The New Zealand Herald

Restaurant­s ordered to pay $196k

- — Staff reporter

Three Auckland restaurant­s have been ordered to pay nearly $200,000 for not providing minimum wage or holiday pay to 132 mostly migrant student employees.

The three restaurant­s — Gengy’s Mongolian BBQ Buffet, Kushi Takeaways and Kushi Restaurant — would be placed on the “stand down list”, preventing them from sponsoring new visas to recruit migrant labour for 12, 18, and 24 months respective­ly, according to a statement from the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment.

The Employment Relations Authority (ERA) ordered the restaurant­s to pay $99,000 in penalties for failing to provide minimum wage and correct holiday pay, as well as $97,000 in arrears to the 132 employees.

“The vast majority of these workers were migrant students doing part-time or casual work waitressin­g, bar tending, or in the kitchen,” said Labour Inspectora­te regional manager David Milne. “Migrant workers have all the same employment rights as Kiwi workers, and there are no acceptable excuses for employers to fail to meet all their obligation­s under New Zealand employment law.”

All three companies share the same sole director and shareholde­r, Wonki (Monty) Cho.

The ERA determinat­ion comes as the Labour Inspectora­te begins a crackdown. “Unfortunat­ely, what we’re finding in our initial visits is widespread non-compliance in the hospitalit­y sector,” Milne said.

“Any employer not familiar with their obligation­s, such as paying timeand-a-half and providing an alternativ­e day off for employees who work on public holidays, should get up to speed now.”

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