Southwest has faced fines, union safety complaints
a Southwest Airlines plane approaches Lambert-St.
Louis International Airport in St. Louis. Over the years, the Dallas-based
carrier has paid millions of dollars to settle safety violations, including
multiple fines for flying planes that didn't have required repairs. (AP
Photo/Kiichiro Sato, File)
Southwest Airlines runs its planes hard.
They make many short hops and more trips per day than other U.S. airliners,
which adds to wear and tear on parts, including the engines.
As the
investigation into last week's deadly engine failure continues, Southwest CEO
Gary Kelly could face questions about whether the company's low-cost business
model - which puts its planes through frequent takeoffs and landings - is
putting passengers at risk.
National Transportation Safety Board investigators
examine damage to the engine of the Southwest Airlines plane that made an
emergency landing at Philadelphia International Airport in Philadelphia on
Tuesday, April 17, 2018. The Southwest Airlines jet blew the engine at 32,000
feet and got hit by shrapnel that smashed a window, setting off a desperate
scramble by passengers to save a woman from getting sucked out. She later died,
and seven others were injured. (NTSB via AP)
Some aviation safety
experts said they see no reason for alarm. And, in fact, Southwest's safety
record is enviable: Until last week, no passenger had died in an accident during
its 47-year history.
Still, the Dallas-based airline has paid millions
over the past decade to settle safety violations, including fines for flying
planes that didn't have required repairs. Twice in the past nine years, holes
have torn open in the roofs of Southwest planes in flight.
In another
episode in 2016, an engine on a Southwest jet blew apart over Florida because of
metal fatigue, or wear and tear, hurling debris that struck the fuselage and
tail. No one was hurt.
Then, last week, one of the engines on Southwest
Flight 1380 blew apart at 32,000 feet over Pennsylvania, spraying the Boeing 737
with shrapnel and killing 43-year-old Jennifer Riordan, a mother of two who was
blown partway out a broken window. The National Transportation Safety Board said
a fan blade that had snapped off the engine was showing signs of metal
fatigue.
The union representing Southwest mechanics recently accused the
company of pressuring maintenance workers to cut corners to keep planes flying.
And the Federal Aviation Administration investigated union whistleblower
complaints and found mistrust of management so serious that it could hurt
safety.
In one case, investigators said a worker who should have been
praised for finding corrosion on a plane in Dallas was chastised for working
beyond the scope of the task he had been assigned. The leader of the Aircraft
Mechanics Fraternal Association, Bret Oestreich, said Southwest had created a
culture of hostility and retaliation.
Nevertheless, aviation safety
experts and longtime industry watchers said they do not consider Southwest
unsafe.
"They have had a lot" of incidents, said John Goglia, a former
NTSB member, "but you have to remember that they have a very large fleet" - more
than 700 Boeing 737s, the largest 737 fleet in the world.
Before last
week, if Goglia thought about airlines that might have safety questions,
Southwest wasn't even on the radar, he said.
Southwest's short, frequent
flights put more stress on the plane and engines, like a car used heavily in
stop-and-go city traffic, said Alan Diehl, an aviation-safety consultant and
former NTSB and Air Force accident investigator.
Diehl said, however,
that Southwest's crews are accustomed to the quicker pace and that their work is
made easier because Southwest flies only Boeing 737s instead of an assortment of
planes.
Southwest jets make on average 5.3 flights per day compared with
between 2.8 and 3.4 per day at American Airlines, Delta and United, according to
an analysis by industry newsletter Airline Weekly using information from airline
data provider Diio.
Southwest flies frequently on short routes such as
Los Angeles to San Francisco and Dallas to Houston. Its average flight is 764
miles, the shortest among U.S. airlines and barely half as long as the average
at American and Delta, according to the Airline Weekly analysis. Each takeoff
and landing contributes to wear and tear on the aircraft.
"It's amazing
how safe Southwest has been over the years, considering the operational
difficulty of what they do," said Seth Kaplan, managing partner of Airline
Weekly. Like others interviewed for this story, Kaplan said he is not afraid to
fly Southwest - he and his family are booked on a flight next
week.
Although last week's accident was Southwest's first passenger
fatality, it was not the first time someone was killed by one of its planes. In
2005, a Southwest jet skidded off a runway and through a fence at Chicago's
Midway Airport, striking a car and killing a 6-year-old boy.
Southwest,
the nation's fourth-biggest airline by passenger traffic but the largest in
terms of U.S.-only flights, has paid millions in fines after enforcement actions
by the FAA.
The biggest FAA fine against Southwest was $7.5 million in
2009. The FAA said Southwest kept 46 planes flying even though they had skipped
critical inspections of the fuselage for metal fatigue.
Five years later,
the FAA proposed a $12 million fine over 44 planes that had undergone improper
fuselage repairs while at a contractor hired by Southwest. The airline settled a
lawsuit by agreeing to pay $2.8 million.
The 2016 engine failure over
Florida highlighted the need for closer inspection of engine blades. Southwest
spokeswoman Brandy King said that after engine maker CFM International
recommended more inspections last year, Southwest had inspected all fan blades
covered by the recommendation before last week's accident.
King said the
airline will meet a new CFM recommendation to inspect all older fan blades by
the end of August. She said the airline is also inspecting all newer fan blades,
a move not yet required by the FAA.
Southwest's CEO has said many times
before and since last week's engine failure that safety is paramount at the
airline.
Rather than hide from bad news, Kelly spoke to reporters just
hours after the accident and promised to "do all we can" to help Riordan's
family.
"His emotion was very real. It was palpable," said Henry
Harteveldt, a travel-industry analyst. "Mr. Kelly has done a very good job in
communicating this to the public and leading the airline."
The day after
the accident, Southwest sent letters from Kelly to passengers on Flight 1380,
saying that the airline would give them each $5,000 "to cover any of your
immediate financial needs" and a $1,000 travel voucher.
Harteveldt said
Southwest clearly hoped the letters might discourage lawsuits, "but I thought it
was a noble gesture."
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