Bay of Plenty Times

Businessnz offers to assist with fair pay agreements

Involvemen­t will be on case-by-case basis

- Jene´ e Tibshraeny

Businessnz says it will help its members negotiate Fair Pay Agreements, even though it rejected the Government’s proposal for it to be employers’ default representa­tive of last resort.

The lobby group’s employment relations policy manager Paul Mackay said it would consider how it would help employers involved in Fair Pay Agreements on a “case-bycase basis”.

Businessnz last year declined the Government’s offer for it to be paid $250,000 a year for three years to act on behalf of employers that need representa­tion and play a supporting role in the Fair Pay Agreements system more generally.

Businessnz, whose members employ up to 70 per cent of the country’s workforce, argued it didn’t want anything to do with the scheme, partly because of its compulsory nature.

The Fair Pay Agreements Bill, which takes effect on December 1, outlines a process that forces employers to negotiate minimum pay and working conditions if a certain number (1000) or portion (10 per cent) of workers in an industry want to go to the negotiatin­g table, or if a “public interest” test is met.

Mackay did not regret Businessnz’s decision not to take up the “immaterial” amount of funding the Government put on the table for it to be a default representa­tive.

Pointing to the cost of advertisin­g campaigns linked to Fair Pay Agreements as an example, he said the money would’ve lasted “all of five minutes”.

Workplace Relations and Safety Minister Michael Wood said the Council of Trade Unions will take the cash and be a default coordinato­r on employees’ side of the table.

He expected most employers implicated by Fair Pay Agreements would have sector-based employer groups to represent them.

Nonetheles­s, one of Businessnz’s affiliates — the Employers and Manufactur­ers’

Associatio­n (EMA) — reiterated it would make the “significan­t” amount of resource it has available to employers.

“With the Employment Relations Authority having the power to set the terms of a Fair Pay Agreement if no employer is available, we feel we need to step back into this mess.

“The Employment Relations Authority consistent­ly finds in favour of employees in more than 70 per cent of hearings, so employers will have little faith in the Authority bargaining also from their corner,” EMA chief executive Brett O’riley said.

Wood’s argument has been employers who offer workers decent

conditions will in fact benefit from Fair Pay Agreements, which will prevent these employers from being undercut by competitor­s that pay their staff less.

He has said that over the past 30 years, workers have suffered from a “race to the bottom“, meanwhile productivi­ty has waned.

 ?? Photo / Michael Neilson ?? Workplace Relations and Safety Minister Michael Wood with trade union representa­tives.
Photo / Michael Neilson Workplace Relations and Safety Minister Michael Wood with trade union representa­tives.

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