Summer Chaos At Heathrow Airport Reduced After Hundreds Of Airway Workers Vote To Accept New Pay Offer

Summer Chaos At Heathrow Airport Reduced After Hundreds Of Airway Workers Vote To Accept New Pay Offer

By James Simons-

Summer chaos at Heathrow Airport has been reduced after hundreds of British Airways workers voted to accept a new pay offer.

Strike action during the peak summer holiday was averted after the pay deal was backed by 75% of workers on Friday, the GMBunion said.

Aviation workers who were set to walk out after rejecting an unsatisfactory 10% pay rise are now happy to return to work. In the absence of resolution, the planned strike would have spelt chaos for holidaymakers, and also constituted a burden to airlines who would have needed to re-imburse passengers their flight money.

Workers will now receive an 8% consolidated pay rise, a one-off bonus and the reinstatement of shift pay, the union said.

Nadine Houghton, GMB National Officer, said: “No one wanted a summer strike at Heathrow, but our members had to fight for what was right.

“This improved pay deal came because of their efforts.

“Now these mainly women workers have won pay improvements for themselves – as well as forcing BA to make this offer to the rest of their staff too.

“Our members stood up for themselves and fought for what they were owed.

“These are frontline workers facing harassment and abuse from customers daily.

“The least they deserved is fair pay.”

The announcement is good news to holidaymakers and other travellers who are facing serious disruption at airports, on roads and at ferry terminals as the great summer getaway gets into full swing.

At the Port of Dover, a “critical incident” was declared as passengers endured long queues amid problems with border control staffing.

Travellers have said waits at Dover are the worst they have experienced, with one lorry driver waiting more than 15 hours.

Muhammet Turker, a Turkish lorry driver, told the PA news agency he had been queuing in his HGV in Dover since 6pm on Thursday, and was still waiting to cross the Channel after 10am on Friday morning.

“I’ve been in something like this before, but this is the worst,” he said.

John Till, a railway manager from west Dorset, and his mother, Edna Johnson, 87, were due to travel to the Port of Dover on Friday but reports of the disruption prompted him to spend £400 changing his plans.

“I saw that people had already been queuing for four hours,” the 45-year-old told PA.

“I’m taking my elderly mother over to see some friends in (Bavaria in) Germany, so I have a really long drive on the other side when we arrive.

“I couldn’t run the risk of being stuck in a queue for four hours with no toilets and the horrendous drive the other side, so at half four this morning I made the snap decision to rebook travel with Brittany Ferries and travel from the Port of Poole, which is a lot more expensive.”

The Port of Dover said in a statement: “On behalf of passengers trying to get on their way for a well-earned summer holiday, HGV drivers performing their critical role of delivering goods, our community who are severely impacted, our ferry operators awaiting their customers, our own port staff who have worked so hard in good faith and all of our Kent and Government partners with whom we have prepared together over several months for the busy summer:

“We are deeply frustrated that the resource at the French border overnight and early this morning has been woefully inadequate to meet our predicted demand and even more deeply regret the consequences that will now be felt by so many.”

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