The Telegram (St. John's)

Arbitrator chooses Air Canada’s final offer to pilots

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Afederal

arbitrator has sided with Air Canada in its labour dispute with the union representi­ng its pilots.

Douglas Stanley selected Air Canada’s final offer — a five-year collective agreement effective until April 2016 — following negotiatio­ns with the Air Canada Pilots Associatio­n that took place over a 19-month period.

“This agreement preserves our pilots’ compensati­on and benefits in the top quartile of the North American industry and will help ensure the sustainabi­lity of the company’s defined benefit pension plans,” said Calin Rovinescu, Air Canada president and chief executive officer.

The airline was poised to lock out the pilots earlier this year, but the move was short-circuited by the federal government, which passed legislatio­n blocking either side from initiating job action and imposing a new contract.

The move was angrily received by many of its 3,000 pilots, and was followed by pilots calling in sick on more than one occasion, disrupting the airline’s schedule and angering passengers. The pilots had complained that the legislatio­n forced them to fly and accept a contract imposed by arbitratio­n in contra- vention of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Capt. Paul Strachan, president of the ACPA and Capt. Jean-Marc Belanger, chair of the associatio­n, said Monday the outcome will only add to pilots’ anger at the way they’ve been treated by both the government and Air Canada, which will drag the airline’s future performanc­e.

“Federally-imposed arbitratio­n could not and did not bring about a negotiated collective agreement, which would lead to the energized and motivated profession­al pilot group Air Canada needs to succeed,” they said in a statement.

“Instead, arbitratio­n has imposed work rules that will cost many pilots their jobs, demoralize the rest and kick other important issues years down the road, where they will fester and undermine any effort to achieve positive culture change at our airline.”

Stanley, a labour lawyer who was New Brunswick’s deputy minister of labour, was suggested as a candidate by both sides.

 ?? — Photo by Gary Hebbard/the Telegram ?? An Air Canada plane comes in for a landing at St. John’s Internatio­nal Airport.
— Photo by Gary Hebbard/the Telegram An Air Canada plane comes in for a landing at St. John’s Internatio­nal Airport.

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