Modern slavery is closer than you might think
The Walk Free Foundation's Global Slavery Index estimates that 15,000 people in Australia1 (and 40 million people globally 2are living in modern slavery.
In the last complete year of records, the Australian Federal Police received 224 reports of human trafficking, slavery and slavery-like offences. One of those reports led to the arrest of the owners of the Cake Merchant, a chain of cake stores in Western Sydney.
The owners have been accused of making an employee work excessive hours without pay, confiscating their passport, using threats of deportation and monitoring overseas phone calls with friends and family. They have been charged with multiple modern slavery offences.
Developments in reporting obligations
The Modern Slavery Act 2018 (Cth) (Commonwealth Act) has been in place for nearly four years and imposes mandatory reporting obligations on Commonwealth government bodies and private enterprises if they meet specific criteria. State and territory government bodies and local councils were not subject to any modern slavery reporting requirements under the Commonwealth Act.
With recent amendments to the Modern Slavery Act 2018 (NSW) (Act), which came into effect on 1 January 2022, NSW government bodies, local councils and state owned corporations will now be obliged to undertake a review of their supply chains and undertake a form of modern slavery reporting.
Thanks to their extensive supply chains, these entities can play an important role in the fight against modern slavery. The Act requires NSW government bodies, councils and state owned corporations to take reasonable steps to ensure the goods and services they buy are not the product of modern slavery, and to report on how they do this.
What are the obligations of NSW government bodies and local councils?
The Act imposes less onerous reporting obligations compared to the Commonwealth Act. While the Commonwealth Act sets out several mandatory reporting criteria for preparing a Modern Slavery Statement (MSS), the Act is less prescriptive and requires NSW government bodies and councils to:
- assess the risks of modern slavery within their supply chains
- implement effective due diligence to ensure that goods and services are not the product of modern slavery
- include a statement in their annual report (which must be
publicly accessible) detailing:
- the steps taken to ensure goods and services procured during the reporting period were not the product of modern slavery
- action taken in relation to any issue identified as significant by the Anti-Slavery Commissioner (see below) concerning the operations of the entity during the reporting period
- co-operate with the Anti-Slavery Commissioner in the disclosure of information and provision of assistance and support with respect to modern slavery and victims of modern slavery.
NSW government bodies and local councils are not obliged to prepare an MSS in accordance with the Commonwealth Act or file it on the federal Modern Slavery Statement Register. However, if these entities choose to do so they will meet the requirements of the Act.
To facilitate disclosure and transparency, the Act also provides protection from criminal and civil liability if information is disclosed in good faith to the Anti-Slavery Commissioner, which may otherwise be subject to disclosure restrictions, for example, confidentiality obligations.
What are the obligations of state owned corporations?
The Act will make it mandatory for all NSW state owned corporations to publish a MSS under the Commonwealth Act, notwithstanding whether the corporation meets the reporting thresholds under the Commonwealth Act.
In addition, a state owned corporation will be required to display a copy of its MSS on a publicly accessible website kept by the corporation and provide the Anti-Slavery Commissioner written notice that the statement has been published.
Anti-Slavery Commissioner
With the Act comes the establishment of Australia's first Anti-Slavery Commissioner, an independent office with broad oversight of government agencies and local councils.
The Anti-Slavery Commissioner has multiple roles, including awareness, education, monitoring and maintaining anti-slavery records.
The Commissioner will also monitor the effectiveness of legislation, governmental policies and action taken to combat modern slavery, issue codes of practice and maintain a public register of government bodies, local councils and state owned corporations that do not comply.
Other roles include recommendations, information, advice, education and training about ways to prevent modern slavery.
The public register
A publicly available register will be maintained by the Anti-Slavery Commissioner to identify any government bodies, local council and state owned corporation that has failed to:
- comply with the Act or directions of the Commissioner; or
- take appropriate steps to ensure future compliance with the Act in the future.
Penalties
Failure to publish a Modern Slavery Report is not currently punishable under the Act. However, this may change. That said, the Crimes Act 1900 (NSW), Human Tissue Act 1983 (NSW) and the Criminal Code Act 1995 (Cth) do carry penalties for modern slavery offences.
Preparing for the reporting period
If you are a government body, local council or state owned corporation that requires assistance in preparing for the reporting requirements under NSW's modern slavery law, please get in touch with us to discuss how we can help you meet your obligations under the Act. We have advised clients on their obligations to report under the Commonwealth Act, assisted with due diligence processes to determine modern slavery issues and responses and prepared MSS's for lodgement on the Modern Slavery Statements Register.
Footnotes
1 2018 Global Slavery Index – Australia, Walk Free Foundation https://www.globalslaveryindex.org/2018/findings/country-studies/australia/.
2 2018 Global Slavery Index – Global findings, Walk Free Foundation https://www.globalslaveryindex.org/2018/findings/global-findings/
The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.