By
Debbie Kline, on February 3rd, 2010
It wasn’t very long ago that every time you looked at a clothing label you would see “Made in the USA.” Not only was it made in the USA but it probably also had some sort of connection to a thriving garment industry in the Cleveland area. Names like Joseph & Feiss Co, Bobbie Brooks, Printz-Biederman, Lion Knitting Mills, and Cleveland Worsted Mill dominated the industry and union cards kept people gainfully employed.
But this good thing has come to an end. Now Hugo Boss, the last clothing manufacturer in Cleveland, has given notice of their intent to shutter their plant and permanently lay off 400 workers at the end of April.
Hugo is closing because they want to ship the jobs to a plant in Turkey where they can pay much less than the average current rate of $12 per hour they pay Cleveland employees.
Hugo management offered to stay if the employees were willing to cut pay to $8 an hour.
Maybe there should be a
Continue reading Hugo Boss Threatens to Move Overseas if Workers Refuse $4/Hr Pay Cut
By
Debbie Kline, on November 3rd, 2009
Debbie Kline is Coordinator of Cleveland Jobs with Justice.
Unless you are a real news junkie and read the Business Section of your local newspaper or know one of the former employees, this is one story you may have missed.
InkStop was a chain of 152 convenience stores for office supplies that stocked ink cartridges and small electronics. The stores were located in small plazas in communities where big box office supply stores did not exist. InkStop owner Dirk Kettlewell boasted that the chain would be profitable by the end of this year by using over $80 million from private investors. This was supposed to be the “Sleeping Beauty” business story of the decade, but instead it turned into something that rivals “Psycho.”
The first blow came when all 152 InkStop stores were closed without warning on October 1st. It was business as usual earlier in the day. As the doors were locked for the night, the devastating news came via a faxed and emailed letter to employees to tell them: No more jobs and no pay for the last three weeks of work. This news was
Continue reading InkStop Stores Dry Up, Owing Workers Pay and Health Care