Canadian Lawyer InHouse

Apr/May 2013

Legal news and trends for Canadian in-house counsel and c-suite executives

Issue link: https://digital.canadianlawyermag.com/i/115931

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 19 of 43

Legal departments are in the trenches when it comes to the battle being staged to tackle solvency issues around defined benefit plans, stay on top of provincial pension laws, and help their companies mitigate the risk of growing pension obligations. F red Headon and the in-house labour law team at Air Canada have learned more about pension law in the last 18 months than most lawyers will learn in a career. Over the last decade, Canada's national airline has been steadily hit with a series of economic hardships — from the New York terrorist attacks in 2001 to the SARS crisis in 2003 and the credit crunch in 2008 — which decimated air travel and led to a series of restructurings. During 2011 and 2012, Canada's national airline was locked in bargaining and arbitration with its unions, which Headon, assistant general counsel, labour and employment law, says "had a major pension component." The company sponsors a number of defined-benefit and defined-contribution pension plans, which were a major sticking point. Under a DB plan, the employer guarantees a set pension and is on the hook for any shortfall, making it riskier than a DC plan, where employees make investing decisions and their pension depends on the performance of those investments. In the beginning of 2012, Air Canada's 10 DB plans were running a $4.2-billion solvency deficit and the company was making past service catch-up payments under federal regulations. It needed to deal with pension issues to move forward. "Through that process, about three of us — on a pretty full-time basis — were involved in the bargaining given the role that pensions played. We were plugged into the discussion in a way that took up a fair bit of time." By Jim Middlemiss 20 • a pr il 2 0 1 3 2013 INHOUSE INHOUSE

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Canadian Lawyer InHouse - Apr/May 2013