Including handmade pottery, Buddhas, Tibetan incense and hand loom cotton
all fair trade all handmade, all low carbon footprint for earth friendly living
7 Key Fair Trade Principles - How do we measure up?
The simple answer is that the people who actually make our products are guaranteed a fair wage, healthy working conditions and good benefits.
Those
who make the products we sell are paid twice the local wage, plus a productivity
bonus.
They have benefits such as sick pay, holiday pay, wages in advance in the
form of loans if necessary, payment for medicines and, for the women, gifts
of gold when they leave to marry, in accordance with the local culture. Conditions
are bright, well- ventilated and comfortable to work in.
1 We regularly visit our producers and see this for ourselves.
2 Our producers are members of IFAT, the International Federation of Alternative Traders. We are very proud that they passed through the stringent application process.
The simple reality is that people who produce for us have a guaranteed job, decent pay and an improved standard of living. As a direct result of this, their children can go to school, they have access to medical treatment and can improve their homes to a safe standard e.g. one member of staff recently told us that she had bought a proper gas cooker, rather than cooking on an old paraffin stove which was highly unsafe. The gift of gold to woman when they marry helps to stop baby girls being abandoned or killed by their parents, who fear they cannot afford a dowry for their daughters.
The more complex answer is that we comply with all six points as defined as the conditions for fair trade. Here are the accepted criteria as defined by Wikipedia.
"Fair trade advocates generally support the following principles and practices in trading relationships:
Fair trade is a strategy for poverty alleviation and sustainable development. Its purpose is to create opportunities for producers who have been economically disadvantaged or marginalized by the conventional trading system. "
As an example of this, we work with small producers who still use hand looms, thus preserving traditional skills and creating work which would otherwise no longer exist. As small manufacturing units they need the opportunity to get their goods into the market place normally dominated by large producers. We practice ethical purchasing in this respect. There's no doubt about it, it would be a whole lot easier to buy factory produced goods from factory producers but that isn't what we aim for. We are actively looking to to work with small producers where the difference our orders make is so much greater.
We work closely with our producers to time orders to suit capacity and order in quantities that best suit their production. We know they are trying their best and treat errors in manufacturing accordingly. Our premise is that all parties have to be successful in this trade otherwise we are not succeeding.
Our producer groups are seperate businesses, whom we encourage to find other customers as well , to ensure that they are viable in their own right and not dependant on us. Since we started working together, our principle producer has expanded their customer base to include customers across Europe, in Japan and Australia.
Our producers set the price for their goods, which ensures that they are paid realistically for them. We order and pay well in advance for each year’s stock to avoid our producers having cash flow problems or getting into debt. All points in the above paragraph are guaranteed.
We are very proud of our producers challenge to cutural values which discriminate on gender and class. This means equality at work and in some cases women being taught what were traditionally male only skills. Although hand loom weaving is traditionally the work of men because of the amount of physical strength required to operate a hand loom, our weaving group does employ woman weavers.
There are no children involved in any of our proceses. A great deal has been spent on building new premesis and providing a safe and pleasant working enviroment. It would have been very easy and cheap to have the main roof of the production unit made using modern construction materials, but working under a tar roof in tropical conditions is unbearably hot and so the building has a coconut leaf roof which must be replaced every two years. This is much more pleasant to work under but is expensive to maintain. In addition, the floors are tiled, so cool and clean to work on in bare feet.
We
are committed to reducing carbon footprint and do so by using hand looms and
foot powered sewing machines and in the case of pottery, foot-pedal wheels
and brick kilns. Our dye works re- process and treat all liquids leaving the
plant, which is almost unheard of in rural Asia. This year we are turning
our production over to organically grown, certified fair trade cotton.
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Starfish
Fairtrade - Unit 10, Kempleton Mill Twynholm, KIRKCUDBRIGHT DG6 4NJ
Tel/Fax:
: 01557 860255
Email: sales@stafishfairtrade.co.uk
All prices include VAT