The Post

Pay equity claims loom for employers

- PETER CULLEN

OPINION: Pay equity for women has received increased attention in recent years.

In Iceland, women have symbolical­ly stopped working at 2:38pm, the time during a standard 8-hour day when Icelandic women say they begin to work for free because of pay inequality.

In France, women, along with many men, stopped work to protest at 4:34pm on November 7, as women say they are volunteers for the rest of the year.

Our newly appointed GovernorGe­neral, Dame Patsy Reddy, recently chaired the joint working group on pay equity principles.

Pay equity is equal pay for work of equal value, regardless of gender. It is more extensive than equal pay within the same workplace because it compares a female-dominated role with an equivalent one in an industry dominated by men.

The joint working group has representa­tives from unions, business groups and the Government.

The group came up with 16 principles of pay equity, as well as a process for workers who make a pay equity wage claim against their employers.

Encouragin­gly, the Government has very recently agreed with all the recommenda­tions (one with an added proviso) and will legislate to pass these developmen­ts into law.

These changes will affect many people: women, men working in female-dominated fields, anyone who has a partner within those categories, or those with children or elderly parents in care.

Many employers should expect claims for pay rises.

Pay equity claims will be able to be made at any time and need not be linked to an existing collective bargaining cycle.

An employee need only raise their claim with their employer. The parties must then attempt to resolve it on the basis of good faith bargaining, with guidance from pay equity principles.

In doing so, the parties must undertake a thorough, unbiased assessment of the skills, responsibi­lities, conditions and effort required by the role.

Comparator­s (similar roles that are not ‘‘women’s work’’) can be used from within the business, similar businesses, or the same industry or sector when available, so long as the comparator has not been systemical­ly undervalue­d.

Employers will be likely to receive claims where their workforce is largely female (such as in nursing or aged-care) or where a specific area of work within business is largely performed by women (for example, secretaria­l roles in corporate offices).

This landmark change was sparked by an aged-care worker, Kristine Bartlett. With the support of her union she brought a case against her employer, TerraNova Homes, claiming that she received a lower wage because her work was predominan­tly performed by women.

The courts accepted that this claim can be made under the Equal Pay Act 1972 and now the Employment Court must decide Bartlett’s case. The case may settle before then or it might be decided under the new principles.

Bartlett’s case prompted the Government to establish the joint working group to provide ‘‘practical and specific’’ guidance on how matters of pay equity can be raised, the processes to progress these matters, how jobs can be valued, and the nature and kinds of evidence to be considered.

Finding a similar business or industry that is comparable and not predominan­tly performed by women may not be easy but that is what has to be done.

Once the legislatio­n is passed, workers will begin knocking on their employers’ doors.

If an employer rejects the claim, the employee can have the Employment Relations Authority

Once the legislatio­n is passed, workers will begin knocking on their employers' doors.

determine whether it is a valid pay equity claim. Recognised claims will then be referred back to the parties to bargain for a resolution.

All of this is likely to lead to increased union membership, particular­ly by women, as they will often require union assistance to satisfacto­rily resolve claims.

Employers may feel that 2016 has caused somewhat of a headache for them, with new, stricter health and safety legislatio­n, changes to parental leave, and now pay equity claims.

The good news, from the employer’s perspectiv­e, is that the legislatio­n hasn’t yet been passed so employers have time to come to terms with the brave new world of pay equity.

But one day in the not too distant future, you may hear a knock on your office door followed by a pay equity claim – so employers, be prepared and start saving.

Peter Cullen is a partner at Cullen – the Employment Law Firm. He can be contacted at peter@cullenlaw.co.nz.

 ?? PHOTO: CRAIG SIMCOX/FAIRFAX NZ ?? Aged-care worker Kristine Bartlett fronted a pay equity test case.
PHOTO: CRAIG SIMCOX/FAIRFAX NZ Aged-care worker Kristine Bartlett fronted a pay equity test case.
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