The real reason behind Southwest Airlines’ post-Christmas meltdown

Southwest Airlines canceled another 2,600 flights Tuesday as the Dallas-based carrier continued to struggle to recover from the weekend’s weather impacts thanks to outdated computer systems and bad scheduling practices, insiders and experts said.

While other airlines managed to get most of their flights off the ground after the weekend chaos, Southwest’s systems for managing flight bookings and employee placement have collapsed, according to reports.

“We’ve seen these sorts of meltdowns occur on a much more regular basis and it really just has to do with outdated processes and outdated IT,” Captain Casey Murray, the president of the airline’s pilots union, told CNN on Monday.

“It’s phones, it’s computers, it’s processing power, it’s the programs used to connect us to airplanes — that’s where the problem lies, and it’s systemic throughout the whole airline.”


post-Christmas travelers At Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport as Southwest airlines face cancellations.
Post-Christmas travelers At Baltimore/Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport as Southwest airlines face cancellations.
mpi34/MediaPunch/IPx

Southwest canceled a whopping 85% of its scheduled flights on Monday and accounted for 53% of all of Tuesday’s US flight cancellations as of 2 p.m. Tuesday, according to FlightAware.

CEO Bob Jordan has privately acknowledged that outdated tech played a role in creating the ongoing fracas.

“Part of what we’re suffering is a lack of tools,” Jordan said in a memo to employees on Sunday, which was reported by CNN.

“We’ve talked an awful lot about modernizing the operation, and the need to do that.”


frustrated airline passengers waiting in denver
Frustrated flyers waiting for a Southwest Airlines flight in Denver earlier this month.
Denver Post via Getty Images

While Southwest suffered through the impacts of winter weather and other climatic obstructions along with its competitors over the Christmas weekend, it has a longer road back to normal due to its own unique circumstances, experts told The Post.

Other major airlines managed to avoid the worst of the holiday chaos in part by offering employees incentives to work during major travel periods, according to airline industry analyst Robert W. Mann. Southwest has done nothing of the sort.

Instead, Southwest relies on mandatory overtime to keep planes running, Mann said — leaving it vulnerable to unscheduled absences.


An information board is seen by the Southwest Airlines counter at San Francisco International Airport (SFO) in San Francisco, California, United States on December 26, 2022 as Southwest cancels more than 2,800 U.S. flights on Monday amid fierce winter storms.
An information board is seen by the Southwest Airlines counter at San Francisco International Airport on Dec. 26, 2022 as Southwest cancels more than 2,800 US flights amid fierce winter storms.
Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

“The industry as a whole is still running around with not enough people to serve the number of customers that are out there looking to fly,” Mann said.

“[Southwest is] in the most dire situation because of the extent and the duration of mandatory overtime. When push came to shove, enough people said, ‘No more.’”

President Biden and the US Department of Transportation both issued separate statements on Monday and Tuesday promising to hold Southwest and other airlines to account.

“Our Administration is working to ensure airlines are held accountable,” Biden said.

One possible response could be to require Southwest to “interline” with other airlines, which would make it easier for stranded flyers to find alternative ways home, said Clint Henderson of travel site The Points Guy.

“Because they fly point-to-point instead of hub-and-spoke, when things start to go wrong it cascades very quickly,” Henderson said about the airline.

The airline operates at the whim of the weather — particularly as it faces challenges created or exacerbated by the pandemic, which initially decimated airline ridership.

“Demand is up. Planes are more full. We’re definitely at 2019 levels, especially for domestic travel,” said Henderson.

“When you throw in a storm like this there’s only so much you can do about it.”