Bay of Plenty Times

‘Disgracefu­l’: Wage subsidy case being built against Alliance

- Andrea Fox

Profession­al campaigner Simon Lusk is planning court action against non-executive directors of meat company Alliance Group for repaying only half the $34.3 million Covid-19 wage subsidy it claimed.

Lusk, in a guest post on Kiwiblog, said he was seeking leave of the court to bring a private prosecutio­n against the company’s non-executive directors for Alliance’s “disgracefu­l” failure to completely repay the wage subsidy.

The farmer-owned cooperativ­e said this month it had returned $17m of the wage subsidy.

“We have been in ongoing discussion­s with the Ministry of Social Developmen­t over the applicatio­n of the wage subsidy. We said at the outset we would return any funds not used to pay people and can confirm we have since returned $17m of the wage subsidy,” said chief executive David Surveyor.

The taxpayer-funded subsidy programme paid around $111m to meat companies, a sector deemed an essential service and allowed to keep working in lockdown.

The meat industry reported record export sales this year.

Alliance has been approached for comment on

Lusk’s move. Lusk said the company paying back some of the subsidy was “incomprehe­nsible”.

“They either have a fall in revenue of more than 30 per cent in which case they are entitled to keep the entire amount, or they have not had a fall in revenue of more than 30 per cent and they should pay back the entire amount.

“Alliance is a strong profitable company that should be doing its part in helping rebuild the economy. The retained wage subsidy is less than the profits they made last year. Instead they chose to take corporate welfare.

“They may be able to justify doing so, but they may not, and it is important that an impartial referee adjudicate­s,” said Lusk’s post.

He said non-executive directors were well remunerate­d for their role, which came with consequenc­es.

“This case aims to make the consequenc­es personal, not something the directors can avoid by hiding behind the corporate structure.”

The largest meat company claimants were Silver Fern Farms, paid $43.2m for 6161 employees, Alliance Group, which received $34.3m for 4913 staff, and the Anzco group of companies which got $17.3m for 2478 employees. Silver

Fern Farms repaid the subsidy in full in July.

Herald inquiries suggested the wage subsidy was claimed for around 13,500 of the meat industry’s estimated 22,000 employees. Several smaller meat companies also claimed the subsidy.

But some large industry players did not. They included Affco, Greenlea and Hellaby, which between them employ more than 6000 people.

Alliance posted a before-tax profit of $20.7m for FY19. Silver Fern Farms, half owned by Shanghai Maling (Hong Kong) and half by a New Zealand farmer co-operative, announced a $70m net profit for FY19. Japanese-owned Anzco posted record revenue of $1.7b and a net profit after tax of $22m. Operating cashflow was $140.7m.

Alliance’s Surveyor said this month that taking the wage subsidy meant the company was able to maintain jobs and ensure employees’ earnings were not impacted during the lockdown.

“Alliance Group predominan­tly processes sheep and the nature of our processing means we were more severely affected by the Covid-19 operating restrictio­ns than other companies.”

Alliance has 10 directors. Its chairman is Murray Taggart.

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