By Rajesh Kumar Singh
CHICAGO (Reuters) -Southwest Airlines Co Chief Executive Bob Jordan said on Thursday the company is looking at all options to ensure the operational meltdown it suffered last month is not repeated.
The Dallas-based carrier has been dealing with customer outrage and regulatory scrutiny after a systems meltdown last month left thousands of passengers stranded.
Southwest has hired consultancy Oliver Wyman to investigate the disruption, Jordan told Reuters in an interview.
“I have put everything on the table here because it just can’t happen again,” he said.
A severe winter storm right before Christmas, coupled with Southwest’s dated technology, led to the cancellation of more than 16,000 flights.
Southwest’s board has also set up a new Operations Review Committee to oversee management following last month’s systems collapse, he said.
Asked about his job security, Jordan said: “I’m not focused on that one bit, and at the end of the day, that’s not up to me in any case.”
“There are a lot of reasons that this happened, but it’s on me at the end of the day. It’s on me to not let this happen again and to rebuild trust with our employees and rebuild trust with our customers and we will do exactly that.”
The company has put in interim measures to avoid a repeat, he said. General Electric Co is updating the company’s software which will automate its crew scheduling systems, he said.
The airline has also put together a new team of trained employees who can be cross-utilized to manage rescheduling crew during a disruption that requires significant schedule changes. Jordan said the company activated this group during the Federal Aviation Administration ground stop on Wednesday.
The airline is processing tens of thousands of customer reimbursements a day, he added. With the exception of 1% of bags, the airline has delivered all the luggage which went missing back to customers.
(Reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh in ChicagoEditing by Chris Reese, Ben Klayman and Matthew Lewis)