Coronavirus pandemic tests Southwest Airlines’ record of no pay cuts, furloughs
A bird flies by in the foreground as a Southwest Airlines jet comes in for a landing at McCarran International Airport on May 25, 2020 in Las Vegas, Nevada.
Ethan Miller | Getty Images
The pandemic’s toll on air travel demand is testing a point of pride at Southwest Airlines: It has never furloughed or cut worker pay in its nearly 50 years of flying.
The Dallas-based airline late Monday announced it’s asking its labor unions that represent some 80% of its workers to accept pay cuts to avoid involuntary furloughs through the end of 2021. It will cut non-union workers’ pay by 10%.
“It’s a shared sacrifice and this is the kind of company that I think is up for that task,” Southwest CEO Gary Kelly told CNBC’s “Squawk Box” Tuesday. Kelly said he is forgoing his base salary until the end of next year.
Airlines are racing to stem cash burn with air travel demand stuck at about a third of last year’s levels as the pandemic keeps many potential customers from flying. In September, the Transportation Security Administration screened an average of about 716,000 people a day at U.S. airports, down from 2.2 million a day a year earlier.
Last week, United Airlines and American Airlines started furloughing more than 32,000 employees, a move they say they will reverse if they receive more federal aid.
U.S. airlines agreed not to cut any jobs until Oct. 1 under the terms of $25 billion in federal aid. Southwest has committed not to lay off or cut worker pay through the end of this year, in part thanks to thousands of workers who accepted buyouts or volunteered for time off.
But with a slow recovery ahead, Southwest, its U.S. rivals and labor unions are urging Congress and the Trump administration to approve $25 billion in additional federal aid to support payrolls, generally carriers’ largest expense.
The proposal has won bipartisan support, but Congress and the White House have been deadlocked on a new, national coronavirus stimulus package, which could include the airline support, for weeks. An attempt in the House to advance a standalone bill for more airline aid failed on Friday.
“Obviously, any reasonable person realizes this is a huge crisis for the airlines but for the country,” Kelly told CNBC.
Kelly told employees late Monday that he wants to have cost-saving agreements with unions in place by Jan. 1 and if there’s a failure to reach deals furloughs will be a “last resort.”
If Congress passes additional airline payroll support the pay cuts at Southwest would be reversed, Kelly said.