French air traffic controllers on strike
FRENCH air traffic controllers went on strike yesterday to demand better working and retirement conditions, prompting the cancelation of nearly half of flights across France.
The powerful SNCTA union called the two-day strike, saying the government had refused to open negotiations about matters such as how to better organize schedules to account for downtime and more traffic.
The start of the walkout led to the cancellation of 40 percent of flights across France yesterday.
Meanwhile, the civil aviation agency called for the cancelation of 50 percent of flights today due to staff shortages.
Air France said long-haul flights were not affected, and guaranteed some 60 percent of medium-haul flights from and to Paris’ main airport, Charles de Gaulle. The carrier said it would ground two of three flights at Paris’ second-largest airport, Orly.
Among other things, strikers are protesting against government plans to increase the maximum retirement age for air traffic controllers from 57 by 2017 to 59 in 2020, said Nicolas Bertolissio, an SNCTA representative and a controller in the Basel-Mulhouse airport in eastern France.
While the union isn’t altogether opposed to that, it wants a study into the health effects of controllers working until age 59, Bertolissio said.
He said many other countries in Europe generally allow for traffic controllers to retire at 55 or 56.
The strike caused passengers like Mathias Mourier, 24, who was trying to fly to his job in southern England as an au pair, to scramble for alternatives.
He said he will be spending an extra couple of nights at his grandmother’s house in the Paris region.
“I was about to get my flight to go to Exeter ... and finally it was cancelled because of the strike,” he told reporters at Paris’ Roissy airport.
“So I have to wait until Saturday because all the other flights were full ... It is the only solution.”
Jackie Knight, who was hoping to return home to Somerset, England, after a family visit to Disneyland Paris, said that they were forced to connect through London, but they were taking the problems in their stride.
“Rather than being home at about 3 or 4, it will be in the evening. But we’ll get there,” she said.
Further strikes are planned from April 16 to 18 and April 29 to May 2, dates that coincide with the spring school holidays in France.
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