This article is from: srnnews.com
TORONTO (AP) â Air Canada started canceling flights on Thursday ahead of a possible work stoppage by flight attendants that could impact hundreds of thousands of travelers.
A complete shutdown of the countryâs largest airline threatens to impact about 130,000 people a day.
The union representing around 10,000 Air Canada flight attendants issued a 72-hour strike notice Wednesday. In response, the airline issued a lockout notice.
Mark Nasr, Chief Operations Officer for Air Canada, said the airline has begun a gradual suspension of Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge operations.
âAll flights will be paused by Saturday early morning,â he said.
Nasr said this approach will help facilitate an orderly restart âwhich under the best circumstances will take a full week to complete.â
He said a first set of cancellations involving several dozen flights will impact long-haul overseas flights that were due to depart Thursday night. âBy tomorrow evening we expect to have cancelled flights affecting over 100,000 customers,â Nasr said. âBy the time we get to 1 a.m. on Saturday morning we will be completely grounded.â
He said a grounding will affect 25,000 Canadians a day abroad who may become stranded. They expect 500 flights to be cancelled by the end of Friday.
He said customers whose flights are cancelled will be eligible for a full refund, and it has also made arrangements with other Canadian and foreign carriers to provide alternative travel options âto the extent possible.â
Arielle Meloul-Wechsler, head of human resources for Air Canada, said their latest offer includes a 38% increase in total compensation including benefits and pensions over four years.
The union has said its main sticking points revolve around what it calls flight attendantsâ âpoverty wagesâ and unpaid labor when planes arenât in the air.
Some flight attendants at the airlineâs news conference on Thursday held up signs that read âUnpaid work wonât flyâ and âPoverty wages = UnCanadian.â
Natasha Stea, who represents flight attendants in Montreal for the union, said she thinks the airline is counting on the government to intervene. Stea said they want a fair and equitable contract.
âThere is still time. Iâm sure if we sat down and talked we could actually get to an agreement,â she said.
The union rejected a proposal from the airline to enter a binding arbitration process, saying it prefers to negotiate a deal that its members can then vote on.
Meloul-Wechsler said theyâve hit an impasse but are still available for talks and consensual arbitration.
She said that if a deal isnât reached, the resulting âvery serious disruptionsâ would prompt the company to consider asking for government intervention.
Federal Jobs Minister Patty Hajdu said she asked the union to respond to the airlineâs request for arbitration. She urged both sides to come to an agreement independently, saying she believes deals are best made at the bargaining table.
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