An Auckland restaurant and its owners have been ordered by the Employment Relations Authority (ERA) to pay nearly $50,000 in penalties and unpaid wage arrears to a migrant woman worker.
Dansan Investments Limited, which operates as Saaj Indian Cuisine in Auckland, and its two directors, Mary George Varghese and Sheik Abdul Kader are also personally liable for this sum. Along with $32,000 owed in wage arrears, one third of the $16,100 in penalties is to be paid directly to the exploited worker.
Following a Labour Inspectorate investigation, it was revealed in court how the worker was told to make a $6,000 premium payment to the employers to secure an application for her work visa. The worker had to borrow money from friends to pay the employers, under the threat that the application for a work visa would not be supported if the employee did not make the payment.
According to the Labour Inspectorate, the employment agreement showed that the worker would work a minimum of 35 hours a week, and although she consistently worked between 40 and 65.5 hours a week, she was only paid for between 28 and 33 hours a week. The employers also did not make any holiday payments, and didn’t pay time and a half for work completed on public holidays.
“Dansan also had no clear wage records. This required the investigation to source alternative proof, in this case the use of public transport travel records, to disprove Dansan’s claim that she didn’t work at the restaurant during those times,” says Labour Inspectorate National Manager Stu Lumsden.
This is not the first time that Dansan Investments Limited has been investigated by the Labour Inspectorate. A former employee complaining in 2015 for failure to pay minimum entitlements saw an Improvement Notice issued by the Inspectorate, which wasn’t adhered to by Dansan.
“Migrants to New Zealand should never have to pay a ‘premium’ or any sort of extra cost to secure a work visa from their employers. For employers to demand such a payment is illegal. To exploit migrant workers is completely unacceptable, and the Labour Inspectorate will take full compliance action against employers who do this,” says Lumsden.
MBIE encourages anyone concerned about the employment situation for themselves or someone they know to call its contact centre on 0800 20 90 20, where their concerns will be handled in a safe environment.
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