The hospitality industry has been dealt a serious blow, with the Fair Work Commission denying an application to alter the way penalty rates are paid.
Both Restaurant and Catering Australia and the Council of Small Business of Australia have condemned the decision, saying more businesses will fail unless the penalty rate scheme is completely overhauled.
โThe Commission is out of touch,โ COSBOA chief Peter Strong told SmartCompany this morning.
RCA appealed to the FWC to allow penalty rates to be paid on the sixth and seventh consecutive days of work, instead of on all Saturdays or Sundays. The organisation also wanted penalty rates be reduced to 125% for working on Saturdays and Sundays.
Part of the RCAโs argument was that weekends are no longer as important as they once were. The FWC dismissed this, saying it wasnโt satisfied there had been a significant change in the difficulties in working โunsociable hoursโ.
Reducing penalty rates to being paid on just the sixth and seventh consecutive day of work would have a โsignificant impactโ on take-home pay, the FWC said.
In a significant finding, the FWC said it didnโt necessarily accept the lower costs would improve productivity among businesses.
โThe Commission found that the variations proposed would have a negative impact on the relative living standards and the needs of the low paid who would need to increase the hours worked simply to maintain their current income.โ
RCA head John Hart was contacted by SmartCompany this morning, but no reply was available prior to publication.
Peter Strong told SmartCompany hospitality businesses are at risk if the current penalty rate scheme continues.
โThey donโt seem to have any focus on people keeping a job,โ he says. โThey donโt seem to understand business, and just have a focus on the ideologues in the union movement.
โAnd there are people in the union movement who get this issue and understand it.โ
Strong says he has heard several tales of businesses being closed on Saturdays and Sundays because they cannot afford to pay penalty rates. If current rates continue, he says, thousands of businesses could be at risk.
โThatโs where weโre heading,โ he says.
SmartCompany has heard reports of hospitality businesses organising with staff to pay lower rates or in cash to stay open on weekends.
RCA head John Hart told the Australian Financial Review a third of businesses have closed on Sundays, when they were open a year ago.
โWe will continue to see businesses going to the wall,โ he said.
Small businesses have lobbied the Abbott government to change penalty rates, but the Prime Minister has made no announcement on whether any changes will be pushed in legislation.
Employment Minister Eric Abetz told The Australian he understands parties are frustrated, but there will be a broader review next year โwhere parties will have an opportunity to raise any outstanding concerns with modern awardsโ.
Comments