NSW nanny allegedly paid $2.33 an hour

The Fair Work Ombudsman is pursuing a Sydney couple over allegations they paid their nanny just over $2 an hour.

Australian dollars in Sydney, Thursday, January 3, 2019. The Australian dollar fell sharply against the U.S. dollar around 9.30am AEDT on Thursday, trading at 67.49 US cents. (AAP Image/Mick Tsikas) NO ARCHIVING

The nanny allegedly worked for just over $2 an hour for up to 106 hours a week. Source: AAP

A Sydney businessman and his wife allegedly had their Filipina nanny work for just over $2 an hour for up to 106 hours a week, giving her only two days off in an entire year.

Now the Fair Work Ombudsman is pursuing the couple for more than $155,000 in unpaid wages under Australia's workplace laws.

In a statement of claim lodged in the Federal Court on Tuesday, the Fair Work Ombudsman alleges Kit Antony (Tony) Lam underpaid the 26-year-old nanny, failed to pay her penalty rates and required her to work between 88 - 106 hours every week from May 2016 to May 2017.

The ombudsman claims Mr Lam's wife Ming Wei (Tiffanie) Tong was also involved.

The nanny was allegedly hired from the Philippines by agents for Mr Lam and lived with him and his wife and their two children in the Sydney CBD.

The statement of claim says her duties included cooking, cleaning, laundry, ironing, gardening as well as bathing, dressing, feeding and caring for two children.

She was allegedly expected to work from 6am to 11pm on weekdays and 7am to 11pm on weekends and was given only two days off in a year - one in October and one in April.

For all of this she was paid 40,000 Philippine pesos a month, which over 12 months amounted to $12,574 AUD, the ombudsman claims.

When averaged across the nanny's alleged hours this equates to her being paid just $2.33 an hour.

The ombudsman says the woman was entitled to at least between $17.29 and $18.91 an hour and up to $37.82 for overtime.

"We allege the worker, in this case, was vulnerable to exploitation given she was new to Australia, resided with Mr Lam and his family and did not know what her workplace rights were," Fair Work Ombudsman Sandra Parker said in a statement on Wednesday.

"The scale of the alleged underpayments and the unreasonable work hours are concerning."

The ombudsman is seeking orders for Mr Lam to make back-payments to the nanny plus interest and for penalties to be imposed.

AAP attempted to contact Mr Lam for comment.


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