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Jan 16, 2026

Union alarm as ITA Airways defers ENAC crisis meeting with Atitech to 29 January

Union alarm as ITA Airways defers ENAC crisis meeting with Atitech to 29 January
Italian airline unions have raised the temperature in the long-running stand-off between state carrier ITA Airways and maintenance provider Atitech after the airline requested a two-week postponement of a make-or-break meeting at the civil-aviation authority ENAC. In a 15 January joint statement, Filt-CGIL, Fit-CISL, UILTrasporti and UGL Trasporto Aereo warned that the delay jeopardises ‘the prospects of a definitive solution’ to staffing and outsourcing disputes that have already sparked wild-cat actions at Milan Linate and Naples. (uiltrasporti.it)

Context. ITA’s transition from Alitalia’s legacy MRO (maintenance, repair, overhaul) contracts has been fraught, with Atitech contesting the scope of work transferred to third-party vendors. The dispute culminated in a 24-hour ground-handling strike notice for 16 February—formally filed in the national strike register on 14 January. (scioperi.mit.gov.it)

Business-traveller impact. While no immediate flight cancellations were announced, corporate travel desks fear that uncertainty will hit February booking patterns, particularly on Milan-Rome shuttle routes critical for same-day meetings. Companies with crew-rotation or cargo dependencies at Linate and Malpensa should prepare for potential service degradation if the 29 January talks fail.

Union alarm as ITA Airways defers ENAC crisis meeting with Atitech to 29 January


For any employees who may still need last-minute visas or permit renewals before traveling, VisaHQ can shoulder the administrative load. Its digital platform guides travellers through Italy’s visa requirements step by step and provides real-time status updates to travel managers, ensuring documents are in hand long before a potential strike hits. Check the dedicated Italy page at https://www.visahq.com/italy/ to see how the service dovetails with your wider risk-mitigation plan.

What companies should do. • Insert contingency clauses into February tickets allowing fee-free re-routing via rail. • Brief travellers on EU-261 rights and on ITA’s policy for hotel and taxi coverage if on-the-day cancellations spike. • HR should monitor duty-of-care obligations for posted workers whose rotation cycles coincide with the threatened 16 February strike.

Next steps. ENAC has urged the parties to submit cost-sharing proposals in advance of the 29 January meeting. Should talks collapse, unions have hinted at escalating to a 48-hour national action in March, which could overlap with peak trade-fair season in northern Italy.
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