Mr. Chair and honourable members of the committee, thank you for the opportunity to appear today.
Our organization was founded by Joy Smith, a former member of Parliament herself. During her time in Parliament, she successfully introduced two private members' bills that amended the Criminal Code of Canada to strengthen Canada's response to human trafficking. That legislative work helped lay the foundation for how human trafficking is defined and prosecuted in our country today.
For more than 30 years, Joy Smith and our foundation have supported survivors, trained frontline professionals and worked with governments at the federal, provincial and municipal levels. We work closely with law enforcement, service providers and international partners to help ensure that Canada's response reflects both lived experience and established legal standards. To date we have supported more than 7,000 survivors of sex trafficking and forced labour.
Consistent throughout our work, human trafficking is often misunderstood while it hides in plain sight. Under the UN Palermo protocol, which Canada has ratified, human trafficking consists of three elements—an act; a means, such as coercion or abuse of vulnerability; and a purpose of exploitation. The International Labour Organization further operationalizes this through 11 indicators of forced labour, which are widely used by governments and courts around the world to assess risk. When we apply that framework, we see that labour trafficking often emerges not from a single illegal act but from systems that concentrate power on one side of the employment relationship and that remove meaningful choice from a worker. Our foundation is seeing a steady increase in forced labour cases and indicators coming to our office, particularly in sectors where immigration dependency and misclassification intersect.
This is where the trucking industry enters this discussion for us today. In 2024 we launched an awareness campaign, called Trafficking Report, in response to the patterns we were seeing in the trucking industry in particular. As this committee has heard, Driver Inc. undermines labour standards, distorts competition and erodes road safety. Those impacts are very real. This is impacting real lives, as we heard today in the heartbreaking stories from the courageous witnesses earlier. What our work at the foundation adds to this conversation is an explanation of how, in certain conditions, those same structures can meet internationally recognized thresholds for forced labour. That risk increases significantly when misclassification is combined with immigration dependency. When a worker's income, housing, legal status and pathway to permanent residency are all tied to a single employer, the balance of power shifts. When that worker is also indebted through recruitment or training fees, is isolated from community supports, and is unable to change employers without serious consequences, reporting abuse becomes unsafe. In international terms, this is what abuse of vulnerability looks like.
Based on our work, the patterns we see in the trucking sector include debt bondage through recruitment costs, deception about wages and working conditions, withholding of documents, threats related to immigration status, physical violence, systemic wage theft, unpaid overtime, excessive hours, isolation and unsafe conditions. When multiple indicators of coercion are present, this creates an environment where forced labour thrives regardless of whether the industry itself is legal or regulated. This helps explain why enforcement alone has struggled. Workers often cannot report safely, remedies are slow or unenforced, and companies can dissolve and re-emerge while workers are left without wages or status.
I want to be clear that this is not about casting suspicion on the entire trucking industry. It's about aligning Canada's trucking, labour and immigration systems with the international standards and Criminal Code provisions that Canada already has committed to uphold. Canada does have some strong laws. Of course more work can be done, but what matters now is ensuring that our systems do not unintentionally enable the human trafficking that those laws were designed to prevent.
Thank you, Mr. Chair. I welcome your questions.
