Southwest Airlines Co. has hired an outside consulting firm and is working to strengthen a crew scheduling system after a meltdown roiled its...
Southwest Airlines Co. has hired an outside consulting firm and is working to strengthen a crew scheduling system after a meltdown roiled its operations during the holidays, Chief Executive Bob Jordan said in an interview.
Southwest... Southwest Airlines Co. has hired an outside consulting firm and is working to strengthen a crew scheduling system after a meltdown roiled its operations during the holidays, Chief Executive Bob Jordan said in an interview. Southwest LUV has engaged Oliver Wyman, a consulting firm, to help it understand what went wrong and to examine whether it needs to reset priorities, Jordan said. Southwest’s board has also formed its own operations review committee to look at the disruption.
Österreich Neuesten Nachrichten, Österreich Schlagzeilen
Similar News:Sie können auch ähnliche Nachrichten wie diese lesen, die wir aus anderen Nachrichtenquellen gesammelt haben.
Everything ‘is on the table’ as Southwest Airlines CEO tries to prevent another meltdownSouthwest Airlines CEO Bob Jordan outlined his short-term and long-term plan to make sure another operational breakdown doesn’t happen after canceling 16,700...
Weiterlesen »
Southwest Airlines promotes executives following operational meltdownSouthwest Airlines announced promotions for five executives on Tuesday, days after saying its operational disaster over the holidays would result in a fourth-quarter loss
Weiterlesen »
Letters to the Editor — TCU, bond debt, democracy, Jan. 6, Southwest AirlinesRe: “No purple reign,” and “Frog stranglers,” Tuesday news and SportsDay headlines. You got two things right about the disappointing loss of Texas Christian...
Weiterlesen »
Southwest Airlines to Revamp Crew Scheduling SystemThe airline said it is working with General Electric on a fresh version of the system it uses to reassign pilots and flight attendants during storms and other disruptions.
Weiterlesen »
Airlines expect U.S. operations to rebound on Thursday as FAA investigates outageWASHINGTON/CHICAGO (Reuters) -U.S. airlines said they expect operations to return to normal on Thursday, as the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) scrambles to pinpoint the cause of a computer outage that grounded flights nationally and to prevent it from happening again. Major carriers such as Delta Air Lines, United Airlines and Southwest Airlines said they expected normal operations on Thursday. Shares of American Airlines , which was not immediately available for a comment, were down about 1% premarket.
Weiterlesen »