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Large penalties for Melbourne café owners who underpaid staff

Siblings must pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in penalties and back pay to workers after scathing judgement by Federal Circuit Court.

Mike Simpson by Mike Simpson
24-10-2020 07:00
in News
Image by Shutterbug75 from Pixabay

Image by Shutterbug75 from Pixabay

In a continuation of her promise to target the underpayment of workers in the hospitality industry, the Fair Work Ombudsman has secured a total of $232,545 in penalties in court against the company that operates Barry Café in the Melbourne suburb of Northcote.

Barry Café and two of its directors were found to have deliberately underpaid 73 staff members more than $180,000.

The Federal Circuit Court penalised siblings Stavros and Anastasia Petroulias $33,919 and $29,030 respectively, and imposed a $169,596 penalty against a company they part-own and operate, Malevi Pty Ltd.

Rectify underpayments in full

In addition, the Court ordered the company, Mr Petroulias and Ms Petroulias to rectify the underpayments in full. To date, workers have been only partially back-paid.

In total, 73 employees were underpaid $180,641 over a 12-month period between April 2017 and April 2018, with underpayments of individual workers ranged from $31 to $12,315.

Most of the underpayments related to a failure to pay employees the penalty rates and casual loadings they were entitled to under the Restaurant Industry Award 2010, with minimum wage rates also underpaid for some employees.

Penalised workers who complained

The Court found that the company, Mr Petroulias and Ms Petroulias (from August 2017 onwards) were aware that they were not meeting their obligations under the Award – but deliberately contravened workplace laws and exploited staff, including many young and migrant workers, by paying flat rates of $18 to $25 an hour.

It found they also deliberately contravened adverse action laws by not offering further shifts to an employee who challenged his unlawfully low rates – and then continued to underpay other employees. Record-keeping laws were also breached.

Fair Work Ombudsman Sandra Parker said employers need to be aware that improving compliance in the fast food, restaurant and café sector continues to be a priority.

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Employers are now on notice

“Employers are on notice that they must pay all workers according to Australia’s lawful minimum pay rates or risk significant financial penalties. We prioritise matters involving vulnerable workers, especially if we think employers are deliberately breaking the law,” Parker said.

“We also treat very seriously instances of employers taking any sort of action against an employee in response to them seeking to have their lawful workplace rights respected.”

Judge Riley said the exploitation of vulnerable workers was an aggravating feature of the matter and Malevi Pty Ltd, Mr Petroulias and Ms Petroulias had failed to display genuine contrition.

“I do not accept that the respondents are genuinely contrite. Rather, I consider that they are very sorry that they have been caught, and are facing a substantial penalty,” Judge Riley said.

Tags: court caseFair Work AustraliaFair Work OmbudsmanFederal CourtMelbourne
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