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    Home»Carpentry»Builder hit with €16,940 bill after failing to pay plasterer agreed industry rate – The Irish Times
    Carpentry

    Builder hit with €16,940 bill after failing to pay plasterer agreed industry rate – The Irish Times

    James Anderson, FRSA, CMgr MCMIBy James Anderson, FRSA, CMgr MCMIDecember 1, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
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    Builder hit with €16,940 bill after failing to pay plasterer agreed industry rate – The Irish Times
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    A plasterer who hired an accountant to investigate his wages when he discovered a “discrepancy” on his Revenue account has won nearly €17,000 for his employer’s contravention of construction industry pay rules.

    Kenplast Ltd has been ordered by the Workplace Relations Commission (WRC) to pay the compensation to worker Joseph Lennon for breaches of the Industrial Relations (Amendment) Act 2015 and the Terms of Employment (Information) Act 1994.

    Mr Lennon’s trade union representative, Barry Murphy, of the Operative Plasterers & Allied Trades Society of Ireland (OPATSI), said the worker noticed in March 2025 that there seemed to be a “discrepancy between pay received and that returned on his Revenue account”.

    Mr Lennon said in evidence that he was struggling to see what exactly he was being paid because he had been provided with no payslips initially, and later with payslips that had “insufficient information”.

    Company director Keith Kenna had referred Mr Lennon to the company’s accountant, who “assured the complainant there was nothing wrong”, the tribunal was told.

    Mr Lennon engaged his own accountant, who did not agree with the company’s position there was “nothing amiss”, the WRC was told. The worker and his accountant met the company accountant in April 2025, it was submitted.

    Questions posed about “fluctuations and discrepancies in the gross income returned by the respondent for taxation” were not answered to Mr Lennon’s satisfaction, and the meeting ended “without resolution”, the tribunal heard.

    Figures presented to the tribunal in support of the worker’s case assessed his hourly pay as being €19.85 on the basis of a 39-hour working week.

    However, the minimum hourly rate of pay for a craft worker under the sectoral employment order (SEO) for the construction industry was €2.39 higher, at €22.24, between November 2024 and May 2025, the period covered by the complaint, the WRC noted.

    Adjudicator Kara Turner found the company had failed to pay Mr Lennon the minimum hourly basic pay set out in the Sectoral Employment Order (Construction Sector) 2023 in breach of the Industrial Relations (Amendment) Act 2015, and awarded him €3,500 for the breach.

    Further breaches of other construction industry employment orders included the company’s failure to have a pension scheme, a sick pay scheme, and a death-in-service scheme in place, Ms Turner ruled. She awarded Mr Lennon a further €10,000 in compensation for those breaches under the 2015 Act.

    She also ruled the company had failed to provide Mr Lennon with a written statement of his terms of employment in breach of the Terms of Employment (Information) Act 1994, and awarded him further compensation of €3,460.

    The total awarded by the tribunal for the rights breaches in the case was €16,940.

    Mr Lennon’s evidence was “uncontested”, Ms Turner noted.

    When the case was called in September this year, a representative of the company, Lena Kenna, asked for it to be put back because of the “unavailability” of company directors, Keith Kenna and Ciaran Kenna, that day, she wrote.

    The men were “on a job”, Ms Kenna told the tribunal.

    Ms Turner wrote that the company had been given a fortnight’s notice of the hearing by the WRC and that a request for postponement had already been rejected by the tribunal. She said there were no “exceptional circumstances” justifying a delay to the case proceeding and heard the complaints without the company directors.

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    James Anderson, FRSA, CMgr MCMI
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    James Anderson, FRSA, CMgr MCMI, is a recognised industry analyst and consumer-protection writer specialising in the UK home-improvement and trades sector. With over two decades of experience in business management, trade standards, and local-service markets, James brings a trusted, evidence-based voice to homeowners and professionals across Sussex and the wider UK. As a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts, James is committed to promoting best practice, transparency, and fair pricing within the trades industry. His Chartered Manager status reflects his long-standing work advising SMEs, independent tradespeople, and emerging digital platforms on sustainable growth and customer trust. James serves as the Lead Research Editor for Sussex Trades Mag, where he writes in-depth guides, trade comparisons, expert reviews, and consumer advice designed to help both homeowners and trades make confident decisions. He is also a key contributor to MyTradeLinks, offering insight into digital transformation, local trade discovery, and community-driven service platforms. Across all of his work, James focuses on three principles: clarity, accountability, and empowering the local workforce. His articles aim to cut through jargon, expose industry myths, and highlight the standards that genuinely matter when choosing a tradesperson. When he isn’t analysing market trends or writing for Sussex Trades Mag, James mentors small business owners, supports community development projects, and continues his research into how technology can strengthen trust between homeowners and local trades.

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