Også denne gang gjelder det kollektivordninger - . (Red.)
SWISS
regrets rejection of new pilots’ collective labour agreement
By
-
The members of the Aeropers pilots’
association have emphatically rejected the collective labour agreement
(CLA2022) negotiated by SWISS and the Aeropers executive committee. From
SWISS’s perspective, the proposed new accord, which had been concluded after
several months of intensive negotiations, represented a compromise that
equitably addressed the interests of both SWISS and Aeropers. SWISS regrets
this referendum result, and will now consider how best to proceed. The
rejection of the proposed new CLA is not expected to adversely affect the
stability of SWISS’s flight operations.
The members of the Aeropers pilots’ association have
voted to reject the collective labour agreement (CLA2022) negotiated between
Swiss International Air Lines (SWISS) and the Aeropers executive committee by a
majority of 80.5% of the votes cast. The referendum result was announced by
Aeropers today after a two-week commentary period followed by a further
two-week membership voting period.
“The CLA2022 which we had fully
concluded represented a compromise which, from our perspective, equitably
addressed the interests of both SWISS and Aeropers,” says Oliver
Buchhofer, SWISS’s Head of Operations and a Member of the SWISS Extended
Management Board. “Had it been accepted, the new CLA would have given us
contractual stability in a highly volatile airline environment for the next
four years. We regret this referendum result; but we naturally accept this
majority decision.”
Viable
cockpit CLA still an option
As a result of the rejection of the proposed new
agreement, the CLA-less status which has prevailed since 1 April 2022 will
continue for now. This is not expected to adversely affect the stability of
flight operations. “A new viable CLA for our cockpit personnel remains an
option,” Buchhofer maintains. “But we will only be able to conclude
such an agreement with a reliable negotiating partner. It is a novelty in the
social partnership between SWISS and its pilots’ union that, after several
months of intensive negotiations, the Aeropers executive committee does not
advise its members to accept a CLA that it has negotiated and co-signed.”
SWISS will now consider what form a future
collaboration could take with the present Aeropers executive committee. The
coming weeks will also be used to evaluate the company’s longer-term position
and interests once again and to determine the next steps.
Inconclusive
talks on a crisis response agreement
All of SWISS’s business units and employee groups have
concluded crisis response agreements extending over several years, with the
exception of its cockpit personnel. Discussions with Aeropers on an agreement
of this kind were terminated without result at the end of 2020. In view of
this, SWISS gave ordinary notice at the beginning of February 2021 to terminate
the existing collective labour agreement with its cockpit personnel on 31 March
2022 and invited Aeropers to enter into negotiations on a new cockpit CLA.
Pilots’
opinion
According to the
union, the CLA, which was rejected by 80.5 percent of Aeropers members, would
have reduced the profit sharing of cockpit staff in good years and enabled even
faster growth at the expense of the staff. That has very little to do with
coping. Management has ignored the rapid improvement in recent months.
Aeropers is
demanding quick improvements from management. This could ensure the stability
of flight operations over the summer and autumn
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