Scottish Daily Mail

BA pilots to go on strike next month

They’ll miss school break – but still wreck plans for tens of thousands

- By James Salmon Transport Editor

BRITISH Airways last night warned how a pay strike by pilots on six-figure salaries is set to ‘destroy’ the travel plans of tens of thousands of its passengers.

The pilots’ union, Balpa, confirmed a strike by more than 3,000 pilots for next month after talks with BA broke down.

A month after announcing its members had voted for industrial action, the union said there was now ‘no prospect of any further meaningful talks’ and claimed it had ‘no choice but to call this action’.

This will be the first time BA pilots will go on strike – in the company’s centenary year. The walkouts will take place on September 9 and 10 – a Monday and Tuesday – and Friday, September 27.

Pilots, including captains on an average of £167,000 a year, have rejected an 11.5 per cent pay rise over three years plus an extra bonus worth 1 per cent of this year’s salary.

BA’s chief executive Alex Cruz said its pilots were already on ‘world-class’ packages and that the ‘inflationb­usting’ hike would have pushed the average package of its captains above £200,000.

Mr Cruz pointed out that the same deal has been accepted by members of Unite and GMB, who account for 90 per cent of BA’s workforce and include staff on far more modest incomes, including cabin crew and engineers.

David Davis, Tory MP and former cabinet minister, said members of the public would ‘simply not understand’ why already highly paid pilots would not accept the existing pay offer and ‘destroy people’s hard-earned holidays to get paid even more’.

Although the strike will take place after the summer holiday peak, it is still set to ground hundreds of BA flights – with around 2,400 scheduled in and out of UK airports over the three day period. Balpa represents roughly 90 per cent

‘Reckless course of action’

of BA’s 4,311 pilots, the majority of whom are based at London Heathrow.

BA said 1,061 pilots did not vote for the strike, which means roughly three quarters of its pilots are expected to protest. In a statement, the airline said: ‘It is completely unacceptab­le that Balpa is destroying the travel plans of tens of thousands of our customers with this unjustifia­ble strike action.

‘We are extremely sorry that after many months of negotiatio­ns, based on a very fair offer, Balpa has decided on this reckless course of action.’

BA said it is ‘doing everything it can’ to mitigate the disruption, and is looking at options including hiring aircraft and crew from rivals, and scheduling larger plans to carry more passengers.

But it said it is ‘likely that many of our customers will not be able to travel’. Mr Cruz apologised for the disruption the strikes will cause, and said passengers would be contacted in 24 to 36 hours.

Passengers whose flights are cancelled will be offered refunds or the chance to rebook for free.

Flights on BA CityFlyer, SUN-AIR and Comair will not be affected by the strikes. Adam French, Consumer Rights Expert at Which?, said: ‘Many affected passengers may also be eligible for compensati­on as these strikes are led by airline staff.’

Balpa has warned of further strike dates if the row is not resolved. It said strike action will cost BA around £40million a day that said it would cost BA £5million to give in to its pay demands.

Balpa disputed BA’s pay figures and said many pilots – particular­ly co-pilots, or first officers – are paid well under £100,000. It said entry-level pilots are paid £26,000 while saddled with training debts of up to £100,000.

The union orchestrat­ed a two day strike by Ryanair over pay, which ended yesterday with minimal impact on passengers as the airline had pilots who were not involved in the dispute step in.

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