COURT
JUDGEMENT
PROVES
NEED FOR
NEW WAGE
THEFT
OFFENCE
IN SA
16
February
2018
Unions
have
welcomed
Labor's
announcement
that if
elected
it will
introduce
a new
penalty
for
bosses
who
recklessly
and
repeatedly
rip off
their
workers'
wages
and
superannuation.
SA
Unions
State
Secretary
Joe
Szakacs
says
wage
theft is
endemic
across
Australia
and has
become a
business
model
relied
on by
businesses
to make
profits.
"Wage
theft -
including
the
failure
to pay a
worker's
superannuation
- has
long
term
consequences
for that
person's
entire
working
life and
reaches
into the
amount
of money
they'll
have to
live on
when
they
retire."
Just
this
week,
six
tradies
who
worked
in the
electrical
contracting
industry
for a
private
company
in
Adelaide
were
awarded
penalties
against
their
former
employer
after
their
wages
and
superannuation
were
stolen
from
them.
The men,
who
worked
for the
company
Go Wasp
Pty Ltd,
started
pursuing
their
employer
for
unpaid
entitlements,
with the
backing
of their
union,
after
they
were
made
redundant
but
never
paid out
any of
their
entitlements.
They
also had
overtime
and
superannuation
payments
stolen
from
them
throughout
their
employment.
In the
SA
Employment
Tribunal,
Deputy
President
Lieschke
fined
the
company
$120,000
in
penalties,
personally
penalised
the two
Directors
$23,250
and
$23,000
and
awarded
the
workers
a total
of
$55,145.
It was
only
with the
backing
of their
union,
the CEPU
-
Plumbing
and
Electrical
Division,
that
they had
the
power
and
resources
to fight
for
their
entitlements.
CEPU
Secretary,
John
Adley
said
that for
twelve
months,
these
employers
breached
court
orders
and
failed
to
either
show up
in Court
or
provide
evidence
about
what
they pad
paid
their
workers.
"It took
more
than
twelve
months
but we
never
gave up
fighting
for
these
workers.
That's
what
unions
do."
Secretary
Joe
Szakacs
says
that
workers
need the
backing
of their
union to
have the
power
and
resources
necessary
to fight
wage
theft
like
this.
"Unions
stand up
for
workers
who've
had
their
wages
and
super
stolen
and
we'll be
able to
do more
of that
with new
wage
theft
laws
proposed
in South
Australia."
"Businesses
like
these,
who
knowingly
and
recklessly
continue
to
rip-off
their
workers,
will now
have to
face the
full
consequences
of the
law."
The
Labor
Government
has
pledged
to amend
the
Criminal
Law
Consolidation
Act to
include
the
criminal
offence
of wage
theft,
where an
employer
and/or
owner of
a
business
knowingly
or
recklessly
and
repeatedly
underpays
their
workers.
"We're
not
talking
about
some
bosses
who make
a
mistake
with
their
payroll.
This is
about
bosses
who set
up their
business
model in
a way
that
pays
people
below
the
legal
minimum.
In some
cases,
this
leaves
workers
being
paid
less
than the
national
minimum
wage and
left
living
in
poverty."
Mr
Szakacs
said
there
have
been
many
cases of
wage
theft in
South
Australia,
particularly
in food
and
hospitality,
agriculture
and meat
processing
industries.
In some
cases,
workers
in the
agricultural
industries
are paid
as
little
as $5 an
hour.
"Stealing
workers'
wages is
a crime
and it's
rife,
most
particularly
among
migrant
workers."
"We now
call on
the
Liberal
Party
and Nick
Xenophon
to tell
us where
they
stand on
working
people
being
ripped
off."
"Do they
support
big
fines
for
bosses
or not?"