TUC worries over GLA reforms
The TUC is concerned that the government’s reforms to the powers, functions and scope of the Gangmasters Licensing Authority (GLA) will lead to fewer workplace inspections and more workers at risk of exploitation.
TUC general secretary Frances O’Grady said that the GLA has played a crucial role in clamping down on rogue employers and preventing abuses like the Morecambe Bay tragedy through its licensing of labour providers.
However, she voiced concerns “that government proposals to make licensing more flexible will lead to fewer workplace inspections, leaving workers more vulnerable to exploitation”.
A weaker “more flexible” vetting process puts workers at risk of victimisation, not being paid the national minimum wage or holiday pay, and being housed in squalid conditions. It increases the chances of bad employers undercutting good ones”.
She said that the government has chosen to ignore the views of many stakeholders on a move to a more flexible approach to licensing, which only one in five supported. And it was “very troubling” that ministers have yet to say how they will properly fund the expanded remit of the new Gangmasters and Labour Abuse Authority.