ON
In March, a new federal law
quietly went into effect that places additional pressure on importers to
develop compliance systems for their supply chains, including identification of
items potentially made with forced labor. The Trade Facilitation and
Trade Enforcement Act of 2015 (Trade Act) prohibits
the import into the United States of goods, wares, articles, and merchandise
mined, produced, or manufactured in a foreign country by convict, forced, or
indentured labor.
The new law comes at a time when federal and state
regulators are turning their focus to supply chain management as a way to
combat forced labor overseas.
At the National Association of Attorneys General
(NAAG) 2016 Winter Meeting, for example, Attorney General Loretta Lynch gave a
speech noting that the Department of Justice would prioritize human trafficking
for law enforcement at all levels. Susan Coppedge, Ambassador-at-Large to Monitor
and Combat Trafficking in Persons and Senior Advisor to the Secretary of State,
also presented to the AGs at NAAG. Given this scrutiny, any company—regardless
of industry—that imports goods from overseas should review its supply chain
management policies to ensure that they are appropriately tailored to address
this issue.
What Does the New Law Do?
The Trade Act closes a
loophole in the U.S. Tariff Act of 1930 (19
U.S.C. § 1307), which had previously allowed the import of products
made with forced labor if the “consumptive demand” for those goods in the
United States exceeded domestic production. This loophole essentially swallowed
the prohibition, as demand in most industries exceeds the capacity of domestic
production. The new prohibition does not target specific countries or products,
but rather permits U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to investigate allegations
that a specific product was made using forced labor.
Why Should a Company Care?
The Trade Act places additional pressure on importers
to develop compliance systems for their supply chains. Under the new law, any
interested party, including competitors and public interest groups, may request
that CBP investigate whether an import was produced using forced labor in
another country. Following an investigation, any products found to be made in
whole or in part using forced labor will be subject to exclusion and/or
seizure, and may lead to investigation of the importer(s).
CBP and public interest groups are likely to look for
“leads” in the U.S. Department of Labor’s List of Goods Produced by Child Labor
or Forced Labor and List of Products Identified by Executive Order 13126.
Although these lists do not ban the import of any of the listed products into
the United States, they do identify categories of products by country that the
United States has reason to believe are at risk of having been produced by child
or forced labor.
Separate from the new federal
law, a number of state attorneys general have created task forces focused on
human trafficking. In addition, California enacted its own law in 2010, the Transparency
in Supply Chains Act (CTSCA), which requires large retailers and
manufacturers doing business in California to disclose on their websites their
“efforts to eradicate slavery and human trafficking from [their] direct supply
chain for tangible goods offered for sale.”
These efforts demonstrate that
states, like the federal government, are dedicating enforcement and other
resources to this issue. While the federal law goes much further than the
disclosure requirements of CTSCA, the bottom line is that
federal and state regulators are focused more than ever on pressuring companies
to police their supply chains for potential human trafficking or forced labor.
What Should a Company Do To
Limit Risk?
To minimize potential risk under federal and state
law, importers should confirm that they have implemented policies and
procedures that are appropriately tailored for their import activities. Examples include:
·
Develop a comprehensive import compliance policy that
addresses supply chain management, including the company’s policies for
limiting the potential for human trafficking and forced labor. This policy
should also address compliance with the CTSCA, which requires covered companies
to post disclosures on their websites related to five specific areas:
verification, audits, certification, internal accountability, and training.
·
All supplier agreements should require an affirmative
certification by the supplier that it is aware of and in compliance with the
company’s policy.
·
Audits should be conducted by independent third-party
auditors on an annual basis.
·
Training programs should be provided for employees who
work directly with the supply chain.
·
Coordinate compliance measures with existing policies
and procedures that cover export controls, anti-corruption, and import
measures.
·
Consider joining the Customs-Trade Partnership Against
Terrorism (C-TPAT) program. C-TPAT is a voluntary supply chain security program
led by CBP and focused on improving the security of private companies’ supply
chains with respect to terrorism.
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