Southwest Airlines to cut service and staffing in Atlanta to slash costs
Southwest Airlines is planning to reduce service to and from Atlanta next year, cutting more than 300 pilot and flight attendant positions, according to a company memo seen by CNBC.
The changes come a day before Southwest's investor day, when executives will map out the company's plan to cut costs and grow revenue as pressure mounts from activist investor Elliott Investment Management.
Southwest told staff it isn't closing its crew base in Atlanta. Instead, it will reduce staffing by as many as 200 flight attendants and as many as 140 pilots, for the April 2025 bid month.
The airline also isn't laying the crews off, but they will likely have to bid to work from other cities.
Southwest will reduce its Atlanta presence to 11 gates next year from 18, according to a separate memo from the pilots' union.
It will service 21 cities from Atlanta starting next April, down from 37 in March, the carrier said.
"Although we try everything we can before making difficult decisions like this one, we simply cannot afford continued losses and must make this change to help restore our profitability," Southwest said in its memo. "This decision in no way reflects our Employees' performance, and we're proud of the Hospitality and the efforts they have made and will continue to make with our Customers in ATL."
The unions that represent Southwest's pilot and flight attendants railed against the airline for the staffing and service cuts.
"Southwest Airlines management is failing Employees while impacting Customers. Management continues to make decisions that lack full transparency, sufficient communication with Union leadership, and most alarmingly, a lack of focus on what has made the airline great, the Employees," said Bill Bernal, the flight