
Canada's Air Canada strike by 10,000 flight attendants caused major disruptions, defying a back-to-work order over pay for unpaid ground duties. (Photo: X)
Over 10,000 Air Canada flight attendants have gone on strike in a first of its kind action since 1985, effectively leaving up to 700 daily flights getting grounded and causing widespread travel disruptions for over 130,000 passengers at the peak of the summer season, news agency Reuters reported on Monday. The Air Canada strike began early Saturday when cabin crew walked off their respective jobs following a breakdown in contract talks.
Meanwhile, the Canada Industrial Relations Board (CIRB) declared the strike illegal and issued a back-to-work order by Sunday afternoon, extending the expired collective agreement until a new deal is reached, the report said. However, the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) rejected the order, calling it “unconstitutional”. The union is reportedly demanding further negotiations.
Prime Minister Mark Carney voiced concerns, saying that “hundreds of thousands of Canadians and visitors… are being disrupted” and urged both sides to resolve the dispute in a swift manner.
With the strike entering its third day on Monday, Air Canada postponed its plans to ramp up operations. In a move underlining growing financial concerns, the airline withdrew its Q3 and full-year earnings guidance, citing the labour disruption as the root cause, CNBC reported.
Meanwhile, Air Canada’s Vice-President of in-flight service Andrew Yiu warned flight attendants that they would be held personally accountable if they continued to defy the board’s directive, per Reuters.
At the center of the dispute is compensation: flight attendants say they are only paid when planes are moving, with no compensation, whatsoever, for the time spent on other tasks, including boarding process. The CUPE is demanding pay parity with Air Transat’s crew, who recently won significant wage gains. In the US, major airline carriers like American and Alaska have already begun paying attendants for pre-flight duties, according to the US-based news agency.
The union’s refusal to comply puts both the CUPE and individual leaders at risk of penalties under the Canada Labour Code, which allows fines of up to CAD 1,000 per day for the union and CAD 10,000 for individuals, reports say.
ALSO READ: CIRB Declares Air Canada Flight Attendants’ Strike Illegal
IndiGo Meltdown: “No Water, No Updates, No Help”- 1,000+ Flights Disrupted, Chaos at Delhi Airport
IndiGO faced one of its worst operational breakdowns, with over 1,000 flights disrupted in 36…
PM Modi and President Putin meet at the 23rd India–Russia summit, where major defence and…
Stephen Tamil Movie 2025: Check Out Release Date, OTT, Cast And Crew, Storyline, Reviews
Stephen Movie 2025: Stephen, a Tamil crime thriller directed by Mithun Balaji, stars Gomathi Shankar…