Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
National

Air Canada Service Agents Ratify New Five-year Collective Agreement

The Canadian Press, 26 Jun, 2015 12:32 PM
    TORONTO — About 4,100 customer service and sales agents at Air Canada (TSX:AC.A) have ratified a new five-year contract.
     
    No details were released, but Unifor says the agreement includes a significant hourly wage increase for those at the lower end of the salary grid.
     
    Air Canada says its board of directors has also approved the new agreement, which was reached on June 14.
     
    Airline president and CEO Calin Rovinescu said in a statement that the agreement is a "win-win" and noted this is the fourth labour contract Air Canada has concluded over the past eight months.
     
    Voting on the agreement, which is effective from March 1 this year to Feb. 28, 2020, took place over the past eight days.
     
    The customer service agents and sales agents had walked off the job for three days in June 2011.
     
    During roughly the same period, the airline faced protracted negotiations with both flight attendants and pilots. In 2012 baggage handlers staged an illegal walkout before being forced back to work by a court order.
     
    "This agreement secures good jobs for customer sales and service agents now and into the future," Unifor president Jerry Dias said in a statement late Thursday.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Seek Deadly Cafe Shooting Suspect North Of Toronto

    Police Seek Deadly Cafe Shooting Suspect North Of Toronto
    Police have released security video images of a suspect and vehicle in a cafe shooting north of Toronto that left two people dead and two others seriously injured.

    Police Seek Deadly Cafe Shooting Suspect North Of Toronto

    B.C. Gets Go-ahead To Pursue Polygamy Charge Against Bountiful Leader

    The leader of a fundamentalist Mormon sect in southeastern B.C. is accused of polygamy for having more than two dozen wives.

    B.C. Gets Go-ahead To Pursue Polygamy Charge Against Bountiful Leader

    Environment Lawyers Challenge B.C.'s Kinder Morgan Pipeline Conditions

    VANCOUVER — A group of environmental lawyers is calling on the British Columbia government to do its own evaluation of Kinder Morgan's proposed $5.4-billion pipeline expansion instead of deferring its questions to the National Energy Board.

    Environment Lawyers Challenge B.C.'s Kinder Morgan Pipeline Conditions

    Saskatchewan Premier Says '60s Scoop Apology Is On The Way, But No Compensation

    Saskatchewan Premier Says '60s Scoop Apology Is On The Way, But No Compensation
    SASKATOON — Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall says the province will formally apologize for decades-old policies that saw aboriginal adoptees taken from their homes and placed with non-native families.

    Saskatchewan Premier Says '60s Scoop Apology Is On The Way, But No Compensation

    Public Sector Jobs Increased More Than Private Sector Over Decade: Report

    Public Sector Jobs Increased More Than Private Sector Over Decade: Report
    A study released today by the Fraser Institute found employment in the public sector increased by 22.6 per cent between 2003 and 2013, the latest data available.

    Public Sector Jobs Increased More Than Private Sector Over Decade: Report

    Canada Can Pursue Trade Deal While Protecting Supply Management, Says Harper

    Canada Can Pursue Trade Deal While Protecting Supply Management, Says Harper
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper says Canada will defend its supply management system for dairy and poultry while still pursuing one of the biggest trade deals in history.

    Canada Can Pursue Trade Deal While Protecting Supply Management, Says Harper