Air Canada union cancels strike - Action News
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Canada

Air Canada union cancels strike

The union representing 6,800 Air Canada flight attendants has cancelled its planned strike for 12:01 a.m Thursday, after the Canada Industrial Relations Board said employees must remain on the job.
An Air Canada Boeing 777 sits at the international departure gate of Vancouver International Airport in May 2010. (iStock)

The union representing 6,800 Air Canada flight attendants says it has cancelled its planned strike for 12:01 a.m.Thursday, after the CanadaIndustrial Relations Board saidemployees must remain on the jobwhile their contract dispute is being reviewed.

"Flight attendants represented by the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), will not be going on strike tonight, as previously planned, following a notice by the Canadian Industrial Relations Board," the union said in a statement issued Wednesday afternoon.

"The ministers intervention with the labour board, as it stands, postpones the calling of a strike until the question of essential services has been ruled on."

The CIRB said in a statement earlier Wednesday that it is being asked by the federal government to determine, under section 87.4 of the Canada Labour Code, "whether any services need to be maintained, in the event of a strike or lockout, to prevent an immediate and serious danger to the safety or health of the public.

"In this regard, the Code is clear that this referral suspends the right to strike or lockout until the board renders a decision on this matter," it said.

CUPEreceived formalnotice Wednesday that Labour MinisterLisa Raitthad referred thecontract dispute to the CIRB.

Her referrals ask the tribunal to decide whether the union membership'srejection of two tentative deals has"created conditions that are unfavourable" to settling the dispute, whether communities might be cut off from service to urban centres and what effect that would have on Canadians' health and safety.

Earlier in the day, CUPE hadinsistedit was in a "legal strike position," while adding itremained available to resume negotiations with Air Canada.

In a statement Wednesday, Raitt saidthe Conservative governmenthad been given a "strong mandate to protect the Canadian economy and Canadian jobs, so we have been closely following the negotiations between Air Canada and CUPE."

"I have asked the CIRB to review the situation at Air Canada to ensure that the health and safety of the public will not be impacted, and to determine how best to maintain and secure industrial peace and promote conditions that are favourable to the settlement of industrial disputes," the minister said.

But CUPE national president Paul Moist called Raitt's decision to go to the CIRB "outrageous."

"Her rationale for this is disingenuous, and the use of the Canada Labour Code and the CIRB in this way is indefensible," Moist said in a statement.

Later,Moist said Raitt is using tactics that have nothing to do with health and safety

"It's got to do with the fact that she's got legislation on the order paper, Parliament's not meeting this week, the government's not inclined to call government backand this government doesn't want strikes," Moist told CBC's Power & Politics with Evan Solomon.

CUPE spokesman Robert Lamoureux echoed the sentiment.

"It's something fundamental to us the right to withhold labour if we cannot reach a settlement," Lamoureux said."If we lose that right, employers will be able to have the upper hand in every situation."

Illegal strike

Labour lawyer Paul Cavalluzzo told CBC News he firmly believes the CIRB cannotsuspend the legal right to strike.

Cavalluzzo pointed out thatthe CIRB was brought in to prevent an illegal strike by security screeners at Toronto's Pearson airportlast week.He said theboard only intervenes in legal strikes if there is illegalactivity,and,even then, the boardcannot stop the strike entirely.

"I don't think the CIRB has the authority to stop [a strike]," he said.

But York University law professor David Doorey told CBC's Power & Politics with Evan Solomon that he believes the board does have that authority.

"The simple filing of this reference to the board has the effect under the statute of suspending the commencement of a strike," Doorey said.

"My take on it is it's pretty clear that in fact it does what the minister says it does."

Flight attendants have rejected 2 tentative deals

Theflight attendants served a 72-hour strike notice on the airline on Sunday after 65 per cent of the votes cast were against the latest tentative collective agreement.

It marked the second time in recent months that the flight attendants have turned down a tentative deal with the airline.

They voted 87.8 per cent against ratifying the previous agreement in August.

Raitt has said a work stoppage would be unacceptable, and has indicated the federal government was prepared to use back-to-work legislation to end a strike by the flight attendants.

Parliament is not due to resume sitting until Oct. 17, meaning a strike could last a few days before legislation goes into effect.

But agovernment source told CBC News that back-to-work legislation remains on the table.