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Qantas prepares strike-breaking operation against licensed
engineers
By Terry Cook
4 January 2008
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Qantas, Australias largest airline, is preparing a major
campaign, including the use of strike breakers, to bust industrial
action by members of the Australian Licensed Aircraft Engineers
Association (ALAEA) and inflict a decisive defeat. If it succeeds,
the defeat will be used as the springboard for an offensive against
other sections of the workforce.
News of the companys contingency plan emerged as the
1,700 licensed engineers concluded a secret ballot last week overwhelmingly
endorsing a campaign of industrial action. Nearly 90 percent voted
to begin bans on overtime and on work outside of normal duties
from January 9.
The licensed engineers, who are required to inspect and sign
out aircraft each day, as well as approve all maintenance work,
are seeking a 5 percent pay increase as part of a new enterprise
bargaining agreement that has been under negotiation since the
beginning of last year. The company, however, is refusing to budge
from its 3 percent counteroffer, even though this will not compensate
for increases in the cost of living.
The airline insists the engineers modest claim will make
its maintenance operations uncompetitive with other
airline providers. Yet, in August last year, the company announced
a record net profit of $720 millionup 50 percent on the
previous year. In December, it predicted a further record, after
flying 7.1 percent more passengers on its low-cost domestic carrier,
Jetstar.
On December 27, Qantas confirmed in a staff memo that the company
was putting in place measures to counter the engineers action.
It had commissioned an Australian-based company with a strong
track record in aviation hire and labour recruitment to
provide qualified engineers to support our operations,
the letter stated. Put more plainly, Qantas admitted it was in
the process of marshalling a small army of potential strike-breakers.
According to the ALAEA, the airline is offering former licensed
engineers, including some of the engineers it made redundant just
one year ago, a six month contract with a total salary of $100,000,
almost double the pay of existing staff.
The unnamed labour-hire agency is also reportedly looking to
recruit licensed engineers in New Zealand. As a further enticement,
Qantas has promised any alternative staff it recruits that they
will be paid the full amount even if their services are not used
in the event the ALAEA abandons its industrial campaign.
Qantas has announced it will cancel all leave for licensed
engineers from January 14, including rostered days off, in a bid
to offset the effect of the overtime bans. Late last week, executive
general manager Kevin Brown warned he would consider sending inspection
work offshore if the ALAEA action proved too disruptive.
The speed with which Qantas is putting in place its multi-million
dollar contingency plan in the face of what is a minimal campaign
by the ALAEA smacks of a provocation designed to deliberately
inflame the situation and to escalate the dispute. Significantly,
news of the contingency plan came as a final round of pay negotiations
between the company and the ALAEA was scheduled to begin on January
4.
The ALAEAs federal president Paul Cousins complained
that the airlines actions had unnecessarily inflamed
the situation and last week predicted ALAEA members are
going to be absolutely furious. While Cousins complained
that the companys decision to cancel overtime meant
Qantas had struck the first industrial blow in the dispute, and
not the union, the ALAEA has not called for a united campaign
by Qantas workers to counter the companys plans.
To date, the union has responded only by threatening to call
nationwide four-hour stop-work meetings that could temporarily
ground Qantas flights, if the airline goes ahead and uses scab
engineers. Yet the companys uncompromising stance indicates
that it is preparing to implement a fundamental restructuring
throughout its operations, centred on slashing wages, dismantling
longstanding working conditions and imposing ever greater levels
of flexibility in the workplace. Its goal is to cut
costs and drive up productivity in order to gain a competitive
edge over its rivals in what has become an increasingly ruthless
battle for international and domestic market share. Even now,
Qantas is confronting new challenges in Australia and internationally
from budget airlines such as Tiger Airways and Virgin.
At the same time, Qantas, like other airlines, is continually
looking to offload rising costs, such as aviation fuel, onto the
backs of its workforce. Jet kerosene in December traded as high
as $US109 a barrel, having gone above the $US100 a barrel mark
on the benchmark Singapore index for the first time in October.
By demonstrating its readiness to instigate a protracted and
bitter fight with the engineers, Qantas hopes to intimidate and
bully other sections of its workforce into accepting such far-reaching
changes.
Attacks on long-haul crews and maintenance
staff
It is no accident that the companys strike-breaking plans
were made known just as long-haul (LH) cabin crews were preparing
to vote on a new enterprise bargaining agreement (EBA8) that will
allow the company to hire 2,000 new starters on 25 percent less
pay than current LH rates, while working 30 percent more hours.
The EBA8, brokered by the Flight Attendants Association of
Australia (FAAA), will lock current long-haul staff into a measly
3 percent pay increase annually for five years. The deal will
deliver Qantas an estimated $40 million in savings each year.
It clearly hopes that its threats against the engineers will act
as a spur to stampede FAAA members into accepting the unpopular
deal and removing any chance of a combined struggle by cabin crews
and engineers.
At the same time, there are indications that the airline company
is moving to further downsize its 5,000 strong Australian-based
maintenance workforce. Last month it signed off on a deal with
Malaysian Airlines (MA) giving Qantas a half stake in MAs
maintenance subsidiary, Kuala Lumpur-based MAS Aerospace Engineering.
The move will give Qantas a foothold in Asias booming
airline maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) market, providing
the Australian carrier with its first ever heavy maintenance base
in Asia. The venture partners are looking to produce a turnover
of $US15 billion ($A17.5 billion) a year by 2016.
Qantas has informed maintenance unions that the Malaysian-based
operation will only be used to deal with overflow
from its current maintenance operations in Australia. However,
it is hardly feasible that, under conditions where Qantas is looking
to continually cut costs, the low-wage operation will not be used
to send more maintenance work off-shore, leading to downsizing
and the closure of more of its Australian-based maintenance facilities.
Such a trajectory was implicit in a statement by Malaysian
Airlines chief executive and managing director Idris Jala, who
declared last week that his aim was to develop MAS Aerospace
Engineering Kuala Lumpur as a hub for the Asia Pacific region
for MRO services.
At the same time, Qantas is developing a plan to expand its
freight arm offshore, rather than attempting to compete in the
home market, which is currently dominated by giant transport companies
Toll Holdings, Asciano and Linfox. It is also looking to outsource
its frequent flyer program, a move that could lead to major downsizing
of its call-centre workforce.
The role of Labor and the unions
To date, the newly elected Rudd Labor government has remained
silent on Qantass strike breaking plans. However, given
that the Qantas operation, if successful, will set a new benchmark
for restructuring across the aviation industry and beyond, it
is inconceivable that the government, which has publicly trumpeted
its ambition to drive up productivity across all industry sectors,
would not have been kept fully informed.
Qantas has been acting with the confidence that it will receive
government backing to isolate and smash the engineers, or any
other section of the airlines workforce, following a statement
by Labors industrial spokesperson Julia Gillard in September
last year. Just two months before Labor won office, Gillard told
ABC-TV Lateline that a Labor government would not
hesitate to crush unlawful strikes, and confirmed
that it would be prepared to engage in strike-breaking.
Gillard emphasised that unlawful industrial action
included any joint action by workers across different industries,
or even within the same company, if they were covered by different
enterprise agreements. Solidarity strikes were also outlawed.
Moreover, Qantas is well aware of Labors track record,
in government, of utilising strike breaking tactics in major industrial
disputes to push through industrial reform. In 1989,
the Hawke-Keating Labor government used the Royal Australian Air
Force as strike breakers to bust the six-month long airline pilots
wage dispute. The pilots defeat set a new point of reference
for the suppression of wages.
That Labor Prime Minister Kevin Rudd has openly embraced the
so-called reform record of the former Labor government
serves as a clear warning that his government will not hesitate
to use identical methods to back Qantas. Equally clear is the
role that the unions are preparing to play. They have already
endorsed Labors industrial relations laws, and refused to
mount any challenge to Gillards threats. There is no question
that they will work to head off any joint struggle by different
sections of Qantas workers and will oppose and block the mobilisation
of support by other workers.
For Qantas workers to take forward the fight to defend their
hard-won conditions, they must recognise the need to take their
struggle out of the hands of the unions and begin an independent
campaign to oppose the companys offensive. This will require
a turn by the engineers to organise support from their co-workers
throughout Qantas, and the broader airline industry, as well as
among other layers of workersin Australia, the Asian region,
and around the world.
See Also:
Australia: Qantas-union
deal will set new benchmark to cut pay and conditions
[7 December 2007]
Australian union chief
jeered as Qantas workers throw out pay deal
[23 January 2002]
Australian airline
plans all-out assault on maintenance workers
[20 December 2001]
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