ISS AS
ESRS disclosure: ESRS S1 \ DR S1-1 \ Paragraph 19
Tags Tree
- Provide detailed information regarding your company's policies designed to manage material impacts, risks, and opportunities associated with your own workforce. Specify whether these policies apply to specific groups within your workforce or encompass the entire workforce, in accordance with ESRS 2 MDR-P Policies adopted to manage material sustainability matters.
-
Question Id: S1-1_01
Our industry and business characteristics make our people impact the most material of our sustainability impacts, which reflects directly in our people policy framework that moves from higher level commitments and principles in our Code of Conduct to detailed policies and principles aimed more specifically at our material impact areas with our Global People Standards focused towards working conditions and equal treatment, our ISS Group HSEQ Policy focused towards occupational health & safety and our ISS Diversity, Inclusion & Belonging Policy focused on equal opportunity. Our fundamental promises to and requirements for our placemakers are anchored in our Code of Conduct. It is available in 22 languages and sets requirements to the personal conduct of all placemakers and provides fundamental principles that we will abide by in our people practices including commitments on upholding the United Nations Declaration of Human Rights, the United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, the ten Principles of the UN Global Compact and the Core Conventions of the International Labour Organisation. It directly addresses child labour, forced labour and trafficked labour. Our Code of Conduct is supported by several policies most notably our Global People Standards, our Diversity, Inclusion & Belonging Policy and our Group HSEQ Policy. All placemakers are required to take mandatory Code of Conduct training to ensure that the basic principles are known and understood. The Global People Standards provide a systematic and consistent approach to managing our people and others providing services under our direction and covers themes within human rights, labour practices, health and safety, legal compliance and supply chain management. Examples of specific topics covered are recruitment, promotion and termination, discrimination, diversity & inclusion, appraisals, learning & development, employee relations, health, safety & working environment, remuneration, working hours, protection of families with children and the right to privacy. In 2024, we did a major update to our Global People Standards particularly in regard to our living wage commitment and living wage benchmarks as well as our commitment to upholding and promoting human rights in all aspects of our operations. The Diversity, Inclusion & Belonging Policy provides a consistent global framework and governance to support our commitment to a global diversity, inclusion & belonging agenda and provides an environment and drive a culture that actively values diversity and inclusion at all levels of the organisation and that provides an environment of equal opportunity. The Group HSEQ Policy provides our commitment and approach towards systematically improving our health and safety, environment and quality practices across the organisation (e.g. through engaging with employees and suppliers (including sub-suppliers). It is supported by our HSEQ Management System Manual which is aligned to ISO 9001, 14001 and 45001 and delivered through global minimum management and operational standards.
Report Date: 4Q2024Relevance: 90%
- Provide a detailed account of the total monetary amounts related to fines, penalties, and compensation for damages arising from identified severe human rights incidents, such as forced labor, human trafficking, or child labor. Additionally, reconcile these amounts with the most relevant figures presented in your financial statements.
-
Question Id: S1-17_12
The total monetary amount for severe human rights violations is 0 DKKm.
Report Date: 4Q2024Relevance: 50%