Isabelle Schomann, the ETUC Deputy General Secretary stated, ‘while this is obviously an important and positive decision in favour of the IAG EWC, it will provide little comfort to those 12,000 workers who lost their jobs 3 years ago.’ She further stated that, ‘this demonstrates why we fundamentally need a revision of the directive and it also supports the ETUC’s demands for effective and dissuasive enforcement provisions to be put in place.’
Jonathan Hayward, the European Transport Federation (ETF) appointed IAG EWC Trade Union coordinator added; ‘Throughout this long and arduous legal battle the IAG EWC has had constant support from UNITE the Union and the Spanish Unions CC.OO and UGT. It is alarming and outrageous to imagine just how many companies are out there that are blatantly ignoring their legal obligations to inform and consult, just because their EWC don’t have the political, legal and financial support to hold them to account and challenge them in court.’
The ETUC hope that this judgement will demonstrate to the European Commission why a revision of the EWC Directive is urgently needed and why they need to not only strength the enforcement of the directive but fundamentally make it easier and simpler for EWC’s to take companies to court when they fail to inform and consult.
Under Spanish law the decision can be appealed.
Written by Jonathan Hayward, UNITE