Boeing to detail quality, training improvements in FAA meeting, sources
say
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[May 30, 2024] By
David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Boeing's outgoing CEO Dave Calhoun and other
senior company officials will detail the planemaker's quality, training
and other improvements during meetings with U.S. aviation regulators on
Thursday, according to sources with knowledge of the matter.
In late February, Federal Aviation Administration chief Mike Whitaker
gave Boeing 90 days to develop a comprehensive plan to address "systemic
quality-control issues" and barred the planemaker from expanding 737 MAX
production after a door panel blowout during a Jan. 5 flight on a new
Alaska Airlines 737 MAX 9.
Whitaker will hear firsthand from Boeing executives on quality efforts
during a scheduled three-hour meeting at FAA headquarters in Washington
that could go longer, according to the sources.
It will be Calhoun's second high-profile meeting with Whitaker this year
as Boeing seeks to have costly production limits lifted by the FAA after
soaring quality concerns compelled the regulator to slow its rapidly
increasing 737 production schedule.
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Boeing confirmed a meeting would take place on Thursday, but declined to
provide further details. The FAA said Whitaker would take part in a
meeting with Boeing.
Calhoun is due to exit the company by the end of the year as part of a
broader management shake-up announced in the wake of the Alaska Airlines
incident, but Boeing has not yet named a replacement.
The meeting is set to include other senior Boeing leaders including
Stephanie Pope, the new head of Boeing Commercial Airplanes as well as
Boeing's head of quality Elizabeth Lund and Mike Fleming, Boeing senior
vice president and general manager, airplane programs, the sources said.
Boeing said this month it has added new training material for
manufacturing and quality roles averaging about 20 to 50 more training
hours per employee, while more than 7,000 new tools and equipment have
been provided for commercial airplane work.
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A Boeing 737 MAX 7 aircraft piloted by Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA) Chief Steve Dickson lands during an evaluation
flight at Boeing Field in Seattle, Washington, U.S. September 30,
2020. REUTERS/Lindsey Wasson
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"We anticipate the FAA will take whatever time is necessary to
review that plan and hold us accountable," Calhoun said at Boeing's
annual meeting on May 17. "This is more of a beginning than it is an
end."
Whitaker, who plans to hold a press conference after the meeting,
said last week that Boeing faces a "long road" to address safety
issues. He added the 90-day plan "is not the end of the process.
It's the beginning and it's going to be a long road to get Boeing
back to where they need to be making safe airplanes."
Boeing is currently producing significantly fewer than the 38 737
MAXs per month it is permitted under the FAA directive.
A February meeting between Boeing executives and Whitaker lasted
about seven hours.
Boeing faces a separate criminal investigation into the MAX 9
mid-air emergency. The Justice Department said this month that
Boeing breached its obligations in a 2021 agreement shielding the
planemaker from criminal prosecution over fatal 737 MAX crashes.
Boeing denied it has breached the deal. The Justice Department
directed Boeing to respond by June 13 and intends to decide whether
to prosecute Boeing by July 7.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Jamie Freed)
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