3rd UPDATE: British Airways' Cabin Crew Details Strike Plan
March 12 2010 - 7:50AM
Dow Jones News
The union representing British Airways PLC's (BAY.LN) cabin crew
Friday announced strikes will take place later this month after the
U.K. airline and union leaders failed to reach a last-minute deal
on changes to working practices.
Unite, the union representing cabin crew, said its members will
begin a three-day strike March 20 and a four-day strike beginning
March 27. The decision to strike likely will deter passengers from
flying with BA over the period and potentially again in the future,
while also adding to BA's troubles. The company in February
reported a pretax loss in the three months to Dec. 31 of GBP50
million compared with a GBP122 million loss a year earlier.
The union said it had received a new proposal Thursday from BA
but didn't feel able to recommend the offer to its members at this
time, and warned that further strikes could take place after April
14 if the dispute wasn't resolved. It will ballot members on BA's
new proposals ahead of its first strike.
BA said in a statement that its offer to cabin crew was
reasonable and fair and that it was disappointed by the decision to
strike. "Unite's action has no shred of justification," it
added.
Unite's proposals to save the airline money fell significantly
short of the savings that BA wanted to make and would leave crew
members between GBP1,000 and GBP2,700 a year worse off, the airline
said.
The strike, which Unite said could cost BA GBP25 million a day,
would be the first for Chief Executive Willie Walsh since he took
the helm of the U.K. carrier in 2005.
Unite accused Walsh and other executives of disrupting
negotiations. "Every time talks appeared to make progress, the
chief executive or another senior manager has popped up making
public statements designed to inflame the situation," said Unite
Assistant General Secretary Len McCluskey. "This has led to the
view that BA management's real agenda is destroying trade unionism
among its employees."
British Airways isn't alone in facing strike action by
disgruntled staff. The severe downturn in the industry caused by
the recession has caused airlines to post billions of dollars in
losses and prompted them to cut costs and jobs as they react to
lower revenue. Airlines including Deutsche Lufthansa AG (LHA.XE),
AMR Corp.'s (AMR) American Airlines and Aer Lingus Group PLC
(EIL1.DB) currently face industrial action by employees battling
planned changes.
But others have avoided strikes. For example, Scandinavian
airline SAS AB (SAS.SK) Friday said it had reached a collective
agreement with flight crew unions, which will save the airline
around 500 million Swedish kronor ($70 million) a year. Finalizing
the deal was one of the conditions for the Swedish, Danish and
Norwegian governments to participate in the carrier's proposed SEK5
billion rights issue, which was announced last month. The three
countries jointly own 50% of the airline.
Walsh has long held his position that permanent change is needed
at BA and has prepared a range of measures to combat industrial
action.
BA last week said it has 23 leased aircraft on standby to cover
services that could be hit by disruptions. It will lease planes
complete with crew and pilots. It wouldn't say which routes they
would cover.
Some 6,000 staff had volunteered to help in various areas, such
as handing out advice at airports. That includes 1,000 workers who
have volunteered to replace cabin crew during strikes. The airline
has already been training pilots and ground staff as cabin
crew.
"Should a strike take place, we will do everything we can to
protect our customers' travel plans as far as possible," BA said.
It plans to operate all its scheduled flights from London City
Airport, all long-haul services and about 50% of short-haul
services from Gatwick, and "a substantial part" of its long-haul
and short-haul schedule from Heathrow.
BA said also that it was in the process of obtaining seats on
flights operated by other carriers to enable thousands of its
customers to fly to their chosen destinations.
Rivals were quick to step in. British Midland International, or
bmi, a unit of Lufthansa, said it would do what it could to assist
BA customers caught up in the dispute and currently was reviewing
the possibility of flying larger aircraft and additional
frequencies. Bmi is the second-largest operator at Heathrow after
BA.
BA and unions have been battling for 12 months over how to save
the airline money. After failing to come to an agreement, BA Nov.
16 took the step of reducing cabin crew on long-haul flights from
London's Heathrow Airport to 14 personnel from 15 without union
support. Last month, the High Court ruled that those changes
weren't a breach of contract, meaning BA won't be forced to reverse
the changes or to pay damages to staff.
This is the second time cabin crew have attempted to take
industrial action after BA in December won an injunction to prevent
a 12-day strike. BA won the injunction based on the grounds the
union had balloted staff that weren't entitled to vote because they
would have left the U.K. carrier at the time strikes were due to
take place.
At 1214 GMT, BA's shares traded up 3 pence, or 1.3%, at 234
pence while the benchmark FTSE 100 index traded up 0.3%.
-By Kaveri Niththyananthan, Dow Jones Newswires; 4420 7842 9299;
kaveri.niththyananthan@dowjones.com