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Minister defends travel company’s pay cut

Finance Minister Simon Birmingham has defended companies asking workers to take significant pay cuts in order to save their jobs after travel firm Helloworld proposed slashing staff salaries after wage subsidies end in March.

Feb 05, 2021, updated Feb 05, 2021

Major travel company Helloworld sparked outrage from Labor and unions after it asked a worker to slash their annual salary package by almost $18,000 when JobKeeper ceased in March.

Birmingham described the move as a “structural adjustment” made due to pandemic travel restrictions.

“A business has to be profitable to survive in the long-term so I do accept companies like this may need to restructure, they may need to make difficult decisions,” he told Sky News on Friday.

“They are necessary decisions that companies have to make to ensure the survival of the company and the maintenance of as many jobs as possible.”

A leaked email shows a human resources manager asking a worker whose pre-pandemic annual salary including superannuation was $83,206 to switch to a $65,700 package.

“To accept the proposed adjustment to your remuneration, please sign below,” the email reads.

The employee had been receiving a $33,283 package under the JobKeeper scheme which is due to end at the end of March.

Birmingham said JobKeeper had to end in March but pointed to a range of other economic support measures travel companies could benefit from.

“There are parts of the economy that are going to see structural adjustment where elements of travel and doing business won’t come back as it was before,” he said.

Labor’s industrial relations spokesman Tony Burke said the travel company was a clear example of what some employers would do if the government passed new industrial relations laws.

“Helloworld has become hello pay cut,” he told Sky.

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“At a time of uncertainty we now have in black and white what the future is going to look like if the government gets away with its plan.”

The wide-ranging legislation includes a provision allowing the Fair Work Commission to consider coronavirus when approving enterprise agreements that don’t meet the better off overall test.

Industrial Relations Minister Christian Porter has fiercely denied workers will receive a pay cut under the changes, accusing Labor of misleading Australians.

Burke said if JobKeeper “fell off a cliff” in March, more workers would be asked to take cuts.

In a bulletin to members, the Australian Services Union alleged Helloworld boss Andrew Burnes sent personalised emails to staff asking them to agree to a pay cut before HR filled in the details.

“It is unlawful for Helloworld to demand that workers accept a pay cut or exert pressure on workers to influence their response,” the union said.

Burnes held the honorary role of federal Liberal Party treasurer for four years until 2019.

Comment was being sought from Helloworld.

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