Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

You are using software which is blocking our advertisements (adblocker).

As we provide the news for free, we are relying on revenues from our banners. So please disable your adblocker and reload the page to continue using this site.
Thanks!

Click here for a guide on disabling your adblocker.

Sign up for our daily Newsletter and stay up to date with all the latest news!

Subscribe I am already a subscriber

New Victoria regulations to help combat labour exploitation

A commissioner able to raid Victorian employers and launch criminal prosecutions is among the sweeping reforms to be introduced by the Andrews government to tackle the exploitation of workers by labour hire syndicates.

A legislative overhaul of the labour hire industry will be introduced by the Andrews government later this year and is set to be the toughest in Australia. While lauded by unions, it is likely to be attacked by some business groups and may also risk pushing worker exploitation interstate.

The changes come after a series of investigative reports by Fairfax Media and Four Corners exposing the systemic exploitation of vulnerable workers by labour hire syndicates. Some of the syndicates operate across state and national borders, are controlled by organised crime groups and are embedded in the supply chains of major companies, including in the retail and construction sector.

In Victoria's food bowl, thousands of mostly undocumented Malaysians work with labour hires syndicates contracted by farms, including those supplying supermarket chains.

Last November, an undercover Malaysian journalist working with Fairfax Media exposed one of Australia's largest stone fruit growers knowingly using workers underpaid and exploited by a network of labour hire companies in Swan Hill.

The Cutri Fruit farming operation in Swan Hill, along with large farming enterprises owned by A & G Lamattina & Sons and the Vizzarri family in Victoria's south east, have all faced accusations of engaging exploitative labour hire contractors. All three farms are key suppliers to major supermarket chains, who insist they run their own robust supply chain integrity schemes. These claims have been undermined by repeated revelations that leading produce suppliers are using exploited foreign workers.

Under the laws to be introduced by the state government, a new statutory agency headed by a commissioner will oversee a licensing scheme that will ban those not of "fit and proper" character from operating labour hire firms. Firms who breach labour or immigration laws will be denied licences or face civil or criminal sanctions. 

"This scheme will bring some much needed transparency to the labour hire industry. Businesses will need to show they treat their workers fairly and become licensed or face hefty penalties," Victoria's Industrial Relations Minister Natalie Hutchins said in a statement.

Professor Anthony Forsyth of RMIT University's Graduate School of Business and Law, whose inquiry into Victorian labour hire syndicates last year uncovered systemic worker exploitation in the agriculture and poultry sector, said the reforms went further than those he recommended as they will not be confined to high risk industries.

While he said the scheme's broader remit "will benefit more workers," Mr Forsyth also cautioned that the new regime would only be effective it had was adequately resourced and prepared to prosecute offenders.

Publication date:

Related Articles → See More