BA boss urged to put redundancy plans ‘back in the hold’

Willie Walsh, the boss of British Airways’ owner IAG, defended the firm’s decision to make staff redundant.

British Airways must put its plans to make staff redundant “back in the hold”, the chairman of the Transport Select Committee has said.

Conservative Huw Merriman said, whilst it is clear that the aviation sector “is on its knees right now”, the extension of the Government’s furlough scheme until October would allow BA employees to keep their jobs despite most flights being grounded.

It comes after BA boss Willie Walsh told the Transport Select Committee on Monday that “almost a third of BA staff are facing redundancy”.

Merriman said the aviation sector in general “needs to do more to support its staff”.

“It just feels as if British Airways are using this as an opportunity to undertake long-held reforms towards terms and conditions.

“I asked the chief executive [Mr Willie Walsh] if he’d be willing to allow those employees to share the proceeds of growth if things return back to normal times and he refused to give that assurance.

“We have had thousands of BA staff contact me and other members of the committee.

“They clearly are the best of employees, they care about their carrier and they care about each other.

“And I hope that BA will use the welcome extension of furlough to put these redundancy plans back in the hold where they deserve,” he told MPs during the debate on Covid-19.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak’s announcement that the UK scheme to pay wages of workers on leave because of coronavirus will be extended to October was designed to prevent a so-called “cliff edge” in which employers, such as BA, could begin mass redundancies.

Following the hearing, a spokesperson for BA’s owner, IAG, said the company welcomed the furlough extension but added: “While this brings some welcome relief, it’s not a permanent financial solution.

“It merely buys us a few extra days to address the restructuring that our business requires to survive this unprecedented crisis.”

Giving evidence to the Transport Select Committee on Monday, Mr Walsh, chief executive of IAG, said there was “nothing positive” about the Government’s plans for passengers travelling into the UK to face a two-week quarantine period.

“The announcements yesterday of a 14-day period [for people] coming into the UK, it’s definitely going to make it worse.

“There’s nothing positive in anything that I heard the Prime Minister say yesterday.

“We had been planning to resume, on a pretty significant basis, our flying in July.

“I think we’d have to review that based on what the Prime Minister said yesterday,” Mr Walsh said.

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