Southwest Airlines reaches five-year tentative deal with Transport Workers Union

Reuters

Published Feb 22, 2024 07:14AM ET

Updated Feb 22, 2024 11:31AM ET

By Shivansh Tiwary

(Reuters) - Southwest Airlines (NYSE:LUV) has reached a tentative five-year agreement with a local unit of the Transport Workers Union that represents nearly 18,000 operations, provisioning, ramp and cargo agents, the company said on Thursday.

The agreement, which is subject to a ratification by the members of TWU 555, includes average pay increase of more than 18% on the date of ratification and a 3% annual wage increase beyond that.

In the past two years, unions representing pilots, flight attendants and maintenance workers have sought higher wages, better scheduling and other benefits against the backdrop of a tight U.S. labor market.

The agreement constitutes a wage rate of $38 per hour at the top of the wage scale, which is 6.6% above United Airlines' current industry leading rate, TWU said.

The deal also allows workers to reach the top of the pay scale after 10 years of service from 11 years currently.

"This tentative agreement provides much needed raises and quality-of-life benefits for our hardworking members at airports across the country," TWU International Executive Vice-President Alex Garcia said in a statement.

Southwest, which is in talks with its cabin crew members, has ratified contracts with nine worker groups since October 2022. The cabin crew members approved a strike mandate in January after rejecting a tentative contract.