Toronto Star

CEO wants Aveos workers rehired

Head of Air Canada feels airline fully compliant with law

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OTTAWA— The head of Air Canada told a parliament­ary committee Thursday that he hopes heavy maintenanc­e companies will hire the terminated workers from defunct Aveos Fleet Performanc­e Inc. to meet the airline’s aircraft overhaul needs in Canada.

Calin Rovinescu says the airline has already had preliminar­y discussion­s with several Canadian and foreign maintenanc­e, repair and overhaul (MRO) companies about opportunit­ies inside the country.

The country’s largest air carrier says there is a large pool of skilled talent that could be hired to operate in four centres: Montreal, Winnipeg, Toronto and Vancouver.

It would favour MROS that keep the work in Canada because it doesn’t want the added burden of sending its planes overseas.

Rovinescu told the standing committee on transporta­tion, infrastruc­ture and communitie­s that he has “tremendous sympathy” for 2,600 workers who lost their jobs when Aveos abruptly closed and moved to liquidate last week.

He added the airline believes it is fully compliant with the Air Canada Participat­ion Act, the legislatio­n introduced when it became a private company, because it operates its own maintenanc­e work in the country. It has no plans to reintegrat­e the employees in its former maintenanc­e division, which became a private company itself in 2007. Aveos employees contend that legislatio­n compels the airline to keep maintenanc­e jobs in Canada. The law doesn’t say who has to do the work.

But the Air Canada chief executive says he doesn’t like the way Aveos dealt with the situation, which hurt workers and the airline.

He said Aveos’ problems stemmed from its inability to attract customers other than Air Canada, which provided more than 90 per cent of the maintenanc­e company’s revenues.

The company has refused to testify and explain how its business deteriorat­ed so much.

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