WestJet starts cancelling flights
The Canadian Press - May 18, 2023 - Business Buzz

Photo: The Canadian Press

MONTREAL — WestJet cancelled more than 100 flights on Thursday after talks with the pilots’ union hit a “critical impasse,” throwing travel plans into turmoil for thousands of passengers ahead of the May long weekend.

Some 1,800 pilots at the carrier and its Swoop subsidiary are poised to walk off the job as of 2 a.m. PDT after the Air Line Pilots Association served a strike notice Monday.

WestJet issued a statement early Thursday saying negotiations were stuck “in a stalemate.”

“We remain at a critical impasse with the union and have been left with no choice but to begin taking the painful steps of preparing for the reality of a work stoppage,” CEO Alexis von Hoensbroech said in a release.

Would-be travellers voiced their frustration on social media Thursday, with some saying they’d been stuck on the customer service line for hours and others posting screenshots of problems with refund processing.

Raahina Somani found herself marooned in Calgary on her way back to Vancouver from Edmonton after WestJet cancelled her Thursday night flight.

“Everything’s already gotten booked up. I’m not really sure what we’re going to do,” the master’s student said, noting options with other airlines are becoming slimmer and costlier. “The prices have become so high. For me, my grandma and my dad to go back it’s going to be upwards of $1,000.”

Somani, 23, said her family has rented a car with the aim of driving back to Edmonton on Friday—after staying overnight with family in Calgary, since their hotel has filled up—and grabbing an Air Canada flight home over the weekend.

“My dad’s a bit stressed because he’s on certain medication … and then my grandmother’s sister is coming in (to Vancouver) from out of town tomorrow, because their brother is actually pretty much on his deathbed … so it’s kind of imperative for her to get back ASAP,” she said.

Passengers say they received emails stating a work stoppage might prompt a change in itinerary that “may” entitle them to compensation. “If required, you will be provided with alternate travel arrangements,” although none were proactively offered, Somani said.

WestJet has begun to park the bulk of its fleet using a “measured, phased and safe approach,” the Calgary-based company said.

As of mid-afternoon Thursday, the carrier had cancelled 111 flights, or 31%, of those scheduled for the day, according to tracking service FlightAware. The vast majority are out of Calgary or Toronto’s Pearson airport, with affected routes ranging from London to Las Vegas, Barcelona and Saskatoon.

So far, 29 flights, or 8%, of those scheduled on Friday have been cancelled. Passengers are now unable to make online bookings for WestJet flights on major routes such as Calgary-Vancouver and Toronto-Calgary until Tuesday.

The airline said it will continue to operate its regional services including its fleet of 47 planes at WestJet Encore and WestJet Link, which connects its Calgary hub with smaller cities in B.C. and Alberta. Regional pilots are not involved in the current bargaining.

The fallout could be “extremely damaging to the WestJet brand” and finances, as well as to pilots’ careers, said Duncan Dee, former chief operating officer at Air Canada.

“You can either come out a hero or a zero. And in this particular case, both WestJet management and their unions are at a very great risk of coming out as zeros—and the heroes could very well be the other airlines that are going to pick up the slack,” he said in a phone interview.

In 1998, a 13-day pilot strike at Air Canada grounded 650 flights and 60,000 passengers daily, costing the company $133 million.

Rival carriers sought to seize on the customer uncertainty and discontent this week.

Porter Airlines, which recently launched a cross-country expansion, announced Thursday it will match passengers’ WestJet rewards status “with one of our VIPorter Avid Traveller levels.” Swoop competitor Flair Airlines stated it would add flights to its Vancouver-Calgary and Vancouver-Edmonton routes, cheekily encouraging travellers on its homepage, “don’t strike out your long weekend.”

WestJet and Swoop operate 130 narrow-body 737s and seven wide-body 787 Dreamliners—most of which will need to be parked in the event of a strike—according to Transport Canada’s civil aircraft registry.

With more than 4,000 flights originally scheduled over the next seven days, the airline carries 28% of Canada’s domestic market, while Air Canada runs 47%, according to Cirium.


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