Ryanair Italian pilot union approves labour agreement

Majority of more than 300 back deal after eight months of negotiation

Italian pilots union Anpac said on Tuesday that a majority of its pilots had approved a collective labour agreement with Ryanair in the airline’s latest breakthrough in efforts to quell staff protests around Europe.

The Irish carrier, Europe’s largest budget airline, has suffered its worst ever strikes this summer, but reached agreement with the union representing Irish pilots last week and said it was hopeful it could secure more deals soon.

“We welcome this first [agreement] with our Italian pilots and hope that it will be shortly followed by a similar agreement covering our Irish pilots,” Ryanair chief people officer Eddie Wilson said in a statement. “We have invited our UK, German and Spanish unions to meet with us in the coming days so that we can negotiate and hopefully agree similar pilot [collective labour agreements] in these other larger markets,” he said.

A “large majority” of over 300 Ryanair pilots in Italy approved the deal on Monday after eight months of negotiation, Anpac said in a statement.

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Italy is Ryanair’s second-largest market, behind Britain, with about 20 per cent of its fleet based there. “Anpac is very satisfied with the result, which gives greater protections and guarantees – on top of an appropriate economic compensation – to Ryanair pilots, completing the harmonisation path the Irish carrier began at the end of last year,” the union said in a statement. It declined to give any further details of what compensation had been agreed.

Ryanair passengers have suffered hundreds of flight cancellations this summer because of protests by pilots over employment conditions. Pilots in Germany, Ireland, Sweden, Belgium and the Netherlands went on strike on August 10th in the biggest one-day strike the Irish airline has faced. Anpac said it was working with Fit CISL and Anpav unions to negotiate a collective labour contract for Ryanair flight attendants based in Italy. – Reuters