Ryanair crew at Stansted turn down wage increase

Majority of pilots at Stansted voted against Michael O’Leary’s offer, sources say

Ryanair pilots are trying to form a companywide group, bypassing the existing structure which requires each of Ryanair’s 86 bases to negotiate deals separately. Photograph: Bryan O’Brien
Ryanair pilots are trying to form a companywide group, bypassing the existing structure which requires each of Ryanair’s 86 bases to negotiate deals separately. Photograph: Bryan O’Brien

Ryanair’s efforts to calm disgruntled pilots were dealt a blow after crew at London Stansted Airport turned down a wage increase that was meant as a peace offering, people familiar with the matter said.

At a Friday meeting, the majority of flight crew at the budget carrier’s biggest base voted against a deal from chief executive Michael O’Leary for annual raises of up to €22,000 for captains and €11,000 for first officers, said the people, who asked not to be identified as the discussions are private. A spokesman for Ryanair said it doesn’t comment on “rumour or speculation”.

After years of grumbling over working conditions, Ryanair’s aviators have been emboldened by a crisis that saw Europe’s biggest budget airline scrap more than 20,000 flights over botched vacation planning. Pilots are trying to form a companywide group, bypassing the existing structure which requires each of Ryanair’s 86 bases to negotiate deals separately.

Chief people officer Eddie Wilson last week wrote to pilots cautioning that the deal on offer, which includes extra scheduling staff, more base managers and an improved IT system, could be withdrawn in the event pilots don’t fall into line. “If pilots continue to be misled by the false promises of unions, then you will delay or miss out on these big pay increases next month,” he said.

READ SOME MORE

Italian Walkout

Adding to the agitation, Italy’s Fit-Cisl union is proposing a four-hour walkout by Ryanair pilots on October 27th, according to the labour group’s website. An Italian strike would be the first since the start of the cancellations and could trigger similar action among staff at other bases.

–(Bloomberg)