Employers are responsible for making and keeping accurate employee records. Record-breaking fines have been issued to employers for contraventions of employee record-keeping obligations, such as details of overtime hours, penalty rates and loadings.

A Caltex franchisee and its owner were fined $80,190 and $16,038 each for falsifying employee records of the wage rates paid to migrant workers and failing to provide payslips on time. Employers should read on to find out more about the Fair Work Ombudsman (FWO)’s recent Caltex investigation.

The facts

The FWO gave the former Caltex franchisee Notices to Produce that required Caltex to send the FWO their employees’ records, including contracts of employment, time-and-wages records, pay slips and earnings. These documents were given to the FWO. FWO suspected that the records were not accurate and issued further Notices to Produce to third parties: a bank, a superannuation fund and the Caltex franchisee’s accountant. The FWO prosecuted the franchisee and its owner, Mr Dagher, in the Federal Circuit Court. The Court held that Mr Dagher and his company falsified documents and records. Mr Dagher and his company, Aulion Pty Ltd, were each fined $16,038 and $80,190. 

Key Principle

Courts can issue heavy penalties for breaches of employee record keeping obligations. These are set out in Section 535 of the Fair Work Act 2009 (FW Act) and the Fair Work Regulations 2009 (FW Regulations).

A failure to make and keep certain employee records will result in a contravention of the FW Act and Regulations and may result in civil penalties of up to $63,000 for a corporation and $12,600 for an individual involved in a contravention. Higher penalties were recently introduced for serious contraventions of up to $630,000 for a corporation and $126,000 for an individual.

Additionally, the Fair Work Amendment (Protecting Vulnerable Workers) Act 2017 (effective since September 2017) increased the penalties for breaches of record-keeping and pay slip obligations and reversed the onus of proof in court for employers who fail to give a reasonable excuse for their failure to meet record-keeping obligations or pay slip obligations. Employers will now have to disprove wage claims made in court.

Employee record keeping obligations under the Fair Work Act

Under Section 535 of the FW Act, an employer is required to make, and keep for 7 years, employee records as prescribed by the FW regulations. These records must be legible, in the English language and readily accessible to an inspector, and must not be altered unless for the purposes of correcting an error and must not be false or misleading to the employer’s knowledge.

An employer must make and keep the following employee records:

If you require advice about whether your employment record-keeping systems are compliant, contact Peter McNamara.