Weekend Herald

Welcome back cobbers!

Delight — and detentions — after Air NZ flies the Tasman bubble

- Khalia Strong

Fourteen passengers who were among the first to fly from Auckland to Sydney yesterday were detained last night after they caught a connecting service to Melbourne.

The drama in Victoria capped a day of joy for dozens of people who took advantage of a change in Covid- 19 arrangemen­ts to travel to Australia after, in many cases, months in New Zealand.

The flight to New South Wales was possible because the state, along with the Northern Territory, was part of a transtasma­n bubble deal which eliminates the need to quarantine on arrival.

Victoria, however, is excluded from the Safe Travel Zone and is not accepting internatio­nal arrivals.

Earlier an Australian mother and daughter expressed their delight to be on one of the first special flights after they had been waylaid in New Zealand for months.

Bledys Tunon was thrilled to be leaving Auckland yesterday: “We’ve been waiting for so long, seven months in New Zealand.”

She and her mother, Deccy Ledezma, had been on holiday here when the borders were closed.

Tunon said New Zealand had been lovely but she didn’t think they’d be back any time soon.

“When we heard the news, we were just ready to go. We haven’t seen our family in a very long time.”

Hundreds were booked on the first flight out yesterday, nearly all on one- way tickets.

Air New Zealand will look to operate two quarantine flights a week, with a further six flights quarantine- free.

“The quarantine- free flights will be for travellers originatin­g from New Zealand who are flying from Auckland to Sydney and are not required to quarantine on arrival in Australia,” said Air NZ chief executive Greg Foran.

Jetstar and Qantas will also resume limited services from Auckland to Sydney.

Jetstar pilot Tony MacDonald said transtasma­n travel had been tipped to resume in November, so the earlier date was a bit unexpected.

“We’re happy to be able to flex up and down with the demand, so we’ll be looking to hopefully add services to what we’ve got in place.”

The transtasma­n flights also meant it was back to work for some cabin crew, which cabin manager Holly Ouwehand said was a welcome relief.

“We’ll be there and back on the same day,” she said.

Since March, Australia had closed its borders to all passengers except returning citizens and residents. Auckland Airport chief executive Adrian Littlewood said the directive to reopen was a welcome one.

“It was really a decision from the Australian Government . . . They’ve chosen to start to gently reopen to certain markets. New Zealand is an obvious first place to start, given our virus performanc­e.”

The airport would continue strict cleaning practices.

“We’ve got advanced cleaning techniques — things like UV technology on hand rails and hard surfaces and we’ve got digital scanners to monitor general cleanlines­s,” Littlewood said.

About 300 passengers flew out yesterday.

Those flying to New Zealand will still have to quarantine for two weeks and pay for it, starting at $ 3100 per person.

Jordan Dye and Stephanie Goodchild had been in New Zealand since February, but every attempt to book a flight home had been cancelled. They were prepared to quarantine in New South Wales for two weeks before self- isolation in Western Australia.

Dye said they had enjoyed exploring the country, but their life was in Perth: “Home, family, friends, work — although I have to say, New Zealand is our second home and has been good to us.”

Air New Zealand Dreamliner captain Andrew Ridling is going where few Kiwis are. Overseas. Kiwis made more than 3 million trips overseas last year but now the

787 pilot is among just tens of thousands who have been travelling beyond New Zealand’s borders since the Covid- 19 all but closed them.

The pilot of 30 years says it is a weird world to be flying in.

“Surreal is the word. You go through Los Angeles and there’s nobody, you go through Auckland and all the duty free shops are boarded up, Hong Kong there is nobody, the second runway is covered by Cathay planes.”

Pre- Covid there was usually a

10- aircraft queue to land in Narita, now it’s straight in with just two or three other planes in the air during a recent trip there.

In Melbourne and Brisbane spare runways are nose to tail with Qantas planes.

Ridling, who is president of the New Zealand Air Line Pilots Associatio­n ( ALPA) recalled that during the depths of lockdown he was cleared to land in Sydney halfway across the Tasman because just three other aircraft were using the airport that day.

“The air traffic controller couldn’t stop talking because there had been nobody to talk to. Everyone is friendly, the whole world is like this — they welcome any arrival.”

Two thirds of his internatio­nal flying is freight only.

“It’s quite surreal to be flying an aircraft with just three pilots and 350 empty seats. When we walk through the airports there is nobody to be seen,” says Ridling.

At airports around the world internatio­nal arrivals are met by a handful of border and security agents but many more health officials. In Australia flight crew stay on planes whose doors are opened by officials wearing full haz- mat suits.

Hong Kong requires pre- flight negative tests, and in Shanghai they are confined to an airport hotel the Chinese Government has taken over and which offers few frills.

“You need to take your own food otherwise it’s just a bowl of fried rice,” he says.

The United States is designated a high- risk country and In Los Angeles and San Francisco air crew are confined to their hotel rooms — restaurant­s are closed and the cities are in lockdown.

He’s into double figures of nasal Covid tests which, he says, don’t get more comfortabl­e with practise.

“It’s doable but the saliva test they use in Hong Kong is better,” he says.

“It’s quite arduous at the moment but the other side of the coin is that we’re probably lucky to have jobs.”

Thousands of pilots around the world have been fired or are on longterm furlough as total capacity struggles towards 50 per cent of the levels of this time last year.

More than 40 airlines have failed and those still operating are burning through an estimated $ 450,000 a minute.

In New Zealand about 700 pilots have lost their jobs or are on furlough out of around 2200 commercial pilots represente­d by ALPA.

More than 300 Air NZ pilots have been furloughed without pay and redundancy under a 10- year deal that allows them to rejoin the airline and around 220 Virgin pilots were out of work after operations closed in this country in April.

“I know it’s going to be tough Christmas for people and it grates me that we can’t do anything more for them. That’s the heartbreak­ing thing of Covid — the families of the people who have lost their jobs.”

Ridling knows the pain of redundancy — he lost his job at Air New Zealand soon after starting at the airline in 1989.

From Coromandel to Kinshasa

He grew up on the North Shore and while at school developed a passion for flying. When he left Rosmini College he spent three years at Walsh Flying School in Matamata.

The first plane he flew was a Cessna 152.

The eldest of four boys and his father a teacher and his mother a nurse, the family had no connection to the aviation industry.

He continued building hours at Ardmore and his first job was for Air Coromandel based in Whitianga flying passengers to Auckland; and then in Kiribati where he flew Trislander­s and the Marshall Islands where he flew Hawker Siddeley 748s.

“I thoroughly enjoyed it — I was 20 years of age having a ball living in the Pacific.”

He joined Air New Zealand in 1989 flying Fokker Friendship­s but got made redundant at the end of the next year during changes brought in during the Brierley buy- in to the airline. The airline sold its Friendship­s, leaving 74 pilots out of work, including Ridling.

“After I got made redundant in

1990 I saw how it affects peoples’ families. I was lucky, I was a single

20- year- old and went off to Africa.” From what is now the Democratic Republic of Congo he flew DC8s for Air Zaire taking flowers from Kinshasa to Amsterdam, returning home via Rome and Paris.

“The airline never made any money, and eventually the airline got repossesse­d by Cargolux in Luxembourg and that was the end of that.”

When he returned to New Zealand in 1993 he worked briefly as a contract pilot for Southern World Airlines on DC8s. That too went bust in what were “cowboy” days of freight flying.

“You just used to jump on an airplane and go places.”

He rejoined Air NZ as a second officer on a Boeing 767 flying to Japan, Thailand, Singapore and Honolulu.

“I really wanted to get back into Air New Zealand — it is the company I always wanted to fly for. We’ve had our ups and downs [ but] it’s a great airline.”

He went on to Boeing 777s, then captain on A320s domestical­ly and across the Tasman and later a captain on the 787 soon after Air New Zealand started getting the planes in 2014. It is his favourite aircraft to fly.

When he came back to New Zealand he also stood for ALPA positions and has twice been president, between 1999 and 2000 and again since last year.

His own experience of redundancy and the bumpy state of aviation helped shape his views of the industry.

“I learned a lot and that shaped me for the future. It made me think — ‘ I’ve worked for everything and now I’ve lost it — am I going to keep fighting for this?”’

Rating the bosses

Ridling has worked at Air New Zealand through tumultuous times; ownership controvers­ies, the airline’s near collapse as aviation was rocked by the 2001 terror attacks, Sars and Mers, the Global Financial Crisis and now Covid- 19.

This is by far the worst economic event to hit airlines.

Maintainin­g a harmonious relationsh­ip with pilots is crucial for any airline and ALPA works closely with Air New Zealand. Ridling says since 2001 each chief executive has been very different:

Ralph Norris led the airline out of near- collapse from 2001.

“I think Ralph Norris will never get the credit for what he did with the airline — he rebuilt it, really, with ordering aircraft — including the Dreamliner. He set down the strategy,” says Ridling.

Rob Fyfe was chief executive from 2005 to 2012.

“He built on that — he put a face to the airline, made us part of New Zealand and coined the phrase that [ staff ] were all Air New Zealanders and members of a big family.”

Christophe­r Luxon was chief executive from 2013 to 2019.

“Christophe­r had a vision that Air New Zealand was going to be the greatest airline in the world — he did a great job, we were expanding. He took it to places it hadn’t been before.”

Former Walmart US boss Greg Foran took over in February.

“I have a lot of time for Greg he will listen to what you have to say, he’s very personable, gets beside people. We’ve also got a board chair in Dame Therese [ Walsh] who is a good appointmen­t as well. Between the two of them I don’t think we could have had more stable leadership than what we have at the moment.”

Ridling says the associatio­n’s internatio­nal links to pilots’ groups provided intelligen­ce on the magnitude of the looming crisis early. It was involved in helping repatriate Kiwi colleagues out of Wuhan ( where it sent masks) and fed informatio­n to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade.

ALPA was also made privy to the dire state of Air New Zealand’s finances after border restrictio­ns were imposed in March.

“I reached out to Greg very quickly after that,” says Ridling.

” We went from a $ 6 billion company to zero or overnight — the thing was grounded.”

It’s quite surreal to be flying an aircraft with just three pilots and 350 empty seats. When we walk through the airports there is nobody to be seen. Air New Zealand Dreamliner captain Andrew Ridling

What’s the flight path?

Throughout the crisis Ridling has often been available to media despite still flying and heading the associatio­n as it deals with the biggest single loss of jobs in the industry. As you would want in a pilot, he’s calm and, in spite of the scale of the crisis, optimistic.

His wife Lysa has been a great sounding board, he says, and the associatio­n has a well- developed peer assistance network that he says has been busier this year than ever.

Being a relatively small and closely connected workforce helps to quickly reach those who need help.

“We can get to them before they get to themselves,” he says.

“Compared to the rest of the world we’re doing very well — Qantas hasn’t flown for seven months, their guys have been sitting on the ground without pay.”

The New Zealand domestic market has recovered to around 85 per cent of pre- Covid levels, government subsidies are propping up freight flights and Air NZ has won some cargo work from the Australian Government.

Prospects of full transtasma­n and Pacific Islands bubbles offer some more flying for his members but a restoratio­n of internatio­nal travel to previous levels is some way off and he says this will come after successful vaccines are widely available.

“I’m very positive — I think New Zealand could boom out of this. Air New Zealand is an iconic brand and the competitio­n is going to be cut, especially in the long haul.”

With many cheap aircraft and surplus crew around the world shorthaul players would “come and go”, he says.

“We’ve been through this before. The one thing we do know is that we will come through the other side — it’s just a matter of when.”

 ??  ??
 ?? Photos / Getty Images ?? Passengers reach the internatio­nal arrivals area in Sydney after landing on Air NZ flight NZ103 from Auckland yesterday.
Photos / Getty Images Passengers reach the internatio­nal arrivals area in Sydney after landing on Air NZ flight NZ103 from Auckland yesterday.
 ??  ?? Friends greet each other with glee after an Air New Zealand flight from Auckland landed in Sydney yesterday.
Friends greet each other with glee after an Air New Zealand flight from Auckland landed in Sydney yesterday.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ?? Photo ( far left) / AP ?? Far left: With internatio­nal air travel down to the bare bones, many parked up in storage, like these in Victorvill­e, California. Left: staff in full PPE gear greet passengers in Sydney.
Photo ( far left) / AP Far left: With internatio­nal air travel down to the bare bones, many parked up in storage, like these in Victorvill­e, California. Left: staff in full PPE gear greet passengers in Sydney.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand