The general public scrutiny over the Southwest’s vacation meltdown hasn’t let up.
Southwest government Andrew Watterson confronted lawmakers in a Senate panel on Wednesday over the provider’s operational fiasco that led to the cancellation of almost 17,000 flights, leaving roughly a million passengers stranded in the course of the winter holidays.
Watterson, who’s the provider’s chief working officer, instantly apologized for the incident earlier than the Senate Commerce Committee, saying Southwest was “deeply sorry.”
“Let me be clear. We tousled,” he mentioned. “We didn’t have sufficient winter operations resiliency.”
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Beneath stress from Congress, Watterson attributed the provider’s December meltdown to their poor winter operations.
Consequently, Southwest plans to spend extra sources on de-icing vehicles and different know-how methods to enhance its winter operations. Nevertheless, it’s unclear how a lot this initiative will price the airline.
“We consider our winter operations resiliency was the basis trigger and that can take longer to deal with and so we are going to concentrate on that for the majority of our time,” Watterson mentioned.
Watterson added that Southwest plans to take a position $1.3 billion into updating its ageing IT infrastructure.
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He mentioned the airline is slated to introduce new software program to its crew scheduling system on Friday that will assist stop the scheduling points that partly led to their points.
Constructing again schedules: Southwest Airways provides 5 new routes and can restore 16 extra that had been reduce
The listening to additionally included testimony from Casey Murray, the president of the Southwest Airways Pilots Affiliation, who mentioned that pilots had warned Southwest for years about its outdated know-how.
“Those that don’t be taught from historical past are doomed to repeat it. Southwest has a historical past of repetition,” Murray mentioned. “Sadly, regardless of many alternatives, Southwest airways administration didn’t take heed to its pilots and frontline staff who noticed this meltdown coming.”
Senators grilled Watterson on pilots sounding the alarm in regards to the antiquated know-how, however the Southwest government couldn’t reply why the airline ignored the warning indicators, as a substitute specializing in investments into new know-how and higher winter gear.
From Dec. 21 to Dec. 31, Southwest canceled almost 17,000 flights because it did not recuperate from winter storm Elliott. Whereas different airways efficiently restored their operations shortly after the storm handed, Southwest’s outdated know-how, together with crew mismanagement, culminated in a full-blown operational meltdown that lasted greater than per week.
Per Watterson, Southwest didn’t know the place its crews have been and the provider couldn’t even contact a few of its pilots or flight attendants in the course of the episode, with some crews remaining out of contact for as much as 17 hours, in keeping with the testimony. With many passengers stranded, many misplaced their baggage and couldn’t attain customer support brokers to rebook their flights. Roughly 200 baggage stay unclaimed.
Because of the fiasco, Southwest started reimbursing all impacted passengers plus an extra 25,000 Fast Rewards factors. Practically 11,000 reimbursement circumstances stay pending, per Watterson.
The meltdown additionally resulted in main monetary losses for Southwest— to the tune of $220 million quarterly loss in the course of the fourth-quarter earnings. The airline estimated the mass cancellations price it $800 million.
The Division of Transportation can also be investigating Southwest for the vacation debacle to see if the provider’s flight schedules have been unrealistic.
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And Southwest’s operational mess sparked renewed calls in Washington to impose extra laws on the airline trade.
Final week, Democratic Sens. Richard Blumenthal (Connecticut) and Edward Markey (Massachusetts) reintroduced laws that will develop protections for passengers within the occasion of operational meltdowns or flight cancellations and delays.
Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-Washington), chair of the Commerce Committee, additionally pressed for client protections.
“Doing higher additionally means ensuring that we’re not going to provide shoppers the brief finish of the stick,” she mentioned.
Nevertheless, Republicans haven’t been so eager to impose laws. Sen. Ted Cruz (R-Texas), the committee’s rating member, argued additional regulating the airline trade would cut back airline service and improve fare costs.
“The Division of Transportation now plans to analyze the sensibility of the whole schedule, armchair quarterbacking the scheduling and operations of a whole trade,” Cruz mentioned. “That is simply silly.”
Extra reporting by Caroline Tanner.
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