Cabin crews at BA lose staffing case
BA argued it was entitled unilaterally to reduce cabin crew numbers on board its worldwide and Eurofleet flights as those are not terms of individual cabin crew members' contracts.
But the Unite union said it was in breach of contract by imposing the changes as the existing crew complements were fixed by collective agreements with the unions and were "expressly incorporated" into individual contracts.
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Hide AdGiving his ruling in London, judge Sir Christopher Holland said they were not incorporated and so the claim failed at the outset. BA said: "We are extremely pleased with today's High Court ruling that the modest changes we made to onboard crew numbers on flights from Heathrow were reasonable, did not breach crew contracts and can remain in place.
"Unite's central demand over the last three months has been that we reverse these changes, despite the severe financial impact this would have on the company at a time when we are facing a second year of record annual losses.
"Talks continue under the auspices of the TUC."
Unite is re-balloting its 12,000 cabin crew members at BA for industrial action, with a result due on Monday.