BA could meet crew demands - union

British Airways could meet key cabin crew demands with an extra £10 million in annual spending, according to a union set to strike…

British Airways could meet key cabin crew demands with an extra £10 million in annual spending, according to a union set to strike at the carrier starting next week.

Europe's third-largest airline is in talks with the Transport and General Workers' Union (T&G) hoping to head off plans by the T&G for a walkout by 10,500 cabin crew.

The T&G has given BA formal warning that it plans a three-day walkout beginning on January 29th and might follow with two more.

"We believe the true cost of the proposed way forward is £10 million, not the £37 million suggested by BA," T&G deputy secretary general Jack Dromey said today.

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"That is an affordable settlement which will lay the basis for a strong forward-looking airline not one where key workers live in fear of an aggressive management," he said.

A spokeswoman for BA declined to comment on the T&G figure but said the two sides were in talks today aimed at averting strikes.

Unresolved issues relate to the airline's sick-leave policy and differences in its two pay scales for cabin crew.