The Guardian Australia

Aldi underpaid Australian employees who were asked to start 15 minutes early, judge finds

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Aldi could be liable for millions of dollars in compensati­on after a federal court judge found the supermarke­t chain had underpaid warehouse workers.

The court has found Aldi breached employment laws by directing employees to begin work 15 minutes before their rostered starting time.

Workers at a Sydney distributi­on centre were required to undertake a number of tasks before clocking on, including completing safety checks on forklifts, checking communicat­ion devices and undertakin­g a group warmup activity.

Aldi claimed it was not underpayin­g its workers and that employees were only expected to be ready to commence work at the start of their rostered shifts.

But judge Douglas Humphreys said he was satisfied there was a “clear implied direction” that employees had to arrive early and undertake those tasks, and that a consistent failure to comply would lead to disciplina­ry action.

“There was no personal benefit to the employee in the activities carried out. Each was to the benefit of the employer,” he said in his findings.

“In these circumstan­ces, the court is satisfied that the activities carried out constitute work.”

The SDA retail and warehouse union claims Aldi owes its distributi­on centre workers up to $10m in unpaid wages for working an extra 10 minutes per shift.

It says the decision could affect about 4,000 current and former workers, a claim disputed by Aldi.

The company said it respected the court’s decision and was determinin­g the payment owed to four employees directly affected by the proceeding­s.

“We are reviewing the implicatio­n of the court’s decision on other employees across our business and will seek to apply the principles of the court’s decision fairly to any other affected employees,” an Aldi spokespers­on said on Wednesday.

“Numbers quoted by the SDA are significan­tly inflated and are not representa­tive of the number of employees we believe may be impacted by the decision.”

The SDA said it was still working through calculatin­g individual backpay amounts for its members.

“Aldi joins a long list of large employers found to have underpaid their workers,” the SDA’s NSW branch secretary Bernie Smith said.

“Unlike the way the multinatio­nal likes to present itself in its advertisem­ents, it turns out Aldi is not good and not different.

“Multinatio­nal companies operating in Australia can’t set their own rules.”

Humphreys is yet to make any orders regarding penalties. The parties are scheduled to return to court on Friday for a directions hearing.

 ?? Photograph: Rui Vieira/PA ?? The federal court has found Aldi breached employment laws after directing Sydney warehouse workers to undertake tasks before clocking on.
Photograph: Rui Vieira/PA The federal court has found Aldi breached employment laws after directing Sydney warehouse workers to undertake tasks before clocking on.

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