ORLANDO, Fla. — Pilots with Spirit Airlines went on strike early Saturday morning and all flights were cancelled after overnight talks failed.
Twenty flights in and out of Orlando International Airport Saturday were cancelled on Saturday and Sunday. Spirit has also now cancelled all flights on Monday and Tuesday.
As passengers heard about the strike Saturday morning, 100's of them lined up at the Spirit Airlines ticket counter at OIA to find out what options were available.
Spirit says it will refund the ticket price to all passengers whose flights have been cancelled. Even with the refund, some people told Channel 9 they don't have enough money to book new flights, so they have no choice but to wait.
Passengers will also get a $100 credit toward a future flight.
The strike is expected to affect thousands of travelers. Spirit flies from several airports in the eastern U.S., through Fort Lauderdale, to points in the Caribbean and Latin America.
Talks were extended past a midnight deadline, but pilots walked out after the last extension expired at 5 a.m.
The extensions were "in order to review final proposals put forth by both parties to keep the airline running. In the end, both sides could not reach an agreement," said Sean Creed, a Spirit captain and the head of the airline's branch of the Air Line Pilots Association, in a statement on the union's website.
He said pilots "will not return to the cockpit until a fair and equitable contract is negotiated."
The company said it offered to raise pilot pay by 30 percent over five years. It would have included work rule changes but would have retained a four-day break between every pilot trip, something the company said no other ALPA contract has. The offer also included a $3,000 signing bonus and a larger retirement plan match.
"We are frustrated and disappointed that our pilots have turned down an over 30 percent increase at a cost of over $70 million over five years while disrupting thousands of our customers and jeopardizing the livelihoods of our over 2,000 employees," Spirit President and CEO Ben Baldanza said in a written statement.
Spirit pilots have said their pay lags competitors such as AirTran Airways and JetBlue. The two sides have been in negotiations for more than three years.
Privately-held Spirit runs roughly 150 flights a day, making it much smaller than major carriers like Delta Air Lines Inc., with 6,200.
The airline has about 440 active pilots and is based in Miramar, Fla. It dubs itself an ultra low-cost carrier, and says some of its tickets go for $9. It attracted notice recently when it announced that beginning Aug. 1 it would charge passengers up to $45 for carry-on bags.
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