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Taxi drivers compensated after being paid below minimum wage

A Dunedin taxi company has been ordered to pay four former drivers almost $100,000 in arrears over minimum wages and holiday pay underpayments.

taxi - Photo:
neo8iam/Pexels.com

Photo: neo8iam/Pexels.com

The Employment Relations Authority determined Southern Taxis was treating its employees as contractors to save money.

Sham contracting, as it's known, is becoming a growing concern for the Labour Inspectorate.

"They knowingly breached the law at the expense of these drivers," National Manager Stu Lumsden told Morning Report.

The company said it was a commission agent, but there's no such thing as a commission agent, you're either a contractor or employee, he said.

"At best, the drivers received a minimum wage no more than 15 percent of the time they were employed, they didn't receive any holidays or leave."

Sham contracting is a growing concern, says Stu Lumsden duration 4:03
from Morning Report

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He said there are a number of similar investigations currently underway.

"It's definitely a growing focus for the Labour Inpectorate as we've seen over the years, more and more people are setting up sham contracting to avoid paying their workers."

He said they are not yet looking at companies like Uber and waiting for decisions through the court to make sure their thinking is line with the Employment Relations Authority.

Mr Lumsden urges all employers to study the Employment Relations website.


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