Alitalia staff votes on cost-cutting to avoid bankruptcy
Alitalia employees are voting on whether to accept a government-brokered deal to save Italy’s flagship airline from bankruptcy. Some 12,500 Alitalia workers began voting Thursday on a package that eased steep cuts sought by parent Etihad Airways, and which will open E2b in investment to keep the airline afloat. Voting runs through Tuesday. Italy’s economic development minister, Carlo Calenda, has excluded nationalizing the airline, putting pressure on workers to accept the deal that foresees wage cuts of about 8%, down from as much as 30%, and reduces the number of layoffs by about one-third to 1,700. Calenda was quoted by the Turin daily La Stampa as saying a no vote would lead to a six-month period of extraordinary administration followed by bankruptcy.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2017-04-21/sky/alitalia-staff-votes-on-cost-cutting-to-avoid-bankruptcy
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Alitalia staff votes on cost-cutting to avoid bankruptcy
Alitalia employees are voting on whether to accept a government-brokered deal to save Italy’s flagship airline from bankruptcy. Some 12,500 Alitalia workers began voting Thursday on a package that eased steep cuts sought by parent Etihad Airways, and which will open E2b in investment to keep the airline afloat. Voting runs through Tuesday. Italy’s economic development minister, Carlo Calenda, has excluded nationalizing the airline, putting pressure on workers to accept the deal that foresees wage cuts of about 8%, down from as much as 30%, and reduces the number of layoffs by about one-third to 1,700. Calenda was quoted by the Turin daily La Stampa as saying a no vote would lead to a six-month period of extraordinary administration followed by bankruptcy.<br/>