Journal Pioneer

Flight attendants union says over 5,100 works will be temporaril­y let go

- ANN MARIA SHIBU REBEKAH MATHEW

TORONTO (Reuters) Canadian miner New Gold Inc said on Friday it has suspended operations at an Ontario mine after a significan­t number of workers making cross-border trips to the United States went into self-isolation.

Canada, which closed its borders this week to most foreign nationals, agreed with the United States on Wednesday to close their shared border to “nonessenti­al traffic” to curb transmissi­on of the novel coronaviru­s.

New Gold’s Rainy River mine is located about 65 kilometers north of Fort Frances, Ont., which straddles the U.S. border.

About 70% of the workforce is comprised of local residents who make frequent short trips into Minnesota, the company said.

Air Canada will temporaril­y lay off more than 5,100 employees as it attempts to check the impact of the coronaviru­s pandemic, the union representi­ng the Canadian airline’s flight attendants said on Friday.

The Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) said it was “deeply saddened” to learn that airline would temporaril­y lay off about 3,600 of its members at Air Canada mainline and all

1,549 of its members at Air Canada Rouge.

CUPE, which represents about 10,000 flight attendants at Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge, said the layoffs were effective until April 30 at the earliest.

Air Canada has initiated discussion­s with its unions to begin placing employees on temporary, off-duty status, the company told Reuters on Friday.

“Employees would be returned to active duty status when we ramp up our network schedule as conditions allow,” the company said in an emailed statement.

Earlier this week, Air Canada said it would gradually suspend the majority of its internatio­nal and U.S. transborde­r flights by March 31 in response to the coronaviru­s crisis.

Airline industry executives around the globe have called for state support as travel demand collapses at an unpreceden­ted rate and government­s impose restrictio­ns due to the pandemic.

Air Canada has “no choice” but to cut staff, calling the move “difficult but necessary,” CBC News, which first reported the news, quoted the airline’s vice president of in-flight service as saying.

As of early Friday, the highly contagious coronaviru­s hadinfecte­d more than 234,000 people across the world and the death toll was exceeding 9,700.

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