(1) Except as
provided in subsection (4) of this section, domestic employers of
foreign workers and international labor recruitment agencies must
provide a disclosure statement as described in this section to
foreign workers who have been referred to or hired by a
Washington employer on or after June 10, 2010.
(2) The disclosure statement must:
(a) Be provided in English or, if the worker is not fluent
or literate in English, another language that is understood by
the worker;
(b) State that the worker may be considered an employee
under the laws of the state of Washington and is subject to state
worker health and safety laws and may be eligible for workers'
compensation insurance and unemployment insurance;
(c) State that the worker may be subject to both state and
federal laws governing overtime and work hours, including the
minimum wage act under chapter 49.46 RCW;
(d) Include an itemized listing of any deductions the
employer intends to make from the worker's pay for food and
housing;
(e) Include an itemized listing of the international labor
recruitment agency's fees;
(f) State that the worker has the right to control over his
or her travel and labor documents, including his or her visa, at
all times and that the employer may not require the employee to
surrender those documents to the employer or to the international
labor recruitment agency while the employee is working in the
United States, except as otherwise required by law or regulation
or for use as supporting documentation in visa applications;
(g) Include a list of services or a hot line a worker may
contact if he or she thinks that he or she may be a victim of
trafficking.
(3) The department of labor and industries may create a
model disclosure form and post the model form on its web site so
that domestic employers of foreign workers and international
labor recruitment agencies may download the form, or mail the
form upon request. The disclosure statement must be given to the
worker no later than the date that the worker arrives at the
place of employment in Washington.
(4) If a foreign worker has been provided an informational
pamphlet developed under the William Wilberforce trafficking
victims protection reauthorization act of 2008, the domestic
employer or international labor recruitment agency is not
required to provide the disclosure statement under this section.
For the purposes of this subsection a worker is presumed to have
been provided an informational pamphlet so long as the William
Wilberforce trafficking victims protection reauthorization act is
in effect and he or she holds an A-3, G-5, NATO-7, H, J, or B-1
personal or domestic servant visa.
[2010 c 142 § 2; 2009 c 492 § 2.]