Frankfurt airport strike extended to late Tuesday
Travelers in Europe face further delays and flight cancellations this week as ground staff at Frankfurt airport plan to extend their strike until early on Tuesday, with neither side in the dispute showing any sign of giving ground.
The strike by apron controllers at Europe's third-busiest airport in terms of passenger numbers, which grounded hundreds of flights last week, went into a third day on Monday and was scheduled to continue until 11:00 p.m. EST on Tuesday.
A spokesman for the GdF union said it was quite likely that the workers would strike again on Wednesday.
The walkouts started last week after GdF and airport operator Fraport
Fraport said 231 flights, of a total 1,250 scheduled for Monday, would be cancelled, with a similar number to follow on Tuesday.
Lufthansa
The situation will not be as bad on Tuesday, with only around 160 flights cancelled, Lufthansa said. A further eight flights on Wednesday were also cancelled, according to its website.
Air Berlin
The apron controllers, who represent about 1 percent of Fraport's staff at the airport, want higher pay, arguing their jobs have become more complex since the fourth runway started operating last October.
Fraport has said demands for pay increases of between 50 and 70 percent are unreasonable, and has called on the union to resume talks.
However, neither side has shown any signs of backing down. The union says it could strike for weeks yet, while Fraport has said it can continue to use other operations management staff.
Fraport estimates that two days of walkouts last week cost it 3.5-4.0 million euros ($4.6-5.3 million) in lost revenues. Analysts estimate that Lufthansa may have lost 40 million euros in revenues during that time.
Silvia Quandt analyst Stefan Kick said Fraport was making the right move by holding out, even at the risk of a protracted battle, rather than giving in to workers' demands.
If Fraport agreed to the wage increases the company would run the risk that other small but important employee groups also ask for massive wage increases, he said.
The GdF, which also represented air traffic controllers in a bitter wage dispute last year, must give 24 hours' notice of any further strikes.
(Reporting by Maria Sheahan and Peter Maushagen; Editing by Greg Mahlich and Erica Billingham)
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