Qantas flights resumed earlier today following
approval from the Civil Aviation Safety Authority (CASA).
Fair Work Australia granted the Australian
Government’s application to terminate all industrial action by the
Australian Licenced Engineers Union, the Transport Workers Union,
the Australian and International Pilots Union and Qantas.
Under the orders issued by Fair Work Australia,
there will now be up to 21 days of negotiations between the
parties. No industrial action can take place during this period.
If no agreement is reached during this period, binding arbitration
will take place under the control of Fair Work Australia.
Qantas Chief Executive Officer Alan Joyce said the decision would
provide certainty for Qantas passengers and all of our employees.
“This is a good outcome that will enable us to begin
operating flights this afternoon on a limited schedule with the
approval of the regulator, CASA,” Mr Joyce said.
“Operations will resume progressively from this afternoon. Our
focus is bringing our schedule back to normal as soon as possible.
Safety will remain our first priority at all times ... The
industrial process has now passed into the hands of the
independent umpire. All parties will be treated equally and we
will respect the decisions that are made. We have new and existing agreements with 12 unions. We now anticipate the
conclusion of agreements with the remaining three.
This
has been a challenging period for Qantas, its employees, its
customers and its shareholders. We sincerely regret the
impact on customers of industrial action over recent months, and
the effect on employees.”
Tourism Australia Managing Director Andrew
McEvoy welcomed the decision by Fair Work Australia to terminate
all industrial action and allow Qantas to resume international and
domestic operations.
“This is a breakthrough for Australian tourism -
an industry which generates $250 million a day in spending for our
economy,” Mr McEvoy said. “The decision provides certainty for
tourism operators and, most importantly for the tourism industry,
allowing Qantas to progressively resume flights. “Australian
tourism is open for business and we need to ensure whatever
existing damage to our industry can now be minimised.
“There will be a backlog to clear, in particular
from our international markets. Interestingly, we have become very
good at clearing backlogs given recent issues such as the volcanic
ash cloud and should see normal service start to resume within the
next 24 hours,” he said.
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