Response to Post-Circuitbreaker Amendments to the Employment of Foreign Manpower (Work Passes) Regulations — HOME & TWC2

26 June 2020

HOME and TWC2 are deeply concerned by certain of the latest amendments to the Employment of Foreign Manpower (Work Passes) Regulations, effective 2 June 2020. These appear to empower, indeed require, employers, to confine migrant workers in their accommodation. These regulations apply to Work Permit and S Pass holders, in all premises housing seven or more workers.  

Employers’ discretion to “consent”

Workers may only leave their accommodation with the employers’ “consent”. This is the most disturbing aspect of these amendments.  Even if restrictions which discriminate against migrant workers could be rationalized as public health measures, it cannot be justifiable for workers’ freedom of movement to be put in the hands of employers, who “may grant or refuse consent”. 

Practically, these regulations appear to give employers almost unfettered power over the workers’ movement. The workers are left with no immediate recourse under the law.  Even if they call for police help, the regulations lack clear objective criteria for first responders to evaluate and override employers’ views.  Employers’ view of “emergency help” may be significantly narrower than the workers’ actual needs, for example.  Yet there are no checks on employers’ discretion to determine these needs.

We are helping several workers whose employment was terminated when they claimed unpaid wages.  Now after the circuit breaker, they are looking for new jobs.  Others need advice and help for their ongoing case.  Confinement in their accommodation has made what are already costly and onerous processes for migrant workers, even more difficult.  This regulation offers no scope for the workers to leave their accommodation for seeking redress, case advice or job-hunting.

Temporary measures?

The new regulations are not time-limited, or pegged, for example to the COVID-19 (Temporary Measures) (Control Order) Regulations’ effective period.  Enacting them within the Employment of Foreign Manpower Regulations—a keystone of the Work Pass legislative regime—symptomises their discriminatory and prejudicial nature.  

The new regulations also adjure workers to “keep [the] living space…clean and tidy” as part of the work pass conditions. That is, slovenly habits could lead to penalties as severe as revocation of their work pass.  While everyone should fairly take proportionate responsibility for clean living space, work permit conditions are not the appropriate means to enforce this.  The main factors of the spread of Covid-19 among the workers were their overcrowded living, working and transportation conditions—not conditions of their own making. 

Under this approach, migrant workers are not included in the community’s mutually responsible collective effort against Covid-19.  Rather, migrant workers become a problem to be fixed, by coercion if necessary, regardless of their rights or personal agency.

HOME and TWC2 support robust measures to protect everyone in Singapore, including migrant workers, from Covid-19.  But a blanket legislative sledgehammer to Work Permit and S Pass holders as a demographic, regardless of individual exposure or infection risk, cannot be justified by public health concerns.

Migrant workers are part of our community.  Just like all of us, they want to stay healthy to provide for their families; they want to be socially responsible.  This public health crisis unleashed forces that swept hundreds of thousands of them into situations beyond anyone’s control.  As Singapore eases back the past two months’ restrictions, the draconian measures to contain and control Covid-19 among migrant workers should likewise be minimized—not entrenched in even more sweeping harsh laws.


 
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Download the joint statement here.

HOME