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EXCLUSIVE: Possible British Airways industrial unrest on the way as unions demand a 5% pay rise

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It has been a while since we’ve seen any industrial unrest at British Airways, so the more cynical amongst you will be thinking that we must be due a strike threat soon.  And here we are.

The three main trade unions representing British Airways staff – BALPA, Unite and GMB – have come together to submit a joint pay claim for 2019-21.  This covers all employees, not just cabin crew.

The immediate demand is for a rise of 5% from 1st January (or 1.75% above RPI if higher – RPI is currently 3.3%).  This is to be followed by a rise of RPI + 1.5% from 1st January 2020 and RPI + 1.25% from 1st January 2021.  In addition, unions want 7% of annual operating profit to be ringfenced for staff bonuses.

British Airways BA 777X 777 9X

Whilst this may sound aggressive, base pay for a new Mixed Fleet cabin crew member is currently, I believe, £13,079.  Allowances bring this up to what unions claim is an average of around £16,000.  BA claims the average is higher at around £21,000, with the difference apparently based on ‘typical’ versus ‘actual’ rostering patterns and fleet-wide bonus payments which the individual cannot control.

Let’s be honest, this pay claim process is unlikely to end well.  Here is the letter circulated to BALPA, GMB and Unite members this week:

Dear Member

Traditionally, around this time of year, the trade unions submit their separate pay claims for their areas. 2019 will be different. The trade unions want to ensure that their members get a share in the success of our employer. Therefore, the trade unions have submitted a joint claim. One claim on behalf of everyone.

Giving our membership a play by play account of negotiations is impossible but in line with our continued efforts to be as open as possible the full claim is set out below. The claim content is based heavily on your feedback in the pay survey conducted at the start of Summer 18 and focusses on:

an above RPI pay rise,

enhanced profit-sharing arrangements, and

the introduction of a sharesave scheme.   

Background to the claim

The BA Q3 operating profit margin of 20.1% (adjusted to take into account exceptional items), far exceeded that achieved by many rival companies, most notably United, Delta, and Norwegian. Based on the key measure used by investors, return on invested capital, BA delivered another excellent result with a ROIC of 16.7%.

BA staff have, for decades, made many sacrifices along the road to where BA is now. Most notably, accepting changed contracts and concessions to contracts old and new, and taking pay cuts to help the company in the face of challenges in the past. Only this year, BA staff who were members of NAPS reluctantly agreed that its costs were unsustainable and that it needed to close to future accrual.

BA’s trade unions have displayed leadership and restraint, always recognising and understanding the need for our employer to deliver strong financial results to enable it to flourish and grow the business.

We firmly believe BA can afford real pay awards materially above inflation.

Details of the claim

The joint unions are therefore seeking to agree the following increases: RPI+1.75% (or 5% if higher) from 1-Jan-19; RPI+1.5% from 1-Jan-20 and RPI+1.25% from 1-Jan-21.

We also believe BA is able to give staff a much larger share in the success of the business, aligning the interests of the company, its shareholders and staff. To achieve this aim, the joint unions are seeking to agree (i) an enhanced, all-employee profit-sharing scheme based on a pot equivalent to 7% of BA’s annual operating profit per year and (ii) the introduction of a voluntary sharesave scheme.

Re-engaging

To deliver the best experience to our customers, we believe BA need their staff engaged. An airline without its pilots is not an airline.

BA has failed to match best practice in recent years by making all-employee awards that in no way match the success of the company itself. This cannot be justified and leads to a fundamental disconnect between the company and its pilots. In our own benchmarking, we know that KLM and Lufthansa both ensure that pilot contracts reflect the success of the company through generous bonus schemes.

Additionally, we know that other airlines continue to offer share schemes. More progressive companies realise such schemes are popular with staff and invaluable in terms of getting staff to identify with the performance of the company.

A CC view

For reps, basic business is getting harder to progress within BA. We believe there are cultural issues in the BA/IAG leadership structure which are not in the long-term interests of our airline. There is so much pressure on resourcing and cost focus now that it is has become increasingly difficult to resolve straightforward, day-to-day matters (for example, dependency leave). This misguided approach is not likely to help BA resolve much bigger issues such as company-wide pay negotiations. A focus on cost-cutting alone, with little or no emphasis on value for money, means increased fatigue, little in the way of staff development, less retention and decreasing job satisfaction.

Job satisfaction and the prestige of working for British Airways is at a low, evident through widespread disengagement. Our recent pay survey showed one consistent response, highlighting that the small bonus did not engender any feeling of value or worth and was generally regarded as “insulting”.

The BACC wants to address these matters. This won’t happen overnight, but BA engaging meaningfully with us during this pay claim will be an essential step for pilots and the company. A collaborative approach is still the BACC’s goal. As we enter another hectic year and ambitious network plan we hope that British Airways and the leadership team recognise this, despite our concerns. We hope managers can facilitate pay negotiations which allow our reward to be aligned with the success of this company. The CC and the other unions believe these changes are entirely affordable and justified.

Finally, reps and members need to work together. We appreciate your patience and recognition that there are times when things will appear too quiet. In recent years negotiations have been plagued by rumours and members working against each other, not with each other. The new CC commits being open and honest with our members at every possible opportunity. In return, we ask that you do not accept rumour as fact. Do not fall into the negativity that can be online social platforms. Instead, come and meet us. Support us. Please email us to bust myths so that we can help you to help each other.

Next steps

The next joint union meeting with the company will take place in December.

Regards

BACC and Pay Team


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Comments (105)

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  • Rocket says:

    If true that senior managers are awarding themselves an increase of 60% to their package, then this claim is not unreasonable, also given the record profits now being enjoyed by the IAG, the majority of which has come from BA.
    In fact, they are aiming too low as their initial demand, especially having given up so much in the bad times that was never returned in the good, the closure of the affordable pension scheme, working increased hours right to the limit (as proven by the requirement now to have a ‘fatigue management system’!)
    Good luck to them, especially the mixed-fleet crew who start on salaries half the national average (put a value on saving 200+ lives from a burning fuselage in 90 seconds; see the incident at LAS recently).

    • Anna says:

      Plus administering emergency first aid, dealing with disruptive or even violent passengers etc…

  • MC says:

    Just to be clear, this isn’t just Cabin Crew, it’s everyone. Pilots, Canin Crew, Engineers, ground staff, call centre staff, unionised Waterside Staff also.

    It’s the first time that all BA staff have submitted a joint pay demand. If the demands aren’t met, then I can see the entire airline going out over this as everyone is so exasperated at the way the airline has been run since AC arrived.

  • TripRep says:

    Another link here, given the decision to poll pilots took place > 2 weeks ago,, it sounds like the results of the ballot could be out this coming week?
    https://www.ttgmedia.com/news/news/union-confirms-virgin-atlantic-christmas-pilots-strike-ballot-16106

  • BJ says:

    The strength of negative feeling that unions and industrial action always creates amazes me and is without justification. It is driven by a post-Thatcherite ideology that champions personal greed (no, not aspiration) at the expense of the common good. It should be self-evident to every employee that were it not for the trade union movement salaries, rights, and benefits of employees would all be substantially less than what they are now, and let’s face it, most of us are employees. However, I have some sympathy with the view that some Union leaderships from time to time hijack their membership to push their own idealogicall agenda but this should not detrract from the value of, and the need for, the trade union movement. Trade unions provide part of the checks and balances that are needed to keep a society in a more stable, even keel, limiting drifts to the political margins and lifestyle inequalities. Even though my own political views are in many respects decidedly right of centre I believe that at this time there is a need for substantial readjustment in society that the Union movement has a role to play in providing. Too many people, including BA mixed fleet crew, are stuck in poorly paid jobs with limited choices and it should be obvious to anybody who opens their eyes that marginalisation in society is a real problem. I believe this can only be addressed by a substantial shift in future growth in wealth from middle earners to low-earning working people. It is totally nonsense to suggest that if people are not happy with their jobs they can simply find another, for most people in most regions of the UK most of ghe time, they simply do not have this choice and opportunity for a whole host of reasons, many of thrm beyond their control. Without trade unions we woold still be living in a Dickensian society, without them, we might be headed back in that direction.

    • Alan says:

      Well said, BJ!

    • Doug M says:

      Nicely put. Absolutely nailed it. The balance between those that have and those have not continues to grow. Anything that helps address that is a good thing.

    • Rocket says:

      Contradiction?

      Quote:
      The strength of negative feeling that unions and industrial action always creates amazes me and is
      WITHOUT JUSTIFICATION.

      and quote:
      Without trade unions we woold still be living in a Dickensian society, without them, we might be headed back in that direction.

      So, do you mean the ‘negative feeling’ that eventually might result in improved working conditions, is justified, or not?!

    • Gavin says:

      Sounds like an argument from John Rawls, well asserted.

    • marcw says:

      The poor are getting poorer, and the rich, richer.

      • Rocket says:

        As your salary increases, you move into more punitive tax bands.
        The argument is always ‘the broadest shoulders can take the greatest strain’.

        The top 50% of earners pay around 90% of the income tax, the bottom half pay just 10%.
        And, according to fullfact.org, the top 1% pay 28% of the income tax.

        So, as the ‘rich get richer’, there should be a greater tax-take for the government to squander.
        Some of this could be used to introduce a lower tax band of say, 10%, which would proportionately benefit those on lower incomes.

    • Mike says:

      Snowflakes – just get another job if you don’t like the one you have. There are no shortage of new applicants…

    • Blue Mountains says:

      Amen BJ! I used to work as a manager/employer (in charge of signing off my employees’ hours) and it always astonished me how other managers (senior and junior, young and old) were happy to swindle employees out of any hours/overtime they had actually worked, while I categorically objected to that. And they were laughing at my attitude because I was standing up for the employees when it came to them fighting for their rights through striking etc. Thather unleashed the monster of neoliberalism and it feels that all ethics have gone out of the window.

  • RussellH says:

    > base pay for a new Mixed Fleet cabin crew member is currently, I believe, £13,079.

    That works out at minimum wage (for over 25 years old) for a 35 hour week for just under 48 weeks a year, for people whose job is supposed to be safety critical.

    > BA claims the average is around £21,000

    So just pay them that as basic salary. Apart from anything else, there can then be no disagreement as to what the earning actually are.

    (I have been a TU rep in my time)

    • Shoestring says:

      You shouldn’t peddle these myths, as I mentioned earlier, the actual pay is a lot higher than base pay. https://www.paddleyourownkanoo.com/2017/03/23/british-airways-cabin-crew-salary-and-benefits-2017/

      [British Airways claim that Mixed Fleet Cabin Crew earn “more than £21,000 based on pay, allowances, incentive and bonus” in their first year of flying. The airline also says that an independent audit of its pay shows that Mixed Fleet crew earned between £21,151.35 and £27,356.30 in the last 12-months.]

      Plus they got a big £2-3K increase with the 2017 settlement.
      Base pay +
      Trip Allowance: £3.14 per hour – an elapsed hourly rate that starts from the moment you check-in to the time you get back to your home airport
      Daily Overseas Allowance: £10 (when away from the UK)
      Nightly Incidental Allowance: £5 (when away from base but still in the UK)
      Commission: 20% on all Duty-Free and Buy Onboard sales
      Quarterly Bonus: Approximately £350 – £450
      Annual Bonus: Approximately £400 – £450 (based on fleet-wide performance)

      • BAeng says:

        No mention of whats happening in BA Engineering…..it gonna be a turbulent flight for BA in 2019.

      • Mikeact says:

        Shoestring…..sounds like a pretty good job to me, if I were a few years younger.

        • Shoestring says:

          Yep – a young person’s dream, which is presumably their idea of the ideal recruit. Whilst I agree with the legislation that says you can’t retire somebody on age grounds, I don’t think you can be that effective as ‘fodder/ dogsbody’ cabin crew once you get past a certain age.

          Whereas the head honcho cabin crew member *does* need to be a bit more experienced.

        • Shoestring says:

          Maybe should have said ‘enthusiastic/ eager to please & give good cabin crew service’ 🙂

        • Shoestring says:

          But that’s it, isn’t it?

          Interns could learn the cabin crew job in a day just by doing it. Most of it *is* serving M&S food and knowing how to do the Exit tutorial.

          Don’t tell me that cabin crew will be that useful in the case of an emergency evacuation – it’ll be every man for himself in the worst cases and some pleasant cabin crew in the way will get mown down, same as always happens.

      • RussellH says:

        > Trip Allowance: £3.14 per hour – an elapsed hourly rate that starts from the moment
        > you check-in to the time you get back to your home airport

        Why not put this in the basic salary?

        > Daily Overseas Allowance: £10 (when away from the UK)
        > Nightly Incidental Allowance: £5 (when away from base but still in the UK)

        And surely this could be in the basis salary too?

        > Commission: 20% on all Duty-Free and Buy Onboard sales

        I never buy from this anyway, but surely people in a safety-critical role should not be thinking about commission payments? Cabin crew are NOT salespeople.

        > Quarterly Bonus: Approximately £350 – £450
        > Annual Bonus: Approximately £400 – £450 (based on fleet-wide performance)

        Again, bonuses are surely not appropriate for people in this sort of role. TBH, the modern bonus culture stinks, IMHO.

    • shd says:

      >> for people whose job is supposed to be safety critical.

      Who really thinks this applies to cabin crew? To at least five nines, it’s a bog-standard customer service job.

      If a bus driver falls asleep, it matters. If a pilot falls asleep, it matters.

      If cabin crew fall asleep, what happens? The service gets very slow? Oh, hang on, that happens already!

  • Ex BA says:

    Mixed fleet base salary – £13,280
    Hourly Rate constatly from time of check in to back to London – £3.14 a hour.

    • Mikeact says:

      And your point is ?

      • TripRep says:

        I’d guess it’s that £3.14 is less than the minimum wage?

        • Shoestring says:

          @TripRep – the £3.14/ hr is *in addition* to the base salary, ie it’s sort of inconvenience money for being in the air. So minimum wage doesn’t come into it.

          [Trip Allowance: £3.14 per hour – an elapsed hourly rate that starts from the moment you check-in to the time you get back to your home airport]

  • Mark says:

    It sounds like BA might be one of those companies that peddle the “Sorry times are tough, no rises, bring your own teabags and hot water” line, then the AGM comes around… “We’ve made a billion trillion quadrillion through incredible cost savings”

  • Nick says:

    My problem withthis is that the unions have deliberately excluded nearly everyone who works at head office, which is a lot of the people whose sympathy they will need to really make it work (and most of whom are equally underpaid). Surely if they did care about it being ‘one combined request’ they would have made it properly inclusive?

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