SECTION 1. Chapter 93 of the General Laws is hereby amended by adding the following section:-
Section 115. (a) For the purposes of this section the following words shall, unless the context clearly requires otherwise, have the following meanings:
“Gross receipts”, the gross amounts realized, otherwise known as the sum of money and the fair market value of other property or services received, on the sale or exchange of property, the performance of services or the use of property or capital including, rents, royalties, interest and dividends, in a transaction that produces business income, in which the income, gain or loss is recognized or would be recognized if the transaction were in the United States, under the Internal Revenue Code, as applicable for purposes of this section. Amounts realized on the sale or exchange of property shall not be reduced by the cost of goods sold or the basis of property sold.
“Fashion manufacturer ”, a business entity which lists manufacturing as its principal business activity in the commonwealth, as reported on the entity's state tax return and primarily manufactures articles of wearing apparel or footwear.
“Fashion seller”, a business entity which sells articles of wearing apparel, footwear or fashion bags that together exceed $100,000,000 in annual gross receipts but, shall not include the sale of used wearing apparel, footwear or fashion bags, nor shall it include multi-brand retailers, except where the apparel, footwear and fashion bags private labels of those companies together exceed $100,000,000 in global revenue.
“Wearing apparel”, any costume or article of clothing worn or intended to be worn by individuals.
“Footwear”, any covering worn or intended to be worn on the foot.
“Fashion bag”, any flexible packaging made of textiles, leather or other animal products, woven material or other similar materials intended for repeated use.
“Due diligence ”, the process companies should carry out to identify, prevent, mitigate and account for how they address actual and potential adverse impacts in their own operations, their supply chain and other business relationships, as recommended in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains in the Garment and Footwear Sector, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Business Conduct and the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights.
“Due diligence report”, a document prepared by the company to communicate all relevant information concerning the existence, implementation and outcomes of due diligence in order to comply with the requirements of this section and to comply with any rules or regulations established, pursuant to this section.
“Risk-based approach”, commensurate to the likelihood and severity of the harm. The fashion seller shall prioritize the order in which it takes action based on the likelihood and severity of harm. Severity of impacts shall be determined according to their scale or gravity, scope and irremediable character.
“Supply chain tiers”, a 4 tier system defined as the following:
(i) tier 1: suppliers who produce finished goods for fashion sellers, including suppliers’ subcontractors, who provide the following services including, but not limited to sewing and embroidering;
(ii) tier 2: suppliers to tier 1, including subcontractors, who provide the following services or goods including, but not limited to knitting, weaving, washing, dyeing, finishing, printing for finished goods and components and materials for finished goods when they are stand-alone operations and not integrated with tier 1. Components shall mean materials used to build a product including, but not limited to buttons, zippers, rubber soles, down and fusibles;
(iii) tier 3: suppliers to tier 2 suppliers, including subcontractors, who process raw materials such as ginning, spinning and suppliers of chemicals; and
(iv) tier 4: companies, including subcontractors that provide raw materials to tier 3.
“Living wage”, the remuneration received for a standard workweek by a worker in a particular place sufficient to afford a decent standard of living for such worker and their family. Elements of a decent standard of living include food, water, housing, education, health care, transportation, clothing and other essential needs including provision for unexpected events. Living wage shall be determined exclusive of overtime wages and by net wages including in-kind and cash benefits and deducting taxes and deductions.
“Open data principles”, data that can be freely used, re-used and redistributed by anyone. Such data shall be findable or easily discoverable on a website or within a database, accessible or available in a machine readable, convenient, modifiable form and published as a whole, complete dataset, interoperable or able to be mixed with different data sets and reusable or provided under an open license that permits re-use and redistribution including, the intermixing with other datasets.
(b) Gross receipts, even if business income, shall not include the following items : (i) repayment, maturity or redemption of the principal of a loan, bond, mutual fund, certificate of deposit or similar marketable instrument; (ii) the principal amount received under a repurchase agreement or other transaction properly characterized as a loan; (iii) proceeds from issuance of the taxpayer's own stock or from sale of treasury stock; (iv) damages and other amounts received as the result of litigation; (v) property acquired by an agent on behalf of another; (vi) tax refunds and other tax benefit recoveries; (vii) pension reversions; (viii) contributions to capital, except for sales of securities by securities dealers; (ix) income from discharge of indebtedness; (x) amounts realized from exchanges of inventory that are not recognized under the Internal Revenue Code; (xi) amounts received from transactions in intangible assets held in connection with a treasury function of the taxpayer's unitary business and the gross receipts and overall net gains from the maturity, redemption, sale, exchange or other disposition of those intangible assets; and (xii) amounts received from hedging transactions involving intangible assets. For the purpose of this section, a hedging transaction shall mean a transaction related to the taxpayer's trading function involving futures and options transactions for the purpose of hedging price risk of the products or commodities consumed, produced or sold by the taxpayer.
(c) Every fashion seller and fashion manufacturer shall effectively carry out human rights and environmental due diligence for the portions of their business related to wearing apparel or footwear, including wearing apparel or footwear produced as a private label, which shall include:
(1) Supply chain mapping and disclosure:
(i) companies taking a risk-based approach and implementing good faith efforts to map suppliers across tier 1 through tier 4 of production. Tier 1 suppliers shall be mapped within 12 months of the effective date of this section and shall contain a minimum of 75 per cent of suppliers by volume. Tier 2 suppliers shall be mapped within 2 years of the effective date of this section and shall contain a minimum of 75 per cent of suppliers by volume. Tier 3 and tier 4 suppliers shall be mapped within 3 years of the effective date of this section and shall contain a minimum of 50 per cent of suppliers by volume or dollar value;
(ii) supplier disclosure for all tiers shall include: the name, address, parent company, product type and number of workers at each site by country; and
(iii) for tier 1 suppliers, fashion sellers shall report, at a minimum, the following information to the attorney general which shall be independently verified no less than once every 2 years: (1) the mean wages of workers and how this compares with local minimum wage and living wages; (2) the percentage of unionized factories; and (3) hours worked weekly by month and the hours and frequency of overtime by firm and country.
(2) Due diligence report:
(i) Fashion sellers must be in compliance with the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises; the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains in the Garment and Footwear Sector; the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Business Conduct and the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights: and
(ii) Fashion seller shall include in the due diligence report: (1) a link on the fashion seller’s or fashion manufacturer's website to relevant policies on responsible business conduct; (2) information on measures taken to embed responsible business conduct into policies and management systems; (3) the fashion seller’s or fashion manufacturer’s identified areas of significant risks in the contexts of its own activities and business relationships such as supply chains; (4) the significant adverse impacts on risks identified, prioritized and assessed in the context of its own activities and business relationships such as supply chains; (5) the prioritization criteria; (6) the actions taken to prevent or mitigate those risks, such as corrective action plans, to be cited where available, including estimated timelines, targets and benchmarks for improvement and their outcomes; (7) measures to track implementation and results; and (8) the fashion seller's or fashion manufacturer's provision of or co-operation in any remediation .
(d) Reporting. Every fashion seller shall develop and submit to the attorney general annually, beginning within 24 months of the effective date of this section, a due diligence report. Such report, excluding the information required in clause (ii) of paragraph (2) of subsection (c), shall also be made publicly available on the fashion seller’s website in a machine readable and reusable format, published in line with open data principles through a clear and easily discoverable link to the required information. In the event the fashion seller does not have an internet website, the company shall provide a written disclosure to any person who has requested information within 30 days of receiving a request. Such report shall also include the fashion seller’s annual volume of material produced, including breakdown by material type.
(e) Verification. The attorney general shall develop a process for accrediting verification bodies authorized to provide verification services. The verification process shall include:
(1) The process for accrediting verification bodies including: (i) demonstrating qualifications of verification staff, including their education, experience, and professional licenses; (ii) any judicial proceedings, enforcement actions or administrative actions filed against the verification body; and (iii) policies and mechanisms in place to prevent conflicts of interest and to identify and resolve potential conflict of interest situations if they arise.
(2) Verification bodies shall not be authorized to provide services to a company where a conflict of interest exists. A conflict of interest shall include: (i) the verification body and reporting entity sharing any management staff or board of directors membership or any of the senior management staff of the reporting entity having been employed by the verification body, or vice versa; (ii) any employee of the verification body or any employee of a related entity or a subcontractor who is a member of the verification team having provided the reporting entity with services related to the areas of verification or any services designated by the attorney general; (iii) any staff member of the verification body providing any type of non-monetary incentive to a reporting entity to secure a verification services contract; and (iv) any additional criteria provided by the attorney general.
(3) Verification bodies that have been accredited by the office of the attorney general shall notify the office within 30 days if they no longer meet the verification requirements set forth in this section.
(f) Enforcement. The requirements imposed on fashion sellers by this section shall be monitored, investigated and enforced by the attorney general or an administrator designated by the attorney general to bring civil proceedings for an injunction, monetary damages or civil performance of a statutory duty. Fashion sellers shall be deemed non-compliant with this section if they fail to conduct effective due diligence or fail to file a due diligence report pursuant to this section.
The attorney general or the attorney general’s designated administrator as applicable shall annually publish and make publicly available a report regarding compliance with this section including, listing the fashion sellers who are out of compliance with this section.
Fashion sellers found to be out of compliance with this section after the attorney general or the attorney general's designated administrator as applicable has provided notice of noncompliance and after a 3 month period to meet obligations under this section has lapsed, may be fined up to 2 per cent of annual revenues. Such fines shall be deposited in the Fashion Sustainability and Social Accountability Fund established in section 2BBBBBB of chapter 29.
Any person may report a violation of this section to the attorney general's office.
(g) Liability. Any fashion seller shall be held jointly and severally liable for the payment of wages of the employees of its tier 1 suppliers. For the purposes of this section, wages shall be inclusive of all monies owed in accordance with the law of the country of manufacture including, wages, overtime wages, paid leave, incentives, bonuses, severance and any other form of payment or compensation. For the purposes of this section, employee shall include all workers, whether full-time or part-time, permanent or fixed-term, directly contracted or hired indirectly through an agency or other intermediary. Fashion sellers shall be liable for payment of lost wages and an additional equal amount as liquidated damages.
(h) Regulations. The attorney general shall promulgate all rules and regulations necessary to implement the provisions of this section. The attorney general shall also develop and disseminate educational materials to fashion sellers including, providing alerts on time sensitive issues, emerging issues and high-risk country situations while assisting fashion sellers in improving the quality of their due diligence processes.
SECTION 2. Chapter 29 of the General Laws is hereby amended by inserting after section 2AAAAAA the following section:-
Section 2BBBBBB. (a) There shall be established and set up on the books of the commonwealth a separate fund to be known as the Fashion Sustainability and Social Accountability Fund for the purpose of requiring fashion sellers to be accountable to environmental and social standards. The attorney general shall administer the fund to assist in verification and enforcement of human rights and environmental due diligence by fashion sellers pursuant to section 115 of chapter 93. There shall be credited to the fund:
(i) revenue from appropriations and other money authorized by the general court and specifically designated to be credited to the fund;
(ii) funds from public and private sources such as gifts, grants and donations to further fashion sustainability and social accountability;
(iii) funds of all moneys deposited pursuant to subsection (g) section 115 of chapter 93; and
(iv) interest earned on money in the fund.
Amounts credited to the fund shall not be subject to further appropriation and any money remaining in the fund at the end of a fiscal year shall not revert to the General Fund.
(b) Amounts credited to the fund may be expended, without further appropriation, by the attorney general for purposes related to the instruction of fashion sellers on human rights and environmental due diligence, including, but not limited to:
(i) development of curricular educational materials to fashion sellers pursuant to subsection (e) of section 115 of chapter 93; and
(ii) professional development training, including the provision of trainings, seminars, conferences and materials for fashion sellers to use in the teaching proper due diligence pursuant to subsection (e) of section 115 of chapter 93.
(c) Amounts received from private sources shall be approved by the attorney general and subject to review before being deposited in the fund to ensure that pledged funds are not accompanied by conditions, explicit or implicit, on the implementation of human rights and environmental due diligence that may be detrimental to the neutral and rigorous teaching of environmental and social standards or unduly influence the direction of environmental and human rights policy. The review shall be made publicly available on the attorney general’s website.
(e) Annually, not later than October 1, the attorney general shall report to the clerks of the senate and house of representatives, the joint committee on judiciary and the house and senate committees on ways and means on the fund’s activities. The report shall include, but not be limited to:
(i) the source and amount of funds received;
(ii) the expenditures made from the fund and the purposes of such expenditures;
(iii) any funds provided to institutions and other stakeholder organizations;
(iv) anticipated revenue and expenditure projections for the next fiscal year; and
(v) the number of fashion sellers that have used the fund to implement a new program or enhance or maintain current programming. The report shall be publicly available on the attorney general’s website.
SECTION 3. This act shall take effect 6 months upon passage.
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