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Tiwai Point smelter faces giant back pay bill after losing appeal-The 17th China(Guangzhou)Int’l Metal &Metall
urgy Exhibition

2/24/2016  Metal &Metallurgy expo
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    NBR reported that New Zealand Aluminium Smelters, operator of the Tiwai Point smelter, has lost its Court of Appeal bid to overturn an Employment Court decision on payment for statutory holidays that fell on a weekend which it has said could cost $20 million in back pay and impose new costs into the future.

The Court of Appeal agreed that the relevant employment law doesn''t require payment for unworked statutory holidays that fall on a weekend but that the collective agreement between the smelter and its E Tu union members is constructed to require such a payment and, because the smelter moved to 12-hour working days in the 1990s, all such payments should be for 12-hour working days rather than the eight-hour days on which the smelter calculated workers'' statutory holiday payments.

The collective agreement requires that shift staff "shall accrue a days (sic) leave in lieu of a statutory holiday as it occurs," irrespective of whether that day was worked or taken as a normal weekend day.

The appeal court upheld the Employment Court decision on the basis that "the conclusion draws more upon the judge''s interpretation of the contracts than upon his interpretation of section 7A" of the 1981 Holidays Act.

As an appeal taken under the Employment Relations Act 2000, it was not possible to appeal a decision "on the construction of an ... employment agreement."

"This constraint recognises the specialist nature of the Employment Court and the need to avoid protracted appellate wrangling in employment disputes where the issues are confined to arrangements by particular parties only," the judgment says.

The chief executive of Rio Tinto-controlled NZAS, Gretta Stephens, said the company was "disappointed" by the decision and would consider its options. She said "My main focus at this time is making sure our employees have the information and support they need to keep working together safely in these tough market conditions.”
-The 17th China(Guangzhou)Int’l Metal &Metallurgy Exhibition

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