13 Sep 2023

Qantas illegally fired 1700 workers during pandemic - top court

5:25 pm on 13 September 2023
08 November 2021, Saxony, Dresden: A Qantas Airways Airbus A380 takes off from Dresden Airport. The aircraft will make the long-haul flight to Sydney following maintenance work at Elbe Flugzeugwerke (EFW). Photo: Sebastian Kahnert/dpa-Zentralbild/dpa (Photo by Sebastian Kahnert / dpa-Zentralbild / dpa Picture-Alliance via AFP)

The ruling found that Qantas breached Australia's Fair Work Act, which protects employee rights. Photo: Sebastian Kahnert/dpa-Zentralbild/dpa via AFP

By Hannah Ritchie, BBC News

Australia's highest court has rejected a bid by Qantas to overturn a ruling that it illegally outsourced 1700 jobs during the pandemic.

The court unanimously upheld that the carrier had unlawfully laid off staff at 10 airports in November 2020.

The ruling found that Qantas breached Australia's Fair Work Act, which protects employee rights.

Qantas apologised for the outsourcing, but maintained it was a necessary financial measure during Covid.

The airline fired baggage handlers and cleaners at airports across Australia at a time when the nation had closed its borders and business was plummeting.

"As we have said from the beginning, we deeply regret the personal impact the outsourcing decision had on all those affected and we sincerely apologise," it said in a statement on Wednesday.

The High Court of Australia upheld that while Qantas had "sound commercial reasons" for the move, it had deprived workers of their rights to "engage in protected industrial action and ... bargaining."

Workers and unionists described the outcome as a "huge win" after a "David and Goliath" struggle.

The Transport Workers' Union said the finding was proof that "the entire Qantas board must be replaced by new directors including a worker representative".

Its national secretary Michael Kaine called the carrier's actions "the largest sacking found to be illegal" in Australian history and promised that workers would now seek compensation in court.

Qantas CEO Alan Joyce speaks before the last Qantas Boeing 747 airliner departs from Sydney airport to the US on July 22, 2020. The downturn in the airline industry following travel restrictions imposed by the COVID-19 outbreak forced Qantas to retire its grounded 747s after flying with the Australian carrier for almost 50 years. (Photo by PETER PARKS / AFP)

Then-Qantas boss Alan Joyce. Photo: AFP / Peter Parks

Qantas has faced public outrage in recent weeks, after reaping record profits amid a series of scandals related to its actions throughout Covid - including allegations it sold tickets on thousands of flights that it had already cancelled.

The airline was also accused of supporting a government block on the expansion of Qatar Airways flights to and from Australia - a move which critics say would have made the market more competitive and driven down fares.

Alan Joyce, the long-time boss of Qantas, announced his early departure from the airline last week amid the mounting controversies.

Joyce's final payout has been valued at about AU$22m (NZ$24m), according to the ABC.

His successor Vanessa Hudson is the airline's first ever female leader and has promised to restore its bruised reputation.

- This story was first published by BBC

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