The
Employment Relations Authority has rejected a personal grievance claim for
unjustified dismissal of a retail assistant.
The employee claimed she was on regular hours of employment and when she
advised the employer that she was pregnant the employer did not offer her any
further shifts.
The
ERA found however that the employee was employed on a casual basis and no
obligation to accept work when offered and no obligation on the employer to
offer any shifts. The claim for a
dismissal therefore failed as the employer was not obligated to offer any
further work to the employee.
The
sting in the tail though for the employer is that the ERA commented adversely
on the employer’s failure to provide a written employment agreement for the
employee, paid the employee under the table and did not deduct PAYE and did not
file employer monthly statements with the IRD.
The employer also failed to discuss KiwiSaver and did not pay holiday
pay or the minimum wage.
No
doubt following the decision the employer can expect a visit from both the IRD
and the Labour Department with prosecutions the possible outcome. Failing to comply with your obligations as an
employer and then getting into a public fight with an employee where the outcome
is reported in the media and in official publications is perhaps not the
smartest move when attempting to pay employees under the table.
Alan Knowsley
Employment Lawyer Wellington
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