Edmonton Journal

CAN UNITED CEO SURVIVE YET ANOTHER SCANDAL?

Puppy’s death is among blunders by airline stirring public outrage

- MICHAEL SASSO

United Airlines has managed a feat to which no company aspires — outraging the world twice in less than a year. The death of a puppy in an overhead bin this week raises anew the question of whether the carrier’s CEO can hang onto his job.

United has sustained a series of embarrassm­ents on chief executive officer Oscar Munoz’s watch, from the tragic loss of a French bulldog on Monday to the surreal death of a giant rabbit in United’s care at Chicago airport. Munoz survived one of the worst corporate scandals in recent history almost a year ago, when a video captured airport officers forcibly dragging a United passenger down an airplane aisle.

Airline insiders say this latest blunder is unlikely to cost Munoz his job, given his successes with stabilizin­g the airline’s workforce and improving on-time performanc­e. Yet Munoz, 59, already lost his elevation to chairman of United Continenta­l Holdings Inc. over his handling of the dragging incident. And escalating social media attention to each gaffe extends their life in the public’s mind.

“The problem is United has long had a culture that some might describe as not customer-oriented and others might describe as anti-customer,” said Bruce Hicks, a former head of communicat­ions for Continenta­l Airlines.

Board members should be thinking about how to change United’s culture and who should be the leader to do it, said Ben Baldanza, the former chief executive of Spirit Airlines, a company with its own history of poor customer service. While he doesn’t see Munoz or president Scott Kirby losing their jobs, he said “any one of these instances are terrible on their own, but you link them all together and you realize you’ve got a problem.”

United spokeswoma­n Megan McCarthy declined to comment on speculatio­n about Munoz’s future.

Chicago-based United finds itself in a bad-news cycle that is difficult to break out of, said Hicks, who fended off negative press in the 1980s over Continenta­l’s difficult merger with the defunct People Express Airlines.

After the video surfaced of officers bloodying passenger David Dao last April, Munoz compounded the damage by criticizin­g the abused customer’s behaviour.

He then quickly reversed course, pledging sweeping changes to United’s customer service practices.

Recently, the airline rolled out a training program for thousands of employees called Core4 that will encourage them to offer more compassion­ate service.

The puppy’s death on a flight from Houston to New York’s LaGuardia Airport on Monday reinforced United’s reputation for corporate insensitiv­ity. Widespread posts on social media say a flight attendant had the animal’s crate placed in the overhead bin over the owner’s protests. Although United quickly apologized and took responsibi­lity for the dog’s death, the carrier erred in telling the public that the flight attendant didn’t know there was a dog in the crate, Hicks said.

Aside from the customer-service glitches, the company got more bad press last week when it replaced an employee-bonus program based on performanc­e with a lottery that awarded larger prizes to fewer people. It dropped the idea after employees pushed back.

Munoz has guided United on an ambitious effort to improve the profitabil­ity of its hubs by increasing connecting flights. However, some investors fear the effort is boosting its seating capacity too much, with the extra supply dragging down fares and hurting profits in the short run.

United slipped 0.4 per cent to $70.43 at 11:05 a.m. after tumbling 2.6 per cent Wednesday, the most in a month. The stock is up 23 per cent since Munoz became CEO in September 2015. That put it behind the 28 per cent gain for a Standard & Poor’s index of the five biggest U.S. airlines and the 40-per-cent advance for the S&P 500 index.

Ultimately, Munoz probably will survive this latest scandal, given the goodwill he’s been building within the company, observers say. Munoz has improved morale among United’s almost 90,000 employees and boosted its position in monthly on-time performanc­e rankings of U.S. airlines to middle of the pack or better from near the bottom.

An airline that historical­ly has had a difficult relationsh­ip with labour now has all of its major union groups under contracts. After the passenger-dragging scandal, several union leaders supported Munoz amid speculatio­n about his future.

“It’s ludicrous to think Oscar’s job would be in jeopardy,” said Sara Nelson, internatio­nal president of United’s flight attendant union, the Associatio­n of Flight Attendants. “United Airlines was nearly destroyed by those previously in charge. Oscar has been working steadily to fix it. Everyone at the airline knows that.”

 ?? SETH WENIG/AP FILES ?? A series of scandals has reinforced United Airlines’s reputation for poor customer service. However, observers say the latest gaffe with a puppy’s death is unlikely to cost CEO Oscar Munoz his job, given his successes such as improving on-time performanc­e.
SETH WENIG/AP FILES A series of scandals has reinforced United Airlines’s reputation for poor customer service. However, observers say the latest gaffe with a puppy’s death is unlikely to cost CEO Oscar Munoz his job, given his successes such as improving on-time performanc­e.
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