Faces In The News
Barger Out As JetBlue COO
Andrew Farrell, 03.08.07, 6:45 PM ET
JetBlue announced a new Chief Operating Officer to replace David Barger just a month after a major logistical meltdown that left Barger personally asking stranded customers for forgiveness.
The airline said Russell Chew will take over as COO on Mar. 19, replacing Barger who held the role since 1998. Barger will continue as President of the company.
Barger and JetBlue were mortified in February after an operational fiasco that left thousands stranded and held some passengers on grounded planes for more than six hours. As flights resumed, Barger went to John F. Kennedy airport to apologize in person to the disgruntled fliers.
Since then, the company has scrambled to respond with changes they assure will preclude a repeat of the disaster and rebuild a carefully crafted image of excellent customer service. (See: "Neeleman's True-Blue Atonement?")
Analysts said the appointment of Chew is another step in those efforts and bolsters the company's claims of genuine repentance for the mishap.
"We believe this enhances JetBlue's operations expertise," said Jim Corridore, an analyst at Standard & Poors Equity Research, in a research note. "In our opinion, the company has taken the right steps to recover from the Feb. 14 storms."
Chew leaves the COO post at the Federal Aviation Administration, a position he held since February of 2003. Before that, the Los Angeles native spent 17 years with American Airlines.
Ray Neidl, an analyst at Calyon Securities, said that background makes Chew well-qualified to avoid a repeat of last month's disruptions. Neidl said though he didn't think the hiring was an indication that JetBlue blamed departing COO Barger, but part of a larger management overhaul to strengthen its operational and financial leadership.
"JetBlue has been making major management changes and this isn't first one," said Neidl. "They've been focusing on getting stronger there for the past year."
JetBlue hired its Chief Revenue Officer Trey Urbahn from private jet provider OneSky Jets in November 2006 and named John Harvey Chief Financial Officer in May of 2006.
Barger Out As JetBlue COO
Andrew Farrell, 03.08.07, 6:45 PM ET
JetBlue announced a new Chief Operating Officer to replace David Barger just a month after a major logistical meltdown that left Barger personally asking stranded customers for forgiveness.
The airline said Russell Chew will take over as COO on Mar. 19, replacing Barger who held the role since 1998. Barger will continue as President of the company.
Barger and JetBlue were mortified in February after an operational fiasco that left thousands stranded and held some passengers on grounded planes for more than six hours. As flights resumed, Barger went to John F. Kennedy airport to apologize in person to the disgruntled fliers.
Since then, the company has scrambled to respond with changes they assure will preclude a repeat of the disaster and rebuild a carefully crafted image of excellent customer service. (See: "Neeleman's True-Blue Atonement?")
Analysts said the appointment of Chew is another step in those efforts and bolsters the company's claims of genuine repentance for the mishap.
"We believe this enhances JetBlue's operations expertise," said Jim Corridore, an analyst at Standard & Poors Equity Research, in a research note. "In our opinion, the company has taken the right steps to recover from the Feb. 14 storms."
Chew leaves the COO post at the Federal Aviation Administration, a position he held since February of 2003. Before that, the Los Angeles native spent 17 years with American Airlines.
Ray Neidl, an analyst at Calyon Securities, said that background makes Chew well-qualified to avoid a repeat of last month's disruptions. Neidl said though he didn't think the hiring was an indication that JetBlue blamed departing COO Barger, but part of a larger management overhaul to strengthen its operational and financial leadership.
"JetBlue has been making major management changes and this isn't first one," said Neidl. "They've been focusing on getting stronger there for the past year."
JetBlue hired its Chief Revenue Officer Trey Urbahn from private jet provider OneSky Jets in November 2006 and named John Harvey Chief Financial Officer in May of 2006.