Southwest vows review of meltdown after union blasts lack of plan
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[January 06, 2023] By
Rajesh Kumar Singh
CHICAGO (Reuters) -Southwest Airlines promised on Thursday a thorough
review of an operational collapse that stranded thousands of passengers
at the end of the year after a union leader said the carrier had not
identified how to avoid a repeat.
Tom Nekouei, vice president of the airlines' pilots association, told
Reuters he was among union leaders in a conference call with Chief
Executive Bob Jordan on Monday to discuss the disruption after a winter
storm forced cancellation of nearly 16,000 flights.
On the call, details of which have not been reported before, Nekouei
said Jordan told them the company had not yet identified a corrective
plan of action to avoid a repeat of a cascade of flight cancellations.
"They don't know what it is that they're going do in terms of corrective
action because they haven't sat down and run the post-mortem on it," he
told Reuters.
Later on Thursday, Jordan posted a video to the company's website
inviting the union to participate in a thorough review of the disruption
that he said would be completed "swiftly."
The pilots union, which represents almost 10,000 Southwest pilots,
estimates the flight cancellations could cost up to $1 billion in lost
revenue, Nekouei told Reuters.
Brokerage Raymond James estimated the meltdown could cut Southwest's
projected revenue growth by more than half in the fourth quarter,
equivalent to a hit of about $515 million in lost revenue.
Southwest is also facing regulatory scrutiny and a lawsuit.
The White House has said Southwest "failed its customers". Citing the
carrier's meltdown, lawmakers have been pressing the Biden
administration to hold airlines accountable for mass flight
cancellations.
The pilots union, which is in heated contract negotiations with
Southwest, on Dec. 31 published a letter signed by Nekouei, denouncing
company leadership as a "cult" that has spent the last 15 years
destroying the airline's legacy. Before the recent crisis, Southwest had
cultivated a reputation for reliable customer service, humorous flight
crews and low-cost flights.
Jordan said the airline had made "great progress" in processing tens of
thousands of refunds and reimbursements. It had also delivered the vast
majority of bags, which went missing, to customers, he said.
[to top of second column] |
Southwest Airlines passengers wait in
line at the baggage services office after U.S. airlines, led by
Southwest, canceled thousands of flights due to a massive winter
storm which swept over much of the country before and during the
Christmas holiday weekend, at Dallas Love Field Airport in Dallas,
Texas, U.S., December 28, 2022. REUTERS/Shelby Tauber/File Photo
DATED TECHNOLOGY
Southwest unions have blamed the company's "outdated" technology and
processes for the biggest operational meltdown in its five-decade
history.
Nekouei said the company's failure to revamp its dated scheduling
system that sends crews around the country as passengers for their
flying assignments left it vulnerable to "more frequent and more
severe" meltdowns. The pilots union has called that so-called
"deadheading" practice fatiguing and inefficient.
Nekouei said the same issues led to a major meltdown at Southwest
after a thunderstorm in Florida in October 2021 that cost it $75
million.
To be sure, the airline has been upgrading its technology in phases.
In 2017, it replaced its entire reservations system, and four years
later it enhanced technology at its maintenance department.
Recently, it has made investments in digital scanners to make its
baggage handling system more efficient.
Jordan said the company spends about $1 billion a year on technology
and will continue to upgrade the tools and processes its employees
use to deliver "reliable and low-cost air travel."
Union officials, however, have called the pace of investment too
slow.
"Every meltdown that we've had, it's gotten more severe," Nekouei
said. "It's become more frequent now and it takes longer and longer
to recover from them."
(Reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh, editing by Nick Zieminski and
Stephen Coates)
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