I PAY FOR WORK, hotels in YOW and YUL

Your Union in Action! 


This week I had the privilege of representing you during a 2 day meeting in Vancouver to work and create a common strategic plan for all CUPE affiliated cabin crew unions across Canada. In attendance were the presidents of (left to right on the photo) Calm Air, Sunwing, WestJet, Westjet Encore, Swoop, Pascan Aviation, Air Transat, Flair, Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge.

It is amazing to see the solidarity that is emerging among us at the airline division. We are the next union group to negotiate our contract and I left this meeting confident that everyone will be with us when the time comes. More details on this project will follow in the coming weeks.

Here is the official press release:

Click here

 

Presse release:

 

CUPE’s Airline Division Component Presidents are meeting this week in Vancouver to discuss how to end the widespread industry use of unpaid labour. Flight attendants regularly perform hours of unpaid work every time they report for duty – a practice that must stop.

 

 

“If you’re a firefighter, a bank teller, an electrician, or almost any other profession in Canada, when you show up for work and perform work duties, you’re on the clock and you’re compensated for your time. For flight attendants in Canada, that simply isn’t the case,” said Wesley Lesosky, President of the Airline Division. “Flight attendants deserve to be paid for hours worked, and we’re going to step up this fight to make sure they are.”

 

Although there are variations at each airline, generally speaking, most flight attendants in Canada are at work, in uniform, performing work-related duties long before they start – and long after they stop – getting paid. It is estimated that between 20 and 50 per cent of a Canadian flight attendant’s time at work is unpaid. Unpaid work may include things like prepping aircraft, boarding and deplaning passengers, gate duties, and safety-related duties.

 

The division presidents have been meeting this week to put plans in place to present a strong and united front across CUPE’s ten different airline groups, and raise public awareness and mobilize members to end this unfair and exploitive practice.

 

 

This is a totally unacceptable industry practice that only exists because nobody knows about it,” said Rena Kisfalvi, Secretary-Treasurer of the Division. “That is about to change.”

CUPE’s Airline Division represents approximately 18,500 flight attendants working at ten different airlines in Canada.

 

In Solidarity,

Dominic Levasseur

Your Component President

 

Temporary changes to our hotels in Ottawa and Montréal downtown.

 

YOW

We wish to inform you that following a fire at our crew hotel in Ottawa, the Marriott, our crews will be relocated to the Delta Marriott, 2 min walk from the Marriott.

Equivalent quality. The relocation will be for the month of December. To be followed.

YUL

In order to protect our crews during the COP 15 near our crew hotel in downtown Montreal, it is possible that you will be relocated during your 20H+ layovers in YUL between December 7th and 19th. We have done our investigation and these relocations are also in place for our colleagues at AC.