AirlinesQantas Workers In Fight For Sick Pay A trade union has its guns aimed squarely at Qantas following the airlines’ decision not to pay sick leave to furloughed workers. The Transport Workers Union (TWU) had Qantas in court yesterday. In a hearing before the Fair Work Commission, part of The Federal Court of Australia, union legal counsel urged the court to force Qantas to pay sick leave to stood down workers.
LinkUnited Joins American With Free Face Masks For Passengers United Airlines has confirmed today that it will start distributing free face masks to its passengers from next month. The Chicago-based carrier is also making it compulsory for flight attendants to wear the new equipment amid the coronavirus pandemic.
LinkAvianca Open To Partial Colombian Government Ownership Avianca’s CFO, Adrián Neuhauser, said that the airline needs an investment from the Colombian Government to survive the current crisis. He added that the airline is willing to make the Government a shareholder if that’s what it takes to survive. Let’s investigate further.
LinkCanadian Airlines Are Being Sued For Refusing Cash Refunds Recently, we covered the Canadian situation regarding airlines and the provision of vouchers and credit in place of cash refunds. The Canadian Transporation Agency (CTA) had issued a statement on the matter supporting airlines doing this.
Link2000+ Icelandair Employees Laid Off Amid Current Crisis Over 2,000 Icelandair employees will be laid off at the turn of the month. The flag carrier of Iceland has had to make the tough call amid financial and operational struggles due to the global health crisis.
LinkDOT Denies Frontier Airlines A Network Waiver The US Department of Transportation (DoT) has today rejected Frontier Airlines’ request to minimize its current network. Simultaneously, it has granted Sun Country Airlines permission to stop flying to a major part of its domestic destinations.
LinkIAG Mulls Up To 12,000 Job Cuts At British Airways British Airways is set to undertake a restructuring program that may result in the redundancy of up to 12,000 employees of the airline. This was announced today at an IAG briefing.
LinkLufthansa Begins Flying Airbus A380s To Spanish Aircraft Graveyard Lufthansa has flown its first Airbus A380 to a Spanish aircraft graveyard. The airline today ferried D-AIMG from Munich to Tarmac Aerosave in Teruel. Earlier this month, it announced the immediate decommissioning of six Airbus A380s.
LinkEtihad Hopes To Resume Passenger Flights From Mid-May United Arab Emirates-based Etihad is due to start regular commercial flights again as soon as the 16th of May. The airline is now taking bookings for multiple dates to several destinations. Etihad is working with the government to get its schedule sorted and work around international travel restrictions. Previously, the airline had hoped to restart a regular schedule from the 1st of May.
LinkJetBlue Becomes First US Carrier To Make Face Masks Compulsory From the 4th of May onwards, JetBlue Airways will require that all passengers wear compulsory face masks. The low-cost carrier is the first US airline to make face masks mandatory for travelers on its flights, or what it is calling “the new flying etiquette.”
LinkLufthansa Is Reportedly Examining Bankruptcy Proceedings German airline group Lufthansa is awaiting the outcome of negotiations for a €9bn ($9.74bn) bailout, with Chancellor Angela Merkel and CEO Carsten Spohr fleshing out the details today. However, it appears that a rescue package is not the only option for the carrier, as reports today suggest bankruptcy is still being explored as an option.
LinkUp To 5,000 SAS Jobs At Risk Due To Demand Slump As a result of the ongoing downturn in air travel, Scandinavian Airlines (SAS) has today announced that some 5,000 employees might be let go. Many of the Nordic airline’s staff had already been furloughed as travel restrictions and quarantine measures made it impossible to continue operations.
LinkSouthwest Airlines Announces Huge $94 Million Q1 Loss Southwest Airlines has announced a considerable loss of $94 million. The US carrier posted the loss for the first quarter primarily as a result of the ongoing crisis affecting the aviation industry. However, it is also still without its 737 MAX aircraft.
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