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Squonk

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Doug Parker just posted a letter to all employees on the Hub. It is copyrighted so I don't think we can paste it here. Curious to hear a reaction from our posters. One interesting note, he did not mention the utter failure of Qik over Shares being the main culprit in this weekends debacle.

🙄
 
Again, lame excuses!!!!! Go get another BEER Dougie.
 
Reading between the lines.

QIK over SHARES was a resounding success. The blame wil be placed elsewhere.
 
Yes indeed the weather was a large contributing factor for last weeks problem ,BUT it was not the major factor and it galls me to have Tempe continue to spew the continued crap of Qik/Shares not being part of the continuing problem. IT IS THE PROBLEM. The system is a total unmitigated failure regardless of what Parker, Kirby and Beery say. If you want the truth ask the frontline, they all say the same thing, Qik/Shares SUCKS. It is difficult to work with and seems to think it know how to work a flight better than a 20 year agent. Also look at staffing levels in HP cities VS US cities. In HP cities 4-5 agents to work a flight because Qik/Shares is so backwards. In US cities a flight is usually worked by 1 or 2 agents using Sabre. Of course evrything went to crap during the res migration, the east(US) cities were staffed to Sabre levels not HP Qik/Shares levels of twice the people to do the same job. If they really wanted to watch staffing levels , wouldn't it be more efficient to use the superior system(Sabre) and do a better job with fewer people rather than a pathetic one?
 
Well, no matter what is being blown out of the Sandcastle, just look at the on-time performance.


US at 46%

WN at 90%

Everyone else is running between 74% an 85%.


But, hey, we don't have a problem it's the agents fault. :angry:
 
When you have 4 and 5 agents to work 1 flight it it easy. When you have 1 or 2 and a system that impedes you every step of the way , it is impossible. The system does not let us do our job, it blocks us with popups. I wnat to enter info not search for it. Sabre did it all, Shares does nothing but get i the way.
 
Can not agree with you more Crusher.

But it does not snow in PHX.

B6 has 78% OT with ZERO XLD so far today.

When will this group learn. We are no longer a Legacy carrier and we are not even an LCC.

Management, the uppers, need to realize that something has to change and quick. We need a long term plan that will make us The Airline of Choice by all. We need to set the standards instead of being three steps behind them. :censored:
 
I believe this is the letter in question. Someone can feel free to say something if it's not.

A message from Doug Parker
March 20, 2007

This weekend, an ice storm moved through the Northeast and had a significant impact on all airline operations, including ours. At one point, US Airways had more than 100,000 misconnected customers as the storm shut down runways at PHL, BOS, EWR and elsewhere. We cancelled about 1,500 flights on Friday alone (462 mainline and 1,038 Express); on Saturday, we cancelled another 823 mainline and Express flights. And Sunday, we had cancelled another 200 flights.

When you consider the load factor booked on most of these flights was north of 85 percent, you can quickly see just how devastating this past weekend was for our customers, as well as our frontline employees. We also had loads for the next several days that were forecast over 90% which meant that we simply didn’t have enough seats in the system to reaccomodate all of the customers from the cancelled flights.

Over the two days, I’ve heard from many of you wondering why our operation was so challenging this past weekend. While not everyone might want the degree of detail outlined here, I think you all deserve to know exactly what happened this past weekend and what we are doing to recover.

A Perfect Storm (of ice pellets, high loads and treacherous travel conditions)
The difficulties began Friday when a predicted “wintry mix†storm quickly became something far worse. Although forecast to be light snow, what happened instead was a small 20-mile wide band of operationally devastating weather that moved from southwest to northeast right over the top of Philadelphia and New York. Airports south of this narrow band had rain and could stay open and airports north of this narrow band had snow and could also stay open. Only in the narrow band of ice pellets were aircraft prohibited from taking off. Normally, the storm would move and the ice would turn to either snow or rain which would allow takeoffs to resume and in fact, that’s what our weather forecasts continued to predict. This one, however, stayed over PHL all day and as a result, PHL was closed for takeoffs from 10am through the rest of the day.

While our operations team kept expecting a change to either rain or snow (either of which we could safely operate in), the ice continued and we ended up saturated in PHL.

With PHL closed, we were forced to cancel hundreds of flights, or divert flights from Northeast cities in to our hub at Charlotte, NC. We had similar icing problems at the Shuttle cities and at PIT. These cancellations and diversions, of course left many airplanes and crews “out of position†and many employees driving to some of these airports had a rough time given the treacherous road conditions.

Although not any solace to our customers; we weren’t alone with the weather challenges. Other airlines had similar challenges and because we are in the middle of spring break travel, there were few options for re-accommodation on any airline (remember the 90 plus load factors for several days in a row). We were getting requests from other airlines for assistance and we were doing our share of asking for seats too. And once passengers ended up in one of the hubs, notably PHL and CLT, there wasn’t much choice but to wait in line to rebook.

Because we had over 100,000 customers to reaccomodate, reservations had very long hold times, the airports had really long lines, and patience, understandably, grew thin. Hotels were completely full in many cities, so customers spent the night in the airport on cots, and in some cases, they spent more than one night in the airport.

Digging Out
As the weekend progressed, our employees worked double- and triple-time to bring extra flights to Charlotte and other cities to get customers where they needed to be. We offered refunds and future flight vouchers to customers who could travel later. Crewmembers came in on their days off to staff flights. Specifically, we flew extra sections from CLT to Miami, Orlando and Buffalo; on Sunday; we flew an extra section from PHL to Aruba.

Our employees worked with local airports to bring cots and food to our customers who could not get into overflowing hotels. We opened our clubs to elderly customers and families with small children.

By Sunday afternoon, we were making progress. Lines at CLT – which on Saturday numbered close to 2,000 customers – were down to several hundred by Sunday afternoon. Philadelphia and other Northeast cities’ lines were down to levels comparable to a heavy holiday travel weekend, a major improvement from just 24 hours earlier.

Week Ahead
So just when Res migration and an ice pellet storm end, many employees wonder what’s next. High loads due to spring break remain, but hopefully, we’ll operate under much more cooperative weather. In addition, while still tight, crew staffing is recovering and we believe we will be staffed to run the full operation Monday morning. The load factor estimates for the week ahead are listed below:

Monday – ML 85.5%, EX 79.7%
Tuesday – ML 77.8% EX, 71.1%
Wednesday – ML 81.0%, EX 74.7%
Thursday – ML 86.5%, EX 80.0%
Friday – ML 89%, EX 83%
Saturday - 90+%
Sunday - 87.1%

To say this past weekend was frustrating to our frontline employees, particularly coming after two tough weeks following Res migration, is an understatement. To simply say “thank you†at this point rings hollow, and more hat tricks and cookouts seem trite. I know that this weekend was very difficult for our customers and employees, particularly coming on the heels of Res migration. We were caught by a storm that closed PHL and other Northeast station and because of Spring Break loads, it has taken us days to recover and made for a very difficult work environment.

We didn’t deliver that this weekend, and we haven’t delivered that for the past few weeks. That must change and it will. Recognize this is due to no fault of our frontline employees and to be clear, our operations team did the best they could with the information they had to work with.

In closing, I realize I’ve provided a lot more detail about an irregular ops weekend than normal. But this past weekend was anything but normal and coming on the heels of Res migration, I felt you all deserved to know as much as possible about what went wrong this past weekend, as well as where we are right now.

If you worked the frontlines over the weekend, please accept -- again -- my humble and personal thanks for all that you endured and did to help our customers. Please know that we are doing everything in our power to resume normal operations as quickly as we can. Thank you for all you’re doing to assist that effort
 
I don't think the users of this board are being fair ..... I'll take this mgt team any day over the past 5 we've had.

In fact, I think this board is loosing its creditability ..... nothing but negative BS.
 
I don't think the users of this board are being fair ..... I'll take this mgt team any day over the past 5 we've had.

In fact, I think this board is loosing its creditability ..... nothing but negative BS.
if this management is so great why didnt delta want it :blink: :down:
 
Can not agree with you more Crusher.

But it does not snow in PHX.

B6 has 78% OT with ZERO XLD so far today.

When will this group learn. We are no longer a Legacy carrier and we are not even an LCC.

Management, the uppers, need to realize that something has to change and quick. We need a long term plan that will make us The Airline of Choice by all. We need to set the standards instead of being three steps behind them. :censored:
Anyone who DOESN'T see a problem NEEDS TO WAKE UP! The last couple of weeks have been a complete disaster for the customer and the employees. I have seen many competent Agents be literally thrown into an ugly situation of this SHARES system , inop kiosks, and weather problems during the Spring Break heavy travel period. Customers have been gravely underserved and business travellers have no choice but to think of US as a complete UNRELIABLE means of transportation. For anyone that says it "ISN'T that Bad", talk to the families that stood in line with screaming kids for 4 hours, elderly pax that barely had the muster to remain in line to seek help, the college students that had their Spring Break screwed up, and the business traveller that couldn't even count on SAME DAY SERVICE, let alone an ON TIME SCHEDULE. So when employees vent and really show their disgust for the latest blunders from Tempe, they have just cause. (I am so embarassed to have witnessed some of these situations I feel like taking the "HAT TRICK Payout" and sending it back with a note "Shove it UP your Arsce, FIX the PROBLEMS"!
 
Blaming the wx is BS. I worked crappy wx a few years - one winter, temps went to -25F (-50F windchill) and snow drifted up to the middle of my second story window.

The difference is, we planned for such a weather event - staffing, equipment, supplies,etc. ahead of time. Management had the foresight to rent a few tractors with snowplows, knowing they had some farm boys who knew what to do. I made some nice OT on a tractor clearing our gate spaces and fuel farm - the airport was busy on the runways and ramps.

During the worst of it, we had heavy falling snow. We set up four deicing rigs as a 'car wash' at the end of the runway. The planes got shot and immediately took off. When two rigs ran out of fluid, we had two more ready to go. Not rocket science, yes?

The notion of "if the temps had been a few degrees higher, we'd be ok" is BS,too. You shouldn't cut it that fine, and you should plan for the worst. I fully understand you can't fly with ice pellets. Cancel where you're most likely to have them, and design the system to recover where you don't. If the NE is going to sock in, ferry the canceled flights and crews to CLT. Game it out ahead of time, and design a computer program that will automate the heavy lifting. Or can't SHARES do that? If it can't, the BOD needs to do the job the stockholders hired them to do.

Of course, that takes $$$ and insight.To date, US misspends one and has none of the other.
 
How did WN fare in their BWI operation, and how did CO do in their EWR operation? Those are the only other major airline "hub" airports that were in the thicke of the ice storm, so the best one should be considered the benchmark for the lesser performing ones to look to. B6 at JFK learned from it's mistakes 2 weeks earlier, but even their operation at JFK is rather small compared to US at PHL.
 

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