About 5500 Waikato Health New Zealand staff not paid overnight due to glitch

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Source: Radio New Zealand

Health New Zealand Te Whatu Ora (HNZ) is scrambling to pay about 5500 staff in Waikato after a payment glitch. RNZ / Peter de Graaf

One of the thousands of North Island health workers who were not paid overnight has been dipping into her son’s bank account while she has just $2 in hers.

Health New Zealand Te Whatu Ora (HNZ) is scrambling to pay about 5500 staff in Waikato after a payment glitch.

Waikato Hospital health worker Helen, who did not what her surname used, told RNZ she felt embarrassed having to ask for money.

“I’ve had to borrow money just so I could park my car and make sure I could get my car out of the car park this afternoon after work,” she said.

“I’ve had to call the banks to make sure that they’re aware that money will not be available for my loans, I’ve had to let my landlord know that I won’t be able to pay my rent today due to not having enough money in the account.

“At this stage, if money doesn’t go through overnight, I’m not 100 percent sure that I can come to work tomorrow because my petrol light is also on.”

HNZ has put the problem down to an error in the rostering system that is used to calculate payments.

“This issue has now been resolved, and all impacted staff will be paid by the end of today,” Robyn Shearer from its people and culture team said.

“We are confident we have addressed the underlying reasons, and we have reduced the likelihood of this reoccurring.”

Staff were informed about the problem in a memo, Helen said.

“They have told us that the hours have been sent to the bank at about midday today, and they’re hoping that the money will come in overnight,” she said.

“But there’s no guarantee that the amount will be correct.”

Public Service Association national secretary Fleur Fitzsimons said health workers deserved to be paid on time. RNZ / Samuel Rillstone

Colleagues were in similar situations, Helen said.

“Most of them have been on the phone to the banks and changing mortgage payments and hoping that we don’t get stung with fees and dishonour payments or defaults on loans and things like that,” she said.

“It’s horrifically stressful at the moment.”

She said the pay glitch was frustrating, but she loved her job.

“And if I can be here tomorrow, I will be.”

The Public Service Association (PSA) called on HNZ to do an urgent review and said the error was a widespread failure.

The pay glitch struck about half of health workers in Waikato, it said.

“Workers turned up and did their jobs, caring for patients, keeping hospitals running, and they deserved to be paid on time,” PSA national secretary Fleur Fitzsimons said.

“A payroll failure of this scale is not a minor inconvenience, it causes real hardship.”

Health Minister Simeon Brown acknowledged staff who worked through the night to fix the problem. RNZ / Mark Papalii

Apologies from HNZ were not enough and IT failures had become a recurring feature of the public health system, Fitzsimons said.

Health Minister Simeon Brown acknowledged staff who worked through the night to fix the problem.

“I know this situation will be frustrating for those affected, and getting it resolved so staff are paid as soon as possible is the priority,” he said.

His office said he was waiting for Health New Zealand’s review into how the error happened.

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– Published by EveningReport.nz and AsiaPacificReport.nz, see: MIL OSI in partnership with Radio New Zealand

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