Background
Overview of the bill
2.1
The bill would amend the Fair Work Act 2009 (Fair Work Act) to
protect vulnerable workers by:
-
introducing a higher scale of penalties for 'serious
contraventions' of payment-related workplace laws;
-
increasing penalties for record-keeping failures;
-
making franchisors and holding companies responsible for
underpayments by their franchisees or subsidiaries where they knew or ought to
have reasonably known of the contraventions and failed to take reasonable steps
to prevent them;[1]
-
expressly prohibiting employers from unreasonably requiring their
employees to make payments (e.g. demanding a proportion of their wages be paid
back in cash); and
-
strengthening the evidence-gathering powers of the Fair Work
Ombudsman (FWO) to ensure that the exploitation of vulnerable workers can be
effectively investigated.[2]
2.2
The proposed amendments aim to more effectively deter unlawful practices
that involve the deliberate and systematic exploitation of workers.[3]
The need for the bill
2.3
Over recent years the exploitation of vulnerable workers (including
migrant workers) has been examined in a range of reports. These include:
-
the FWO's June 2015 inquiry report into the labour procurement
arrangements of the Baiada Group in New South Wales;[4]
-
the Productivity Commission's November 2015 report into the
workplace relations framework;[5]
-
the Senate Education and Employment References Committee's March
2016 report entitled 'A National Disgrace: The Exploitation of Temporary Work
Visa Holders';[6]
and
-
the FWO's April 2016 inquiry report into 7-Eleven.[7]
2.4
In particular, the Senate Education and Employment References
Committee's inquiry into the impact of temporary work visa programs highlighted
shocking instances of exploitation. The report found that such unscrupulous
behaviour not only had a detrimental impact on the workers themselves, but also
negatively impacted on Australia's labour markets, placing downward pressure on
the wages and conditions of workers and undercutting the majority of legitimate
employers that abide by Australian workplace laws.[8]
2.5
Media investigations have also detailed instances of serious worker
exploitation from numerous well-known companies, including 7-Eleven, Pizza Hut,
Caltex, Domino's Pizza and United Petroleum.[9]
2.6
As a result of these inquiry reports, as well as significant media
attention, the Australian community has become concerned about deliberate and
systematic non‑compliance with the Fair Work Act. As the Explanatory
Memorandum (EM) noted:
The bill addresses increasing community concern about the
exploitation of vulnerable workers (including migrant workers) by unscrupulous
employers, and responds to a growing body of evidence that the laws need to be
strengthened.[10]
2.7
The EM further observed:
The Inquiry into 7-Eleven report [by the FWO in April
2016], for example, revealed not only systematic underpayment of migrant
workers, but also a practice of some franchisees paying their employees the
lawful rate, but then coercing them to pay back a certain proportion of their
wages to the employer in cash. In some cases, records were deliberately
falsified to disguise the underpayments and leave the impression that workers
were being paid their lawful entitlements. A series of cases involving the
exploitation of franchise workers (both preceding and following the 7‑Eleven
scandal) demonstrate more can be done to protect vulnerable workers.[11]
2.8
The negative impacts of deliberate and systematic non-compliance with
workplace laws by unscrupulous employers are stark: employees are denied the
minimum wages and conditions to which they are entitled; compliant employers
are placed at a competitive disadvantage; and Australia's international
reputation as a desirable place to visit and work is undermined.[12]
2.9
The FWO submission outlined the limitations of the current statutory
provisions:
...the FWO has faced a range of challenges achieving lasting
behavioural change in these circumstances [systematic exploitation of
vulnerable workers] using the current tools available. The agency finds that
the reality of what can be achieved in some limited but critically important
areas, using the existing enforcement framework in the Fair Work Act 2009,
falls short of community expectations.[13]
2.10
The Department of Employment stated that in developing the bill between
October 2016 and February 2017 it undertook targeted consultations with a
variety of stakeholders, including:
-
employer and industry groups;
-
unions;
-
non-government organisations;
-
state and territory governments;
-
the Committee on Industrial Legislation under the National
Workplace Relations Consultative Council; and
-
the FWO.[14]
Committee view
2.11
While the committee acknowledges that the majority of employers are
compliant with Australian workplace laws, several recent high-profile cases
have identified that the existing provisions within the Fair Work Act are insufficient
to effectively deal with situations where vulnerable workers have been deliberately
and systematically exploited.
2.12
The committee is of the opinion that the bill addresses a growing body
of evidence that indicates that the Fair Work Act needs to be strengthened in
order to better protect vulnerable workers, and appropriately punish those who
deliberately and systematically break the law.
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