Labor Pains: Managing the Employee with a Medical Issue

  Registration is closed for this event
Join USFIA and Kelley Drye & Warren LLP to learn about a personnel management issue that has been increasingly vexing managers.

Organizations are seeing a growing number of employment discrimination claims from employees with medical conditions related to permanent disabilities, temporary impairments and pregnancies. In fact, the number of complaints filed with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) alleging violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act has increased by more than 25% in the past five years. In 2013, 25% of overall cases filed with the EEOC were disability claims, with another 1/3 involving pregnancy and gender claims. 

Managers are often the first to hear about such conditions and the many requests for accommodation that come with them. This presentation will review the various laws dealing with disabilities and leaves of absence that managers need to be aware of, the steps that need to be taken when requests for accommodations are made and the types of scenarios that often end up in litigation. The webinar will be presented by Barbara Hoey, Chair of Kelley Drye & Warren’s Labor & Employment practice, and Mark Konkel, a Labor & Employment partner at the firm.

This webinar will be recorded and distributed to all registered participants.

This webinar is part of the United States Fashion Industry Association's Fall Management Refresher: How to Better Manage Your Employees, Your Data, and Grow!

 

 

 

 

 

When
October 2nd, 2014 from  2:00 PM to  3:00 PM
Location
Online via Go2Webinar
Contact
Phone: 202-419-0444

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2025 USFIA Fashion Industry Benchmarking Study

This is the 12th USFIA Benchmarking Survey and unsurprisingly, fashion industry executives are more concerned with tariffs than ever. The top business challenges facing U.S. fashion companies center on the Trump Administration’s escalating tariff policy and its wide-ranging impacts on companies’ sourcing and business operations.

100% of respondents rated “Protectionist U.S. trade policies and related policy uncertainty, including the impact of the Trump tariffs” as one of their top business challenges in 2025. In taking the #1 spot, this challenge rose from #5 in 2024 and #11 in 2023, showing the increasing concern over the last few years.

Over 70% of surveyed companies reported that the higher tariffs increased sourcing costs, squeezed profit margins, and led to higher consumer prices.
Tariffs have been the most significant factor driving sourcing cost increases for U.S. fashion companies in 2025. And amid higher tariffs and policy uncertainty, about 65 percent of respondents feel optimistic about the next five years in 2025, a decline from 75 percent one year ago.

Download the complete study here, and see the highlights below:

 2025 USFIA Benchmarking Study - Respondents expressed the most concern about protectionist U.S. trade policies and their ripple effects in 2025


Higher tariffs have triggered ripple effects across supply chains.

2025 USFIA Benchmarking Study - Figure 1-3 US fashion companies reported broad economic impacts of the escalating tariffs on their sourcing and business operations

2025 USFIA Benchmarking Study - Figure 1-4 U.S. fashion companies explored various methods to mitigate the tariff impacts

 


U.S. fashion companies are actively exploring new sourcing opportunities, with a particular focus on emerging suppliers in Asia

2025 USFIA Benchmarking Study - Figure 2-20  U.S. fashion companies plan to exand apparel sourcing from emerging sourcing destinations in Asia and the rest of the world through 2027


 

2025 Sourcing Trends & Outlook Report

USFIA's 2025 Sourcing Trends & Outlook Report is out. Members can log-in to the website to download it here

The top 5 sourcing trends in the 2025 report are:

  1. Asian apparel suppliers continue to dominate sourcing.
  2. China maintains its role as the top supplier.
  3. Higher costs are easing with lower average unit values.
  4. New suppliers highlight apparel sourcing opportunities.
  5. Despite high duty rates, FTAs and preference programs remain underutilized. CAFTA remains the major duty-free supplier.

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