Southwest urges employees to take extra shifts over July 4 to avoid flight disruptions

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A Southwest Airlines flight logo is seen as the plane taxis to a gate at Long Island MacArthur Airport in Ronkonkoma, New York on March 25, 2021.
Steve Pfost | Newsday | Getty Images

Southwest Airlines is urging employees to pick up shifts and offering overtime in early July to help it avoid flight disruptions during what’s expected to be a surge in Independence Day weekend travel, according to internal company memos reviews by CNBC.

The Dallas-based airline has had to cancel hundreds of flights and delay others this month due to a combination of bad weather and a technical problem.

The push to staff up quickly shows how airlines are struggling to respond to a surge in air travel after a slump in demand during the pandemic. U.S. airlines took $54 billion in federal aid in exchange for not furloughing workers. But thousands of employees at Southwest and other airlines took buyouts or leaves of absence at the urging of company executives.

“We have heard from many of you who are frustrated with our network reliability and irregular operations created by summer storms across many parts of the country,” Alan Kasher, Southwest’s executive vice president of daily operations, wrote in staff note posted Monday, entitled “We Need Your Help This Holiday Travel Week.”

“To address the situation for the short term, we will be incentivizing our Ops Employees during this busy holiday travel week by increasing overtime pay from July 1 through July 7,” he said.

Southwest flight attendants will get double-pay for picking up open shifts over that period, Sonya Lacore, Southwest’s vice president of inflight operations, wrote to in a separate memo to employees Monday.

Southwest didn’t immediately comment.

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