ALBANY, NY (02/13/2024) (readMedia)-- Last week, Governor Kathy Hochul kicked-off New York Fashion Week by attending the Prabal Gurung show and announcing a $5 million investment to support designers, farmers, manufacturers, and other professionals in the fashion industry. Despite the extensive investment, Governor Hochul failed to acknowledge any support or labor protections for the thousands of models and content creators who act as the faces of the industry. In response, Model Alliance Founder and Executive Director Sara Ziff is urging the Governor to rally behind models and content creators in supporting the Fashion Workers Act: a pro-labor bill that would regulate predatory management companies in New York that currently operate without oversight in the $2.5 trillion fashion industry.
"Governor Hochul clearly understands the economic and cultural capital New York derives from being the center of fashion: the industry contributes $2 billion a year to New York, and New York Fashion Week helps to bring in a whopping $600 million to State coffers. But we cannot overlook the thousands of models who bring NYFW to life, and who are routinely taken advantage of by predatory modeling agencies. While the Model Alliance is grateful to see the Governor investing in an industry that operates with little regulation, we are urging her to also support the Fashion Workers Act this legislative session and provide meaningful labor and safety protections for the faces of the industry," said Sara Ziff, Founder and Executive Director of the Model Alliance.
The fashion industry notoriously operates without significant regulatory oversight, leaving models struggling to find their footing and stability in the fashion world. Due to the rise of artificial intelligence within the industry, the Model Alliance recently introduced new amendments to the Fashion Workers Act to specifically address the misuse of AI and its growing threat to models' working lives. The Fashion Workers Act is a necessary step in ensuring models and content creators have basic protections as workers.
Background on the Fashion Workers Act:
Modeling agencies are considered to be management companies under New York State General Business Law ยง171(8), known as the "incidental booking exception," allowing them to escape licensing and regulation. In almost every case, management companies are granted blanket "power of attorney" as part of their agreement to represent models, giving management companies power to accept payments on behalf of the model, deposit checks and deduct expenses, as well as book jobs, negotiate the model's rate of pay, and give third parties permission to use the model's image, while having no obligation to act in their talents' best interests.
This leaves models unprotected outside the terms of their individual contracts โ which tend to be exploitative and one-sided in favor of the management company โ and creates a lack of transparency and accountability when it comes to basic issues like health and safety and having insight into one's own finances. For example, models often don't know whether and how much they'll be paid for jobs booked through management companies, which deduct various unexplained fees from their earnings, in addition to a 20 percent commission from the model and a 20 percent service fee from the client. Models are also often left in the dark about how their images will be used, which is particularly concerning in light of the rise of generative artificial intelligence. Models are held to multi-year, auto-renewing contracts without any guarantee of actually being booked paid work, which ensnares them in cycles of debt and makes models highly vulnerable to other forms of abuse, including human trafficking. When models experience abuse, they do not have a safe channel to file work-related grievances without a risk of retaliation.
The Fashion Workers Act would address these issues by closing the legal loophole by which management companies escape accountability and create basic protections for the models and content creators who are the faces of New York's fashion industry.
The Fashion Workers Act would require management companies to:
And discontinue bad practices such as:
The Fashion Workers Act would require clients to:
And discontinue bad practices such as:
About the Model Alliance
Founded in 2012, the Model Alliance has been at the forefront of advancing labor rights in the fashion industry for the last decade. Through strategic research, policy initiatives, and campaigns, the Model Alliance aims to promote fair treatment, equal opportunity, and more sustainable practices in the fashion industry, from the runway to the factory floor. The Model Alliance has championed multiple pieces of legislation, including the Child Model Act in New York and the Talent Protections Act in California. The organization also runs the world's only industry-specific support line, MA Support. In 2021, the organization received the first Positive Social Influence Award from the Council of Fashion Designers of America at the CFDA Awards.