7-Eleven pays out $150 million to staff

A Senate committee has heard ripped-off 7-Eleven workers are gradually getting their dues as the chain cleans up its act.

7-Eleven corporate signage is seen in Melbourne, Monday, Aug. 31, 2015. A joint Fairfax-Four Corners investigation found up to two-thirds of 7-Eleven stores could be underpaying workers. (AAP Image/Julian Smith) NO ARCHIVING

7-Eleven corporate signage is seen in Melbourne file photo, dated Monday, Aug. 31, 2015. Source: AAP

About 3600 7-Eleven workers have been paid out $150 million since revelations of under-payments and poor record-keeping.

A Senate committee heard on Wednesday the "compliance partnership" between the Fair Work Ombudsman and 7-Eleven was yielding results.

Ombudsman Natalie James said 10 matters were before the courts.

An agreement struck in 2016 also included installing and overseeing biometric shift-scanning systems and the introduction of 7-Eleven-owned CCTV at all outlets to allow head office to monitor employee hours and make sure workers were paid correctly.

The ombudsman has also written to pizza chain Domino's about underpayments.

"We have some outstanding issues around information we have requested," Ms James said.


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1 min read
Published 26 October 2017 8:28pm
Updated 27 October 2017 7:47pm
Presented by Justin Sungil Park
Source: AAP


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