The Employment Relations Authority (ERA) ordered Greywacke Farms Limited and its director Dietmar Kopetschny to pay
$20,000 and $10,000 respectively in penalties for failure to comply with employment law.
Greywacke Farms Ltd ran two dairy farms in South Canterbury that supplied milk to Fonterra. Mr Kopetschny also operated
as a sole trader working as a share-milker.
The Labour Inspectorate, part of the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment (MBIE) investigated these
businesses in 2019, after receiving complaints from former and current employees. The investigation revealed breaches of
minimum employment standards in relation to 24 workers across Mr Kopetschny’s operations. About half of them were
migrants on temporary work visas.
The Inspectorate found the employer had a complicated rostering system and manually recorded payroll and leave data.
This resulted in failures to keep compliant wage, time, holiday and leave records, failures to calculate and pay correct
holiday pay to eight employees and failure to pay minimum wage to at least one employee. The employer also failed to
obtain consent from one employee for making deductions from wages for providing the employee with accommodation.
The ERA found the breaches caused significant material hardship to some of the low paid employees and gave the employer
an unfair competitive advantage over businesses that comply with legal requirements. The ERA determined the breaches
were intentional and could have been avoided by using publically available guidance from MBIE or Federated Farmers, or
investing in a more efficient and compliant payroll system.
Mr Kopetschny was made personally liable for $10,000 in penalties. Of this, $7,500 will be paid out to three former
employees.
Labour Inspectorate Acting Regional Manager Callum McMillan says the dairy farming industry is a focus area for the
Labour Inspectorate.
“We have been working together with the dairy industry over a number of years to lift employment law compliance. The
industry made significant improvements to put assurance systems in place and have readily available support for farmers
on matters of employment.
“This makes it even more disappointing to find there are still dairy farmers that undermine minimum employment
standards. Employers cannot cut their overheads by taking advantage of workers.
“The Inspectorate has also engaged with Fonterra about promoting compliance within their supply chains. Large brands
like Fonterra have an important role to play in taking leadership to ensure a fair treatment of workers from the top
down. Failing to do so damages the reputation of the brand, the industry and of New Zealand as an exporter,” Mr McMillan
says.
MBIE has resources on promoting employment law compliance in supply chains.
The Labour Inspectorate encourages anyone concerned about their employment situation or the situation of someone they
know, to phone the Ministry’s service centre on 0800 20 90 20 where concerns are handled in a safe environment.