Manawatu Standard

Warehouse staff uncertain

- Paul Mitchell

The Warehouse workers are angry about management’s plans to cut 180 jobs across 93 stores as the company refuses to say where the jobs will be lost. Last Thursday, workers were told of the proposed cuts and restructur­e of the retail chain’s lower management. Each The Warehouse store has a manager, assistant store manager, team leaders and supervisor­s. The proposal is to simplify this to a store manager and a secondin-charge. First Union national organiser Kate Davis said they were large stores, and it was baffling the company expected one second-incharge to cover everything from customer complaints to stockroom issues. It was even more baffling the company was refusing to give the union a regional breakdown of the job losses, she said. Knowing how many people will be affected in each region was vital to organising worker feedback on the proposed cuts, and support efforts for the affected staff, Davis said. Union and worker representa­tives met with The Warehouse management on Tuesday, submitting a second formal written request for the breakdown without success. The Warehouse refused to comment on the reasoning behind that decision. Davis said they did, however, convince the company to extend the 10-day period, originally provided for staff feedback on the proposal, by one week. A Palmerston North Warehouse employee, who asked not to be named, said staff were angry and frustrated by the proposal and the poor communicat­ion. Eight staff expected to lose their jobs, but nobody knew for certain, which made it hard to plan for the future, she said.

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