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Socially Responsible Procurement

Socially Responsible Procurement

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Socially Responsible Procurement. Introduction. Kyle Richard Corporate Social Responsibility Analyst, University of Washington. What is Socially Responsible Procurement?. Purchasing Responsibly produced products From socially responsible suppliers Responsibly Produced - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Socially Responsible Procurement

Socially Responsible Procurement

Page 2: Socially Responsible Procurement

Introduction

• Kyle Richard– Corporate Social Responsibility Analyst, University of

Washington

Page 3: Socially Responsible Procurement

What is Socially Responsible Procurement?

• Purchasing – Responsibly produced products– From socially responsible suppliers

• Responsibly Produced– Purchased products are produced in a manner that reflects

respect for an institution’s values

• Socially Responsible – Supplier reflects the institution’s values in its business

practices

Page 4: Socially Responsible Procurement

Socially Responsible

Page 5: Socially Responsible Procurement

Why?

• Reputation– Increased interest in CSR – Better process– Who produces Apple Computers?

• “Right thing to do”– Case Studies

• Sustainability• Ethics

Page 6: Socially Responsible Procurement

Business Case for SCSR

• Leadership, Reputation & Value– Students– Employees

• Risk Reduction – Minimize the likelihood of disruptions

• Cost

Page 7: Socially Responsible Procurement

Program Development

• Campus Interest

• Supplier Investigation

• Presidential Response

• Program Management

Page 8: Socially Responsible Procurement

30,000 Foot View

• Code of Conduct– What do we expect?

• Monitoring– How are our suppliers doing?

• Intake/Complaint Resolution– A way for the community and students to be heard

Page 9: Socially Responsible Procurement

Program Structure

Enforcement

Code of Conduct

Monitoring

Suppliers

Intake Process

Binds

Reports

Complaints

Investigates

Page 10: Socially Responsible Procurement

What’s in a Supplier Code of Conduct?

• Labor & Human Rights• Environment• Ethics• Health & Safety• Legal Compliance• Supplier Diversity• Subcontracting

• Always evolving…

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Monitoring

Page 12: Socially Responsible Procurement

More Monitoring

Page 13: Socially Responsible Procurement

Intake

Page 14: Socially Responsible Procurement

Intake

Procurement Services Recommendation

Allegation

Allegation

Allegation

Committee Review

Committee

Investigation

Remediation

Page 15: Socially Responsible Procurement

RFPs-Getting More Responsible Suppliers

• Simplify monitoring by selecting responsible suppliers

• Social responsibility language– Signal that the University values social responsibility– Normalize social responsibility as a part of doing business

• Large-dollar solicitations– Capacity– Influence– Impact

Page 16: Socially Responsible Procurement

Rollout

• Supplier Outreach

• Pilot

• Presidential Communication and Marketing

• Campus-Wide Collaboration

Page 17: Socially Responsible Procurement

Outreach & Pilot

• Outreach – Summer of 2013– 30+ Suppliers Reviewed Draft Code of Conduct

• Current Suppliers– Completed Supplier Certification– 4 Suppliers

• Campus Hardware RFP – Laptops, Desktops, Servers, Components– Evaluate bidder CSR programs

• Continuing Outreach and Inclusion in Strategic Contracts

Page 18: Socially Responsible Procurement

Program Roadmap

• Current– Share values and change expectations– Take action when issues raised

• Next Steps– Collaborate with Universities and GPOs– Improve monitoring & reporting

• Future– Inclusion in all major contracts– Universal compliance requirement

Page 19: Socially Responsible Procurement

Questions?

• Contact:– Kyle Richard

[email protected]• 206-685-0571

– Claudia Christensen• [email protected]• 206 543-4156

Page 20: Socially Responsible Procurement

Attributions

• Slide 4– By Hans Hillewaert (Own work) [CC-BY-SA-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0)], via

Wikimedia Commons– By marissaorton (Sweatshop project Uploaded by Gary Dee) [CC-BY-SA-2.0

(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons– By ell brown (Own work) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/)], via Flickr– By Paul Krueger (Own work) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/)], via Flickr– By mckaysavage (Own work) [CC-BY-2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/)], via Flickr

• Slide 5– By Image SVG créé par Utilisateur:Quark67 avec Inkscape à l'aide de la police de caractère Helvetica

fournie avec Mac OS X. (Quark67 at fr.wikipedia) [Public domain], from Wikimedia Commons• Slide 13

– By Brian Stansberry (Own work) [CC-BY-3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0)], via Wikimedia Commons