It's also worth noting that after a couple rounds of trying to replace veteran airline managers at several airlines (Delta and United among others), it is being seen that outsiders are no more able to turn legacy airlines around than the insiders that preceded them. In fact, the real problems are structural and the outsiders haven't done anything to fix those problems.
Keep in mind that CO not only changed its network and went after some big untapped markets (like EWR) but also worked double time to improve labor relations with its employees. It is no surprise that AA has spent a huge amount of time and effort rebuilding relationships with its employees after making them endure cuts, a lesson not lost on Delta. Unfortunately, UA and US are probably too far gone to financially survive without pushing the employees over the brink, at which none of it matters anyway. Getting into chapter 11 is a death sentence.
[post="171628"][/post]