Franchising-code reform also needed to protect vulnerable workers

With the government’s Fair Work Amendment (Protecting Vulnerable Workers) Bill having finally passed the senate earlier this week, 7-Eleven CEO Angus McKay urged further franchising-code reforms to ensure the industry can more easily terminate franchise agreements in the case of serious non-compliance with workplace laws.

Speaking to the Monash Business Awards lunch in Glen Waverley, Melbourne, Mr McKay reiterated 7-Eleven’s longstanding support for the government’s original legislation, and outlined how the reforms 7-Eleven has already undertaken, and agreed with the Fair Work Ombudsman, are well ahead of the changes under the original bill.

“While we are still reviewing the amendments passed by the senate on Monday, we are pleased that the original bill included a number of reforms 7-Eleven first proposed in mid-2016 to raise the bar across the industry, including expansion of franchisor responsibilities and increased penalties for breaches of the Fair Work Act,” Mr McKay said.

“However, while the changes in the bill hold franchisors to a higher standard of compliance, the relevant industry codes lack the commensurate power for franchisors to remove franchisees for serious non-compliance with workplace laws.”

7-Eleven is calling for the two relevant industry codes – the Franchising Code of Conduct and the Oil Code – to be amended so that franchisors have the right to immediately terminate a franchise agreement in the case of serious non-compliance with Commonwealth Workplace Laws or Fair Work Instruments.

No such power currently exists in either industry code. Termination for underpayment is only available to a franchisor if it can be demonstrated at the requisite level of proof that the underpayment has occurred in a way that involves fraudulent conduct. According to 7-Eleven, the termination bar is set too high, takes too long to meet, and does not strike the right balance between protecting the legitimate rights of franchisees while upholding workers’ rights and the broader integrity of the sector.

“Our experience demonstrates that the barriers to terminating a franchise agreement in cases of underpayment are difficult enough for a company the size of 7-Eleven to pursue through the courts, let alone the two-thirds of Australian franchisors that are small-to-medium-sized businesses,” Mr McKay said.

“While we support a level of expanded franchisor responsibility, we call on the government to appropriately balance this with the right under the relevant industry codes for franchisors to reasonably terminate a franchise agreement in the case of serious non-compliance with workplace laws.”

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