(Mainichi Japan) April 22, 2010
Four of Japan Airlines' (JAL) labor unions have decided to merge into two larger bodies in a bid to enhance their influence over management as the airline moves to make drastic cuts to its workforce.
The JAL Flight Crew Union and the Japan Airlines Domestic Pilot Union, consisting of some 1,100 JAL and 670 former JAS pilots, respectively, plan to consolidate on June 1. Similarly, the Japan Airlines Labor Union and the Japan Airlines Domestic Labor Union, comprised of approximately 70 JAL and 650 former JAS ground staff, respectively, are scheduled to merge by the end of June.
Both flight crew and ground staff unions will hold separate extraordinary conventions in May, and begin preparing for the planned consolidations.
Currently, JAL has a total of eight labor unions, including the largest JAL Labor Union, as a result of a series of labor-management confrontations and the merger between JAL and JAS in 2002, leading to criticism that the complex relationship between the company and its labor unions is contributing to the airline's high costs.
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