Southwest, pilot union differ over causes for holiday meltdown
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[February 09, 2023] By
David Shepardson and Rajesh Kumar Singh
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Southwest Airlines and its pilot union will offer
sharply contrasting reasons for the low-cost carrier's meltdown in
December that disrupted travel plans for two million customers, ahead of
a U.S. Senate committee hearing on Thursday.
While Southwest has cited weather impacts, the union will single out
poor preparation and a failure to modernize technology, according to
written testimonies for the hearing, seen by Reuters.
The meltdown canceled almost 17,000 flights and is estimated to have
cost more than $1 billion. It has also prompted a lawsuit from
shareholders and a U.S. Department of Transportation investigation.
The Dallas-based airline attributed the breakdown in service to a
"historic" winter storm, both in size and scale, which caused frozen jet
bridges and icy aircraft engines.
It has also defended its computer system, saying the technology "worked
as designed," while adding the airline has tapped General Electric Co to
improve crew rescheduling capability and hired consultant Oliver Wyman,
a unit of Marsh McLennan, to recommend operational changes.
Southwest's Chief Operating Officer Andrew Watterson repeated that
message in his testimony, saying the airline experienced a "historic
event" with a combination of challenges it had not confronted before.
"What began as a weather event on December 21st turned into a crew
scheduling event by December 24th," said Watterson.
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A Southwest Airlines jetliner lands at
Chicago Midway International Airport in Chicago, Illinois, U.S.,
December 27, 2022. REUTERS/Kamil Krzaczynski/
But Southwest's pilot union, which is in contract negotiations with
Southwest, blames the company and its leadership for a "failure" to
modernize crew management processes and technology and to prepare
for the storm.
Casey Murray, president of the Southwest Airlines Pilots Association
(SWAPA) said the union has been sounding the alarm about the
carrier's crew scheduling technology and "outdated" operational
processes for years.
"Unfortunately, those warnings were summarily ignored," he said.
The debacle has put Chief Executive Bob Jordan in the eye of a storm
as he faces pressure to restore the airline's credibility and regain
the trust of customers, just one year after he took the helm.
Jordan has apologized and taken responsibility for the troubles,
vowing to prevent a repeat.
Murray said while Jordan inherited a "massive, complex operation
held together by duct tape and baling wire," he must show through
actions that the company is serious about change.
The committee had asked Jordan to testify but Southwest said the
hearing conflicted with other commitments, including an employee
rally in Baltimore on Wednesday.
(Reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh and David Shepardson; Editing by
Josie Kao)
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