Clothes for a Change

Working with farmers, consumers, and companies
to promote organics and Fair Trade in the clothing sector
About Clothes for a Change (CFAC)

OCA and our allies have launched a new global campaign to raise awareness about the negative health and environmental effects of conventional and genetically engineered cotton and the institutionalized exploitation of clothing sweatshops.

By uniting organic consumers, anti-genetic engineering activists, trade unionists, religious social justice advocates, progressives in the fashion & apparel industry, and the Fair Trade / anti-sweatshop communities into a potent force we can change the dynamics of the marketplace and fundamentally alter public policy.

The Clothes for a Change Campaign Is Demanding that Major Clothing Retailers & Manufacturers:
  • Stop using genetically engineered cotton.
  • Start blending in certified organic or "transition to organic" cotton in their clothing.
  • Guarantee that they meet independently verified Fair Labor (non-sweatshop) standards.
  • Eliminate all production and export cotton subsidies in the U.S. and convert to Green subsidies for organic and transition to organic cotton production.
While the OCA and our allies put marketplace pressure on the clothing giants, we will also be enlisting public interest groups to support the campaign by:
  • Committing to procure non-sweatshop, environmentally sound products.
  • Signing-on in support of the core demands of the Clothes for a Change campaign.
Want to Endorse Our Campaign?

You can make a difference in your community.

Today, organic and Fair Made clothing constitutes a niche market, but with your support we can ensure that at least 30% of all clothing in the USA is Organic & Fair Made by the year 2015. Help us reach these goals by participating locally in the Clothes For a Change campaign:

  • Campaign for your school district or university to begin purchasing only organic and Fair Made clothing and fibers. Campus clothing represents is a $6 billion a year industry.
  • Get a resolution passed in your town mandating organic and fair made fiber purchasing for municipal contracts.
  • Buy your new clothing from socially responsible businesses who can certify that their products are organic (not genetically engineered) and Fair Made.
  • Help us ensure that every exhibitor at Earth Day festivals and May Day Rallies are selling only fair made and organic clothes.
  • Ask the manager of the local store where you purchase your clothes if they can guarantee that the fibers they use are GMO-free and organic and if the workers who made the garments were paid a living wage.
LINKS
SUSTAINABLE COTTON PRODUCTION
Cotton Bud
  • Sustainable Cotton Project - Information about farmers, manufacturers, activists, retailers and others who are devoting their energies to making organic cotton a viable agricultural and economic alternative.
  • Behind the Label - Promoting the collective bargaining power of both workers in sweatshops and communities of consumers.
  • The Organic Cotton Directory - Directory of companies selling organic cotton products
  • International Organic Cotton Directory -Directory locates links in the organic cotton chain: organic agricultural input suppliers, farmers, gins, mills & retailers of organic cotton products.
PESTICIDES INFO
LABOR ISSUES & SWEATSHOP INFO
  • National Labor Committee - Educating & engaging the public on human & labor rights abuses by corporations.
  • Global Exchange - Human rights organization dedicated to promoting environmental, political, and social justice around the world.
  • Workers Rights Consortium (WRC) - A non-profit organization created by college and university administrations, students and labor rights experts on over 100 campuses. The WRC's purpose is to ensure that factories producing clothing and other goods bearing college and university names respect the basic rights of workers.
  • Campaign for Labor Rights (CLR) - Working to inform and mobilize grassroots activists in solidarity with major, international anti-sweatshop struggles. CLR has been called the "grassroots mobilizing department" of the anti-sweatshop movement
  • UNITE! Fighting for good jobs everywhere. Our union is supporting workers in other countries who are fighting to organize their own unions to improve wages and working conditions.
  • Clean Clothes Campaign Campaignind to improve working conditions in the garment industry.
  • SweatX A new line of "sweat-free" casual active wear. Designed and manufactured entirely within Los Angeles, SweatX clothing is made by teamX inc., an employee owned, and unionized garment factory
Visit the CFAC Background InfO Page
Video

Lucas County Goes Sweatfree!

CFAC News Digest

Show All

More News Headlines

Facts
  • In the US, it takes about a third of a pound of synthetic agricultural chemicals to grow enough cotton, enough for one T-shirt. -Sustainable Cotton Project
  • Federal report: Children exposed to "cotton poison," methyl parathion, suffer memory loss, emotional swings. -U.S. Agency for Toxic Substances and Disease Registry
  • In Bangladesh, women earn 1.7 cents for every baseball cap they sew with a Harvard logo and 5 cents for every Disney T-shirt they sew that sells for $17.99.-National Labor Committee
  • Cotton accounts for 25% of the world's insecticides and 11% of global pesticide sales, making it the most toxic crop grown on the planet. "With full time wages as low as $US2 a day, workers in clothing factories often live in extreme poverty and those with children must either send them to distant villages to be looked after by relatives or else go into debt to meet their basic needs." -We are not Machines: Nike and Adidas workers in Indonesia.