This Article is From Apr 10, 2024

After Vistara, Trouble Brews For Air India As Technicians Plan Strike

The strike will further roil India's aviation industry that saw hundreds of flight cancellations last week after some pilots at Vistara, jointly owned by Air India's owner Tata Group and Singapore Airlines Ltd., called in sick en masse.

After Vistara, Trouble Brews For Air India As Technicians Plan Strike

Air India said the situation is being monitored closely.

Trouble for Air India Ltd. is mounting with aircraft technicians planning a strike later this month after its pilots voiced concerns last week about being overworked and underpaid.

Technicians at AI Engineering Services Ltd. - a state-run maintenance, repair and overhaul firm and an erstwhile Air India unit - will strike on April 23 due to various issues affecting their "well-being" and "professional growth," All India Aircraft Maintenance Engineering Union wrote in a letter dated April 8 to the chief executive officer.

A representative for Air India said the situation is being monitored closely.

The unrest among aviation workers risks thwarting India's air travel boom. Pilots and aircraft engineers are crucial to support the country's rapid fleet expansion after IndiGo, Air India and Akasa placed orders for more than 1,100 aircraft combined.

The strike will further roil India's aviation industry that saw hundreds of flight cancellations last week after some pilots at Vistara, jointly owned by Air India's owner Tata Group and Singapore Airlines Ltd., called in sick en masse due to fatigue and pay cuts. The airline is cutting back 25 to 30 flights a day to create a buffer in its rosters to prevent more cancellations.

AI Engineering's biggest client is Air India.

Its staff are upset over lack of career advancement opportunities because they haven't been promoted in the past seven years, according to the letter. The management promised a revised pay structure for technicians who have worked for at least two years with the firm but hasn't followed through. The contractual employees, who form 75% of the company's workforce, feel discriminated because they have to serve longer notice periods and aren't given as many benefits as the permanent staff, the letter said.

A representative for AI Engineering said the management has initiated discussions with the union to resolve the issue. AI Engineering has revised salaries of all staff except technicians as a court case is pending, it said. The company is planning to revise the pay of technicians after the union withdraws a court case, wherein it requested equal pay for contractual employees and permanent ones.

Meanwhile, Air India pilots have echoed Vistara staff's concerns, saying the issues of being underpaid and overworked are "systemic" across Tata's aviation empire.

Aircraft technicians have urged the management to resolve issues to avoid potential disruptions from the strike, the letter said.

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