Bussiness
Aer Lingus cancels more flights as union decision awaited
Aer Lingus cancelled 25 flights across Monday, July 15th and Tuesday, July 16th as a crunch meeting of union leaders began considering a 17.75 pay increase offered to pilots in a bid to end the dispute.
The carrier added that it will announce the axing of further flights on Thursday morning. So far Aer Lingus has dropped 573 services since pilots began refusing to work overtime or accept roster changes under a work to rule initiated two weeks ago.
The news comes as Irish Airline Pilots Association (Ialpa) officials weigh a 17.75 per cent pay rise offered to Aer Lingus members in a Labour Court-brokered deal to which the company has already agreed.
However, sources say that while union leaders could back the offer, they may not suspend the work to rule unless Aer Lingus drops “punitive actions” against pilots.
These include changing sick leave terms and declaring that some pilots observing the work to rule failed to show for their flights, something that could ultimately lead to dismissal.
The union has yet to formally support or reject the Labour Court’s proposals.
The court on Wednesday responded to a request from Ialpa officials to clarify parts of a deal offering members at Aer Lingus pay rises of 17.75 per cent over three years.
The union’s executive had sought the clarification to aid its officials in deciding whether or not to recommend the proposal to pilots, who must vote on it. It met on Wednesday afternoon to discuss the response.
Executive members of Ialpa, part of trade union Fórsa, met on Tuesday to discuss the Labour Court recommendation of an extra 17.75 per cent.
However, they held off on issuing any recommendation one way or the other to members pending the court’s clarification of several points.
Once Ialpa’s executive decides on its position, meetings with members and a ballot will follow, a process that could take several days.
Whatever position Ialpa officials adopt is seen as crucial to ending the dispute, as its members are likely to support this when they vote.
Aer Lingus has already confirmed it would agree to the deal.
Should pilots not accept the deal, Ialpa is likely to step up current industrial action at the airline which included an eight-hour strike along with the work to rule.
A key issue for Ialpa officials is their understanding of how the terms of the Labour Court recommendation affect different groups within the union. Along with the pay increase, the court recommends replacing Aer Lingus’s two pay scales with just one, boosting allowances and dropping an agreement allowing pilots to take extra summer leave.