Vueling cabin crew call for strikes until January

The airline Vueling (IAG) faces a strike call for cabin crew starting next month.

Thomas Osborne
Thomas Osborne
21 October 2022 Friday 04:39
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Vueling cabin crew call for strikes until January

The airline Vueling (IAG) faces a strike call for cabin crew starting next month. The Stavla union, the majority in this group, has called strikes at the airline every Friday, Sunday and Monday between November 1, 2022 and January 31, 2023, as well as on November 1, 6, 8, December 24 and 31 of this year and January 5, 2023.

According to the workers' representatives, the strike call responds "to the absence of significant progress in the negotiation of the collective agreement and the lack of real intention shown by Vueling to solve the wage demands of the group of cabin crew" . The union demands a salary increase of 13.4% for this 2022. The increase "is only intended to adapt the salary tables of the collective agreement to the current standard of living", they point out from the union. Stavla also affirms that if the conflict persists, they will extend the strike "indefinitely".

Vueling, whose main base is at Barcelona airport, reached an agreement with the CCOO union. in August to raise salaries by 6.5%, corresponding to the 2021 CPI, but Stavla stood out and did not sign. Now, this union is preparing mobilizations to request a higher salary increase in the negotiation of the agreement.

The company has lamented that this "is not the time to divide ourselves but to join our efforts to build the future of Vueling together". According to the airline, Stavla's requests at the negotiating table of the IV Collective Agreement reach "salary increases of 33% until 2025".

The call for the strike is conditional on the concession by the company of an additional 13.4% increase, "which would be added to the 6.5% already agreed in the summer of 2022." "An increase of this magnitude is unfeasible, since its consequences would be the loss of our competitiveness and could imply a reduction in the size of the company and a necessary reorganization," they have stated from Vueling.

Several airlines have suffered strikes this summer in Spain, such as Ryanair, Iberia Express or easyJet. The conflict in Irish low cost is still open, although the stoppages already have very little follow-up. In this case, the USO union is calling the strike. It also coincides that the airline has reached agreements with CC.OO.