British
Airways to cut Gatwick operation and lay off 1130 pilots
Over 1100 cabin crew jobs also to go, and suspension of remaining Heathrow
flights 'not ruled out'
British Airways plans to lose more than 1,100 pilots and make heavy cuts to its
Gatwick airport operation as part of 12,000 redundancies.
The airline has informed staff of detailed plans after it announced on Tuesday
evening that it intended to lay off up to 30% of its workforce.
Letters sent to union representatives for all sections of the airline set out
swingeing cuts, as well as drastic changes to terms and conditions across the
company as it responds to the grounding of most air travel since March due to
the coronavirus pandemic.
BA plans to lay off almost four in five crew managers at Gatwick and 60% of
other cabin crew, more than 1100 of almost 1900 staff. The jobs of just over
400 ground staff will be outsourced to the airport and its contractors.
In emails to staff and unions, managers at BA warned that "there is no
certainty as to when services can return" to London City or Gatwick
airports, and that they had "not ruled out suspending the remainder of our
Heathrow operation".
Ground staff at Heathrow are also likely to be forced to accept the same
contracts as recent starters, which pay around £10,000-15,000 less, according
to employees.
All 4,346 pilots will be asked to sign new contracts changing their terms and
conditions, and accept new rostering arrangements. BA will be seeking to lay
off 1130 pilots.
Pilots union Balpa said it would fight to save every pilot job. The general
secretary, Brian Strutton, said: "The company has declined government
support claiming it is financially secure enough to survive the coronavirus
crisis, so it is hard to see how these cuts can be justified.
"There are many options to ensure BA can continue its business and survive
coronavirus and Balpa does not accept that job losses are the only
answer."
The Unite union has described BA's moves as "unlawful and immoral".
Around 22,000 BA employees were furloughed in April and May, while pilots
accepted unpaid leave instead of furloughing to allow them to restart swiftly
should travel recommence.
The general secretary of Unite, Len McCluskey, said: "UK taxpayers have
not handed over their money to BA for it to embark on an opportunistic course
of slashing jobs, conditions and wages, and potentially jeopardising jobs right
across [the] aviation sector."
BA's parent company IAG announced the planned redundancies to the Stock Exchange
on Tuesday. In a memo to staff, the BA chief executive, Álex Cruz, said:
"What we are facing as an airline ... is that there is no 'normal' any
longer.
"We do not know when countries will reopen their borders or when the
lockdowns will lift, and so we have to reimagine and reshape our airline and
create a new future for our people, our customers and the destinations we
serve."
IAG has declined to seek government help, unlike Virgin Atlantic, which has so
far been rebuffed, or EasyJet, which has received a £600m Bank of England loan.
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