This Article is From Feb 05, 2019

Pay Flying Allowances By February 10: Air India Pilots' Unions

Pilot unions of Air India have written to the company asking that their flying allowances be paid by February 10 or they will not accept any changes in the duty roster for February.

Pay Flying Allowances By February 10: Air India Pilots' Unions

The Air India failed to pay to its over 20,000 employees on time for most of the months last year. (File)

New Delhi:

Pilot unions of Air India have written to the company asking that their flying allowances be paid by February 10 or they will not accept any changes in the duty roster for February.

Flying allowance is paid to a pilot on the basis of the number of flight hours they have clocked in a month.

"If flying allowance is not paid by 10th of February 2019, we will not take any changes in roster and will maintain CMS (crew management roster) printed roster already issued for the month of February," stated a letter written on February 3 by the Indian Commercial Pilots" Association (ICPA) and Indian Pilots' Guild (IPG).

According to airline sources, the monthly duty roster has to be changed last minute if a flight crew member does not show up. In such an eventuality, an employee on standby mode has to be called in as a replacement, the sources added.

The ICPA represents the pilots who fly the narrow-body aircraft of Air India whereas IPG is the union of pilots who fly wide-body aircraft of the national carrier.

"Over the past one year, the delay in salary and flying allowance has mounted our financial instability and we are unable to cope with the financial stress," the February 3 letter of the two unions stated.

The Air India had failed to pay to its over 20,000 employees on time for most of the months last year. Like other public sector enterprises, the airline is supposed to pay the salaries on the last day of the month.

The government will provide a total of Rs 3,900 crore for servicing Air India's loans transferred to a special purpose vehicle, according to Budget documents released on February 1.

The government has been working on ways to revive the fortunes of Air India, which is estimated to have a debt burden of Rs 55,000 crore. Out of the total amount, about Rs 29,000 crore is to be transferred to Air India Asset Holding Ltd.

The Air India Asset Holding Ltd, a special purpose vehicle, has been set up as part of financial restructuring of the debt-laden national carrier.

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