EXCLUSIVE: Employers holiday pay cheating can be stopped!

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I reported on The Daily Blog last month of cases Unite had brought against major employers whom we had accused of stealing holiday pay from their staff.

Last week MBIE, the government agency responsible for enforcing legal minimum standards like the Holidays Act, reported that they were guilty of similar unlawful practices with their own staff and a many were due for a back payment.

TV1’s Corin Dann did a series of reports effectively highlighting the issue. See:

Holiday pay problems in police and business departments could extend to private sector

Payroll operators call for law change following holiday pay shortfalls

Do you think you’ve been short-changed in your holiday pay? Here’s some help

The problem essentially relates to staff who work irregular hours. The law provides for a protection to ensure workers are getting their holidays paid out at their current rate of pay and hours being worked.

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We discovered a bit over a year ago that most employers we dealt with, and the payroll systems they used, were not doing the necessary calculations for this.

Attempts have been made to beat up the story to claim that the issue is very complicated. But that is not the case at all.

Where workers have irregular work weeks, the law requires employers to pay the higher of the average weekly pay for the year, or the ordinary weekly pay at the beginning of the holiday. If there is a problem working out the “ordinary weekly pay” then the average for the most recent four weeks can be used.

This allows holiday pay to capture the fact that you may be working longer hours in the period just before taking leave and that should be the basis for the holiday pay calculation.

A simple example can make this clearer. I may start work for someone in a part time position of 15 hours a week. Later on I work 30 hours regularly. If I take a weeks’ leave I should be paid 30 hours for the week – not the average for the year which may be 20.

We discovered one security company doing this and that accepted they had got it wrong and paid $17,000 in back pay to staff once they recalculated their entitlements.

We wrote to MBIE asking for their interpretation of the issue a year ago.

We wrote to all the fast food employers asking them to check their systems. They all wrote back claiming they were doing the right thing.

We knew that was not true and have been collecting information from members in the expectation we would need to do legal cases to force the issue.

We selected one of the biggest to make an example of.

Following the MBIE revelations last week, that company has now assured us that they are doing comprehensive audit to fix all problems that may be identified and will keep us informed about progress.

Other companies remain in denial, but there will be no escape from our determination to make them pay. We hope MBIE will be an ally in this. The law is the law.

We have drafted the following letter that will be sent to all employers we believe are cheating on annual leave.

Hi ……………,
We would like to have your company’s assurance that they will deal with the issue of its legal duty to check if staff are getting the correct holiday pay.

MBIE have recently identified an issue where there has been a widespread failure to comply with the law in both the private and state sectors.

We are concerned that your company only calculates annual leave as an hourly, not a weekly entitlement. Therefore, it is impossible for the company to do a calculation for a week’s annual leave that includes a calculation for the “higher of” a weekly payment.

The correct way to calculate a week’s annual leave entitlement is the higher of the average for the previous four weeks or the average for the year.

It is common for staff’s hours to vary greatly during a year. It is also common for weekly hours to be longer at the end of a year’s employment rather than at the beginning.

Often companies do not even differentiate between the hours of accrued annual leave and the annual leave as an entitlement which exists from the anniversary date of staff’s employment.
We are also concerned annual leave is being used to top up staff’s meagre wages from week to week, or to make up wages when their rostered hours are below what they were expecting.

This is often the result of staff having insecure and irregular hours from week to week.

This practice will result, and does result, in staff not having proper annual leave as a genuine holiday of up to four weeks because they simply use up the hours during the year.

It is also possible that companies are in breach of the lawful requirement not to cash up more than a week’s annual leave.

It is probably that companies are not monitoring the actual annual leave being taken and ensuring that at least two-weeks leave is able to be taken uninterrupted.

It has also come to our attention that some employers have been rostering staff on leave without their request. Other employers have simply left staff on the roster for payment of leave without any calculation at all.

We need an assurance that your will recalculate all annual leave payments since the Holiday’s Act was introduced and adjust any underpayments as required.

I don’t know if MBIE discovered the error as a result of our communications with them, or the fact we went public a month ago, or entirely independently. What I do know is that as a Union we are enormously relieved that we probably don’t have to have drawn out expensive legal cases to get the bosses to obey the law.

With the end of zero hours, and the probably win over the holiday calculations, last week was a good week many workers.

Our bargaining teams in negotiations that are coming up are confident that major improvements can be won around secure hours.

It is probable that tens of millions of dollars will be owed in back pay to possible hundreds of thousands of workers.

We need to ensure there is not attempt by the bosses to get this government to legalise their theft in any way with the argument that it is all to complicated. The calculation we are talking bout does not need sophisticated software. An Excel spreadsheet could do the job.

The bosses stole it from the workers. They should pay every cent back!

4 COMMENTS

  1. How does this relate to annual leave that has been accrued over the term of the employment and is paid out upon the employee leaving the company?

    • It probably doesn’t affect that much. When people leave they should be paid the accrued leave using the 8% formula. However, if someone has shifted from 20-hours part-time to 40 hours full-time just before they take their annual leave they should be paid their annual leave “weeks” as 40 hour weeks which would be higher than the 8% they would get if they left. So people in that situation should use up all their entitled leave before leaving work.

  2. MBIE (Ministry of Business Innovation & Employment) is the NZ equivalent to Hitler/Goebbels “Ministry of Public Enlightenment & Propaganda” (MPEP) back in Germany 1932.

    John Key studied German history war & Hitler widely we are told.

    Similarly, MBIE serves to provide Propaganda through it; tentacles into all agencies under it’s umbrella as their agent’s are installed deliberately into positions now on Local Council,s, consultancy networks, media and even unions now, so they have enormous influence as a Government propaganda agency.

    Probably this agency is used for Government policy during election time as the GCSB and SIS is used during Phil Geoff election campaign.

    Sad that this Government has resorted to using a taxpayer funded agency for it’s own gain during the next run up to the 2017 election, and use it as a propaganda machine also against us all.

    Corruption is certainly well & alive, and we need to expose this crooked MBIE monster agency that bought us the “NOVAPAY” mess so we term MBIE as “Ministry of Bullies, Intimidation & Enforcement”

  3. don’t forget the 10s of millions owed by bosses in kiwi saver money as well
    workers are being royally ripped off

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