Skip to content
Union

Reforms will combat migrant exploitation

Unions NSW 2 mins read

Unions NSW, a long time campaigner against migrant exploitation, has declared the passage of a suite of reforms through the Senate as a massive step forward for justice and fairness.

 

The reforms repeal the criminal offence of working in breach of visa conditions, and confirm that workplace protections apply to all workers in Australia, including those who are undocumented.  

There are new offences for employers who use immigration-related threats to coerce migrant workers into exploitation, alongside a new prohibited employer list, banning businesses that have engaged in exploitation from hiring new migrant workers for a period of time.

 

The laws also impose a new requirement to take evidence of workplace exploitation into account before deciding to cancel a worker’s visa.

 

Unions NSW has agitated for these reforms since 2017. In that time, it has published original research auditing more than 10,000 foreign language job advertisements to consistently show an overwhelming majority of jobs advertised below minimum wages. A 2022 report found 60% of jobs ads were below minimum wage, despite the post COVID environment of labour shortages and record low migration.

 

“These reforms are a seismic shift in favour of justice and fairness,” said Mark Morey, Secretary of Unions NSW. “Over the last seven years, dozens of brave but vulnerable migrant workers have told their stories, risking serious retribution to blow the whistle on the worst exploitation. 

 

“We have heard stories of foreign workers rummaging through bins, being paid rations and enduring sexual and physical assault. Today’s reforms are built on the bravery of those workers and trade unions pay tribute to them.

 

“Migrant exploitation has been a blight on Australia. Today’s reform bring us a big step to making the ‘fair go’ closer to reality than rhetoric.

 

“We congratulate the Labor Government, in particular Minister Burke, Minister O’Neil and Minister Giles, for their commitment to landing these reforms. We look forward to working closely together to stamp out race-based exploitation at work.”

 

Contact: Nick Lucchinelli 0422 229 032 

More from this category

  • Education Training, Union
  • 10/01/2025
  • 10:59
National Tertiary Education Union

Monash University admits fresh $7.6 million wage theft scandal

The National Tertiary Education Union has demanded an urgent federal parliamentary inquiry into university governance after Monash University admitted underpaying staff $7.6 million. The new wage theft revelations at Monash are additional to $10 million in previous underpayments at the university, and millions more in alleged underpayments NTEU is pursuing in the Federal Court for unpaid consultation hours. The NTEU is calling for an independent investigation of governance at Monash, alongside a federal parliamentary inquiry into the governance crisis at universities across Australia. The national university wage theft tally is now a confirmed $265 million, with a further $159 million…

  • Disability, Union
  • 19/12/2024
  • 06:06
Australian Services Union

Unions fight to end Xmas pay cut for NDIS workers

The Australian Services Union hopes this will be the last Christmas that disability support workers are shortchanged $200, as the Fair Work Commission hears closing arguments in a wage theft case today and tomorrow.The ASU and other unions are fighting to stop NDIS providers from misclassifying disability support workers as lower-paid home care staff, while claiming the full NDIS price and pocketing the difference.Some workers are losing $9 per hour on a normal shift, and $20 per hour on public holidays, including Christmas Day.ASU NSW & ACT Secretary Angus McFarland said the Fair Work Commission can close the loophole by…

  • Union
  • 16/12/2024
  • 13:34
Police Association of South Australia

Union secures record-breaking pay rises and EB outcome for SA police officers

Union secures record-breaking pay rises and EB outcome for SA police officers The Police Association has negotiated a historic enterprise bargaining deal for its members, with lead negotiator and president Wade Burns saying it’s a necessary outcome in the quest to avert the retention crisis gripping policing in SA. Pivotal to the new arrangement are increased wages, starting on the first full pay period on or after 1 January 2025, that represent the highest comparative pay rises for SA police since enterprise bargaining began in 1995. In addition to wage outcomes, the deal also comes with an extensive suite of…

  • Contains:

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.