Close X
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

$2 An Hour: Indian Hoteliers Face Jail Term For Underpaying Workers In New Zealand

The Canadian Press, 08 Sep, 2015 12:18 PM
    Two Indian-origin managers of New Zealand's popular Indian restaurant chain, Masala are facing up to seven years in jail or a $100,000 fine after pleading guilty to underpaying their workers, a media report said.
     
    Joti Jain and Rajwinder Singh Grewal jointly pleaded guilty to a total of 20 immigration and exploitation charges at the Auckland district court on Tuesday, the New Zealand Herald reported.
     
    Jain was the main target of a ministry of business innovation and employment sting, which until Tuesday did not reveal her identity and full facts of offences committed by her.
     
    Court documents revealed that Jain significantly underpaid four employees between 2009 and 2014 as she promised to help them obtain a visa.
     
    According to the New Zealand daily, Jain offered illegal immigrant Gagandeep Singh the position of assistant manager with the promise of paying him $15 an hour for his 30-40 hours of work. 
     
    Instead, he worked up to 11 hours a day, sometimes seven days a week, and was paid $250 after a week of unpaid "training".
     
    Singh eventually quit the job after having effectively been paid $2.64 an hour during his tenure.
     
    Grewal, who managed the Bucklands Beach Masala, contacted Fijian national Bimal Roy Prasad in September 2014 in relation to a job opening for a chef.
     
    He took him to meet Jain and was instead asked to help in the kitchen. Prasad ended up receiving only $40 as his pay after working for more than nine weeks for the company.
     
    In more than one case, workers were told to submit timesheets indicating they were working about 30 hours a week, when in reality it was usually more than double that, the daily said.
     
    According to New Zealand's Employment Relations, the current adult minimum wage rates (before tax) that apply to employees aged 16 or over is $14.75 an hour. The minimum rates that apply to starting-out workers and employees on training is $11.80 an hour.
     
    "Employees have to be paid at least the minimum hourly wage rate for any extra time worked over eight hours a day or over 40 hours a week or 80 hours per fortnight," it said.
     
    Grewal and Jain will be sentenced next month.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Fall Forecast Calls For Hot, Dry Weather In Western Canada

    Fall Forecast Calls For Hot, Dry Weather In Western Canada
    TORONTO — Experts say the risk of wildfires will linger in much of western Canada in the coming months as hot and dry weather continues to dominate.

    Fall Forecast Calls For Hot, Dry Weather In Western Canada

    Handbook Tells Parents And Kids How To Recognize Concussion, How To Recover

    Handbook Tells Parents And Kids How To Recognize Concussion, How To Recover
    At the tender age of 17, Warren McNeil considers himself a concussion veteran. He's sustained six of the brain injuries playing hockey and lacrosse, one of which knocked him out cold.

    Handbook Tells Parents And Kids How To Recognize Concussion, How To Recover

    'Stage 0' Breast Cancer Over-Treated, Suggests New Canadian Study

    'Stage 0' Breast Cancer Over-Treated, Suggests New Canadian Study
    Many women are receiving unnecessary treatment for a condition that is sometimes called Stage 0 breast cancer, the findings of a new Canadian study suggest.

    'Stage 0' Breast Cancer Over-Treated, Suggests New Canadian Study

    Valeant To Buy Sex Drug Company For $1 Billion, Expects Addyi On Market In Fall

    Valeant To Buy Sex Drug Company For $1 Billion, Expects Addyi On Market In Fall
    Valeant Pharmaceuticals said it has reached a friendly deal to buy North Carolina-based Sprout Pharmaceuticals for cash and a share of future profits

    Valeant To Buy Sex Drug Company For $1 Billion, Expects Addyi On Market In Fall

    Toxicology Tests Reveal High Alcohol In Pilot Who Crashed In B.C. Mountains

    Toxicology Tests Reveal High Alcohol In Pilot Who Crashed In B.C. Mountains
    The service says toxicology tests found Robert Brandt had an alcohol level of 52 millimoles per litre, or 24 per cent.

    Toxicology Tests Reveal High Alcohol In Pilot Who Crashed In B.C. Mountains

    Progress On Rock Creek Fire Containment, But Windy Conditions May Spell Trouble

    Progress On Rock Creek Fire Containment, But Windy Conditions May Spell Trouble
    The B.C. Wildfire Service says the fire is now 50 per cent contained, but less smoke and better mapping reveal flames have scorched 42-square kilometres of bush.

    Progress On Rock Creek Fire Containment, But Windy Conditions May Spell Trouble