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Australia's Qantas told to pay $114,000 to 3 sacked workers in landmark outsourcing case

A court on Monday bought Australia's Qantas Airways to pay a combined A$ 170,000. ($ 114,000) to 3 luggage handlers it unlawfully sacked in. 2020, indicating a huge damages expense for a lawsuit involving about. 1,700 former workers whose jobs were outsourced.

Federal Court Judge Michael Lee said Qantas must pay each of. the fired workers A$ 30,000, A$ 40,000 and A$ 100,000 respectively. for non-economic loss to show the damage sustained when the. airline company laid off them and their coworkers to avoid industrial. action.

The carrier needs to use those payouts as test cases as it. negotiates with a union on an overall damages expense for all of the. former ground workers. Qantas had actually declared the sackings were. called for as a cost-cutting step during the COVID-19 pandemic. and fought the commercial claim all the method to the High Court.

Lee stated he found if Qantas had not unlawfully outsourced its. ground handling operations in 2020, it would have done so. lawfully in 2021 to conserve about A$ 100 million a year.

Though the judgment did not offer a final payment figure, it. sets the tone for the last major legal fight for the airline as. it attempts to recuperate from a reputational scary stretch in. relation to its actions during and immediately after pandemic. constraints from 2020 to 2022.

The airline company said it Might it would pay A$ 120 million to settle. a regulator suit implicating it of selling tickets on currently. cancelled flights in the months after Australia's global. border resumed. It was also implicated of pressing the federal. federal government to stop competing Qatar Airways from offering more. flights to Australia.

Qantas says it's turned over a new leaf, stated Michael. Kaine, nationwide secretary of the Transport Employee Union that. brought the commercial dismissal case.

It's time to prove it. After non-stop lengthening this. case and denying employees justice, Qantas must do whatever in. its power to guarantee appropriate payment.

Qantas CEO Vanessa Hudson, who started in the function in. November 2023, stated in a declaration the company apologised to the. workers affected by its choice and we understand that the onus is. on Qantas to gain from this.

Lee, the judge, informed Qantas and the TWU to go over. settlement for all the sacked employees and go back to court on. Nov. 15.

(source: Reuters)