最好看的新闻,最实用的信息
11月24日 31.0°C-32.1°C
澳元 : 人民币=4.71
凯恩斯
今日澳洲app下载
登录 注册
匿名用户
SHARE One Stop Warehouse former HR manager accuses company of underpaying staff By state political correspondent Peter McCutcheon Posted FriFriday 10 JulJuly 2020 at 1:04am, updated MonMonday 13 JulJuly 2020 at 6:19am One Stop Warehouse CEO Anson Zhang. One Stop Warehouse chief executive Anson Zhang, named Australian Young Entrepreneur in 2019.(Supplied: One Stop Warehouse) A former human resources manager for Australia's biggest solar panel distributor is accusing the company of underpaying its staff. Liesa Oldfield is taking court action against One Stop Warehouse, its founder and chief executive, Anson Zhang, and manager Jeffrey Wu for her alleged forced resignation in November 2018, leading to a loss of income and "hurt and humiliation". One Stop Warehouse is a national company with offices in all state capitals and at the time was one of Australia's fastest-growing private companies. Mr Zhang won a 2019 Australian Young Entrepreneur Award. According to a judgment on a related application before the Federal Circuit Court in Brisbane, Ms Oldfield worked for the company for 19 months as both a human resource officer and manager. The judgment notes that during her time at the company, she formed the view that One Stop Warehouse "underpaid its staff and did not pay penalty rates or overtime rates, nor did it pay the basic award rate of pay". Ms Oldfield, according to her statement of claim, reported her conclusions to company management "in an effort to have the matters of concern to her rectified". She further claimed the workplace "was visited by inspectors from the Department of Work Health and Safety and it was found to be non-compliant in a number of respects". Ms Oldfield said she was "obstructed" by a person involved in the management of the company from rectifying these problems, told she was "unstable", she did not fit the "culture" of the business, and had core duties and responsibilities taken away from her. Solar panels The company denies the accuracy of Ms Oldfield's allegations.(ABC News: Billy Cooper) She claimed she "was uncomfortable working for the company" and was in effect forced to resign "to protect myself from exposure to liability for the misconduct of Anson [Zhang] Jeff [Wu] and the first respondent [One Stop Warehouse] for intentionally underpaying OSW Employees in breach of the law when they knew better". The company denies the accuracy of Ms Oldfield's conclusions and the allegation it was underpaying employees and it sought to strike out Ms Oldfield's claim for $126,000 in compensation for loss of income, medical costs and "hurt and humiliation". In dismissing the company's application, Justice Michael Jarrett decided to let the case go ahead, noting: "I cannot be satisfied that her claim generally has no reasonable prospects of success." "Her resignation might be seen as a reasonable and foreseeable consequence of the adverse action taken against her," Justice Jarett said. "I cannot accept the respondents' argument that merely because the applicant chose to resign her employment, she has no reasonable prospect of successfully pursuing a claim for economic loss." But the judge also noted: "That is not to say that her case is not without significant difficulty." A spokesperson for One Stop warehouse said the company has engaged an external party to conduct a full audit. "If we have made a mistake, we will fix it immediately, and pay people their entitlements plus interest," the spokesperson said. "Trust and accountability are key pillars of our company. We are committed to best business practices based on the final audits of the company." Top Stories Dhanya Mani asked the PM's office for help over an alleged assault. She says she did not get any A woman wearing glasses. Fourth woman alleges former staffer at centre of rape allegations 'stroked her thigh' Composite image of Scott Morrison and Brittany Higgins ANALYSIS I'm the Australian doctor who went to China for the WHO. This is what we found A man with white hair and wearing glasses and blue scrubs smiles in a labratory. Another Crown director resigns as Victoria calls royal commission Flower beds outside the front entrance to Crown Casino in Melbourne. Fit for purpose or 'shameless'? Critics divided over Facebook and friends' new code to fight disinformation App logos on a phone screen ABC News We acknowledge Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples as the First Australians and Traditional Custodians of the lands where we live, learn, and work. Connect with ABC News ABC Help © 2021 ABC Get the ABC News app for the latest news and live notifications.
投稿声明:本文为读者投稿/发布,仅代表原作者态度,不代表我方观点,今日澳洲仅提供信息发布平台。转载时必须在醒目位置注明本文出处和具体网页链接。对未注明而擅自转载者,本站保留追究法律责任的权利。
今日评论 网友评论仅供其表达个人看法,并不表明网站立场。
最新评论(0)
暂无评论


Copyright Media Today Group Pty Ltd.隐私条款联系我们商务合作加入我们

电话: (02) 8999 8797

联系邮箱: [email protected] 商业合作: [email protected]网站地图

法律顾问:AHL法律 – 澳洲最大华人律师行新闻爆料:[email protected]

友情链接: 华人找房 到家 今日支付Umall今日优选