Boeing directors agree to $237.5 million settlement over 737 MAX safety
oversight
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[November 06, 2021] By
David Shepardson
WASHINGTON/SEATTLE (Reuters) -Boeing Co
current and former company directors have reached a $237.5 million
proposed settlement with shareholders to settle a lawsuit over the
board's safety oversight of the 737 MAX aircraft, documents released on
Friday show.
Following two fatal 737 MAX crashes in the space of five months in
2018-19 that killed 346 people, Boeing's best selling plane was grounded
for 20 months and returned to service after the company made significant
software and training improvements.
The proposed agreement, which is being filed in Delaware Chancery Court
late on Friday and was confirmed by Boeing, will require the election of
an additional board director with aviation/aerospace, engineering, or
product safety oversight expertise within one year.
New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli and the Fire and Police
Pension Association of Colorado, the lead plaintiffs, said the
settlement if approved will be the largest monetary recovery in a
lawsuit filed in the Delaware Courts over allegations that directors
failed to protect against the risk of harm.
Boeing’s board "failed in their fiduciary responsibility to monitor
safety and protect the company, its shareholders and its customers from
unsafe business practices and admitted illegal conduct," DiNapoli said.
"It is our hope, moving forward, that the reforms agreed to in this
settlement will help safeguard Boeing and the flying public against
future tragedy and begin to restore the company’s reputation."
The agreement calls for Boeing's board to always be required to have at
least three directors with safety-related experience, according to the
proposal, which must be approved by a judge to become final.
Under the settlement, Boeing would amend its bylaws to require the
separation of the CEO and Board chair positions, create for at least
five years an ombudsperson program to provide Boeing employees
conducting airplane certification work for the Federal Aviation
Administration with a way to raise work-related concerns.
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A Boeing 737 MAX airplane lands after a test flight at Boeing Field
in Seattle, Washington, U.S. June 29, 2020. REUTERS/Karen Ducey
The settlement would also require Boeing to provide annual public reports on
safety related enhancements implemented by the planemaker since the MAX air
disasters.
The financial penalty is to be paid by insurers to Boeing, the documents show,
minus up to $29.7 million in legal fees and expenses to the shareholder
attorneys.
Boeing's current and former directors do not admit wrongdoing and assert they
were acting in the best interests of Boeing and its stockholders, according to
the settlement.
The Delaware court in September ruled Boeing stockholders could pursue some
claims against the board, saying the first 737 MAX crash was a "red flag" about
a safety system known as MCAS "that the board should have heeded but instead
ignored."
The crashes have cost Boeing some $20 billion. Boeing agreed to a deferred
prosecution agreement with the U.S. Department of Justice in January including
$2.5 billion in fines and compensation stemming from the 737 MAX crashes.
Boeing confirmed the settlement and said "Boeing has taken significant actions
to reinforce and strengthen our commitment to aviation safety" since the
crashes.
The settlement, it added "builds on those actions with additional oversight and
governance reforms that will further advance safety and quality in the work that
we do."
Boeing's board includes the recent additions of Retired Lieutenant General
Stayce Harris, who has over 10,000 hours experience as a pilot of Boeing
aircraft; and David Joyce, who led GE Aviation from 2009 to 2020.
(Reporting by David Shepardson and Eric M. Johnson; editing by Grant McCool)
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