Pilot unions at Aer Lingus owner vow to work together
Pilot unions at Aer Lingus owner International Airlines’ Group (IAG) have vowed to work together to bolster their conditions across the multinational business in a deal signed on Thursday. The move comes as the Irish Airline Pilots’ Association (Ialpa) and Aer Lingus await a Labour Court recommendation on a pay dispute following hearings that adjourned this week. Along with the Irish carrier, London-listed IAG owns British Airways and Spanish airlines Iberia and Vueling. Ialpa, Spanish union Sepla and the British Airline Pilot’s Association (BALPA) signed a declaration of intent to defend and bolster all group pilots’ working conditions. The statement signed by union chiefs at Sepla’s offices says they “do not support” the allocation of new aircraft to any group airline in exchange for pilots agreeing to conditions imposed by their employer. Aer Lingus this week conceded that IAG was likely to allocate a new Airbus jet to one of its other airlines as the dispute between the Irish carrier and its pilots remained unresolved. Luis Gallego, IAG chief executive, warned earlier this year that the group could not expand Aer Lingus’ fleet as planned if it had to agree to the 20%-plus increases sought by pilots as this would hit returns on investment. Ialpa is seeking increases to compensate members for inflation.<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2024-05-03/unaligned/pilot-unions-at-aer-lingus-owner-vow-to-work-together
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Pilot unions at Aer Lingus owner vow to work together
Pilot unions at Aer Lingus owner International Airlines’ Group (IAG) have vowed to work together to bolster their conditions across the multinational business in a deal signed on Thursday. The move comes as the Irish Airline Pilots’ Association (Ialpa) and Aer Lingus await a Labour Court recommendation on a pay dispute following hearings that adjourned this week. Along with the Irish carrier, London-listed IAG owns British Airways and Spanish airlines Iberia and Vueling. Ialpa, Spanish union Sepla and the British Airline Pilot’s Association (BALPA) signed a declaration of intent to defend and bolster all group pilots’ working conditions. The statement signed by union chiefs at Sepla’s offices says they “do not support” the allocation of new aircraft to any group airline in exchange for pilots agreeing to conditions imposed by their employer. Aer Lingus this week conceded that IAG was likely to allocate a new Airbus jet to one of its other airlines as the dispute between the Irish carrier and its pilots remained unresolved. Luis Gallego, IAG chief executive, warned earlier this year that the group could not expand Aer Lingus’ fleet as planned if it had to agree to the 20%-plus increases sought by pilots as this would hit returns on investment. Ialpa is seeking increases to compensate members for inflation.<br/>