Pilots union launches formal complaints against Air Canada, Jazz
The union representing pilots at Jazz Aviation claims that their employer and Air Canada have breached the Canada Labour Code, even as it ratified changes to their collective agreement. On Monday, the Air Line Pilots Association filed a complaint with the Canada Industrial Relations Board arguing that both airlines violated the exclusivity deal between the two and effectively narrowed the pipeline of pilots from one carrier to the other. Jazz, a subsidiary of Chorus Aviation Inc., provides regional service for the country’s biggest airline under the Air Canada Express brand. In May, Air Canada CEO Michael Rousseau announced a “bridging arrangement” with St. John’s, N.L.-based company PAL Airlines to boost the number of regional flights in Eastern Canada. Tim Perry, president of the Air Line Pilots Association’s Canadian segment, said that the deal was out of bounds, due to the contract between Jazz and Air Canada. “The arrangement was that it was exclusivity. So when flying was assigned or when deals were struck with PAL, we’re basically saying that that was done in contravention of previous agreements,” he said in a telephone interview from Winnipeg. Rather than boost compensation and benefits to pilots — and thus attract and retain more in order to expand flight capacity at Jazz — management took another route, he said. On top of partnering with PAL, that path also saw Air Canada’s “micromanaging what Jazz and Chorus are able to work out in bargaining” and setting an effective cap on Jazz’s spending, Perry claimed. Air Canada and Jazz also encroached on pilots’ labour rights by “refusing to comply with contractual pilot ‘flow’ agreements,” which see a certain number of pilots trickle from Jazz to Air Canada each year, according to a union statement.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2023-08-30/star/pilots-union-launches-formal-complaints-against-air-canada-jazz
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Pilots union launches formal complaints against Air Canada, Jazz
The union representing pilots at Jazz Aviation claims that their employer and Air Canada have breached the Canada Labour Code, even as it ratified changes to their collective agreement. On Monday, the Air Line Pilots Association filed a complaint with the Canada Industrial Relations Board arguing that both airlines violated the exclusivity deal between the two and effectively narrowed the pipeline of pilots from one carrier to the other. Jazz, a subsidiary of Chorus Aviation Inc., provides regional service for the country’s biggest airline under the Air Canada Express brand. In May, Air Canada CEO Michael Rousseau announced a “bridging arrangement” with St. John’s, N.L.-based company PAL Airlines to boost the number of regional flights in Eastern Canada. Tim Perry, president of the Air Line Pilots Association’s Canadian segment, said that the deal was out of bounds, due to the contract between Jazz and Air Canada. “The arrangement was that it was exclusivity. So when flying was assigned or when deals were struck with PAL, we’re basically saying that that was done in contravention of previous agreements,” he said in a telephone interview from Winnipeg. Rather than boost compensation and benefits to pilots — and thus attract and retain more in order to expand flight capacity at Jazz — management took another route, he said. On top of partnering with PAL, that path also saw Air Canada’s “micromanaging what Jazz and Chorus are able to work out in bargaining” and setting an effective cap on Jazz’s spending, Perry claimed. Air Canada and Jazz also encroached on pilots’ labour rights by “refusing to comply with contractual pilot ‘flow’ agreements,” which see a certain number of pilots trickle from Jazz to Air Canada each year, according to a union statement.<br/>