Air BP grows its operation in Brazil

Air BP has strengthened its presence in Brazil and will start supplying fuel at Santos Dumont airport.Santos Santos Dumont complements Air BP’s existing operations in Rio de Janeiro which include Galeão International airport, Jacarepaguá, Cabo Frio and Macaé. This is an important addition to Air BP’s network and comes in response to increased demand from the general and commercial aviation sectors.

Air BP will supply Santos Dumont with Jet A-1 fuel and refuelling will be carried out by an Air BP team of aviation fuel experts. The airport will join the Air BP network, now 900 strong.

Brazil is seen as a key market for Air BP. The company markets fuel at 26 locations across the country, providing fuel and services to general aviation, commercial aviation and military operations.

Towards a cleaner ramp

RAMP EQPT NEWS Wollard lpgIn line with growing interest in the environment, NMC Wollard has decided to re-engineer its diesel-powered beltloader, model TC-888. The net result is a retrofitted unit of GSE that now runs on LPG. Not only is this a greener option but it also permits easier fuel management.

 

Minimum pay: minimum lip service

When is the minimum wage not the minimum wage? When you work at Sea-Tac, it would seem.

After all the media hype back in 2013, when Sea-Tac proudly blazed a trail that others simply had to follow, its minimum wage policies would appear to be less than concrete. The magical hourly rate of US$15, long sought after and immediately (unsuccessfully, as it turned out) contested by local carriers, raised the airport worker’s standards overnight. Yet five years on, some workers are taking home a few cents less than this figure – whilst other, new contracts, are pitched considerably below this figure.

The devil here lies not in the small print but in the unions – and the airlines. When Alaska terminated Menzies’ contract at Seattle, it took ground handling in-house, forming McGee, with a view to saving money. And because this group was unionised, city ordinances allow it to set its own wage levels, effectively waiving the status quo. Thus ex-Menzies workers (previously on US$15 an hour) who are now with McGee, actually earn less. Likewise, because of the Railway Labour Act, a city is not able to regulate wage levels across multiple sites – so any fresh airline employees are starting on a wage several dollars below that living wage. Both these exemptions are completely legal, leaving the minimum wage concept something of a misnomer.

Interesting to note, both McGee and Alaska Airlines point to better perks and benefits as critical in making up the differential.