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SAS staff face ‘worst pay’ in Sweden: report

A last ditch savings plan to save SAS would make cabin personnel among the lowest paid in the Swedish job market, it emerged on Thursday, amid reports that the airline is closer to bankruptcy than previously thought.

SAS staff face 'worst pay' in Sweden: report

SAS cabin personnel who are paid by the hour would see their wages slashed to 80 kronor ($11.77) per hour, among the lowest wages on the Swedish job market, according to the TT news agency.

“Salaries should be 70 percent of a full time wage when calculated at an hourly rate. That would be 80 kronor an hour compared to today’s 150 kronor per hour,” TT reports the savings plan as stating.

Working a full 40-hour week at 80 kronor per hour yields a monthly pre-tax salary of barely 13,000 kronor.

“You can’t live on 80 kronor per hour. This is just terrible,” a SAS stewardess who has worked with the company since the mid 1980s told the Aftonbladet newspaper.

A SAS spokesperson disputed the TT report, saying the 80 kronor per hour figure is inaccurate, but refrained from providing any specific details until a new agreement with unions is reached.

The revelations come amid reports in the Danish media that SAS could go bankrupt in a matter of weeks if management is unable to win approval for its saving plans.

Citing several sources within the airline, Danish newspaper Politiken wrote that SAS has already drawn up hundreds of pages of contingency plans of how to deal with bankruptcy, including procedures for handling stranded passengers and the expected lines at Scandinavian airports.

“It’s not true that we have money in the bank to survive the rest of the year,” a centrally placed source at SAS told the paper.

Meanwhile, the head of Sweden’s largest trade union federation, LO, criticized the airline for issuing a de facto ultimatum to workers to accept massive wage cuts or bankrupting the company.

“If we go along with this, where will it all end?,” Karl-Petter Thorwaldsson told the TT news agency, arguing SAS’s ultimatum puts Sweden’s entire collective wage negotiation model at risk.

“That’s why we sometimes say that it’s better to shutter operations than to worsen collective agreements.”

At 12.30pm on Friday, SAS entered into negotiations with eight union groups representing aircraft personnel.

The talks are expected to continue until Sunday afternoon.

TT/AFP/The Local

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SAS

‘We agree to disagree’: Still no progress in marathon SAS strike talks

By lunchtime on Friday, talks between the Scandinavian airline SAS and unions representing striking pilots were still stuck on "difficult issues".

'We agree to disagree': Still no progress in marathon SAS strike talks

“We agree that we disagree,” Roger Klokset, from the Norwegian pilots’ union, said at lunchtime outside the headquarters of the Confederation of Swedish Enterprise in Stockholm, where talks are taking place. “We are still working to find a solution, and so long as there is still some point in continuing negotiations, we will do that.” 

Mats Ruland, a mediator for the Norwegian government, said that there were “still several difficult issues which need to be solved”. 

At 1pm on Friday, the two sides took a short break from the talks for lunch, after starting at 9am. On Thursday, they negotiated for 15 hours, breaking off at 1am on Friday morning. 

READ ALSO: What’s the latest on the SAS plane strike?

Marianne Hernæs, SAS’s negotiator on Friday told journalists she was tired after sitting at the negotiating table long into the night. 

“We need to find a model where we can meet in the middle and which can ensure that we pull in the income that we are dependent on,” she said. 

Klokset said that there was “a good atmosphere” in the talks, and that the unions were sticking together to represent their members.

“I think we’ve been extremely flexible so far. It’s ‘out of this world’,’ said Henrik Thyregod, with the Danish pilots’ union. 

“This could have been solved back in December if SAS had not made unreasonable demands on the pilots,” Klokset added. 

The strike, which is now in its 12th day, has cost SAS up to 130m kronor a day, with 2,550 flights cancelled by Thursday, affecting 270,000 passengers. 

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