Air Canada potential pilots’ strike would ground 1,000 flights a day. How worried should Canadians be?

By | August 31, 2024

Walk-off by 5,400 pilots could happen as early as Sept. 17, after union members deliver overwhelming strike vote at end of 10-year contractPilots at Air Canada, Canada’s largest airline, could walk off the job as early as Sept. 17, after 98 per cent voted in favour of giving their union a strike mandate. Here’s what that would mean for travellers.What do the pilots want?

TORONTO, CANADA – SEPTEMBER 29: Hundreds of Air Canada pilots demanding better wages and working conditions hold an informational picket at Toronto Pearson International Airport in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada on September 29, 2023. (Photo by Mert Alper Dervis/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

Charlene Hudy, head of the Air Canada contingent of the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA), told The Canadian Press that wages are a major issue for the membership.Last year, WestJet, the country’s second largest airline, agreed to a contract that included a 24 per cent compensation bump over four years.

Over the last year and a half, new contracts have been signed between the four biggest U.S. airlines and their pilots, meaning some of those workers now make roughly double what Air Canada pilots are earning.

“We all fly passengers under the Star Alliance,” Hudy said. “So we’re flying the same passengers in the same airspace on some of the very same routes, and those pilots are being compensated dramatically more than us.”When was the last collective agreement signed?
The current collective agreement dates back to 2014, and expired last September.

ALPA, which represents more than 5,400 Air Canada pilots, has been negotiating with the airline with the help of a federal conciliator since June 2023, The Canadian Press reports. Those talks are scheduled to end Monday, with a three-week cooling-off period meaning a strike could begin on Sept. 17 at the earliest.“It’s a stale, outdated contract,” Hudy said of the previous agreement, per Canadian Press. She added: “There are elements of our collective agreement right now that stem back to just post-bankruptcy,” referring to when the airline filed for bankruptcy protection in 2003.What is Air Canada saying?
Arielle Meloul-Wechsler, Air Canada’s chief human resources officer, said in a video message last week that the two sides had reached agreement on “numerous provisions” of the collective agreement.

She noted that despite a decade of labour stability at the airline, “a 10-year-deal creates a bit of pent-up demand. So it’s time to refresh that agreement.”Air Canada CEO Michael Rousseau told analysts this month that both sides were in agreement on several points, and that he hoped to reach a deal in the coming weeks, The Canadian Press reported.

In an email to Bloomberg news, Air Canada downplayed the strike vote, saying: “Such a vote is a normal step in a negotiation process and does not mean that any disruption will take place.”

What happens if the strike goes ahead?Air Canada’s pilots would have to give 72 hours notice before beginning a strike action. According to ALPA, a strike would ground roughly 1,000 flights and day, and impact more than 120,000 each day.

Passengers could seek alternate airlines or other modes of transportation, but the effect of so many cancelled flights would make that difficult.However, Air Canada is offering passengers who have booked flights around the date of the possible strike some increased flexibility in rebooking travel. Under the policy, customers with tickets for travel between Sept. 15 and 23 can rebook on any other Air Canada flight with the same origin and destination up to Nov. 30 at no additional cost. Customers who want to cancel and rebook their travel for after that date will have their change fees waived but will have to pay any fare difference.

Travellers with bookings during the affected period may also cancel their flight and receive a credit for future travel. Refunds will be available for customers with refundable tickets, but Air Canada says refunds will not be available for those with non-refundable tickets as the flights are scheduled to operate as normal.

Could the federal government intervene?
In the recent labour relations standoff between railway companies Canadian National and Canadian Pacific Kansas City and their unions, the government has forced a binding arbitration on the two parties that saw rail service resume on Monday.

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