The US Labor Department will provide US$2.5 million in grants as it wants to improve the safety standards in Bangladesh’s garment sector.
The US Department of Labor’s Bureau of International Labor Affairs on Friday announced a $2.5 million competitive grant solicitation to fund improvements in the enforcement and monitoring of fire and building safety standards to better protect workers in the readymade garment sector of Bangladesh.
Readymade garment production has been central to Bangladesh’s economic development, with the sector accounting for the vast majority of Bangladesh’s exports to the United States, according a web release of US Department of Labor.
The industry also is the focus of longstanding concerns over violations of worker rights and workplace safety standards.
The government of Bangladesh has been the subject of a review under the Generalized System of Preferences trade program since 2007.
Attention to these concerns has grown in the wake of the Tazreen Fashions factory fire in November last that killed over 100 garment workers and the Rana Plaza building collapse in late April that led to the loss of more than 1,200 lives.
In recent months, the government of Bangladesh, industry, worker and civil society organisations and other groups have engaged in stepped-up efforts to address fire and building safety concerns.
The government and other stakeholders, however, have a great deal of additional work to do in order to implement existing and developing plans.
The Department of Labor’s funding of technical assistance represents one important element in a broader strategy to address these issues.
The department will fund one or more recipients who will work to (1) strengthen the Bangladesh government’s ability to improve its enforcement of fire and building safety standards and (2) build the capacity of worker organisations to effectively monitor violations of fire and building safety standards and abate related hazards in the readymade garment sector.
The collapse of the Rana Plaza factory on April 24 killed more than 1,100 people and is considered to be among the worst modern structural collapses, second only to the building collapses on 9/11.
Source: UNBConnect