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French easyJet Pilots Issue Warning To Airline's CEO

French easyJet Pilots Issue Warning To Airline's CEO



A letter sent from easyJet's French pilots to the airline's CEO has been leaked with the contents being made public. The letter makes stinging allegations about the airline, its management, and its future in light of the crippling delays and cancellations that are taking a daily toll on the carrier's operations and crew.

Another day, another problem

In what is already proving to be a problematic summer season for EasyJet, the airline has been dealt yet another blow as it grapples with ongoing operational issues and staff shortages. The trade union that represents French pilots employed by the airline has written a blistering letter to the airline's Chief Executive officer, Johan Lungren, making a number of allegations.

In the letter, a copy of which was leaked to news, the union warns that the low-cost giant stands to suffer an exodus of customers this summer. The threat follows several difficult weeks recently for the airline, the latest culmination of which were thousands of passengers being left stranded by the cancellation of hundreds of flights during last week's UK school half-term break and the Platinum Jubilee bank holiday weekend.

The letter goes on to accuse the airline's management of presiding over "unprecedented chaos", canceling viable flights, and suffering what it describes as "operational meltdowns" after its executives failed to heed warnings that the carrier could not cope with surging demand for flights this summer.


Scathing attack on management

The document, written by the EasyJet branch of the French SNPL pilots' union, continues its withering attack on the management holed up at the airline's Luton Airport headquarters. It claims that its members believe that the ongoing disruption to the airline's operations this summer has yet to peak – a situation it describes as a "frightening prospect."

The pilots' letter accuses senior executives of being fooled into believing they could deliver a summer schedule with fewer flight crew, cabin crew, and flight planning officers. The letter adds that operational employees, who were aware of the issues but were not listened to, are now witnessing the consequences.


The four-page document cites various issues currently plaguing the budget carrier, including the cancellation of multiple flights as a direct result of a lack of crew - often with just a few hours or even just minutes before departure.

The deeply critical letter is unrelenting in its scathing attack on how the giant airline group is being run. The union alleges that in some cases, managers at the airline's Integrated Control Centre (ICC) at Luton, which controls the operations over easyJet's entire network, had often waited until the very last minute to cancel early morning flights despite knowing the night before that no crew was available.

In its stinging critique of the airline's leadership, the SNPL accuses the top managers of being "penny wise and pound foolish" by letting too many staff go during the pandemic - actions which are now "reaping a whirlwind" by leaving thousands of passengers frustrated and disappointed with the airline. The union believes that many once-loyal passengers will not return to the carrier as a result.

Operational incapabilities

The letter claims that due to staff shortages, the ICC is too stretched to monitor operations in real-time adequately and is often lagging hours behind real-time happenings around the network. The letter adds that the union has evidence of "some cancellations which were avoidable: crew ready to go, serviceable aircraft, passengers ready, but with ICC not having the local picture."

In a stark warning to the airline's top brass, the SNPL pilots state in their letter that they had raised the issue of the effect of stress on aircrew caused by the pandemic and subsequent disruption, calling for extra support and saying that the mental health of the airline's aircrew is now at stake.

The pilots said the problems at the airline were leaving staff as demoralized as they had been during the mass grounding of flights caused by the pandemic. In a list of requests to management, the union asks for reinforced mental health support to be made available due to the stress and disruption of recent weeks, adding that mental health, following an emotional roller coaster, is at stake.

Closing out its unsparing and caustic correspondence, the pilots claim that,


"Literally hundreds of employees in distress have fed back how chaotic our operations have become recently, to unprecedented levels. We are actually convinced that our disruption hasn’t even peaked yet and frankly this is a frightening prospect.”

Indications of wider discontent

easyJet currently has around 50 French-based pilots operating from airports including Paris Orly, Lyon, and Toulouse. However, sources within the airline have advised that dissent is rife across the airline and that the complaints and concerns being put forward by the SNPL are reflected across the airline.

In response to the letter issued by the French pilots, a statement issued by easyJet said,


"We remain in continuous dialogue with its unions and would be responding directly to the SNPL. We are absolutely focused on our daily operation and continue to monitor this very closely and will not hesitate to take action as needed. Delivering a safe and reliable operation for our customers and crew is the airline's highest priority.

EasyJet continues to operate up to around 1,700 flights and carries around a quarter of a million customers every day. However, the ongoing challenging operating environment continues to have an impact which is resulting in a small proportion of flight cancellations."

The airline also claims that it continues to offer an extensive mental health service for staff that has remained in their positions since the pandemic.












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