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Air Canada demands massive concessions
By a correspondent
18 February 2003
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Air Canada, the countrys principal air carrier, is demanding
$650 million in annual contract concessions from its 35,000 unionized
employeesthe equivalent of eliminating 8,000 jobs.
At meetings with union officials earlier this month, Air Canada
executives warned that the airline could be forced into bankruptcy
unless workers accepts changes in work rules, wage cuts and other
concessions worth more than 20 percent of the companys annual
labor costs.
Company President and CEO Robert Milton says Air Canada is
determined to win the contract concessions and squeeze more labor
from its workforce for less wages, rather than simply reduce flights
and slash jobs: It is a fools game to continue trying
to chop the junior-most, highest-productivity, lowest-wage-rate
employees.
In threatening Air Canada workers livelihood, Milton
has invoked the language of the Bush administration, claiming
that September 11 fundamentally transformed the air travel industry.
Everything is on the table, declared Milton. The
game has changed. The cheese has moved and were going to
deal with it.
In fact, Air Canadas financial woes significantly pre-date
the post-September 11 falloff in air travel. The airline has a
$12.9 billion debt, much of it the result of a protracted commercial
war with Canadian Airlines. In 2000, Air Canada succeeded in buying
out Canadian, which was then on the verge of bankruptcy.
Air Canadas principal creditors and shareholders anticipated
the merger would result in a profit premium since it left the
airline as the sole carrier in large parts of the country. But
with the puncturing of the stock market boom in 2000, the air
travel industry went into a tailspin. More recently, Air Canada
has faced a growing challenge from a new, nonunion, low-cost carrier,
West Jet. Even as Canadas overall air travel market has
shrunk, Air Canadas share has fallen from 80 percent in
2000 to 55 percent today.
Since the merger, Air Canada has eliminated about 12 percent
of the combined Air Canada-Canadian workforce. With the support
of the unions, it has also spun off part of its operations to
form a new regional subsidiary, Jazz, with increased work-rule
flexibility and lower labor costs.
Milton has now announced Jazz is to be sold off. So as to boost
Jazzs worth to potential buyers, Air Canada is seeking substantial
further concessions from its workers. Declared Jazz President
Joe Randall, There are no sacred cows.... There are things
like wages, benefits and work rules to look at. We just need to
get [concessions] now in the short term.
Canadas federal Liberal government has signaled full
support for Air Canadas drive to improve its profitability
at the expense of its workers. I am very concerned about
Air Canada, [and] I have been for quite a while, said Transport
Minister David Collenette. I think the management has done
a good job in the last number of years in trying to cut costs,
but obviously that isnt sufficient.
In a second interview, Collenette echoed Air Canadas
complaints about excessive labor costs and lack of profits. We
have some of the lowest airfares in Canadian history. But its
coming at a great price ... the bottom line for all companies,
especially Air Canada. Air Canadas cost structure does not
permit it to continue this kind of low-fare regime.
During the corporate struggle between Air Canada and Canadian,
the unions worked to mobilize their members behind their respective
employers and against their fellow workers at the other airline.
In keeping with this corporatist policy, the unions are now falling
in line behind Air Canadas concession demands.
The low-cost carriers are eating us alive, said
Jean Jallet, head of the International Association of Machinists
and Aerospace Workers (IAM), which represents 15,000 maintenance
workers and baggage handlers. There is some validity to
(managements) argument.
Ken Hopper of the Canadian Union of Public Employees
Air Canada component says CUPE will work with management to find
ways to cut costs. But for the moment, it is insisting that the
new collective agreement signed with the airline last month not
be reopened.
Gary Fane of the Canadian Auto Workers, which represents customer
care and service workers, has said his union is prepared to consider
changes to work conditions but wont discuss wage cuts. At
the CAW, we dont give up wage concessions.... But well
talk about anything else.
The Air Canada Pilots Association (ACPA) is hiring financial
advisers to do due diligence on the airline to see if its future
is as bleak as Milton claims. If we are satisfied,
ACPA President Don Johnson told reporters, then well
act appropriately.
See Also:
Unions set Air Canada flight
attendants against each other
[28 January 2003]
United Airlines bankruptcy
signals new attacks on US workers
US Airways and American seek millions in concessions
[11 December 2002]
Bush administration
drives United Airlines into bankruptcy
Government panel demands all-out attack on airline workers
[7 December 2002]
The Onex-Air Canada
struggle: unions pit worker against worker
[10 November 1999]
Merger of Canadas
major airlines will mean massive job losses, fare hikes
[7 October 1999]
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