Ongoing Air Canada flight attendant strike is illegal, federal tribunal rules | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: National Post
Author: Christopher Nardi
Publication Date: August 18, 2025 - 11:59

Ongoing Air Canada flight attendant strike is illegal, federal tribunal rules

August 18, 2025

OTTAWA — A federal labour tribunal ruled Monday morning that the ongoing Air Canada flight attendant strike is illegal and that their union’s direction to keep striking is “unlawful.”

The Canada Industrial Relations Board (CIRB) decision came one day after it ordered flight attendants back to work shortly after the Mark Carney Liberals invoked a controversial authority to demand the tribunal put an end to the work stoppage.

Shortly after the CIRB decision Sunday ordering an end to the strike that began Saturday morning, Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) leadership — which represents Air Canada’s flight attendants — publicly ripped up the order and exhorted members to keep striking.

After new hearings on Sunday regarding the legality of the ongoing strike, the CIRB issued its new decision on Monday giving CUPE leadership until noon eastern Monday to declare the strike over.

“The Board finds that the union’s direction to its members to not resume their work duties is a declaration or authorization of strike activity when the collective agreement is in force which is, therefore, an unlawful strike,” reads the CIRB decision shared by Air Canada .

“The union and its officers are ordered to immediately cease all activities that declare or authorize an unlawful strike of its members and to direct the members of the bargaining unit to resume the performance of their duties,” the board added.

In a statement, Air Canada said it estimated that 500,000 flights have been cancelled in recent days due to the ongoing labour dispute.

Saturday, federal Jobs Minister Patty Hajdu directed the CIRB to order both parties to resume operations and resolve their lingering labour dispute through binding arbitration.

To do so, she invoked powers under section 107 of Canada Labour Code, an increasingly controversial power that the Liberals have used roughly a handful of times over the past decade to order federally-legislated industries back to work without going through back-to-work legislation.

Her decision has sparked the ire of all major federal unions, who said in a joint statement through the Canadian Labour Congress Sunday that they stood behind Air Canada flight attendants’ decision to keep striking.

CLC President Bea Bruske said in a statement that union heads came out of an emergency meeting Sunday evening “with a clear message to push back against the government’s attacks on workers’ rights: an attack on one is an attack on all.”

On Monday morning, Carney said it’s important that flight attendants be compensated fairly but did not address the union revolt against his government’s recent order.

“It is disappointing that those negotiations did not come to an agreement. It was the judgement of both the union and the company that they were at an impasse,” Carney noted as he entered a meeting with Ontario Premier Doug Ford.

“We are in a situation where literally hundreds of thousands of Canadians and visitors to our country are being disrupted by this action. I urge both parties to resolve this as quickly as possible,” he added.

National Post

cnardi@postmedia.com

Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark nationalpost.com and sign up for our politics newsletter, First Reading, here.



Unpublished Newswire

 
Snagging the commission to furnish the commissioner-general’s suite in Moshe Safdie’s Habitat complex at Montreal’s Expo 67 was quite a coup for 26-year-old furniture jobber Klaus Nienkamper. He had sailed to Canada from his native Germany in 1960 with only $36 in his pocket, and eked out a living soon after as “right rear vacuum man” at Farb’s Car Wash on Toronto’s King Street West. As Mr. Nienkamper recalled in his eponymous furniture company’s Festschrift, Nienkamper: 50 Years of Excellence from Design to Delivery, published in 2018, “I did not have a factory. My only asset was a...
August 20, 2025 - 18:00 | David Lasker | The Globe and Mail
Patients, doctors, nurses and medical organizations across Canada have sounded the alarm for years about what they call the dire state of emergency room care. The family of a teen who died in Ontario after he waited several hours for urgent medical care is also calling for urgent reforms.
August 20, 2025 - 17:42 | Globe Staff | The Globe and Mail
Ontario Premier Doug Ford says the head of the company that owns Hamilton-based steelmaker Stelco “doesn’t give two hoots” about the workers, pointing to Lourenco Goncalves’s praise for U.S. President Donald Trump’s tariffs on steel. During a press conference in Hamilton, Ont., Ford said Stelco should find a new owner.
August 20, 2025 - 17:19 | | The Globe and Mail