KEY POINTS
  • Southwest Airlines is in the process of adding some 10,000 workers through next year.
  • The Dallas-based airline was left short-staffed during a summer peak after thousands of workers took buyouts and leaves of absence.
  • Incoming CEO Bob Jordan vowed not to repeat the summer's flight disruptions.

In this article

A passenger checks in her luggage at the Southwest Airlines terminal at LAX.

Southwest Airlines customers suffered hundreds of cancelations, delays and other disruptions this summer as the carrier struggled with snowballing problems of bad weather and a lack of staff.

Its next CEO, Bob Jordan, vowed not to repeat that. The airline is about halfway to its goal of hiring 5,000 workers this year and has already trimmed its schedule for the rest of 2021 to avoid further service shortfalls. The airline, and others like Spirit and American, set out to operate an ambitious schedule over the summer to try to recover revenues lost during the coronavirus pandemic, but a shortfall of staff exacerbated operational issues.

In this article