Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Strike cancels 1,700 U.K. flights

British Airways pilots go on 48-hour walkout in pay dispute

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British Airways canceled most flights scheduled for Monday and today after its pilots went on strike over their demand for higher pay, upending the travel plans of about 195,000 passengers.

The pilots’ union said its members would not return to work for 48 hours after starting the job action at 12:01 a.m. Monday, prompting the latest of several cancellati­ons that British Airways has had to manage in recent months amid a simmering labor standoff.

Terminal 5 at Heathrow in London, a British Airways hub, was deserted Monday, according to British media reports, a sign that the airline had prepared for the possibilit­y of a walkout. British Airlines said it had contacted customers two weeks ago to offer a choice of alternativ­e flights on British Airways planes or with different airlines, or full refunds.

“After many months of trying to resolve the pay dispute, we are extremely sorry that it has come to this,” British Airways said in an emailed statement Monday.

The airline said it had canceled 1,700 flights that had been scheduled for Monday and today because of the strike, the first ever for British Airways pilots.

“Unfortunat­ely, with no detail from B.A.L.P.A. on which pilots would strike, we had no way of predicting how many would come to work or which aircraft they are qualified to fly, so we had no option but to cancel nearly 100 percent of our flights,”

the airline added, referring to the British Airline Pilots’ Associatio­n.

British Airways had offered to raise its pilots’ pay 11.5% over three years, a proposal that pilots who belong to two other unions had accepted. The average captain earns about $205,000 a year in base pay, and the proposed raises would eventually take them to more than $245,000 a year, including bonuses and other unspecifie­d additional payments, according to the airline.

Most of the carrier’s 3,900 pilots belong to the British Airline Pilots Associatio­n, which said that its members have had to take pay cuts

and that British Airways has declined to entertain counteroff­ers.

They have argued for a share of the company’s profits, which in 2018 increased 11.6% from the year before, to $2.4 billion.

“They’ve previously taken big pay cuts to help the company through hard times,” Brian Strutton, the union’s general secretary, said in a statement. “The company’s leaders, who themselves are paid huge salaries and have generous benefits packages, won’t listen, are refusing to negotiate and are putting profits before the needs of passengers and staff.”

The two sides have been negotiatin­g since November, and the dispute has already led to frustratio­n among customers.

In August, British Airways

emailed passengers to tell them that flights would be canceled because of a planned pilot strike. The airline then contacted passengers hours later to say it had made a mistake with regard to when the strike would affect flights.

The admission came too late for many passengers who had already made alternativ­e plans. Many expressed anger over what they felt was the inadequate support they had gotten from customer service representa­tives for the airline.

The pilots’ union has voted to strike again Sept. 27 if the dispute has not been resolved by then.

Interviewe­d by Sky News on Monday, Alex Cruz, the airline’s chief executive, said the pilots had acted against their own interests by deciding to strike, although he admitted that the walkout was “punishing our brand.”

The reputation­al problems may not last, said Andrew Charlton, managing director at consulting firm Aviation Advocacy. Customers who complain about problems now might be won over by the airline later, he said. Price cuts could be one remedy, Charlton said. British Airways, which is considered a higher-end national carrier, has increasing­ly sought to compete with budget airlines that have grabbed a larger share of the European aviation market.

“To the extent the brand has been tarnished, it can be polished back up by offering cheap tickets,” he said. “I don’t think the worries are huge.”

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