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SAS

SAS in talks while staff prepare for bankruptcy

Despite intensive negotiations between Scandinavian Airlines, SAS, and union representatives the company and staff have not been able to reach an agreement and bankruptcy may be imminent.

SAS in talks while staff prepare for bankruptcy

“Negotiations are going shit,” SAS chairmain Fritz Schur told Danish radio on Sunday afternoon.

SAS has been holding talks with pilot and cabin crew unions in Copenhagen all weekend to negotiate the terms of salaries, pensions and work conditions outlined in a rescue package that was aimed at salvaging the troubled airline.

A deal must be reached before the SAS board meets on Sunday evening to determine the airline’s future, but in the late afternoon the management announced that they would not accept the terms laid out by the unions.

“Unfortunately there is no deal with any of the unions yet,” SAS said in a statement.

The pilots’ unions had presented their bid shortly after midnight between Saturday and Sunday but it did not come close to fulfilling the SAS management’s demands, despite assurances to the contrary from the union’s leaders.

Jens Lippestad, chairman for the Norwegian SAS pilots association and head of negotiations for the pilots’ unions, had claimed that the Swedish, Danish and Norwegian unions’ bid complied with SAS “on all areas, and ensures that negotiations can be completed in a successful manner.”

Some success was initially reported from negotiations between SAS and the cabin crew unions.

“We feel SAS is being attentive,” one source told the Ritzau news agency.

The Swedish cabin crew union had been cooperating with its Danish and Norwegian counterparts to negotiate a new deal.

“We handed in a joint proposal on Friday…The company has said it wants the same terms in the different countries and that is why we are cooperating,” said union press secretary Jennie Zetterström.

But, in the end, SAS management rejected the cabin crews’ terms, too.

The company encouraged all staff members who are currently travelling to ensure they have enough cash to manage on their own in case bankruptcy is announced.

The company also ordered all planes to be refuelled so that they can return home in the event of bankruptcy.

Some time after 5.30pm, Schur and two other board members reportedly left Kastrup for Stockholm, where a “crisis meeting” with bank representatives was scheduled for 8pm, daily Dagens Nyheter reported on Sunday night.

TT/The Local/nr

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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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