Air Canada pilots vote in favour of new contract, eliminating risk of strike

Air Canada pilots have voted to ratify a new four-year labour deal with the country’s largest carrier, the union said on Thursday, eliminating the risk of a work stoppage, despite concerns by some members about pay for entry-level aviators.

The agreement received 67 per cent votes in favour, said the Air Line Pilots Association (ALPA), which represents the workers. Terms of the agreement were not immediately available.

“We look forward to working under these improved pay rates and working conditions,” said Charlene Hudy, chair of the Air Canada ALPA Master Executive Council.

Air Canada averted a strike in September by reaching a last-minute deal with the union, which represents more than  5,200 of its pilots. But the tentative agreement was widely criticized by pilots on social media and even within the union local.

A person in a yellow vest walks on the tarmac near the landing gear of a parked airplane. The photo does not capture the entire plane, just the back and part of a wing.
An Air Canada Jazz pilot performs a walk around of a Dash 8-400 aircraft after arriving at West Kootenay Regional Airport, in Castlegar, B.C., in October 2024. One issue at contention during negotiations was wages, with pilots looking for pay comparable to their American counterparts. (Darryl Dyck/The Canadian Press)

Hudy had told a virtual meeting that she would resign if the deal were rejected, two Air Canada pilots told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

One committee member in the local quit his post, citing a “fundamental disagreement” with the direction taken by the union in presenting the agreement to members, according to resignation letter seen by Reuters. 

The airline had been at the negotiating table with the union for the past 15 months, with the pilots demanding wages that would narrow the pay gap with their American counterparts at carriers like United Airlines. 

The contract goes into effect immediately and expires on Sept. 29, 2027.

In a post on social media platform X, Air Canada said it welcomed the vote.