Air Canada service agents call carry-on crackdown too unpleasant - Action News
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Air Canada service agents call carry-on crackdown too unpleasant

A number of Air Canada ground staff find the airline's new crackdown on oversized carry-on bags so unpleasant that they don't want to do it, a representative from the airline's union told CBC News.

Front-line staff want a say in who does crackdown duty

A recent policy to crack down on the size of carry-on bags is proving unpopular both with travellers and also with Air Canada front-line staff who are tasked with enforcing it. (Graham Hughes/Canadian Press)

Its been a month since Air Canada launched its carry-on crackdown where customer service agents stop and confront travellers at check-into ensure their cabin bags meet size limits. Bags that dont make the cut now must be checked.

The move has made some passengers hostile. And a number of agents find crackdown dutyso unpleasant, they dont want to do it, according to Air Canada service agent and union representative, Sheila Fardy.

And it may be about to get worse. This Sunday, Air Canada starts charging $25 for the first checked bag for domesticeconomy-class travel.

Fardy says Unifor, the union representing the agents, has asked the airline to recruit only willing volunteers to do the job which she describes as horrible. She says, generally, agents get to bid on customer service shifts with the most senior staff getting priority. But, so far, she adds, Air Canada wont let workers have a choice in whether or not they are tasked with inspecting carry-on bags. Consequently, says Fardy, the union will grieve it unless we can come to a solution.

The crackdown has upset and even angered some passengers. You have a lot of unhappy customers today, a distressed traveller informed a stoic Air Canada agent after she learned her bag which shed taken on board for years didnt meet airline requirements and had to be checked.

Hard to cope

Some agents are having quite a difficult time with [the job], says Fardy, who works at Torontos Pearson airportthe first airport to tackle the crackdown.

Some passengers have been quite abusive- Sheila Fardy, Air Canada service agent and union rep.

"Some passengers have been quite abusive, she says.Passengers can be quite aggressive and swearing and stuff like that.

As a lead agent, Fardy says colleagues have complained to her about the gig: I've had people walk up to me and say, 'Sheila, I've been doing this for four hours, get me the frig out of here.'

People push by them, are rude, they invariably give you a list of all the other times I brought that [bag] on board an aircraft, adds Fardy. She notes that most passengers are pleasant and co-operative but the bad fiveper cent can make for a difficult day.

Looking for volunteers

Fardy believes allowing workers to bid on the job would solve the problem. She says more junior staff would volunteer for the gig because they dont have much say in their shifts and signing up for the job would give them more stability.

Somebody with two years who doesn't have enough seniority to do anything, they'll take it, explains Fardy. And, she adds, everyone benefits because if somebody chooses it, they'll at least know what they're in for. They'll be less resentful.

Air Canada says, so far, the crackdown has been highly effective. We have had a great deal of positive feedback from customers who appreciate that [airline overhead bin] space is being apportioned more equitably, says spokesperson, Peter Fitzpatrick.

CBC News repeatedly asked Fitzpatrick for a comment about the unions request to allow workers to choose if they want to police carry-on bags. We did not receive a response in time for publication of this story.

Why the anger?

Aviation analystFred Lazarsays Air Canadas crackdown has sparked passenger anger because the airline hasnt consistently enforced its carry-on limits in the past, so some travellers are taken by surprise. Basically [the airline has] looked the other way and front-line employees are [now] going to be the brunt of the resentment by passengers.

But Lazar believes Air Canada will continue its crackdown and, in six to nine months, most [passengers] will become accepting of it and the hostility will die down.

However, the York University professor predicts heightened short-term hostilities starting this Sunday when the airline starts charging the new $25 checked bag fee. That means some travellers with carry-on that exceeds the size limits will also be hit with an extra charge. WestJet began charging a similar fee on Thursday.

Lazar estimates the checked bag charge will generate tens of millions of dollars in extra revenue for Air Canada. He suggests the airline could appease disgruntled front-line employees by offering them a portion of the profits: They should somehow share in the additional revenue that should be generated when passengers are forced to check in and pay for carry-ons.