Khaleej Times

Boeing extends Washington production shutdown indefinite­ly

- PRECAUTION­ARY MEASURES David Shepardson

washington — Boeing said it would extend the suspension of production operations at its Washington state facilities until further notice amid the coronaviru­s outbreak.

The largest US planemaker said on March 23 it would halt production at its Washington state twinaisle jetliner factory as a temporary measure to help fight the outbreak of the respirator­y disease. Production had been expected to resume early this week.

Boeing declined to say when production could resume. It said the actions were “being taken in light of the company’s continuing focus on the health and safety of employees, current assessment of the spread of Covid-19 in Washington state, the Covid of the supply chain and additional recommenda­tions from government health authoritie­s”.

Boeing will stop paying about 30,000 production workers this week in Washington state after it previously doubled to 10 days the amount of paid leave it gave to production workers after the suspension. Employees can use paid time off, vacation and sick leave in the interim and will continue to get medical benefits.

Boeing said on Sunday about 135 members of its 160,000-person global workforce had tested positive for the coronaviru­s.

The Seattle Times reported that as of Friday, Boeing had 95 employees who tested positive for the respirator­y disease in Washington state, up from 54 a week earlier. The newspaper said 14 of those work at the Everett widebody jet plant.

During the suspension, Boeing will implement additional health and safety measures, including “new visual cues to encourage physical distancing”, more frequent cleaning of work and common areas and staggered shift times.

“We will take this time to continue to listen to our incredible team and assess applicable government direction, the spread of the coronaviru­s in the community and the reliabilit­y of our suppliers,” said Boeing Commercial

Airplanes chief executive officer Stan Deal.

Boeing’s airline customers have deferred taking new aircraft and making pre-delivery downpaymen­ts, compoundin­g a crisis over the year-old grounding of Boeing’s previously fast-selling 737 MAX jet after two fatal crashes. Boeing halted 737 production in January.

Boeing asked last month for at least $60 billion in US government loan guarantees for itself and other American aerospace manufactur­ers to help the embattled industry withstand a coronaviru­s-related cash drain. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates