
Urgent summer holiday warning as Glasgow & Edinburgh Airport staff threaten strikes
Read on to discover if it will affect your upcoming trip
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STRIKE action during the summer holidays is looming at two Scottish airports in a dispute over pay, a union has warned.
Unite the Union said ground services crew employed by Menzies Aviation at Edinburgh and Glasgow airports have overwhelmingly rejected "unacceptable" separate pay offers from the company.
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Edinburgh Airport staff have threatened strikes this summer
Credit: Andrew Barr
It warned unless Menzies Aviation tables a better offer it will have no option but to ballot members for strike action.
Unite said around 300 Menzies Aviation workers, 97 per cent of those balloted, rejected a basic uplift offer worth around 4.25per cent at Glasgow Airport while at Edinburgh Airport 100 per cent of some 300 workers balloted rejected an offer worth around 4 per cent.
Unite industrial officer Carrie Binnie said: "Summer strike action looms over Edinburgh and Glasgow airports because the pay offers on the table from Menzies Aviation aren't good enough.
"Menzies Aviation has the ability to improve its offers and they can easily resolve this pay dispute without any disruption to the travelling public.
"If the company fail to table a better offer to our members, Unite will have no option but to ballot our members for strikes over the summer holidays."
The union said the ground crew workers - who include dispatchers, allocators, airside agents and controllers - provide essential support for a host of major airlines.
Unite general secretary Sharon Graham said: "Unite's Menzies members have emphatically rejected unacceptable pay offers.
"The Menzies group is posting sky-high profits and our members who contribute towards this success deserve far better from the company."
Menzies Aviation has been asked for comment.
Elsewhere Brits are being warned of a scam spreading across some of the UK's biggest airports.
Moment Brit woman is dragged off Ryanair flight & thrown to floor after 'assaulting passengers and making bomb threat'
Passengers at Heathrow, Gatwick and Luton, have been warned by police of the new scam after several passengers have already been targeted.
Tourists are been approached shortly after landing typically at the arrivals hall - by individuals posing as official airport staff or prebooked drivers.
The scammers are often noted wearing smart clothing, carrying clipboards or signs and sometimes present fake ID.
They then claim that the tourist's scheduled hotel pick-up or transport has been cancelled, changed, or upgraded.

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