I googled SWA ramp pay and found this shared by a SWA ramper on another forum. I wonder if the unions will band together or point the finger at each other when management comes for concessions;
You'll be getting 40 hours base from day one.. There is the occasional mandatory overtime, and that's always doubletime. Overtime works like this. Working voluntary overtime on first off day is time and a half. Working overtime on scheduled work day is time and a half for first 4 hours and double time for all hours after that. That's really the secret to why Southwest ramp agents make so much money. $26 x 1.5 = $39 an hour. $39 x 4 = $156. $26 x 2 = $52 an hour. $52 x 4 = $208. $208 + $156 = $364. That's $364 extra dollars for working that one extra shift per week. That's $728 extra per pay period. That's $1,456 extra per month. That's $17,472 extra per year. I make $54,163 base per year. With that 1 extra shift I now make $71,635 a year. I work with guys who do 2-3 double shifts per week and their pay is well into 6 figures.
$11.12 an hour works out to be $23,165 base. With the 1 overtime shift using the same math you'll make $30,605.
The good part about this job is that despite the low pay at the beginning, if you can stick it out for a few years high pay is a sure thing. The job security is bullet proof. If you make it out of probation and become a card carrying union member you KNOW for sure based on the scale how much you'll be making in "x" amount of years. The union contract is renegotiated every 3-5 years and the pay is always adjusted for cost of living. The last negotiation took the top pay from $24 an hour to $26 an hour. And historically it's always been similar. It's a safe bet that the pay will be over $30 an hour by the time a new hire today reaches top out.
Here is the complete union contract for Southwest Airline ramp agents.
http://twu555.org/uploads/2008-2011 CBA.pdf
Can you say Menzies?