Air Canada is asking Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government to intervene in contract negotiations with its pilots, seeking to avoid a shutdown of the airline next week.
The company is set to begin winding down operations Sunday, as talks with more than 5,000 unionized pilots appear to be at an impasse. Fifteen months of negotiations between Air Canada and the Air Line Pilots Association have stalled over wages.
The Montreal-based airline wants the government to request arbitration as soon as this weekend if there’s no breakthrough in negotiations.
ALPA’s local head, Charlene Hudy, said Air Canada’s call for arbitration is very disappointing. “Both parties should really try to get to the best deal possible without any government interference,” she said. The union seeks to close the wage gap with U.S. pilots.
“Our goal is to reach a deal, but if there is no conclusion by Saturday, we ask the government to be ready to intervene to avoid these disruptions for Canadians,” Air Canada spokesman Christophe Hennebelle said Thursday in a phone interview. Arbitration is “a path that seems reasonable.”
The airline and the union were still in talks Thursday, though Hennebelle said there’s no certainty of reaching an agreement “because the union refuses to moderate its wage demands.”
The airline has already started to turn away orders for cargo services, and some passenger cancellations may begin Friday to prevent them from being stuck abroad, Hennebelle said.
Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon’s office said in an emailed statement that it’s committed to the collective bargaining process.
The government can ask the Canada Industrial Relations Board to force arbitration. Last month, the government asked the CIRB to step in when
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