Systemic underpayment
The $170-billion franchising industry has been exposed as a hotbed of wage underpayment in a series of media investigations. Current and former Subway employees provided by The Young Workers Centre in Melbourne,The Young Workers Centre,a union affiliated group in Melbourne that has received over two dozen complaints about Subway over the last 12 months.
The employees dispute the company's claim that it is"proactive"and that employment records are audited regularly.
We don’t think it is good enough to wash their hands of responsibility.
Felicity Sowerbutts
Former Subway employee Oscar Machen said he has worked at various Subway outlets from the age of 18 and was paid under the award rate at"pretty much"every store.
"They were all in the game of keeping those wages as low as possible however th
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ey could,"he said.
Mr Machen said a particular concern was unpaid mandatory training through the"Subway University".
"I have done that three different times,"he said."It was an online module and you could do it in your own time ... all up it took five to six hours. There were quizzes you needed to do to finish the whole thing."
Mr Machen said staff were told they would be given $50 for doing the training but were never paid.
"At a different store where I got paid cash in hand the guy there made me watch trainee videos for a week after every shift,"he said.
Felicity Sowerbutts from The Young Workers Centre said Subway employees complained of underpayment,the use of expired"Work Choice era"agreements,lack of penalty rates and physical and verbal bullying.
"These are very young workers in Subway it is often their first job and a young person's first job should be a positive experience,"she said."It is a pretty sad way to start your working life with a culture of bullying and intimidation."
Felicity Sowerbutts is the director of the Young Workers Centre and has been dealing with complaints about Subway.
A Subway employee,who wanted to remain anonymous for fear of repercussions,said she has worked at three different Subway stores over a three year period and has been underpaid in each store and not paid overtime in her current role.
"Now we only have one person closing at a time so overtime happens nearly every time a shift,"she said."My overtime would be worth at least $100 a week,it would be a big difference."
Former Subway employee Renee McCarthy worked at the franchise for more than three years and said she was underpaid by $1,300 after being paid through a'pirate[workplace] agreement'which had expired but was never updated.
Renee McCarthy said she and other Subway staff were bullied when they worked at the franchise.Credit:Simon Schluter
"The only things[Subway head office] care about is your name badge,your uniform,it is all about the image,"she said.
"They do inspections once a month and everything in the store is immaculate because you know Subway head office is coming but they don't ask to look at a payslip,they don't care about anything else."
Ms McCarthy,who was backpaid after her underpayment was featured onThe Project, said she was also bullied by the franchisees she worked for.
"It's the classic first job with so many young people working there,"she said."We used to get very passive aggressive texts. The owner called up and said'You are wearing leggings,you are meant to be wearing jeans,I am watching you from the cameras at home'."
Ms Sowerbutts said Subway monitors franchises and sends out inspectors to see displays of products,cleanliness and that staff are wearing the right uniforms.
"When it comes to workers safety and wages they turn a blind eye and say it is franchisors who have to oversee that,"she said."They have over 1,000 stores in Australia. We don’t think it is good enough to wash their hands of responsibility."
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