chris kenny – Michmutters
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Business

Tech companies offer lavish perks despite lay-offs

A hefty suite of employee perks remain at trendy start-ups, despite some companies recently laying off significant numbers of staff.

Melbourne link-in-bio site, Linktree, has continued its lavish offerings despite this week laying off 17 per cent of its staff – about 50 people – the Sydney Morning Heraldreported.

Remaining employees have access to above market wages and a $6000 lifestyle payment they can use on fitness items including yoga classes or a new bike.

The planned shift into a trendy new office in Melbourne’s Collingwood will also go ahead, despite the company’s forecasted growth not eventuating.

“To meet the needs of our users throughout the last year, we scaled many of our functions, made some big bets and set ambitious hiring targets to meet them. I assumed the favorable economic environment would persist into 2022,” chief executive Alex Zaccaria wrote in a blog post this week.

“Instead, conditions changed faster than expected and those assumptions I made were wrong. I have many learnings to take into the next phase of building Linktree. That next phase involves narrowing our focus on our long-term strategy by reducing roles that are no longer aligned with our roadmap.”

In support of employees likely shocked at the lay-offs, the company gave all staff a mental health day on Friday.

“For a company like ours, so focused on culture and camaraderie, this will be difficult news. I don’t expect anyone to be their normal selves. We will also be allocating you an additional mental health day that you can take at a time that suits you,” Mr Zaccaria wrote.

Elsewhere, despite a round of lay-offs at Sydney blockchain start-up Immutable, it is offering staff a bonus of up to $16,000 if they refer a new employee.

Healthcare start-up Eucalyptus, which is behind the Software, Pilot and Juniper brands, made about 20 per cent of its workforce redundant last month but has upheld its free food and drinks offering.

Online graphic design company Canva, which had its value cut by about $20 million by investors, has also maintained its free meals and will still offer its annual Vibe & Thrive allowance that employees can claim for “whatever best supports their wellbeing”.

It can be spent on anything from health memberships to celebrations, wellbeing and education.

Industry sources who spoke to the Sydney Morning Herald anonymously said companies were saving money by offering employee perks rather than increases to their salaries.

“Free kombucha is way cheaper than paying an extra $40,000 in salary to someone who wants to work somewhere cool,” one told the publication.

While labor shortages still present a threat to the technology industry, supply has crept up on demand, largely due to talented people being let go from major companies, talent marketplace Expert360’s Bridget Loudon said.

“There are more talented engineers at the moment. This is largely driven by lay-offs in the tech sector from the majors to earlier-stage companies,” she told the publication.

Industries across Australia have resorted to offering thousands of dollars in incentives to secure staff, with people in high-demand areas such as healthcare, trades, transport, retail, manufacturing and logistics receiving thousands of dollars in cash bonuses.

They range from $1000 to $15,000 across the country, with one Grill’d franchise saying it was ready to pay prospective store managers $10,000 just to sign on.

McDonald’s Chatswood store manager Rhys Taylor told the Australian Financial Reviewthat incentives were advertised on in-store posters, with the fast-food chain losing staff quicker than they could be replaced at some stores.

Last month, the Australian Retailers Association announced that the post-pandemic worker shortage had worsened over autumn.

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Categories
Business

Simple act of submitting meter read wipes $365 off women’s AGL gas bill

As Australians continue to deal with the rising cost of living, they are reminded to check the charges on their energy bills are actually accurate.

A Melbourne resident, who lives in a new-build town house with her partner, said she was “astounded” to get a $430 gas bill recently, despite her two previous bills being under $100.

She said it made “no sense” and that her heating was electric, meaning “hardly anything is on gas”.

“Once I inspected the bill I realized it was actually an estimate,” she told news.com.au.

“Lucky for me AGL allows you to run a meter read to receive an actual bill so that’s what I did.”

The simple act wiped hundreds off her bill, bringing it down to the markedly different cost of $65.

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According to the Australian Energy Market Commission, a small customer is entitled to request that their energy retailer adjust their bill by providing their own reading of the meter if they believe the electricity or gas bill given was based on an inaccurate estimate.

If your meter is a “basic meter” rather than a “smart meter” it means someone must physically attend the property to read it, which is when estimates are sometimes used.

Whether or not your bill is based on an estimate is indicated by an A (actual) or E (estimate) on the bill.

AGL said it there were “a range of factors” that resulted in customers getting an estimated read.

“When we’re unable to get an actual read of a meter, we send an estimated bill based on a number of factors including past energy usage and the average usage of similar customers,” a spokesperson said.

The company said customers were able to submit their own read directly via the AGL App or over the phone and their bill would be adjusted accordingly.

“As one of Australia’s largest energy retailers, AGL is committed to keeping energy prices competitive and affordable for customers,” the spokesperson said, adding that anyone with concerns should contact them.

Read related topics:melbourne

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Categories
Sports

Erin Phillips’ heartwarming Port Adelaide captaincy reveal melts AFL

WNBA-turned-footy superstar Erin Phillips has brought her footy legend father to tears after revealing she would be Port Adelaide’s inaugural AFLW captain.

Erin, who has been a three-time premiership player, two-time league best-and-fairest and two-time Grand Final best on ground winner with the Adelaide Crows, revealed she would be joining Port Adelaide after winning last season’s decider.

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Erin’s father Greg Phillips was an eight-time Port Adelaide SANFL premiership player and the captain between 1991 and his retirement in 1993 — before the club joined the AFL in 1997.

Greg, who was a 1980 All-Australian, played 343 games for the club and an addition 84 games for Collingwood in the VFL in over 18 years in top-flight footy.

He was also named in Port Adelaide’s greatest ever team, is a life member of the club and is an inaugural inductee into the South Australian Football Hall of Fame and a 2020 inductee into the AFL Hall of Fame.

So it’s safe to say the club means a fair bit to him and the family.

When joining the club, Erin said she would wear her father’s No. 22 when joining the club.

But after getting Greg down to the club for a photo shoot, he immediately realized the jig was up when the No. 1, which is reserved for the club captain, was on the back of the jersey.

“What’s this number? What’s this? Put another twenty one numbers on … plus twenty one?” Greg asked.

“Well you know how you said the best part of being at Port Adelaide was being captain?” Erin said.

“Are you already?” Greg replied.

He immediately wrapped her in a hug.

Clearly emotional, he said simply: “Well done”.

“I don’t get to wear the 22 but I get to wear the No. 1,” Erin added.

“Oh good girl,” Greg added. “Did they vote that in?”

Phillips was voted captain, while Ange Foley was named vice-captain and Hannah Dunn, Gemma Houghton and Justine Mules also made up the leadership group.

But he couldn’t hold the emotion back rubbing his eyes, saying: “This is a shock”.

He then joked: “Are they sure you’re not too old?”

“Pretty special, huh?” Erin said.

“Well done, well done,” Greg said. “Well, it doesn’t matter what number you wear, I’m proud of you.”

They were lovely scenes and Erin also spoke about letting her dad know in the press release from the club.

“My dad always said to me the only thing better than playing for this club is being captain of this club and, he was right,” Phillips said.

“Telling him the news that I had been named captain was a very special and emotional moment for both of us.

“I’m so excited to be following in his footsteps and can’t wait to lead the team onto the ground for the first time. It will be yet another special moment for this group and for Port Adelaide.”

The 37-year-old Erin has had an incredible athletic career, having started as a basketball star and winning the WNBA twice.

She also won a World Championship gold for Australia in 2006, playing in two Olympic Games, including winning silver in 2008, and won 2006 Commonwealth Games gold.

She instantly made an enormous impact in the AFLW after retiring from basketball in 2017.

But in joining Port Adelaide for its first season in rugby league, Erin told Howie Games podcast with commentator Mark Howard being able to play for the Power was like going full circle.

“It was pretty emotional,” she said. “I reckoned the whole build up to deciding whether to stay at the Crows or go to Port Adelaide was very emotional. It was emotional for him. As a father, he was more concerned about me and just wanting me to make a decision and feel comfortable with it and then get on with life.

“When I told him, he obviously was ecstatic because it was Port Adelaide. He would have been just as happy if it was the Crows to be honest. I think he was just so relieved because he knew how hard a decision it was for me and now that I had made a decision and could just focus forward. He was absolutely pumped.

“I think the Port Adelaide part will hit him a little closer to when we run out for the first game. Running out the exact same race as he ran out.

“I’d be hanging over the fence trying to get a high-five from him and his teammates. It’s unbelievable to think I play for Port Adelaide, a team I was pretty much born into. It still blows my mind.”

Read related topics:Adelaide

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Categories
Australia

Sky News hosts Andrew Bolt and Chris Kenny clash over Anthony Albanese’s Indigenous Voice to Parliament

Sky News Australia hosts Andrew Bolt and Chris Kenny have clashed in a heated debate over the government’s Indigenous Voice to Parliament.

Kenny – a member of the senior advisory group that guided the Indigenous Voice co-design process – appeared on The Bolt Report on Monday night and told his fellow primetime host that allowing First Nations people to have their say on how to combat Indigenous disadvantage would give them “a fair go”.

“We want to overcome indigenous disadvantage because we have no mechanism for those indigenous Australians to actually have their say,” Kenny said.

“To tell us what they think will help redress health outcomes or employment outcomes or domestic violence in remote communities”

“We ought to allow those people to have a say. It’s a fair go.”

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But Bolt fired back and said it was “more than a fair go” pointing to the proportion of indigenous MPs in Parliament.

Of the 11 parliamentarians who identify as Indigenous there are three lower house MPs – Jana Stewart, Marion Scrymgour and Dr Gordon Reid – and seven Senators – Pat Dodson, Malarndirri McCarthy, Linda Burney, Jacinta Nampijinpa Price, Jacqui Lambie, Kerrynne Liddle, Dorinda Cox and Lydia Thorpe.

While Kenny said it was not “relevant”, Bolt replied by suggesting Voice would serve as a “separate parliament”.

“Nope. It’s not a separate parliament it’s an advisory body,” Kenny responded.

The Labor Government pushed the issue to the center of its agenda when Prime Minister Anthony Albanese declared on election night that there would be a referendum in his first term.

The Voice to Parliament was a key element of the 2017 Uluru Statement from the Heart and called for an elected Indigenous advisory body to the Federal Parliament.

The proposed body would advise the government on issues affecting First Nations people.

Bolt said the Voice would set up a “false dichotomy” and establish race as the defining difference between Australians.

“It stresses its race as the primary difference between us which I think is false, wrong and dangerous,” he said.

Kenny responded by saying that Indigenous Australians are the most disadvantaged people in the country.

“Now there is all sorts of complex reason for that but it is a national shame that their life expectancy is shorter,” he said.

“They are much less likely to finish school, to get an education, to get a job and we all want that.

“And I believe that requires some special attention from government.”

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