Bangkok Post

Boeing is shutting down its Seattle-area manufactur­ing hub for two weeks after a worker died of coronaviru­s complicati­ons.

Move bolsters case for $60bn bailout

- JULIE JOHNSSON RICHARD CLOUGH

WASHINGTON: Boeing Co is shutting down its Seattle-area manufactur­ing hub for two weeks after a worker died of coronaviru­s complicati­ons, adding to a wave of plant closings sweeping the globe as the aviation industry navigates the biggest disruption in decades.

“Activity at the factories will start winding down now and come to a halt on March 25,’’ Boeing said in a statement on Monday.

The company will conduct deep cleaning at the facilities, which range from a wide-body plant in Everett, about 25 miles (40 kilometres) north of Seattle, to parts-fabricatio­n plants south of the city. Workers will receive 10 days of paid leave.

The aerospace giant is pausing operations as the Covid-19 pandemic upends the airline industry and threatens the health of the planemaker’s own workers in the Seattle area, a hot spot of the outbreak.

Boeing is also assessing the health and safety of workers at its 787 Dreamliner plant in South Carolina, the company’s last jetliner factory to remain in operation.

“The fight to save lives by halting the spread of Covid-19 around the world is demanding actions that few of us could have imagined even a few weeks ago,” Boeing chief executive Dave Calhoun said in a note to employees.

“It has to be the top priority for all of us — individual­ly and collective­ly — to do what’s possible to help stop the pandemic now.”

“The drastic move bolsters Boeing’s case for a $60 billion US bailout,’’ Bank of America Corp analyst Ron Epstein said in a report.

So far, 32 Boeing employees have contracted the virus, with the bulk of the cases occurring in Washington state.

The company’s jetliner division is headquarte­red in Longacres, south of Seattle.

Earlier this month, the manufactur­er ordered employees who can work from home to do so.

It has been coordinati­ng with local authoritie­s as cases started to crop up in the gigantic Everett factory, which makes twin-aisle models from the 747 jumbo to the KC-46 tanker.

The first Boeing worker to die from the virus was a resident of Everett, Mayor Cassie Franklin said in a message on the city’s website.

She thanked Boeing for closing the 1,000-acre facility “to help keep our residents and workers healthy and safe.”

IAM District 751, which represents 31,000 Boeing workers in the Puget Sound region, also supported the factory shutdowns in a message to members.

The union said it was negotiatin­g unemployme­nt benefits for those whose underlying health conditions would prevent them from returning to the workplace.

The temporary halt will add to the pressure on Boeing’s finances as the Chicago-based manufactur­er lobbies the Trump administra­tion and Congress for taxpayer assistance.

Underscori­ng the strain, General Electric Co — a key Boeing supplier — said earlier that it would cut 10% of its aviation division’s US workforce.

The Everett factory costs Boeing about $750 million a month to operate, including fixed expenses and labor costs, according to estimates from Melius Research analyst Carter Copeland.

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