Australian watchdog sues Woolworths over staff underpayments

Reuters

Published Jun 17, 2021 11:07PM ET

By Paulina Duran

SYDNEY (Reuters) - Australia's largest supermarket chain Woolworths Group is being sued by the country's industrial relations watchdog for underpaying staff, more than a year after the retailer admitted not paying thousands of workers in full.

The Fair Work Ombudsman (FWO) On Thursday filed civil proceedings at the Federal Court seeking the repayment of outstanding amounts it alleges Woolworths still owes its workers, as well as penalties against the supermarket giant.

After closely reviewing a sample of 70 employee files out of about 19,000 workers that were allegedly underpaid, the regulatory body found Woolworths had only back-paid about 40% of the A$1.172 million it still owed those people.

The regulator wants the court to force Woolworths "to rectify the total outstanding underpayments in relation to the 70 managers whose records were assessed and ... to then apply those calculation methods to rectify any underpayments owed to all other affected salaried managers, plus interest and superannuation," it said in a statement on Friday.

Woolworths said in a statement it was reviewing the proceedings and continued to remediate affected staff, and that there was "considerable uncertainty" about the issues raised by the proceedings. So far, it had repaid A$370 million to current and former employees, it added. Shares in the company fell 1.8% while the wider market was 0.31% higher.

In October 2019, Woolworths admitted that it had underpaid thousands of supermarket workers for years.

The scandal prompted some politicians to call for a parliamentary inquiry into what they called "wage theft" in Australia. [https://reut.rs/3iTmJ0K]

In June 2020, Woolworths booked a one-off A$500 million remediation charge related to the shortfalls.

The FWO did not disclose the magnitude of the penalty it was seeking, as that would be decided by the court if legal action is successful.