Jet crash disaster in South Korea marks another setback for Boeing
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[December 30, 2024] By
PAUL WISEMAN
WASHINGTON (AP) — A machinists strike. Another safety problem involving
its troubled top-selling airliner. A plunging stock price.
2024 was already a dispiriting year for Boeing, the American aviation
giant. But when one of the company's jets crash-landed in South Korea on
Sunday, killing all but two of the 181 people on board, it brought to a
close an especially unfortunate year for Boeing.
The cause of the crash remains under investigation, and aviation experts
were quick to distinguish Sunday's incident from the company’s earlier
safety problems.
Alan Price, a former chief pilot at Delta Air Lines who is now a
consultant, said it would be inappropriate to link the incident Sunday
to two fatal crashes involving Boeing’s troubled 737 Max jetliner in
2018 and 2019. In January this year, a door plug blew off a 737 Max
while it was in flight, raising more questions about the plane.
The Boeing 737-800 that crash-landed in Korea, Price noted, is “a very
proven airplane. "It’s different from the Max ...It’s a very safe
airplane.’’
For decades, Boeing has maintained a role as one of the giants of
American manufacturing. But the the past year's repeated troubles have
been damaging. The company's stock price is down more than 30% in 2024.
The company's reputation for safety was especially tarnished by the 737
Max crashes, which occurred off the coast of Indonesia and in Ethiopia
less than five months apart in 2018 and 2019 and left a combined 346
people dead. In the five years since then, Boeing has lost more than $23
billion. And it has fallen behind its European rival, Airbus, in selling
and delivering new planes.
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Last fall, 33,000 Boeing machinists
went on strike, crippling the production of the 737 Max, the
company's bestseller, the 777 airliner and 767 cargo plane. The
walkout lasted seven weeks, until members of the International
Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers agreed to an offer
that included 38% pay raises over four years.
In January, a door plug blew off a 737 Max during
an Alaska Airlines flight. Federal regulators responded by imposing
limits on Boeing aircraft production that they said would remain in
place until they felt confident about manufacturing safety at the
company.
In July, Boeing agreed to plead guilty to conspiracy to commit fraud
for deceiving the Federal Aviation Administration regulators who
approved the 737 Max. Acting on Boeing’s incomplete disclosures, the
FAA approved minimal, computer-based training instead of more
intensive training in flight simulators. Simulator training would
have increased the cost for airlines to operate the Max and might
have pushed some to buy planes from Airbus instead. (Prosecutors
said they lacked evidence to argue that Boeing’s deception had
played a role in the crashes.)
But the plea deal was rejected this month by a federal judge in
Texas, Reed O’Connor, who decided that diversity, inclusion and
equity or DEI policies in the government and at Boeing could result
in race being a factor in choosing an official to oversee Boeing’s
compliance with the agreement.
Boeing has sought to change its culture. Under intense pressure over
safety issues, David Calhoun departed as CEO in August. Since
January, 70,000 Boeing employees have participated in meetings to
discuss ways to improve safety.
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