appears that Nike doesn't care.
04:14 PM on 04/12/2010
Kudos to Wisconcin for keeping to what they believe is the spirit of their contract (WOW! How did they sneak that in?)


But I dont think Nike should interfer in the affairs of it's subcontractors esp those overseas.

And when will people stop using the term "sweat shops" and "child labor" like its a bad thing.
06:25 PM on 04/12/2010
uh
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
AngryBuddist
03:55 PM on 04/12/2010
Nike has all the ethics of a South American drug cartel.