Government extends reporting deadlines for entities required to comply with the Modern Slavery Act 2018

The Assistant Minister for Customs, Community Safety and Multicultural Affairs, the Hon Jason Wood MP, today announced the Australian Government will extend the deadline for entities due to lodge statements in 2020 under the Modern Slavery Act 2018 (the Act) by three months.
This three month deadline extension applies to all reporting entities under the Act operating on reporting periods that end on or before 30 June 2020.
“The Government’s decision to temporarily extend reporting deadlines under the Modern Slavery Act recognises that the coronavirus pandemic is causing significant and unprecedented disruption for Australian businesses and global supply chains,” Assistant Minister Wood said.
“Now more than ever, it is vital that entities continue to take action to combat modern slavery risks in their global operations and supply chains and report on these actions through their modern slavery statements.”
“This three month deadline extension will provide reporting entities with additional time to assess changing modern slavery risks linked to the coronavirus pandemic and help ensure that they are able to comply with their legislative obligations.”
Further information about the deadline extension and advice for reporting entities about responding to the impacts of coronavirus is available on the Department of Home Affairs’ website: https://www.homeaffairs.gov.au/about-us/our-portfolios/criminal-justice/people-smuggling-human-trafficking/modern-slavery
Source: https://minister.homeaffairs.gov.au/jasonwood/Pages/government-extends-reporting-deadlines.aspx
Photo by Scott Graham on Unsplash

Property Council of Australia Develops Platform for Modern Slavery Data

The Property Council of Australia (PCA) is leading a collaborative group of the 17 largest property companies in developing a tech platform that gathers and collates information from industry suppliers on their modern slavery exposures in operations and supply chain.

Robin Mellon, CEO of Better Sydney and member of the Australian government’s Modern Slavery Expert Advisory Group. The collaborative group, which includes Vicinity, Dexus, Mirvac and others, have paid for the development of a tech solution via Informed 365 to gather pre-competitive information from more than 1,000 supplier companies in the cleaning and security sectors in its pilot phase. The goal is to create a single source of reporting for suppliers and a pool of information that property companies can use when developing their Modern Slavery statements in accordance with the Australian Modern Slavery Act.

“This is a way of trying to look at the information and look at not just what do we know about our suppliers and what they know, and how they assess and address risks, but also what happens when we look at the suppliers all at once,” said Robin Mellon, CEO of Better Sydney and member of the Australian government’s Modern Slavery Expert Advisory Group. “The 17 largest property companies that are involved have a lot of shared suppliers, so how do we make this as easy as possible to collect the information, and how do we make it as easy as possible for the suppliers to report?”

“Informed 365 worked with the Property Council of Australia to develop a self-assessment questionnaire for suppliers to report on their modern slavery exposures, management and monitoring processes, as well as a risk framework to allow the property companies to assess their exposures to their tier one and tier two suppliers”, said Nicholas Bernhardt, CEO of Informed 365.

“To test the process, Informed 365 and the Property Council of Australia decided to focus on the cleaning and security sectors in its pilot stage, because those two supplier sectors were identified as bearing higher risk of modern slavery violations. The process of communicating to the common suppliers for the participating companies, as well as the collection and collation of data was a learning process”, Bernhardt said.

“The primary learning was we have to also advise the suppliers why they’re filling in these forms,” Bernhardt said. “A lot of them say, modern slavery, never heard of this, why bother? So we had to develop and provide educational material as part of this to give the suppliers a bit of clarity around why they’re completing this. The second learning was that to drive completion rates up, we have to automate email reminders, which is something that is an integral part of the solution.”

“Providing suppliers with education about modern slavery, the Modern Slavery Act, and how to fill out the questionnaire was integral to the solution because part of the proposal was to build out supplier knowledge and capability to provide more transparency year on year,” Mellon said.

“One of the outcomes from the project is that, understandably, everybody is at different levels of knowledge and maturity,” Mellon said. “If organisations do a little bit of learning through each period, by the time the next supplier assessment comes around, they are almost always in a better place.”

Acting as a collaborative group also allows the property sector to use its economies of scale to work with suppliers domestically and internationally to improve their practices around modern slavery.

Informed 365 is working more than 3,000 Australian companies that are legally required to report under the Modern Slavery Act, meaning that there are other industry applications beyond the property sector.

“At this stage, we’re about to launch two more industry specific standards, relating to the healthcare insurance sector and the energy utility sector,” Bernhardt said. “The idea behind that is to standardise the self-assessment questionnaire. We have the PCA data, and we’ll likely have 50,000 supplier companies in that database in 12 months’ time. We have the same in the healthcare one as well, and it’d be sad if the data wasn’t integrated.”

“That’s the other idea – what we’re also thinking of is opening up the back end for suppliers to say, here are the standardised set of questions, answer them once here, and try to develop a standard, because otherwise we’d have a siloed solution. About 80% of the questions would be generic, with 20% that are industry specific.”

By Rachel Alembakis

Publisher/Editor at The Sustainability Report

Rachel Alembakis has published The Sustainability Report since 2011. She has more than a decade of experience writing about institutional investments and pension funds for a variety of publications.

 

The Gold Coaster Tackling Modern Slavery

He’s one Gold Coast local who is doing his part to make the world a better place and in ways many of us couldn’t even imagine.

We sat down for a chat with Nicholas Bernhardt about abolishing modern slavery and exactly what we can do to help.

How long have you been a Gold Coast local?
I moved to the Gold Coast in 1999. I first lived in Tallebudgera and have now been in Currumbin Valley for seven years and love it there.

What do you love most about living here?
I love the combination hinterland / beaches plus the beautiful weather.

Can you give us an overview of your business Informed 365?
Informed 365 is a tech company that helps businesses in the Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) space. We manage, monitor and visualise data to ensure our clients make better, more informed decisions.

How are you tackling modern slavery in Australia and abroad?
With the passing of the Modern Slavery Act in Australia in late 2018 companies with a turnover of over $100 million have to prepare an annual Modern Slavery statement. We provide our clients with real-time dashboards and easy-to-use analytics functionality to drive visibility and transparency in their supply chains.

People may not be aware that slavery still exists, can you give us some more information…
This may surprise some people but in Australia there are currently an estimated 4,000 – 10,000 people living in slave-like conditions. In America, the number is a staggering 400,000 and worldwide there are between 40 million to 80 million slaves. After the drug trade, slavery is the second largest criminal “industry”. The Modern Slavery Act defines that modern slavery includes eight types of serious exploitation: trafficking in persons; slavery; servitude; forced marriage; forced labour; debt bondage; deceptive recruiting for labour or services; and the worst forms of child labour. The worst forms of child labour mean situations where children are subjected to slavery or similar practices, or engaged in hazardous work.

How did your business come about?
I used to be an investment banker and decided I wanted to help the corporate world “do the right thing” with regards to both their environmental and social activities. Corporations have in the past, solely been focusing on profits and shareholder value. It is time that purpose, environmental and social stewardship become an embedded, equally important part of every organisation’s vision and strategy.

What’s the plan for the future for you and the business?
Last year Andrew Banks (Morgan & Banks, Talent 2 and Australian Shark Tank) became an investor in Informed 365 and we are looking to expand into new markets with more innovations in the CSR space. We are continuously looking for new tech solutions to help organisations navigate their sustainability journey.

How can we help?
Be conscious – live a more sustainable life, be kind to your fellow human beings and animals and plant trees.

Tell us your favourites on the Coast:
Cafe for breakfast:
 Pasture & Co in the Eco Village in Currumbin Valley or simply at home with my family and dogs!
Coffee spot: I’m a tea man but I do love the Pavilion in Burleigh (not that tea is my beverage of choice there…). Having said that, there are some great little tea / coffee places in James Street in Burleigh.
Restaurant for dinner: We love heading to Balboa or trying out any of the restaurants in the casino. A couple of weeks before COVID-19 struck, we discovered a very nice little Italian restaurant in Coolangatta called Radici and are looking forward to going back again, once the world returns to normal.
How does your weekend usually look: Bushwalking, gardening and playing with our 7-year old daughter Florence. I love spending time in the garden where we are revegetating a 10 acre block to bring back the native wildlife.