- Do your employment contracts with employees and associated persons require them not to facilitate tax evasion and to report any concerns immediately?
- Has Criminal Finances Act 2017 (CFA 2017) awareness training been provided to your business and/or to all relevant employees and associated persons?
- Are you confident that all employees, and those who undertake work on your organisation’s behalf, are aware of how to seek advice and report any concerns or suspicions of tax evasion or wider financial crime?
If you answered “No” to any of the above, add this to the risk assessment we discussed earlier.
There are dozens of resources out there to help ensure your staff, contractors and other associated persons fully understand their obligations in reference to CFA 2017.
This is a service OPRaaS can support with; however, we have highlighted some examples below:
- International Compliance Association – Financial Crime Prevention
- Caring for Care – CFA awareness (health and social care sector)
- Kallidus – CFA 2017 training
- Alison – Combating Financial Crime (free)
You may find it useful to refer to the self-certification audit at this stage.
Ask yourself these questions:
Are staff and contractors provided with training on CFA 2017 compliance and recognising tax evasion risks? If so, is the training tailored to different roles and risk levels?
How often is CFA 2017 compliance training conducted, and is it mandatory for all relevant employees and associated persons?
Does the training cover key topics, such as identifying red flags for tax evasion facilitation, understanding company policies, and knowing reporting procedures?
What formats are used for training (e.g., in-person workshops, online modules, interactive case studies)?
Are training records kept, including details of who attended, completion dates, and any assessments or certifications obtained?
How does the company track compliance with training requirements and follow up with staff who have not completed required training?
Is there a process to evaluate the effectiveness of training, such as assessments, surveys, or post-training evaluations?
How is feedback from training sessions incorporated to improve future training content and delivery?
Keep training records (attendees, dates, content, assessments) as evidence of “reasonable prevention procedures” under CFA 2017.