Good afternoon, everyone. We thank you for the opportunity to speak.
Although I'm sure some of the other people here today will talk about the crisis in general in manufacturing—because it is a crisis, so “crisis” is the word I'm using—with job losses and the closure of plants across Canada, I'd like to take my time, and I'll keep it as brief as possible, to talk a little bit about a more particular crisis in the apparel industry in Canada.
The apparel industry in Canada is the tenth largest manufacturing industry in the country, and in Quebec it's higher up on the list.
To give a brief description on what UNITE HERE does and who we are, UNITE HERE Canada is a union of 50,000 members, and we have 10,000 members in Quebec. Although I am making a national case for the apparel industry, you have to understand that it becomes a Quebec problem, particularly since 55% of the jobs are situated in Quebec.
Our union is the child of several different mergers. The old International Ladies' Garment Workers' Union and the Amalgamated Clothing and Textile Workers Union merged in 1995 to create UNITE, which in turn merged with the Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees Union in 2004 to create UNITE HERE.
As our union has shifted and changed, it is only as a result of what has been happening in the industries that we represent, which are apparel and textile manufacturing workers, as well as hotel employees and restaurant employees.
What's going on in the apparel industry?
I'm sure you'll speak to plenty of people who represent the industry as well. I want to give you the perspective because sometimes we lack the human perspective on what this industry is and who it represents.
It's mostly in Montreal, and it's mostly immigrants, mostly women, mostly older women.
I'll give you the example of Lucia Sousa, a Portuguese immigrant who came to Montreal over thirty years ago. In her second year in the country she started working at Cardinal Clothes, and she has worked there ever since--until the 27th, when Cardinal is going to close its doors. Cardinal makes men's jackets and overcoats.
Another example is Carlos Costa, an immigrant from Chile who got his first job in the apparel industry and has worked at Jack Victor Ltd. in high-end men's suits for his whole life. Jack Victor is doing well. It's a men's suit company that is doing well, and he, his wife, his two daughters, and his son-in-law all work in the shop. You can understand that if this place closes, the whole family would be devastated.
We think of T-shirts, socks, bras, and underwear when we think of the apparel industry, but it isn't always that. Let's look at the industry that remains.
I'm not asking you to look to the past; I'm asking you to look to the future. What is the apparel industry in Canada today, and what could it be in five, ten, or twenty years down the line?
It's high-end men's tailored suits. We have a great reputation as the third largest city in North America...after only New York and Los Angeles, a place of distinction that I don't think we should lose. We make great labels: Tommy Hilfiger, Brooks Brothers, Nordstrum, Saks Fifth Avenue, Barneys New York, J. Crew, Paul Stuart, and Harry Rosen. The list is endless.
We have people of a certain celebrity who wear suits that are made in Canada, made in Montreal specifically, such as David Letterman, Neil Armstrong, and CBS sportscasters. There are people who will refuse to wear suits made in sweatshops because they hold a certain role in society. They are looked at.
Why should we as Canadians lose this place of distinction? They're wearing our stuff now and they should keep wearing our stuff. If not ours, they'll buy American-made stuff or European-made stuff.
This brings me to the reason I am here today. The United States and the European Union are our competing markets for the apparel industry in Canada. Let's look at what they've done to safeguard their industry.
They've put in place safeguard measures, which are provisions that exist in the World Trade Organization agreements. When the United States, the European Union, some South American countries, and South Africa, as little as a month ago, all put in place a measure to limit the imports from China of apparel coming into Canada, we have to ask ourselves why the Canadian government isn't doing the same.
This is what we've called on government to do, and what I'm asking the committee to consider as well: look at the possibility of putting in place and enacting these safeguards.
I'm sure most of you are probably familiar with what it is. But briefly, it would limit the growth of Chinese imports in apparel. If the growth of imports is already 10%, let's say, it would be 10% plus 7.5%. That's the limit on the growth we could put in place.
Now, the safeguard measures are measures that can only last for three years. Because of several different factors, we've lost the year, but there are still two years. I'm not at all talking from a protectionist perspective. It's not. Other countries who use free trade as commonly as possible have put in place these measures.
What I'm saying is that for these two years the companies need this. I talk to companies of distinction, such as Jack Victor, Samuelsohn, Confection de Beauce, who make different products but are all committing to saying they want to keep these jobs here, they want to keep their company open, and they want and need these safeguards. Let's not just listen to companies who import more than they produce. Let's look at the ones who want to keep this industry alive in Canada. They need these safeguards in place.
Giving them two years allows them to develop their markets, to specialize their niches, because yes, if the apparel industry continues to exist in Canada, it will exist only with those companies or manufacturers who have decided to develop a niche. Those who are just going to hang in for as long as they possibly can won't continue to exist in the short or medium term.
That's one solution. The other thing we're asking for, and I'm going to wrap up with this, is that after these two years, or in the case, for example, of Lucia Sousa who has lost her job, and of many others who are older workers, we need to have an older worker adjustment program, as we've had in the past. There was an announcement not long ago about some kind of adjustment program for workers, but it is completely ineffective. There's not enough money in it, it excludes Montreal, and it excludes apparel—and that's where the jobs are. We need a real worker adjustment program to help these people who are all over 55—closer to 65 than anything else—and that will permit them to take a retirement with dignity.
Finally, we should promote Canadian-made clothing and have procurement programs when possible. Let's not just think of T-shirts and uniforms; let's think of suits as well. The Montreal police use Canadian-made stuff, and the RCMP. We should make this, where possible, more commonplace.
Finally, and this is something that comes from a lot of people in industry, the Canadian dollar has hurt significantly the ability to compete, since most of our product—I'd say over 80%—goes to the United States. If we were able to relax the interest rate policy to reduce upward pressure on the Canadian dollar, that also would be helpful.
To give you a brief statistic on the impact China is having on the apparel industry, in men's suits, from 2004-05, there's been an increase of imports from China of 134%, whereas there's been a drop of 1% from every other country in the world put together.
We can't say it's just a trade problem; it is, right now, a China problem. There is an ability to limit this, and I think we should put it in place.
That's going to be it for now, and I'll take your questions.