Houston Chronicle

CEO: Southwest Airlines at risk of shrinking

- By Mary Schlangens­tein

Southwest Airlines Co. has to prepare for the risk of becoming a “drasticall­y smaller” company, and CEO Gary Kelly told employees he’d prefer an across-theboard pay cut to more dire scenarios — such as the first involuntar­y furloughs in the carrier’s history.

Kelly outlined possible scenarios if travel doesn’t begin to pick up in the wake of the coronaviru­s pandemic, addressing workers in a video message Thursday that was part pep talk and part warning. While Southwest has cash reserves plus $3.2 billion in government payroll aid to survive the coming months, he encouraged workers to “fight like we’ve never fought before” to lower costs.

Southwest is contemplat­ing the first layoffs and involuntar­y pay cuts in its 49-year history as the outbreak and government restrictio­ns bludgeon airlines by prompting a collapse in travel. The federal airline aid limits mass employment cuts through Sept. 30, but Southwest has already joined rivals in parking planes, slashing flight schedules and offering employees voluntary leave.

“If things don’t improve dramatical­ly over the May-June-July time period, we’ll have to prepare ourselves for a dramatical­ly smaller airline,” Kelly said. “I am not predicting that. But life can be very humbling, and clearly this is a lesson that we are not in control of this coronaviru­s and how many people choose to fly.”

If Southwest has to shrink, it will first seek volunteers to retire early, take extended time off or accept voluntary furloughs, Kelly said. If the airline is still burning through cash at that point, it would try to push through reductions in benefits and then in pay before resorting to involuntar­y furloughs, he said.

“To preserve precious jobs of our co-workers, our friends, our family, I would prefer we all take a small and hopefully temporary pay cut,” said the CEO, who pledged to work for no salary if Southwest has to ask employees for larger sacrifices.

Such changes would have to be negotiated with unions representi­ng Southwest workers. Leaders of the Transport Workers Union and Aircraft Mechanics Fraternal Associatio­n recently said the Dallas-based carrier had sought to begin talks on contract givebacks.

Kelly said Southwest hadn’t sought concession­s from labor groups and underlined that doing so would be a last resort. He called the airline’s record of avoiding pay cuts and furloughs his “greatest source of pride.”

But with the airline industry’s passenger loads down more than 95 percent, business “is bad and the future is uncertain,” Kelly said. And he was at pains to warn employees that more trouble may be in the offing.

“We have a problem,” he said. “Our traffic is virtually zero.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States