“The work with the
unions, with the organisations that represent TAP workers will continue, but
obviously the worst that could happen, at a time when the company is recovering
and showing the first positive signs of this recovery, [would be] a strike that
disrupts the life of the company”, said the Minister of Infrastructure and
Housing.
Pedro Nuno Santos said
he was well aware of the salary cuts that workers are subject to and the
pressure that this puts on their lives, but he noted that these cuts cannot
begin to end before the company's situation is stabilised.
“We had a quarter in
which the airline made a profit, but TAP has, in 2022, still an accumulated
loss and has a restructuring plan that is still very challenging to implement”,
said the minister.
However, he noted, a
strike, in addition to the disruption it causes, does not take into account
“the tremendous effort that the Portuguese people have made so that TAP did not
disappear in 2020”.
“We have the
expectation, as we have had until now, on the part of the workers, of cooperation
to recover and be able to save the company”, he said, stating that this is the
best way to protect jobs and also to respect the capital injection that the
country put into the company.
Tap has just announced that, following on from the summer fiasco, they will arbitrarily be cancelling "seven flights a day" over the Christmas holiday season. Brilliant marketing: anyone travelling over this period will now give preference to another carrier. The "Portuguese people" seem to have made a bad investment.
By Peter Kirby Higgs from Lisbon on 05 Nov 2022, 23:43