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Air Canada resumes flights following directive ending strike

Air Canada will resume flights Sunday, after the Canadian Industrial Relations Board acted upon a directive by the country's Minister of Jobs Patty Hajdu. The board acted in response to a strike by cabin crew that had caused around 700 flights to be suspended daily.

The CIRB ordered Air Canada to resume its operations, and all Air Canada and Air Canada Rouge Flight Attendants to return to work by 2 p.m. The airline issued a press release stating that the time was 1800 GMT (1800 ET).

The government issued the directive after moving on Saturday to end the strike, and to require binding arbitration in order to break an impasse contract. This was a move that the largest airline of the country had requested but which unionized flight attendants strongly opposed.

After months of contract negotiations, Air Canada cabin staff walked out of the workplace on Saturday. This was the first time in 1985 that thousands of crew members had done so. The airline cancelled flights in anticipation of the strike, forcing over 100,000 passengers to find alternate travel arrangements or stay at home.

Air Canada announced that flights would resume on Sunday night, but would continue to be cancelled over the next seven to ten days until the schedule is stabilized and returned back to normal.

(source: Reuters)