Many gone from flight to Wuhan
Many of the Air New Zealand flight attendants who volunteered a year ago for a rescue mission to get stranded Kiwis out of Wuhan have lost their jobs.
The 11 were selected from dozens of volunteers, and the head of aviation for the E tu¯ union, Savage, said they had done a fantastic job.
“People can remember that moment when people were quite proud of the national airline and all the volunteers who really selflessly flew into Wuhan to extract New Zealanders,” he said.
Air New Zealand says five are still employed at the airline and one is on furlough. At least one of five pilots who volunteered for the flight into the epicentre of the impending pandemic no longer works at the airline.
Air New Zealand chief executive Greg Foran yesterday said those who put up their hands to fly into the unknown had done an awesome job. They had been celebrated within the airline and it was “heart wrenching” that they were among those to go in the waves of departures last year. The long haul cabin crew were one of the worstaffected groups, with E tu¯ saying 85 per cent had gone from its 1600 members in that part of the airline.
Savage said the past year had been destabilising, unsettling and in some cases heartbreaking for many of the union’s aviation members, including crew from Virgin Australia, Qantas’ Jetconnect and other associated businesses such as airline catering companies.
At Air New Zealand, the scale and abruptness of job losses was “truly traumatising”.
“It was heartbreaking for many of our members; they’re really committed to the work that they do and they care about the work they do, not just for the airline, but they have a real profound sense that they’re serving New Zealand as well.” Depending on what transferable skills they had, some had gone on and found other jobs relatively quickly but others remain unemployed.
“But the important thing for union members is that they had negotiated into their contracts good redundancy clauses. And a lot of them realised just how important those clauses really were.”
There was also a “huge sense of camaraderie and collectivity” around dealing with redundancies, and workers took pay cuts to save the jobs of their colleagues.
Savage said all aviation employers were caught unawares or unprepared for the pandemic, and they responded in different ways. “Some employers were floundering, and the union had to step in and effectively advise them on how they were going to have to deal with their workforce because some of them, they were like deer frozen in the headlights.”
The union has been trenchant in its criticism of Air New Zealand at times, talking about an erosion of trust, but Savage said it was keen on rebuilding the relationship
“We definitely felt it could have been done better — it’s been a difficult and fractious relationship in the last year. But recently, with changes in management, we’ve started the rebuild process of talking to Air New Zealand about what the future holds and what we can do to improve things from here on in.”
Nikki Dines, who has been at the airline for eight years, is now chief people officer, replacing Joe McCollum whose one-year posting covered the time of the mass redundancies. “I think it’s fair to say that all of the unions at Air New Zealand have respect for her approach and her integrity.”
Savage said he was encouraged by chief executive Greg Foran’s willingness to talk to unions.
Savage said airlines needed to resist the “race to the bottom” of the low-cost airline model.
“We need an aviation sector that can stand up to these kinds of pressures and de-skilling. Lowering terms and conditions and decreasing standards is not going to lead to a better aviation sector and that’s not going to help New Zealand.”