Air Canada to resume service as flight attendants' union end strike

Striking Air Canada flight attendants walk a picket line in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada, Monday. The airline's unionized flight attendants reached an agreement with the company Tuesday, ending the first strike by its cabin crew in 40 years.

Striking Air Canada flight attendants walk a picket line in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada, Monday. The airline's unionized flight attendants reached an agreement with the company Tuesday, ending the first strike by its cabin crew in 40 years. (Kyaw Soe Oo, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • Air Canada's flight attendants' strike ended with a tentative agreement reached.
  • The strike impacted 130,000 daily passengers and the agreement caused Air Canada shares to rise 4%.
  • Full service restoration may take over a week; some flights remain canceled.

MONTREAL — Air Canada's unionized flight attendants reached an agreement with the country's largest carrier on Tuesday, ending the first strike by its cabin crew in 40 years that had upended travel plans for hundreds of thousands of passengers.

The strike that lasted nearly four days had led the airline that serves about 130,000 people daily to withdraw its third quarter and full-year earnings guidance.

Shares of Air Canada rose 4% in early trading. They have lost 14% of their value so far this year.

The carrier said it would gradually resume operations and a full restoration may require a week or more, while the union said it has completed mediation with the airline and its low-cost affiliate Air Canada Rouge.

"The Strike has ended. We have a tentative agreement we will bring forward to you," the Canadian Union of Public Employees said in a Facebook post.

Air Canada said some flights will be canceled over the next seven to 10 days until the schedule is stabilized and that customers with canceled flights can choose between a refund, travel credit, or rebooking on another airline.

The flight attendants walked off the job on Saturday after contract talks with the carrier failed. They had sought pay for tasks such as boarding passengers.

While the details of the negotiations were not immediately released, the union said unpaid work was over.

The CUPE, which represents Air Canada's 10,400 flight attendants, wanted to make gains on unpaid work that go beyond recent advances secured by their counterparts at U.S. carriers like American Airlines.

In a rare act of defiance, the union remained on strike even after the Canada Industrial Relations Board declared its action unlawful.

Their refusal to follow a federal labor board order for the flight attendants to return to work had created a three-way standoff between the company, workers and the government.

Stranded passengers walk as Air Canada flight attendants protest amid a standoff with a government board that said the stoppage was unlawful, at Toronto Pearson International Airport in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada Monday.
Stranded passengers walk as Air Canada flight attendants protest amid a standoff with a government board that said the stoppage was unlawful, at Toronto Pearson International Airport in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada Monday. (Photo: Wa Lone, Reuters)

Jobs Minister Patty Hajdu had urged both sides to consider government mediation and raised pressure on Air Canada on Monday, promising to investigate allegations of unpaid work in the airline sector.

Over the past two years, unions in aerospace, construction, airline and rail sectors have pushed employers for higher pay, improved conditions and better benefits amid a tight labor market.

Air Canada's flight attendants have for months argued new contracts should include pay for work done on the ground, such as boarding passengers.

Its CEO had on Monday in a Reuters interview stopped short of offering plans to break the deadlock, while defending the airline's offer of a 38% boost to flight attendants' total compensation.

While many customers had expressed support for the flight attendants, frustration with flight cancellations was growing.

Retiree Klaus Hickman missed a flight to Toronto earlier in the week. While he rebooked on another airline, he was concerned about returning to Calgary on time for a connecting flight to Germany.

Hickman sympathizes with workers demanding better pay but is worried about his own health and travel challenges.

"They want to get more money to survive. And so it is with everybody else," he said.

Canada's largest carrier normally carries 130,000 people daily and is part of the global Star Alliance of airlines.

James Numfor, 38, from Regina, Saskatchewan, had been stranded in Toronto for two nights since returning from Cameroon for his brother's funeral. Air Canada only provided one night in a hotel for his family before leaving them without further support, he said.

He had slept in the airport with his family.

Contributing: Divya Rajagopal

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The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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Allison Lampert and Wa Lone

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