Ryanair’s Irish pilots suspend strike after union recognition

epa06232268 A Ryanair Boeing 737 at Dublin Airport, Ireland, 28 September 2017. Ryanair is facing enforcement action from the Civil Aviation Authority, as the no-frills carrier announces a second wave of flight cancellations that will affect 400,000 customers.  EPA-EFE/AIDAN CRAWLEY

Bloomberg

Ryanair Holdings Plc’s Irish pilots suspended a planned strike, after Europe’s biggest low-cost carrier agreed to recognise their labour union.
The Irish company wrote to pilot organisations in Ireland, the UK, Germany, Italy, Spain and Portugal inviting each of them to talks “to recognise these unions as the representative body for pilots in Ryanair in each of these countries,” it said earlier. In response, pilots suspended a strike set for December 20.
Impact, a labour union helping representing the pilots, said that it had agreed to
meet management on Tuesday, but says it is available to meet sooner.
In the email statement, Impact said “it looked forward to establishing a positive relationship with Ryanair company management.
The about-turn by Chief
Executive Officer Michael O’Leary, who once said “Hell would freeze over” before Ryanair unionised, reflects the intensity of the pressure pilot groups have put on the airline for recognition. The CEO had pledged higher pay and bonuses to keep flight-deck crews from bolting to rivals and also threatened them with retaliatory measures if they went on strike.
Ryanair said in its statement that unions will be recognised so long as they establish committees of its pilots to deal with issues relating to the company. There will be no engagement with pilots who fly for competitor airlines, the company said, calling on crews to call off planned walkouts.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend