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Is There A Supply Chain Due Diligence Law In The US? – Employee Benefits & Compensation


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Federal and state laws relating to supply chain due
diligence include:

  • A 2010 Wall Street reform and consumer protection law requires
    SEC-listed companies to disclose whether they use ‘conflict
    minerals’ and whether these minerals originate in the
    Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) or an adjoining country. In
    such a case, the company must submit a ‘Conflict Minerals
    Report’ describing the measures taken to exercise due
    diligence, the description of the products and the facilities used
    to process them, the country of origin of the conflict minerals,
    and the efforts to determine the mine or location of origin with
    the greatest possible specificity.

  • A California law that took effect in 2012 requires covered
    companies to disclose information regarding their efforts to
    eradicate human trafficking and slavery within their supply chains.
    The law applies to retail sellers and manufacturers that do
    business in California and have annual worldwide gross receipts
    exceeding USD 100 million. These companies must disclose the extent
    of their efforts in five areas: verification, audits,
    certification, internal accountability, and training.

  • The Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act (UFLPA), which was
    signed into Federal law on 23 December 2021, establishes a
    rebuttable presumption that the importation of any goods mined,
    produced, or manufactured wholly or in part in China’s Xinjiang
    Uyghur Autonomous Region, or produced by certain entities, is
    prohibited. The presumption applies unless the Commissioner of U.S.
    Customs and Border Protection determines that the importer of
    record has complied with specified conditions and that the goods
    were not produced using forced labour.

  • A longstanding Federal tariff act prohibits the importation of
    all goods and merchandise mined, produced, or manufactured wholly
    or in part in any foreign country by forced labour, convict labour,
    and/or indentured labour under penal sanctions, including forced
    child labour. This law is enforced by the U.S. Customs and Border
    Protection. CBP has the authority to investigate, issue orders and
    findings, and impose civil penalties against domestic companies to
    prevent merchandise produced using forced labour in the supply
    chain from being imported into the United States. https://www.cbp.gov/trade/forced-labor

  • The United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) has fully
    enforceable labour standards, including enforcement of laws
    regarding forced labour and child labour. USMCA also includes new
    provisions that require the parties to take measures to prohibit
    the importation of goods produced by forced labour, including
    forced child labour, to address violence against workers exercising
    their labour rights, to address sex-based discrimination in the
    workplace, and to ensure that migrant workers are protected under
    labour laws.

  • A 2015 Federal contracting rule strengthens the existing
    prohibition against trafficking in government contracts by
    expressly prohibiting Federal contractors, contractor employees,
    subcontractors, and subcontractor employees from engaging in
    specific types of trafficking-related activities. These include
    destroying and confiscating identity documents, using misleading
    recruitment practices, failing to provide return transportation
    costs upon the end of employment in most situations, failing to
    provide an employment contract in writing, providing housing that
    fails to meet standards, and charging employees recruitment fees.
    Additionally, where contracts that exceed USD 500,000 are performed
    outside the United States, contractors must develop a compliance
    plan with an employee awareness program, a process for employee
    reporting of violations, a housing plan, and a wage and hour plan.
    Such contractors must certify annually that they are implementing
    their plans, and that neither they or their subcontractors have
    engaged in the prohibited practices, or that if violations are
    found in their supply chain that they have taken appropriate
    remedial and referral actions.

  • A 1999 Executive Order requires the U.S. Department of Labor to
    publish a List of Products Produced by Forced or Indentured Child
    Labor and their countries of origin. This List is intended to
    ensure that U.S. federal agencies do not procure goods made by
    forced or indentured child labour. Under procurement regulations,
    federal contractors who supply products on the List must certify
    that they have made a good faith effort to determine whether forced
    or indentured child labour was used to produce the items
    supplied.

Recent proposed legislation relating to supply chain
transparency includes:

  • The Slave-Free Business Certification Act of 2022, which was
    recently introduced in the U.S. Senate, would require any publicly
    traded mining or manufacturing entity with annual worldwide gross
    receipts that exceed USD 500 million to conduct an audit of its
    supply chain, to investigate the presence or use of forced labour
    by the company or its suppliers. Covered companies would be
    required to submit and publish a report containing the results of
    the audit and the company’s efforts to eradicate forced labour
    from the supply chain.

  • The Corporate Governance Improvement and Investor Protection
    Act was passed by the House in June 2021 and is currently before a
    Senate This Act would require publicly traded companies to
    periodically disclose information related to (among other things)
    environmental, social, and governance performance metrics;
    expenditures for certain political activities; compensation
    information regarding executive officers and employees; tax
    jurisdiction, income, and assets of constituent entities on a
    country-by-country basis; and manufacturing activity in China’s
    Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region.

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.

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