'Significant' rise in assaults on Countdown staff: spokeswoman

Countdown general manager of corporate affairs Kiri Hannifin said the company was concerned about both the frequency and severity of assaults in its stores.

Two senior Countdown staff are in a stable condition in Dunedin Hospital's intensive care unit this morning after they were stabbed at work at the Cumberland St Countdown in Dunedin yesterday.

Assaults on staff in stores had been increasing, with a 600 percent increase during the level 4 lockdown early last year, she said.

"But since then and if you take away those six weeks, we've still had a 300 percent increase since 2019 so that's really significant.

"We're spending a lot of resources trying to work out the why and the where, and how we're going to deal with it but it's random, it's during the day, it's all over the country, it's not isolated to certain stores ... it's so difficult to control but it's not difficult to control your manners and being polite and to our team."

She said security had been increasing at stores month by month since last March, and while many stores have security all the time, others have them on occasion.

"You don't expect this to happen, we're all incredibly worried about our team and customers, you don't come shopping to witness that and you don't come shopping to save other people's lives and you certainly don't come to work to be stabbed."

"We are concerned about both the frequency and severity of assaults in our stores.

"I don't think I've ever felt so stressed about anything in my life in terms of what my team have to put up with everyday.""These threats to kill or threats to bomb or threats to injure our families and the horrific verbal abuse that our team get every day that's based on race or sexuality or ethnicity or culture, it's just hateful and frequent.

She told RNZ's Morning Report programme today the two injured staff were senior members of the team, and support was being provided to them and their families as well as the wider team.

"There were lots of people working yesterday and it was a really incredibly traumatic and terrifying event. They're not at work today obviously, and many of them are incredibly distressed and we'll be offering support to them but also to the customers in our store who were quite unbelievably heroic and saved our team without a doubt and intervened to protect them.

"Our team across our country have taken it very badly."

First Union - the union that supports Countdown staff - said staff were still "in shock and shaken up" by the attack.

The union's retail and finance secretary, Tali Williams, said they would be meeting with staff along with Countdown and counsellors to talk to the workers about support mechanisms available.

"Many of them have witnessed something truly horrific yesterday that will not leave their minds for some time and people just need time to recover.

A security guard patrols the empty Countdown carpark this morning. PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH
A security guard patrols the empty Countdown carpark this morning. PHOTO: PETER MCINTOSH

"But for us as well, we want to make sure there's that ongoing support after today, that people get time off they need to recover both mentally and physically."

"They are feeling a bit unsafe and they want something to change" - First Union retail and finance secretary Tali Williams Williams said they were glad to see Countdown address the increasing abuse against staff, but workers needed to be able to have their input into solutions too.

"People at the frontline know what's missing and what's there and that's a key next step for us.

"Because they're witnessing this type of behaviour, and experiencing firsthand customer abuse, they are feeling a bit unsafe and they want something to change, they need to be a part of the conversation on what that looks like."

She said feedback they heard from staff suggested solutions like upgrade to technologies as well as security and staffing increase.

"But with the traumatic events that happened yesterday, really it's hard to know what can stop somebody like that in that situation."

Countdown also provided training to staff about how to de-escalate situations, she said. However, Williams did not believe that it would have helped in this particular event.

"I think for now it's really important given the immediacy of these events that people are just aware when they're in supermarkets, that supermarket workers will be tenterhooks, feeling on edge about what happened. So just take that extra measure to be kind and thoughtful right now to supermarket workers."

Dunedin Mayor Aaron Hawkins told Morning Report it was reassuring to know the injured individuals were now doing okay after the "shocking and deeply concerning attack".

He said people's attitude towards essential workers needed to improve.

"People collectively as a society need to think about how they act and treat people that are in service jobs and what that treatment of those workers does to enable and empower people at the more extreme end of the spectrum."

People should feel confident and comfortable going to central Dunedin, Hawkins said.

"We've been given no reason to believe there's an ongoing safety for people in the city centre."