The Canadian government moved swiftly on Saturday to halt a nationwide strike by Air Canada flight attendants that grounded hundreds of flights and disrupted travel for more than 130,000 passengers. The walkout, which began just after midnight on August 16, involved over 10,000 unionized cabin crew and forced the suspension of all mainline and Rouge operations during the busy summer travel season.

Canada halts Air Canada strike as government orders arbitration to end flight disruption
Labour Minister Patty Hajdu invoked emergency powers under the Canada Labour Code, ordering binding arbitration through the Canada Industrial Relations Board. The government said the action was necessary to avert significant economic and logistical disruptions, with widespread flight cancellations already straining transport infrastructure and frustrating travelers across the country.
The strike followed a 72-hour notice issued by the Canadian Union of Public Employees, which represents the flight attendants. It came after negotiations collapsed despite a compensation offer from Air Canada that included a 38 percent total pay increase over four years. The offer featured a 25 percent wage boost in the first year alone, but the union rejected it, arguing it failed to adequately address unpaid work hours and rising inflation.
Government steps in to force arbitration between parties
At the core of the dispute is compensation for what union officials call “ground duty,” referring to time spent on tasks such as boarding, deplaning and waiting between flights, none of which is currently paid. Under existing policy, flight attendants only receive compensation from the moment an aircraft leaves the gate to the time it arrives at its destination.
In anticipation of the walkout, Air Canada had already begun cancelling flights the day before the strike. A total of 623 services were pulled from schedules by Friday evening, and on Saturday, both Air Canada and its low-cost Rouge subsidiary suspended all operations. Regional affiliates, including those operated by Jazz Aviation and PAL Airlines under the Air Canada Express brand, continued to fly as they are covered under separate agreements.
The federal government’s decision to step in was met with sharp criticism from the union. CUPE leadership accused Ottawa of undermining collective bargaining rights and handing Air Canada an unfair advantage by removing workers’ leverage. The union warned that forced arbitration could erode trust in future labor negotiations.
Air Canada begins restoring services after strike halt
Air Canada, for its part, welcomed the government’s intervention, stating that the strike had jeopardized the travel plans of thousands and threatened to harm the airline’s operational recovery. The carrier implemented flexible rebooking policies and issued travel credits for affected passengers but urged travelers to avoid heading to airports unless they had confirmed bookings on unaffected regional routes.
The government acknowledged that although arbitration will put a legal end to the strike, restoring full operations may take between five to ten days. The impact is expected to be particularly severe on transcontinental and international routes, many of which remain suspended or significantly delayed.
This marks the first strike by Air Canada cabin crew since 1985 and highlights longstanding tensions over compensation, working conditions and labor protections. With binding arbitration now underway, both parties face mounting pressure to reach a resolution that prevents further disruption and restores confidence in Canada’s largest airline. – By Content Syndication Services.