Angry Cathay pilots vote to raise funds as buffer for
potential management action
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[December 22, 2017]
By Jamie Freed
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Pilots at Cathay
Pacific Airways Ltd voted in favor of raising funds as a buffer against
any actions the Hong Kong airline may take against them, such as
unilateral benefit changes or job losses, their union said on Friday.
The move underscores persistent pilot discontent at Cathay, where anger
and distrust has deepened after it decided not to pay any year-end
bonuses to Hong Kong-based captains, five pilots told Reuters on
condition of anonymity.
Eager to trim costs, the loss-making airline had also sought to cut
payment of housing allowances but this month extended the stipend ahead
of a busy holiday travel period and amid poaching attempts by its
rivals.
More than 82 percent of union members voted in favor of resolutions
including raising funds to prepare for any industrial escalation. Chris
Beebe, general secretary of the union, said however that there were no
plans to take any action unless the airline moved to cut benefits first.
Cathay said this month it capped year-end bonuses to junior and
mid-level employees at HK$35,000 ($4,475) in Hong Kong, or less than the
usual payment of an extra month's salary due to the "difficult financial
environment".
Captains, as senior-level employees, did not get any bonus.
Cathay's director of flight operations, Anna Thompson, said in memo to
pilots that the airline could have communicated its decision better and
noted that more than 400 pilots had expressed "how they are currently
feeling as employees" to managers after the bonus decision on an
internal online forum.
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A view of the cockpit of a new Cathay Pacific Airways Airbus A350
after being received by the airline at Hong Kong Airport May 30,
2016. REUTERS/Bobby Yip/File Photo
The airline has around 3,300 pilots globally, two-thirds of whom are union
members.
One of the pilots who spoke to Reuters said: "This obviously keeps all office
and ground staff happy, but docks all pilots, and deducts a whole month's salary
from captains."
Cathay in August posted its worst half-year loss in at least 20 years, due to
poor fuel hedging and stiff competition from expanding mainland Chinese and Gulf
airlines.
The airline is undertaking a strategic transformation program aiming for HK$4
billion of cost savings over three years and has also warned pilots about
potential cuts to their retirement benefits.
Cathay said in a statement that it had been engaging with its pilots and the
union and was aiming for an "agreeable solution".
(Reporting by Jamie Freed in Singapore; Additional reporting by Anne-Marie
Roantree in Hong Kong; Editing by Himani Sarkar and Edwina Gibbs)
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