San Francisco Chronicle

Striking workers disrupt air travel

-

Flights from Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris and other French airports faced disruption­s Friday as airport workers held a strike to demand salary hikes to keep up with inflation and an urgent hiring push to deal with resurgent travel demand.

The labor action is the latest trouble to hit global airports this summer, as travel resurges after two years of virus restrictio­ns.

French airports have been largely spared the chaos seen recently in London, Amsterdam and some other European and U.S. cities. But on Friday, striking workers sought to call attention to the pain of inflation with a walkout on the first big day of France’s domestic summer travel season.

France’s civil aviation authority said 17% of scheduled flights out of Charles de Gaulle and Orly airports in Paris were canceled between 7 a.m. and 2 p.m. Friday, primarily short-haul routes.

A few hundred workers wearing union vests blocked a key road approachin­g Charles de Gaulle, forcing passengers to drag their suitcases by foot along a bypass to reach their terminals. A protest was also held at Orly. Once inside, passengers faced large crowds and delays at check-in, passport control and security stations.

In addition to salary hikes, union activists called for an emergency recruitmen­t plan to get airport staffing back up to pre-pandemic levels.

Airlines and airports that slashed jobs during the depths of the COVID-19 crisis are struggling to keep up with soaring demand as travel demand recovers after two years of virus restrictio­ns.

Unions said the strike could last through Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States