The Pilots Delivering Your Amazon Packages Are Ready to Strike
https://www.wired.com/story/amazon-air-pilots-vote-strike-delays/
Pilots for Amazons largest air freight provider voted to strike, complaining of low pay and high turnover. If a strike happens in the new year, Amazon deliveries could be impacted.
Caitlin Harrington
Business
Dec 5, 2023 7:00 AM
Amazon deliveries could be headed for some turbulence in the new year. Pilots for US-based Air Transport International, a cargo airline that ferries Amazon packages from its fulfillment centers to airports nearer to its customers, voted to authorize a strike last month. During the three and a half years the union has been negotiating with ATI, wages in the industry have soared, and ATIs pilots complain that their pay has fallen behind. Meanwhile, they say ATI is facing record attrition as pilots jump ship to better-paying carriers.
A strike could throw a wrench in Amazons logistics network. ATI, owned by holding company ATSG, operates half of the 80 US aircraft currently in service for Amazon, according to an estimate by Planespotters. But the pilots, who are represented by the Air Line Pilots Association union, cant walk out until at least next year.
Federal law requires airline labor disputes to be mediated by the US governments National Mediation Board, which will implement a 30-day cooling-off period if it determines the parties have reached an impasse and they refuse arbitration. If a resolution isnt reached during that time, the pilots can walk off the job or the airline can lock them out. Some 98 percent of ATIs 640 pilots participated in the vote and only one didnt vote to authorize the strike.
Amazon outsources the operation of its air service, which it calls Amazon Air, to a small network of cargo airlines whose pilots fly Amazon-branded planes. In the US alone, they collectively operate more than 330 daily flights for Amazon between more than 50 airports, according to the logistics consultancy MWPVL International.
FULL story at link above.