Glasgow Times

Unions reveal campaign to protect jobs at airports

- BY CATRIONA STEWART

ACAMPAIGN to protect jobs linked to Scottish airports has been launched by Unite Scotland. The trade union has warned 1500 workers are at risk of redundancy from airlines and companies operating at Glasgow, Edinburgh and Aberdeen airports.

Scottish airport workers are disproport­ionately affected by planned job losses, the union has argued.

It also says some face their earnings being cut by up to 45% by airlines firing and rehiring staff on poorer pay and conditions.

The campaign is demanding the furlough scheme for the industry is extended beyond the UK Government’s end date of October 31, as well as an end to the “fire and rehire” proposals for Scottish airport workers.

It also wants any government support, investment or tax relief to come with conditions to protect jobs, wages and terms of employment, in line with the Scottish Government’s fair work principles.

Unite Scottish secretary Pat Rafferty said: “The launch of the Save Scotland’s Airports campaign by Unite is vitally important in concentrat­ing the minds of the Scottish and UK government­s on the immense pressure the civil aviation industry is under.

“The scale of the challenge is massive and that’s why we need all politician­s to support our campaign demands, which focus on the condition of protecting jobs and the terms and conditions of workers associated with any company receiving government support.

“We also need strong support from politician­s and the public to ensure that any civil aviation company like British Airways and Menzies Aviation stop and reverse the brutal attacks on jobs and the terms and conditions of the workforce under fire and rehire practices, which could potentiall­y affect take-home pay, we believe, by up to 45%.” The campaign follows a warning from the union that the aerospace engineerin­g and civil aviation industries in Scotland “could both be on the brink of terminal decline” without additional support packages from the UK and Scottish Government­s.

Unite Scotland released the findings of a study by Strathclyd­e University’s Fraser of Allander Institute (FAI), which suggested almost 5000 Scottish jobs may be at risk because of proposed redundanci­es in the two sectors.

The FAI report found the planned job losses – from companies including Rolls Royce, GE Caledonian, Spirit Aerosystem­s and Wyman Gordon – could also inflict a £325 million blow to the Scottish economy, with the ultimate loss of 2530 staff.

Meanwhile, production of face coverings has begun at two sites across the UK as part of £14m government investment in manufactur­ing millions of coverings each week, a minister has announced.

The Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, Michael Gove, said that suppliers in Port Talbot, Wales, and Blackburn, in north-west England, had started producing “high-quality” face coverings, with another site in Livingston to begin in the coming weeks.

It is part of a drive to increase production of face coverings in the UK, he added.

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 ??  ?? Pat Rafferty, Unite’s Scottish Secretary, said they would be fighting for staff at airports including Glasgow’s
Pat Rafferty, Unite’s Scottish Secretary, said they would be fighting for staff at airports including Glasgow’s

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