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Reading: Boeing CEO admits error, says mid-air blowout ‘can never happen again’ 
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Boeing CEO admits error, says mid-air blowout ‘can never happen again’ 

Team Happen Recently
Last updated: 2024/01/10 at 11:24 AM
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 CEO Dave Calhoun’s remarks were Boeing’s first public acknowledgment of errors since a so-called door plug snapped off the fuselage of a nearly full 737 MAX 9 on Friday, leaving a gaping hole next to a miraculously empty seat.  

 Boeing CEO Dave Calhoun acknowledged errors by the US planemaker as more than 170 jets remained grounded for a fourth day, telling staff the company would ensure an accident like the mid-air Alaska Airlines panel blowout “can never happen again.” 

 The company’s top planemaking official, Stan Deal, also told a somber town hall meeting at its Renton, Washington 737 factory that Boeing acknowledges “the real seriousness of the accident” as it launches checks into its quality controls and processes. 

  Calhoun’s remarks were Boeing’s first public acknowledgment of errors since a so-called door plug snapped off the fuselage of a nearly full 737 MAX 9 on Friday, leaving a gaping hole next to a miraculously empty seat.

 Calhoun said he had been “shaken to the bone” by the accident, which rekindled pressure on Boeing over its troubled small plane family almost five years after a full-blown MAX safety crisis sparked by deadly crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia. 

  “We’re going to approach this, number one, acknowledging our mistake,” Calhoun told employees, according to an excerpt released by Boeing.  “We will  approach  this  100% and  be transparent  every step of the  way. 

 Alaska Airlines and United Airlines,  two  US airlines  that  used  temporarily grounded planes, have found  spare  parts on similar  planes,  raising  concerns that  such an incident could  happen again. 

  At another  meeting  Tuesday, Boeing told  employees that  the findings were  considered a “quality control issue” and that inspections were  being  conducted  at Boeing  as well as at the  fuselage  supplier.  Spirit Aerosystems, sources  close to  the  company  said. 

  They said  Boeing  had  sent written  requests  to its  factories  and those of its suppliers to ensure  these issues were  addressed and to  institute  broader  controls  of systems and  processes.  

 Boeing shares fell 1.4% on Tuesday as United canceled 225 daily flights, or 8% of  the  total, while Alaska Airlines canceled 109, or 18%. Similar cancellations were expected on Wednesday.  Calhoun also told Boeing employees  that  the company  will “make sure that  every next  plane  that  takes to  the  skies  is  truly  safe.” 

 He praised the Alaska Airlines crew  for quickly landing  the plane,  leaving 171 passengers and 6 crew members  with only minor  injuries. 

 Calhoun, who was  on the  Boeing board  when all  the  MAX  planes  were grounded in 2019, also praised Alaska Airlines for quickly grounding its 737 MAX 9  planes, saying  adding  that  he knew “how  difficult  it is to  land a plane, let alone a crew,” according to sources. speak.  

 Some industry  executives  privately criticized Boeing for not grounding  their  planes  more quickly  on Saturday. People familiar with the matter  said the company was planning  to order  an inspection  when the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) intervened with an emergency order  for 171 planes  to  be grounded.  

 Boeing  expressed  support for the  FAA’s  action, and the  company’s  contrite tone  Tuesday contrasted with statements  criticized as  legal  after the 2018 crash of  the  Lion Air 737 MAX in Indonesia. 

 US  crisis communications expert Paul Oestreicher, who  criticized  Boeing in 2019 for taking weeks to  realize  its  mistake  after the Lion Air and Ethiopian Airlines crashes, said this time Calhoun  had ” act  much  faster, realizing  the importance of  transparency,”  some  people expressed. empathy  and  determination  to  find solutions.  

 Boeing declined to comment on  Calhoun’s  remarks beyond the official excerpt. 

 Control  protocol 

 The panel that blew  up  Alaska Air Flight 1282  replaced  an optional  emergency  exit door on  the  737 MAX 9  used by airlines  with  denser seating configurations.  

 The FAA said Tuesday that Boeing  is  revising its  inspection  and  maintenance guidelines,  which the regulator  still  must  approve before  inspections  begin. The FAA said it  will “conduct  a thorough  review”  and  that  public safety will determine  a  timeline for returning the MAX to service. 

Boeing ended 2023  behind rival Airbus in aircraft deliveries for the fifth  straight year, sources said,  after seeing  about 50% of  its  market  share  eroded by the  crisis before.  The latest problems could  force  the FAA to  introduce tougher design certification rules  for other  aircraft  models, including  changes  needed for  the smaller MAX 7. 

  Boeing  requested a waiver  to allow  pre-certification of  design changes that analysts say  are now  less  likely.  

 Two senior industry sources said they expected  Southwest  Airlines’ scheduled flight  to  be delayed  another  six months.  

 FAA  Administrator  Mike Whitaker, who took  office  in October, will testify before Congress next month and  may  face questions about approval of the 737  MAX.  The hearing was  being prepared  before the incident on the Alaska Airlines flight. 

 For more  information,  visit at https://happenrecently.com/zepto/?amp=1

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