The New Zealand Herald

Shortage of bakers a rort, says union

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Norm Holley is on the case of the disappeari­ng bakers.

The 69-year-old secretary of the Bakers Union says he’s sick of seeing his industry used as a stepping stone by immigrants who only want permanent residency.

Figures obtained by the union under the Official Informatio­n Act show that 1933 people were brought in from overseas to fill shortages of bakers between 2012 and February this year, while 2367 local and 717 internatio­nal students trained here over the same period.

“It’s a rort,” claims Holley, who represents workers at bread and pie plant bakers and independen­ts and has worked for the union for 32 years.

“If we had a shortage, I would have it in the [part of the] industry I look after.”

Holley says bakers in the mainstream industry get paid about $25 to $29 an hour and up to $33 for night work. Supermarke­t workers tend to get between $15.25 (the minimum wage) and $21 an hour and he suspects the rate in most hot bread shops would not be any higher.

“The industry we’re in basically pays OK, so these people would be wanting to get jobs in our industry — and we’re not seeing them.”

He believes bakery jobs have become a backdoor immigratio­n route for internatio­nal students and other migrants looking for a supposedly skilled job that will earn them a work visa and a chance to

We’re being used to get permanent residency because it’s so easy to set up a bakery. Norm Holley, Bakers Union

win permanent residency.

“We’re being used to get PR because it’s so easy to set up a bakery. You don’t see an engineerin­g shop on every corner, but you do see a hot bread shop.”

It is not clear how many migrants who come here as bakers stay in the industry. Immigratio­n NZ Area Manager Darren Calder says a third of the 1326 people applying for work or residency visas as bakers and pastrycook­s from 2012 to February 2016 still identified with those occupation­s.

The other two thirds had either gained a residency visa or had become permanent residents, so Immigratio­n NZ did have any informatio­n about where they were working.

The Immigratio­n NZ figures obtained by the union show supermarke­ts hired the most bakers on visas, with 120 bakery applicatio­ns for Countdown and 191 for New World and Pak’nSave over the period.

But Progressiv­e Enterprise­s, which owns the Countdown chain, says 93 per cent of its bakery team in the past five years have been New Zealand residents and only 2 per cent have held internatio­nal student visas

Foodstuffs, which owns Pak’nSave and New World, says it has fewer than half a dozen internatio­nal students in its bakery team and less than 1 per cent of all staff are on work visas.

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