
Air Canada cancels upcoming flights ahead of cabin crew strike
Montreal-based Air Canada said on Wednesday it plans to cease flying on Saturday after its flight attendants' union served a 72-hour strike notice due to stalled contract talks over pay.
The standoff is disrupting service by Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge, which together carry about 130,000 customers a day. It's also creating a fresh test for the country's Liberal government under Prime Minister Mark Carney which was asked by Air Canada to impose binding arbitration on the two sides. Binding arbitration would stop any strike.
3 Montreal-based Air Canada said it plans to cease flying after its flight attendants' union served a 72-hour strike notice due to stalled contract talks over pay.
AP
Canada's Minister of Jobs and Families on Tuesday encouraged both parties to remain at the table until a deal is reached.
The dispute hinges over the way airlines compensate flight attendants. Most airlines have traditionally paid cabin crew members only when planes are in motion.
But flight attendants in North America have sought compensation for hours worked, including for tasks like boarding passengers and waiting around the airport.
3 Flight attendants in North America have sought compensation for hours worked, and tasks like boarding passengers and waiting around the airport.
AP
3 Earlier this month, 99.7% of flight attendants represented by the Canadian Union of Public Employees voted for a strike.
REUTERS
The strike is set to begin at about 1 a.m. ET on Saturday. Earlier this month, 99.7% of flight attendants represented by the Canadian Union of Public Employees voted for a strike.
Air Canada has said customers would be fully refunded for cancellations, which could hit lucrative routes between Canada, the United States, Europe and Asia.
The airline also issued a lockdown notice beginning 32 minutes after the strike. It had declared a deadlock in negotiations on Tuesday, after the union rejected its proposal for binding arbitration.
The carrier had offered a 38% increase in total compensation for flight attendants over four years, with a 25% raise in the first year.
However, the union said the offer would raise actual wages by 17.2% over four years and was below inflation. Air Canada had offered to compensate flight attendants for some unpaid work but only at 50% of their hourly rate.
Every morning, the NY POSTcast offers a deep dive into the headlines with the Post's signature mix of politics, business, pop culture, true crime and everything in between. Subscribe here!
Flight attendants have negotiated with more confidence, encouraged by improved airline earnings in 2024 and bumper pay deals for pilots since the pandemic.
Such concessions would raise labor costs for Air Canada, which reported a drop in second-quarter profit, weighed by weak passenger traffic to its key U.S. market.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
14 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Canada minister urges Air Canada, union to return to bargaining table as strike looms
By Allison Lampert and David Ljunggren MONTREAL/OTTAWA (Reuters) -Canadian Jobs Minister Patty Hajdu on Thursday urged Air Canada and the union representing its flight attendants to return to the bargaining table to reach a deal that could avert a strike set to start this Saturday. A spokesperson for the Canadian Union of Public Employees, which represents the carrier's 10,000 flight attendants, said Air Canada negotiators have not returned to bargaining and have not responded to a proposal they made earlier this week. "We believe the company wants the federal government to intervene and bail them out," a CUPE spokesperson told Reuters. The union added that Air Canada has "been completely missing in action from the bargaining table since Tuesday evening, despite a looming shutdown." In a statement, Hajdu also said Air Canada had asked her to refer the dispute to binding arbitration. She said she had asked the union to respond to this request. CUPE has previously said it opposes binding arbitration and wants a negotiated settlement. Air Canada was not immediately available for comment. The Montreal-based company said on Wednesday it would be cancelling flights from Thursday, as the country's largest carrier winds down service through Saturday. FlightAware data shows Air Canada has, thus far, cancelled only four flights as of Thursday morning. A strike would hit the country's tourism sector during the height of summer travel. Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge carry about 130,000 customers a day. Air Canada is also the foreign carrier with the largest number of flights to the U.S. U.S. carrier United Airlines, a code share partner of Air Canada, said it is working with customers to get them to their destinations and has issued a travel waiver to help them manage their travel plans. Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


UPI
17 minutes ago
- UPI
Air Canada cancels flights in prep for flight attendant strike
1 of 2 | Air Canada has canceled most of its flights for the next few days in preparation for a strike by the union that represents flight attendants. The airline warned that some travelers may be stranded. File Photo by John Angelillo/UPI | License Photo Aug. 14 (UPI) -- Air Canada has canceled most of its flights over the next few days to prepare for a strike by flight attendants. It issued a 72-hour lockout notice ahead of the strike by the Canadian Union of Public Employees, which represents 10,000 flight attendants. "To provide customers certainty, Air Canada will begin a phased wind down of most of its operations to be completed over the next three days," the airline said in a statement. "The airline has also sought government-directed arbitration to resolve the situation." The airline warned that some customers could be stranded. "Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge carry approximately 130,000 customers a day who could be affected by a disruption, this includes the 25,000 Canadians that the airline flies home from abroad each day, who could be stranded," Air Canada said. Air Canada Rouge is the airline's lower-cost, leisure brand. Flights operated by regional affiliates Jazz and PAL will continue during the strike. Wages appear to be the main issue in the negotiations. CUPE said negotiators are not satisfied with the airline's offers for wage increases and other forms of compensation. It rejected a proposal to continue contract talks in arbitration. "For the past nine months, we have put forward solid, data-driven proposals on wages and unpaid work, all rooted in fairness and industry standards," said Wesley Lesosky, president of the Air Canada Component of CUPE, in a statement. "Air Canada's response to our proposals makes one thing clear: they are not interested in resolving these critical issues." The union said the airline is "refusing to increase flight attendant wages to match industry standards, inflation, or even federal minimum wage. Entry-level flight attendant wages have only gone up $3 per hour since 2000, while inflation has increased by 69% in the same timeframe." The airline said it offered a compensation package on Monday, but the union rejected it. "Air Canada tabled a revised comprehensive proposal to the union on Aug. 11, which sought no concessions in return from its flight attendants and provided for a 38% total compensation increase over four years. The offer also addressed the issue of ground pay, improved pensions and benefits, increased crew rest and contained other improvements." The union said, "Air Canada's offer of an 8% wage increase in year one would not even recoup the 9% that flight attendants have lost in purchasing power over the course of their previous contract. It is, in effect, a pay cut." The group is prepared to help its members during the strike. "Our locals have had to set up food banks in our union offices for junior members who cannot afford groceries," Lesosky said. "Our members need and deserve a fair wage increase that makes everyone whole for the skyrocketing cost of living, and one that lifts our junior flight attendants out of poverty." Neither has said how long they believe the strike will last.


CNBC
17 minutes ago
- CNBC
Canada minister urges Air Canada, union to return to bargaining table as strike looms
Canadian Jobs Minister Patty Hajdu on Thursday urged Air Canada and the union representing its flight attendants to return to the bargaining table to reach a deal that could avert a strike set to start this Saturday. A spokesperson for the Canadian Union of Public Employees, which represents the carrier's 10,000 flight attendants, said Air Canada negotiators have not returned to bargaining and have not responded to a proposal they made earlier this week. "We believe the company wants the federal government to intervene and bail them out," a CUPE spokesperson told Reuters. The union added that Air Canada has "been completely missing in action from the bargaining table since Tuesday evening, despite a looming shutdown." In a statement, Hajdu also said Air Canada had asked her to refer the dispute to binding arbitration. She said she had asked the union to respond to this request. CUPE has previously said it opposes binding arbitration and wants a negotiated settlement. Air Canada was not immediately available for comment. The Montreal-based company said on Wednesday it would be cancelling flights from Thursday, as the country's largest carrier winds down service through Saturday. FlightAware data shows Air Canada has, thus far, cancelled only four flights as of Thursday morning. A strike would hit the country's tourism sector during the height of summer travel. Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge carry about 130,000 customers a day. Air Canada is also the foreign carrier with the largest number of flights to the U.S. U.S. carrier United Airlines, a code share partner of Air Canada, said it is working with customers to get them to their destinations and has issued a travel waiver to help them manage their travel plans.