BA boss says there is no need to fire and rehire staff
There is no need for British Airways to lay off cabin crew and then rehire them on inferior terms, boss Alex Cruz has said.
Unions and MPs had accused the airline of following a "fire and rehire" policy, which saw some employees facing pay cuts of up to 50%.
But Mr Cruz told MPs "there will be no need to issue new contracts", subject to staff approval.
BA reached the outline of a jobs agreement with union Unite last week.
The pair have been in a bitter dispute over BA's plans to shed up to 13,000 jobs and cut pay, amid a collapse in demand for air travel.
Speaking to the Transport Select Committee, Mr Cruz said it was a matter of "regret" that it took 73 days for BA's non-pilot unions to sit down and negotiate.
But Labour MP Sam Tarry responded: "I would argue that if you hadn't put a metaphorical gun to their head then that might not have happened.
Mr Cruz said the airline would now follow the "standard methodology" of union agreements and make amendments to existing the contracts.
Details are still being worked out and ballots of some staff are yet to be held.
Long-serving cabin crew members face a 15% pay reduction, while hoping to retain many of the allowances which constitute a significant part of their overall pay.
"We have reached agreements in a majority of areas," Mr Cruz said.
"We very much hope that the result of the ballots will be to accept those ballots."
'Devastated business'In relation to whether or not BA will have to make 13,000 staff redundant, Mr Cruz said that the company didn't "need to get to that number".
However, a large number of long-serving cabin crew have taken voluntary redundancy and many staff felt that the terms being offered at the time meant that was their only choice.
Mr Cruz told MPs that the pandemic had "devastated our business... and we're still fighting for our own survival".
Last week the airline flew about 187,000 passengers - about 25%-30% of its normal flight schedule.
"Everyone is facing decisions we never wanted to face," Mr Cruz said.
He said he had taken a 33% pay cut during the pandemic, reducing his salary from the £805,000 he earned in 2019.
But he refused to comment on an £833,000 bonus paid to the outgoing boss of BA's parent company, Willie Walsh.
IAG faced a backlash from shareholders over that payment to Mr Walsh who left the company last week.
Source: BBC
Trending Business

Muntaka Entrepreneurship Hub trains over 100 women in Asawase
14:16
Ghana Gold Board rakes in over $10bn ahead of target
09:56
GEXIM faces GHS1.5bn credit exposure as NPLs near 30% — CEO
09:36
Six Degrees delivers immersive experiential production at Kweku Smoke’s revival concert
10:37
GIPC highlights govt’s commitment to retail sector transformation at GUTA conference
03:01
Lower-Volta Small-Scale Miners & Farmers to host international livestock market
00:43
Nigeria's commercial dispute involving Ghanaian firm raises bilateral trade concerns-UK Certified Customer Communication expert warns
21:31
GoldBod Jewellery, GTA launches December homecoming promotion for diaspora visitors
17:15
Global cocoa prices soared, but Ghanaian farmers gained little – Randy Abbey
15:40
GIPC CEO joins Vice President to open new sanitary pad production line
09:23



