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WSWS : Workers
Struggles : Airlines
Ansett New Zealand pilots fight company lockout
By John Braddock
29 September 1999
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Airline pilots employed by Ansett New Zealand are engaged in
a bitter battle against company plans to carry through job cuts
and attacks on working conditions. The company has locked out
125 pilots since September 15 in a determined effort to break
the pilots' resistance.
Ansett, one of New Zealand's two national air carriers, wants
to cut pilot numbers from 146 to 111, and to force its remaining
pilots to work longer hours by rostering them an extra two days
per month. The company is also proposing to ease flight and duty
time limits, weaken superannuation provisions and cut pay rates
by between $NZ4,000 and $10,000 in a bid to reduce its wage bill
by $4.7 million a year.
The company imposed the lockout after the fourth in a series
of 24-hour strikes called by the Airline Pilots' Association,
and a week of unofficial "sickouts" (pilots phoning
in sick), which grounded nearly 600 flights and brought Ansett's
losses to over $5 million since the beginning of August. Services
have been reduced by two-thirds during the current two-week school
holiday period.
A recruiting company, Rishworth Aviation, and the Civil Aviation
Authority have both confirmed that the company has sought approval
to employ pilots recruited overseas to extend its present limited
services and undermine the lockout.
So far Ansett has maintained only minimal flights on the main
trunk routes by using a dozen pilots who have signed the new contract.
These include three management pilots, two non-union pilots and
a handful of union members. Late last week, Ansett demanded that
the pilots' website be disconnected by its Internet provider when
the identities of the scabs keeping the airline flying were revealed
on the site. The union has disclaimed any responsibility for the
website.
The pilots have voted almost unanimously to reject the new
contracts, but Ansett is sending its offers separately to individual
pilots. According to the union, the company is offering promotions
to pilots who sign the contracts, and threatening to blacklist
those who do not as "industrial malcontents".
Ansett New Zealand was set up in competition with Air New Zealand
during the period of economic deregulation in the 1980s. The company
has barely been out of the red during its existence and has lost
millions of dollars on its services.
Transport Minister Maurice Williamson earlier encouraged Ansett
to bring in pilots from overseas to undermine industrial action.
Now he has warned that Ansett might pull out of New Zealand altogether
if the pilots do not agree to its demands. "They (Ansett)
are quite clear about having to restructure the company and get
some realistic terms and conditions out of their pilots or they
can't stay. I would imagine the owners are starting to get a little
bit tetchy and say... if this goes on for too much longer we might
be best to cut our losses, he said.
According to union representatives, News Corporation owned
by Rupert Murdoch, the principal shareholder in Ansett, has been
pushing for the company's restructuring as part of plans to sell
it off. Newscorp chairman Ken Cowley flew to Auckland last week
to supervise Ansett's strategy during the lockout.
Cowley is being assisted by management consultant Francis Wevers,
a former leading official in the Public Service Association and
Wellington region chairman of the Combined State Unions. Wevers
is one of a number of senior union bureaucrats who shifted easily
from one side of the bargaining table to the other over the past
decade. He established his own industrial relations consultancy
in the wake of the deregulation of the state sector by Labour
governments in the 1980s.
The Airline Pilots Association has been seeking to find a way
to shut down the dispute with two conciliatory offers to Ansett
management in as many weeks. Firstly, the pilots' union suggested
that it was prepared to halt all action if the company agreed
to negotiate a new contract through a mediator. When that was
rejected, the union leaders offered their members as a free workforce
for Ansett during the school holidays, saying the "disruption
to the public's holiday plans is of major concern". It was
also knocked back.
The union failed to close down air transport by calling out
Air New Zealand pilots, who are themselves involved in contract
negotiations and took strike action to defend conditions less
than a month before the Ansett dispute. Air New Zealand is picking
up business being lost by Ansett and running extra flights.
See Also:
Airline
Workers Issues
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