The Southland Times

Jobs pressure for Spark staff

- Tom Pullar-Strecker tom.pullar-strecker@stuff.co.nz

About 1900 Spark staff members are being given five days to either sign new employment contracts agreeing to new ways of working, or leave the company.

But employment law expert Max Whitehead said the staff appeared to have been given too little time to consider their options.

The new contracts have been prompted by Spark deciding last month to bring forward part of a wider structurin­g programme that is expected to see several hundred staff leave the company between June last year and this December.

Spark employees are being asked to adopt a new way of working called Agile, which has been popularise­d by the software industry.

It tends to involve people working in more informal groups to implement changes incrementa­lly, rather than work being organised into larger, hierarchic­al projects.

Spark spokesman Andrew Pirie said about 40 per cent of its employees were being invited to sign new contracts.

It is understood the contracts have been going out to staff members this week.

But some employees in the affected parts of the business had already decided it was ‘‘not for them’’ and would be leaving Spark, Pirie said.

‘‘As part of the move to Agile, a reasonable number of people in the engine room of the business – product developmen­t and marketing, those sorts of roles – are being organised into new teams,’’ he said.

‘‘People are being offered new roles, so they are being given the opportunit­y to sign new contracts and if they don’t want to sign a new contract then obviously they have the opportunit­y for redundancy.’’

Pirie said staff would be allowed time to seek advice if they needed it.

‘‘Our standard approach for people to agree or not to new offers is five working days, and we had been looking to shorten this to three working days for some roles. But we are now going to keep to the standard five working days for all roles.

‘‘We are moving to fairly tight timeframes but people have been well-informed about the process for months.’’

Whitehead said Spark staff might need time to seek advice and perhaps provide a written submission.

‘‘Five days is hard ... particular­ly when they have to go to work every day. I would have thought a fortnight would be the minimum at the very least.’’

He also questioned whether it was reasonable to accept people were choosing redundancy if they didn’t sign.

‘‘If their job hasn’t varied much at all then technicall­y it is not a redundancy situation, so they shouldn’t be facing potential dismissal.’’

Spark has indicated it expects its labour costs to fall by about a fifth over the 18-month period.

But Pirie said that did not necessary mean staff numbers would also fall by a fifth – which would imply about 1000 jobs lost.

Responding to questions from National MP Melissa Lee on the changes at Spark, Communicat­ions Minister Clare Curran said that if hundreds of job were lost it would be ‘‘one of the impacts of digital disruption that was impacting on every single sector’’ of the economy.

A Wellington business analyst with knowledge of Agile work processes said the shift to the way of working across a large organisati­on such as Spark was relatively novel in New Zealand.

Agile tended to work best in organisati­ons where a collaborat­ive way of working was well establishe­d, he said.

‘‘If their job hasn’t varied much at all then technicall­y it is not a redundancy situation.’’ Employment law expert Max Whitehead

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