The council has in response launched an 18-month-long review and set aside at least $5m to cover arrears due to miscalculations of pay, leave, and shifts. Photo / 123RF
The council has in response launched an 18-month-long review and set aside at least $5m to cover arrears due to miscalculations of pay, leave, and shifts. Photo / 123RF
An investigation into the payroll system at the Christchurch City Council has found a series of faults.
The council has in response launched an 18-month-long review and set aside at least $5m to cover arrears due to miscalculations of pay, leave, and shifts.
The council isone of hundreds of agencies and companies nationwide facing sometimes enormous bills to correct payroll breaches under the overly complex Holidays Act, including health boards, police and major government departments.
The council, though consultants EY, looked into the cases of 35 individual staff likely to have pay arrears, and found about that a fifth of them had pay rates different from their employee contract.
In eight cases, termination payments were underpaid.
Seventeen had not been paid for a public holiday worked in the investigation period, the two years up to mid-2019. In some cases, allowances were not being paid.
Elsewhere, four casual employees had working patterns that meant they might be able to be get annual leave, but had not been getting it.