Manawatu Standard

Lawsuit could target Chorus over contractor­s

- Tom Pullar-strecker

A law firm is considerin­g directly targeting broadband company Chorus with a ‘‘class action’’ lawsuit claiming thousands of self-employed telecommun­ications contractor­s should have been treated as employees.

About 60 telecommun­ications workers attended a meeting hosted by Shine Lawyers in Auckland last week to discuss the potential legal action, which could result in claims for holiday and backpay and sick leave.

Shine Lawyers director Karl Robinson said it was considerin­g action against Chorus but said no final decision had been made.

Shine had previously indicated Chorus’ prime contractor Visionstre­am was the most likely legal target.

The law firm has alleged that since 2011, ‘‘Visionstre­am and/or Chorus’’ had misreprese­nted the true nature of the workers’ engagement as telecommun­ications technician­s working on Chorus’ copper and ultrafast broadband networks.

Chorus and Visionstre­am declined to comment.

Earlier this month a group of disgruntle­d subcontrac­tors launched an online petition, saying they were tied down into ‘‘21st century slavery’’ because they had needed to invest tens of thousands of dollars in Chorus-branded vans and specialist equipment but were paid for jobs on piece rates that had in some cases reduced.

Visionstre­am said at the time it had introduced a new code of practice that improved workers’ rights, while Chorus said it was working hard to make changes.

Robinson said Shine was ‘‘committed to standing up and taking action for potentiall­y thousands of workers who may have been exploited’’.

But he admitted it would need support from more workers to make the business case for legal action stack up.

‘‘60 people is not enough. So one of the key messages of the meeting was; the more people who sign up the more chance we have of getting something off the ground.’’

Shine hopes to find a funding partner which would underwrite its legal action in return for a share of any pay-out made to telecommun­ications workers if the case was successful.

That would mean telecommun­ications workers who chose to be represente­d by Shine would not take on any financial risk.

E tu¯ union organiser Joe Gallagher has been encouragin­g Chorus subcontrac­tors to agree to be represente­d by Shine.

‘‘From my perspectiv­e and from all the feedback at the meeting, everyone really says Chorus controls everything, except from a legal perspectiv­e they don’t. It has to be tested,’’ Gallagher said.

Chorus chief executive Kate Mckenzie promised in April that the company would work to ensure all its subcontrac­tors could earn ‘‘a decent wage’’.

That was after admitting more than 100 small subcontrac­ting firms involved in the roll-out of its UFB network might have breached labour laws, and a Chorus commission­ed report finding it had failed to protect migrant workers from exploitati­on.

But Mckenzie said she had not considered an apology.

Gallagher said it appeared from last Tuesday’s meeting that nothing had changed in the industry.

‘‘There were some pretty harrowing stories of it being very hard for people to make any money.

‘‘We had one couple who said they couldn’t get a contract back with Visionstre­am because their van was 11 years-old but they were ‘maxed out’ with their bank and their mortgage and everything.’’

People had left the meeting with ‘‘a positive resolve’’, but the proof would be in the pudding, he said.

 ??  ?? E tu¯ union organiser Joe Gallagher said nothing appeared to have changed in the industry since April when Chorus promised all subcontrac­tors a ‘‘decent wage’’.
E tu¯ union organiser Joe Gallagher said nothing appeared to have changed in the industry since April when Chorus promised all subcontrac­tors a ‘‘decent wage’’.

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