Boeing CEO blasted in US Senate hearing while apologizing for safety
woes
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[June 19, 2024]
By David Shepardson, Allison Lampert
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -U.S. senators on Tuesday attacked the CEO of
Boeing for the planemaker's tarnished safety record, overshadowing his
apology to families who lost loved ones in two 737 MAX crashes and
acceptance of responsibility after a January mid-air emergency.
Chief Executive Dave Calhoun faced repeated questions about how much he
is paid, Boeing's safety culture, and why he is not immediately
resigning instead of retiring by year's end, at a hearing before the
Senate Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations.
"I am proud of every action we have taken" Calhoun said in response to
harsh questioning from Republican Senator Josh Hawley who asked, "why
haven't you resigned?" and accused Calhoun of "strip-mining" Boeing
while earning a multimillion-dollar pay package.
Calhoun's total compensation in 2023 rose to $32.8 million, a 45%
increase from the $22.6 million he received the previous year.
The hearing marked the first time Calhoun had faced lawmakers' questions
and put the spotlight on Boeing's souring safety reputation and the CEO
who said in March that he plans to step down by year-end amid a
management shakeup by Boeing.
Senator Richard Blumenthal, who chairs the subcommittee, called the
proceeding a "moment of reckoning" for Boeing and told the hearing there
was overwhelming evidence that the U.S. Justice Department should pursue
prosecution against Boeing.
"As a former federal prosecutor and state attorney general I think that
the evidence is near-overwhelming to justify that prosecution,"
Blumenthal said.
Prosecutors have until July 7 to inform a federal judge in Texas of
their plans. The Justice Department found in May that Boeing had failed
to "design, implement, and enforce a compliance and ethics program" as
part of complying with a deferred prosecution agreement following the
fatal crashes.
Calhoun took responsibility for incidents that have thrust Boeing into
crisis over the last five years, acknowledging that the Alaska Airlines
door plug incident on Jan. 5 was the result of a manufacturing defect.
Boeing also took responsibility for the development of a key software
system linked to the 2018 and 2019 fatal crashes in Indonesia and
Ethiopia which killed a combined 346 people.
"I am here in the spirit of transparency and I am here to take
responsibility," Calhoun told reporters earlier as he walked into the
hearing room. At the beginning of the hearing, Calhoun turned to the
crash victims' families and said: "I apologize for the grief that we
have caused," adding the company was "totally committed" to addressing
safety concerns and calling the families' losses "gut-wrenching."
Boeing's chief engineer, Howard McKenzie, played down safety concerns
about hundreds of incorrectly tightened fasteners on some of the
planemaker's widebody 787 jets. The discovery of the fasteners was first
reported by Reuters last week.
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Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun speaks with reporters ahead of meeting with
U.S. senators on Capitol Hill in Washington, U.S., January 24, 2024.
REUTERS/Valerie Insinna/File Photo
McKenzie confirmed that the fasteners had been torqued from the
wrong side, but said an initial analysis done by Boeing said they
were safe.
Last week, Boeing told the U.S. Justice Department it did not
violate a deferred prosecution agreement which shielded the company
from a criminal charge arising from the crashes.
"Boeing needs to stop thinking about the next earnings call and
start thinking about the next generation," Blumenthal said
He said a new whistleblower has come forward after a hearing with a
previous whistleblower in April. Blumenthal said on Tuesday that Sam
Mohawk, a current Boeing quality assurance investigator at its 737
factory in Renton, Washington, recently told the panel he had
witnessed systemic disregard for parts that were potentially
defective or lacking required documentation.
In a report released by the committee ahead of the hearing, Mohawk
said his work handling nonconforming parts became significantly more
"complex and demanding" following the resumption of MAX production
in 2020 following two fatal crashes involving the model.
The report said Mohawk filed a related claim in June with the
Occupational Safety and Health Administration.
Boeing said in a statement that the planemaker is reviewing the
claims it heard about on Monday. "We continuously encourage
employees to report all concerns as our priority is to ensure the
safety of our airplanes and the flying public,” it said.
Boeing also said it has increased the size of its quality team and
"increased the number of inspections per airplane significantly
since 2019."
Since the Jan. 5 mid-air blowout of a door plug on a 737 MAX 9 jet,
scrutiny of the planemaker by regulators and airlines has
intensified.
The National Transportation Safety Board said four key bolts were
missing from the Alaska Airlines plane. The Justice Department has
opened a criminal investigation into the incident.
On May 30, Boeing delivered a quality improvement plan to the FAA
after Whitaker gave the company 90 days to develop a comprehensive
effort to address "systemic quality-control issues." He has barred
the company from expanding production of the MAX.
Boeing shares closed 1.9% lower at $174.99 on Tuesday.
(Reporting by David Shepardson in Washington and Allison Lampert in
Montreal; editing by Chris Sanders, Jason Neely and Matthew Lewis)
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