More WestJet flight cancellations as Canadian airline strike hits more than 100,000 travelers
UNB
Publish: 01 Jul 2024, 04:04 PM
TORONTO,
Jul 1 (AP/UNB) - A strike by plane mechanics forced Canada's second largest
airline, WestJet, to cancel hundreds more flights Sunday, upending plans of
roughly 110,000 travelers over the Canada Day long weekend and prompting the
carrier to demand action from the federal government.
Some 680 workers, whose
daily inspections and repairs are essential to airline operations, walked off
the job Friday evening despite a directive for binding arbitration from the
labor minister.
"WestJet is in
receipt of a binding arbitration order and awaits urgent clarity from the
government that a strike and arbitration cannot exist simultaneously; this is
something they have committed to address and like all Canadians we are
waiting," WestJet Airlines President Diederik Pen said in a statement
Sunday.
Since Thursday, WestJet
has cancelled 829 flights scheduled to fly between then and Monday - the
busiest travel weekend of the season.
The vast majority of
Sunday's trips were called off as WestJet pared down its 180-plane fleet to 32
active aircraft and topped the global list for cancellations among major
airlines over the weekend.
Trevor Temple-Murray was
one of thousands of customers scrambling to rebook after their trips were
scrapped less than a day in advance.
"We'll just have to
wait it out," said Temple-Murray, a resident of Lethbridge, Alberta, who
waited in a car with his wife and 2-year-old son in the parking lot of the
Victoria, British Columbia, airport. They were trying to get a plane to Calgary.
Their 6:05 p.m. flight
had been cancelled, and they wouldn't know until the evening whether a
scheduled 7 a.m. flight the next day would go ahead.
"There are a lot of
angry people in there," Temple-Murray said, pointing at the terminal.
Nearby, Grade 10
exchange student Marina Cebrian said she was supposed to be back home in Spain
early Sunday, but now won't return to her family until Tuesday after enduring
three flight cancellations.
"It's
distressing," she said. "I was supposed to be at home today, like
seven hours ago, but I'm not."
Both WestJet and the
Airplane Mechanics Fraternal Association have accused the other side of
refusing to negotiate in good faith.
The union's goal remains
a deal hammered out through bargaining rather than by an arbitrator - a route
it opposed from the start.
The union says its
demands around wages would cost WestJet less than $8 million Canadian (US$5.6
million) beyond what the company has offered for the first year of the
collective agreement - the first contract between the two sides. It has
acknowledged the gains would surpass compensation for industry colleagues
across Canada and sit more on par with U.S. counterparts.
WestJet says it has
offered a 12.5% wage hike in the first year of the contract, and a compounded
wage increase of 23.5% over the rest of the 5 1/2-year term.
End/UNB/AP/SU