Burger King worker assaulted by management for monitoring kitchen temperature – Unite Union

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An 18 year old Burger King employee was assaulted by management on Sunday the 19th of February for monitoring temperature levels in an overheated and understaffed Burger King restaurant on Lincoln Road in West Auckland.

Workers had been forced to work in 33 degree heat and been refused rest breaks for up to five hours as the drive through backed up. Crew took it upon themselves to get a thermometer from nearby Burger Fuel workers, record the temperature at 33 degrees and call the air conditioning repair company after restaurant management failed to take action.

“The customers are more important” said one of the managers to Abby Holland as she walked into the kitchen with the thermometer to record the temperature a second time after the air conditioning engineer had left the building.

“Then she tried to snatch the thermometer out of my hands” said Ms Holland who was shoved through the kitchen from behind for several metres, hit on the back of the head in front of customers and coworkers and then threatened with further assault.

Unite Union has repeatedly warned senior company management of their responsibility to provide a safe and healthy workplace for its employees. Specifically we have on a number of occasions raised concerns about the inadequate air conditioning at the Lincoln Road restaurant and the company’s failure to provide employees with needed rest breaks for health and safety reasons.

In 2015 workers at Burger King Lincoln Road walked off shift after being subjected to temperatures as high as 34.5 degrees and a disgusting fly infestation in the kitchen.

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Workers and the union have been met with repeated delay, excuses and have been provided with incorrect information since reporting the widespread non provision of breaks at Lincoln Road Burger King last year.

Managers at the same restaurant have remained on staff after assaulting other workers. Workers have been rostered to continue working alongside people who have assaulted them rather than being separated to ensure their health and safety. The company has also disciplined and terminated workers who have defended themselves against assault from customers. The comment by the manager who said “The customers are more important” tells us where the company’s priorities lie, and its not with the welfare of their employees.

Yesterday’s incident at Burger King Lincoln Road was immediately reported to West Auckland police who took a statement and explained that they will be making contact with the assailant.

The entire incident was captured on CCTV, which we are asking the company provide to unite union and have advised the police to obtain as part of their investigation. The company had previously attempted to conceal CCTV footage showing another manager assaulting another young female crew member in the same restaurant in 2012. [see link below]

Unite union organiser Gary Cranston will be representing another manager from Burger King’s West City restaurant this week who was terminated by the company after defending herself against a violent customer who had verbally and physically attacked staff causing serious injuries. In this case the customer had made public complaints about the manager on Facebook that turned out to be untrue. The manager was terminated despite other workers at the store, loyal customers and even mall security presenting a petition to the company asking not to sack the manager because she was acting in defence of herself and her coworkers. Perhaps because Antares Group, who owns the BK franchise in New Zealand really does believe that “the customers are more important” than the safety of their employees.

5 COMMENTS

  1. Having a high staff turn over loses a bit of quality but thats a mute pointwhen it supresses wages and the burgers are cooked to a formula.

    But nobody ever questions how you can sell tomatoes out of season, if they did, we’d be hard against below average instead of average wage

  2. Jeez. It’s not even a pub and they’re having fights in there. It’s a fast food restaurant for christ’s sake.

  3. In regards to the managers.
    After 6 years working at Queen Street McDonalds, including time with Mark Thomas as store manager (ha!), I can say working in fast food is always a case of survival of the fittest.
    Management and half the staff seem to take some sort of perverse pleasure in ‘suffering’ for the benefit of the company. It then comes as a massive blow when the company turns around and fires them for ‘stealing’ a cup of coffee or clocking in 5 minutes early….this manager, if he somehow avoids an assault charge, will sooner or latter get shafted by the company…..

    Kudos to these staff and this young woman for standing up for their rights.
    And if the Labour Party are the Broad Church Party…well here’s a good chance to stand united with the working poor of New Zealand.

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