Bid to entice Air Malta pilots with tax-free option on part of their
salaries
Stalemate in talks as end-of-year deadline looms over
Air Malta
The government is considering offering Air Malta pilots a
tax-free option on part of their salaries, based on flying hours, in an attempt
to break the deadlock in negotiations over a new five-year collective agreement,
informed sources have said.
Tourism Minister Konrad Mizzi had set an
end-of-year deadline for concluding the talks. "Dr Mizzi's self-imposed deadline
is fast approaching, and it is by now clear that the pilots will not accept
what's on the table," a government source said.
"As a last-ditch attempt,
the minister is now trying to lure pilots with an unprecedented offer which, if
given, would most probably get Malta in trouble with the EU, because it would
amount to state aid."
The Sunday Times of Malta was informed that the
government, on Dr Mizzi's orders, is studying the possibility of waiving income
tax on part of the pilots' salaries, with the amount to be based on the number
of flying hours.
The source said Dr Mizzi was basing his argument on the
fact that most flying hours are performed in international skies and are
therefore not taxable in Malta.
However, Dr Mizzi has already been
warned, by Brussels and the Finance Ministry, that the proposal should be
dropped, according to the source.
"From the EU's point of view, this will
surely amount to State aid - something that would land Air Malta in trouble.
Secondly, the argument that pilots are working in international territory does
not make any sense, as according to international law, an Air Malta plane is
considered part of Maltese territory," the source said.
"Third, the
measure would create a precedent, as the cabin crew, who are in exactly the same
situation as cockpit staff, would be up in arms claiming discriminatory
treatment."
The pilots' union, ALPA, is the only one of the four Air
Malta unions which has not yet concluded negotiations on a new collective
agreement.
Prime Minister Joseph Muscat last week tried to give a helping
hand to Dr Mizzi by warning pilots that if they did not accept what was on offer
by the end of the year they would be putting the national airline in
jeopardy.
However, their union is known to be pushing for a better offer.
They have been offered a 20 per cent pay increase over the next five years but
are arguing that this is not enough, as their flying hours are set to
increase.
"The 20 per cent increase is only on paper, as we will be
working much more to earn it. Also, conditions will be changing drastically, and
this needs to be compensated fairly," a veteran pilot said. Despite earning an
average of €120,000 a year, pilots argue that compared to pilots of other
airlines they are underpaid.
"Unlike other Air Malta staff, pilots have
always managed to get whatever they wanted, as they negotiate from a strong
position," an industry source said.
"While it is easier to replace cabin
crew and other staff, it's not easy to replace pilots in a short time."
A
spokesman for Dr Mizzi declined to comment on the state of negotiations with the
pilots.
This morning, on twitter, Dr Mizzi described this report as 'a
fabrication saying the government is not considering tax free salaries for
pilots.
The airline currently employs 115 pilots.
Dr Mizzi has
told Air Malta staff that banks will not provide the much-needed credit lines to
the airline if the collective agreements are not wrapped up by the end of this
year.
Air Malta closed the last financial year, ending in March 2017,
with a loss of more than €13 million. Two years earlier, then Tourism Minister
Edward Zammit Lewis and then Air Malta chairman Maria Micallef promised that the
airline would break even during the same timeline.
Dr Mizzi is now
promising that the airline will break even by March 2018.
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