Cabin crew and ground staff at British Airways have voted overwhelmingly in support of supporting striking action in a rapidly escalating dispute over pay and conditions at the embattled airline.
In a consultative ballot involving cabin crew, check-in agents, customer service staff, engineers and other ground staff, more than 97 per cent of those who took part in the poll voted in favour of supporting industrial action.
The ballot was conducted by the powerful Unite union and involved every work group represented by the union at British Airways. Workers may now be asked to take part in a formal strike ballot with any action designed to cause maximum disruption over the busy summer holidays.
“To anyone that has flown British Airways recently, this overwhelming consultative ballot result with come as no surprise,” the union said shortly after the ballot results were made public on Monday.
“British Airways’ management now can no longer ignore the universal discontent across their own workforce, in the way they have ignored the needs of their own customers,” the statement continued.
“Despite BA claiming hundreds of millions of pounds of furlough pay from government, thousands of experienced staff were dismissed, and have simply not been replaced.”
The dispute centres on a pay deal negotiated earlier this year that saw some lower-paid employees at the airline get a 10 per cent pay raise. The union accepted the deal on the basis that the amount being offered was the very best that British Airways could afford and that no higher offer would be made.
The agreement, however, included a so-called ‘me too’ clause which, in the event that BA did find extra money for a particular group of workers, would be extended to every other workgroup represented by Unite.
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