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Sham Contracting and Visa-Compliance

The Sham Contracting and Visa-Compliance Code of Conduct is a voluntary, industry-led initiative developed by the Building Industry Consultative Council. The Sham Contracting and Visa-Compliance Code of Conduct (Code) is a voluntary, industry-led initiative developed by the Building Industry Consultative Council (BICC).

BICC is a high-level advisory council to the Minister for Industrial Relations. It is made up of employers, industry associations, unions and government. BICC advises the minister on economic and industrial relations issues affecting the building and construction industry.

BICC has identified sham contracting and visa-compliance as significant industry issues.

The Code has been developed to help Principal Contractors and Subcontractors understand their legal obligations under immigration and workplace laws concerning these matters. A failure to comply with visa requirements or allowing sham contracting to occur are unlawful practices and punishable by law with significant penalties.

It is expected that Principal Contractors and Subcontractors, Employer Associations and Unions will formally sign on to the Code and agree to have such commitment published. By signing up to the Code the signatory undertakes to act in accordance with its requirements.

It is noted that by signing the Code it does not in any way affect the obligations that any party has under the law and to regulatory bodies such as the Fair Work Commission, Fair Work Ombudsman, Australian Tax Office, WorkSafe and State Revenue Office.

Objectives

The objectives of the Code are to ensure:

Application

The Code applies to:

Principal contractors will include a contractual obligation requiring compliance with the Code through the sub-contracting supply chain to ensure employees receive their lawful entitlements under workplace and immigration laws.

BICC checklists

In 2020, BICC developed sham contracting and visa-compliance self-assessment checklists (Checklists) to help Principal Contractors and Subcontractors make a preliminary self-assessment about their compliance with immigration and workplace laws.

The Checklists were developed to provide Principal Contractors and Subcontractors with tools they can use to be confident they are complying with their legal obligations under immigration and workplace laws.

Read the sham contracting compliance checklist for contractors.

Code requirements

Principal Contractors commit to the following practices:

Subcontractors commit to the following practices:

Employer Associations and Unions commit to the following practices:

Immigration and workplace laws

Migration Act

If your projects involve engaging overseas workers, you must understand their visa requirements. There are a range of visa options to engage overseas workers and strict penalties for non-compliance.

Employers must comply with their legal obligations under the Migration Act 1958 and its subordinate legislation. This may include obligations relating to the lawful engagement of persons or conditions on the sponsorship, engagement and employment of persons who hold visas granted under the Migration Act 1958.

Fair Work Act

Under the sham contracting provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009, an employer cannot:

The Fair Work Act 2009 provides serious penalties for contravening these provisions.

Further information

For more information on visas and immigration matters contacted the Commonwealth Department of Home Affairs on 131 881 or visit their website.

For more information on sham contracting arrangement under the Fair Work Act 2009 contact the Fair Work Ombudsman on 13 13 94 or visit their website.

For information or referral of disputes concerning sham contracting and visa compliance contact the Victorian Building Industry Disputes Panel on (03) 9348 2613 or visit their website.

Governance

Updated 27 August 2024



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