She was offered other roles actually, but seems does not wish to accept either. Fine,her choice. We do not know her financial circs, might be the millionaire next door for all we know.
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Luckily the government provides universal super*.
* which she is already receiving
The role has been disestablished. They have been offered more redundancy that the unions managed to negotiate for them OR another role in the company. Sure it is harsh but it does sound fair.
One of the roles was making pizzas. More physical than sitting on a phone line, but not like heavy lifting or mopping floors all day. Maybe it was part time, or part time could be possible - we don't know.
Certainly the call centre work could be easy, but perhaps that is largely because there weren't many calls per operator. What was the company supposed to do?
In any case, people get laid off all the time, many with no redundancy - and this lady is better off financially than many others who don't have a guaranteed income for life.
Shows you the greedy, calous attitude of a lot of senior management now a days, and yes I work with some of them.
14 staff, if they had given them all a months wages as redundancy, whats that about 56k all up, peanuts when you look at the big picture. Could have turned it into a good publicity story, "Pizza Hut gives staff months redundancy as thanks for long service". NZ would have been thinking what a great company !!, now everyone thinks what a bunch of low life wallies.
Those staff where the first contact for many customers for many years and helped RBD sell Pizza's and get them were they are today, not their fault the internet has cost them their jobs.
Disc: I hold a few shares
They did!! (wel three weeks anyway).
They were entitled to 1 weeks and they were given 4 weeks (from my reading of the article).
The union probably wanted 4 weeks plus 1 for each year of service which for the old bird, would have resulted in 20+ weeks redundancy payout.
It is in there (para 8):
Quote:
"We've known many of these staff for a long time and we would offer a four-week notice period, which is three weeks more than we are contractually required to give," a spokeswoman said.
http://www.nzherald.co.nz/business/news/article.cfm?c_id=3&objectid=11292536