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McDonald's to pay tens of thousands of workers holiday pay

McDonald's agrees to pay tens of thousands of workers millions in holiday pay says Unite Union


Unite Union has announced that agreement has been reached with fast food giant McDonald's that will see tens of thousands of current and former staff receiving payment for miscalculated holiday pay.

McDonald's was one of the companies caught up by the fact that many payroll systems were not fit for purpose and therefore not legally compliant when calculating holiday pay.

Unite Union is very pleased that after McDonald's was originally alerted to the problem by Unite they have been working with both Unite and the Ministry of Business Innovation and Enterprise (MBIE) to fix the problem.

McDonald's has agreed to go back ten years to November 1, 2009, in remediation rather than six years which has been seen by some companies as the maximum they are legally obliged to go back.

It is possible that every person who worked for McDonald's after November 2009 is owed some money. Unite Union believes that could be as many as 60,000 staff and millions of dollars will be involved. 

Going back ten years is in part in recognition of the fact that Unite alerted McDonald's and other companies it deals with to the problem in February 2015.

While we congratulate McDonald's for going back as far as they have, and other companies like Bunnings who have gone back even further, we are hugely disappointed that MBIE has allowed companies like Restaurant Brands who were alerted to the problem at the same time as McDonald's to limit their liabilities to only six years. Other companies like SkyCity have yet to commit to going back six years from the date Unite first wrote to them on either.

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MBIE promised to audit all the major employers in New Zealand but this has proved to be not true at all.

Among the employers Unite is dealing with are Burger King and Armourguard who are among the top 100 employers and have never been approached by MBIE. Neither company has yet promised to pay back their staff.

In fact, we believe that 90 percent of private-sector workers will get nothing unless the government takes some action.

No employer who has not voluntarily undertaken an external audit can claim to be compliant with the law. Failing to act now constitutes wage theft.

We know that only 22 payroll providers supply 95 percent of employers with their payroll software and nearly every one of them got it wrong.

The government needs to order these providers and the bosses they were acting for to ensure every worker who has been cheated out of their annual leave entitlement is paid back every cent they are owed.

To achieve that goal we want people to go to the new website Stop Wage Theft setup by Unite for that purpose.

On that site, you can message the government to bring the unions, employers and payroll providers together to come up with a solution that sees everyone paid back not just the lucky few.

We are also including information and questions workers can ask current and former employers about any money they are owed.

Cheating workers of holiday pay is wage theft. It's time to pay it back!

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