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Business groups advise Ottawa to prevent Air Canada pilots strike

Around 100 organization groups on Wednesday advised Ottawa to prevent a strike by Air Canada pilots, stating an interruption would interfere with supply chains and spoil Canada's track record as a trustworthy partner.

Air Canada said on Monday it was completing plans to suspend most of its operations as soon as talks with the pilots' union were nearing a deadlock over inflexible wage needs. The union says the airline company needs to get serious at the bargaining table.

In a letter to Labour Minister Steven MacKinnon, the groups noted he had actioned in quickly last month to stop an interruption at the country's 2 primary rail business, requiring staff members back to work and imposing binding arbitration.

The federal government requires to take decisive action. The effects of a labor interruption at Air Canada will ripple throughout the economy, they said.

Must the celebrations not concern a negotiated contract, the federal government should ... be prepared to act ahead of time to prevent yet another destructive disruption by referring the matter to binding arbitration where a neutral arbitrator can solve any outstanding problems.

A strike might begin as soon as Sept 18. In a statement, MacKinnon's office stated Ottawa thought in the collective bargaining procedure.

Air Canada and its inexpensive subsidiary, Air Canada Rouge, together run nearly 670 flights daily. A shutdown might affect 110,000 travelers daily.

If Canadian companies are unable to provide our products to market on time, our worldwide partners will start to look for permanent alternatives, business groups warned. A strike will strengthen a growing understanding that Canada is not a. trusted trading partner.

(source: Reuters)