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Canada's National Sport not so Canadian

Canada's National Sport not so Canadian

Write: Parvati [2011-05-20]

Reebok offshores production of hockey equipment to Asia

MONTREAL, Nov. 27 /CNW/ - Labour union, UNITE HERE announced today it has
launched a cross country campaign to persuade Reebok to bring back to Canada
its production of hockey equipment and jerseys. Over the past six years,
Reebok-CCM Hockey, Inc., the official makers of NHL apparel, has shut many of
its Canadian plants and outsourced its production of NHL jersey replicas and
other hockey equipment to Asia.

"Sporting associations in other countries have policies in place that
restrict sporting apparel and equipment production from going offshore," says
Alex Dagg, Executive Vice-President and Canadian Co-Director, UNITE HERE.
"Hockey is a part of Canada's identity and jerseys and equipment should be
made by Canadians for Canadians."

"From coast to coast to coast, in small towns and big cities, we support
our national game and we demand that Reebok commit to producing jerseys and
equipment once again in our country," Dagg adds. "It makes good economic sense
- Canadian production creates jobs, which allows for even greater support for
hockey."

Key facts:
- Five plants have closed in Ontario and Quebec over the past 6 years.(Harrow, Ontario; Richmond, Drummondville, Cap-de-la-Madeleine and Cowansville, Quebec)

- Almost 600 manufacturing jobs lost in Canada (500 jobs lost in Quebec

- $55 million loss for the Canadian economy

Manufacturing work has been sent to factories in other countries,
particularly China. An analysis of over 500 Reebok import shipments from the
last two years shows that NHL jerseys, hockey sticks, ice skates and other
items are produced in at least 12 countries, with nearly two thirds of the
total product coming from factories in China.

"The game of hockey used to provide not only entertainment, but also a
decent livelihood for many Canadian families," says Lina Aristeo,
Vice-President, UNITE HERE International. "Canadian textile workers sewed
their pride into every letter on every jersey produced. Now these Canadians
are jobless."

UNITE HERE is asking supporters of Canadian hockey to take a stand and
demand that Reebok produce hockey equipment and NHL replica jerseys in Canada
by Canadian workers.

UNITE HERE is the union representing 50,000 foodservice, apparel,
textile, hotel and distribution workers across Canada. Its membership is the
face of multi-cultural Canada, with immigrants and women making up the
majority of its members. UNITE HERE has a long history of fighting to maintain
good jobs in the Canadian apparel and textile industries, and has called for
fairer trade agreements that preserve manufacturing jobs. Recently UNITE HERE
campaigned to save hundreds of jobs at the Golden Brand/Moores suit
manufacturing plant in Montreal, and has been urging that the Canadian
government adopt apparel safeguards on surging imports from China.