Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Boeing exec from 737 Max team leaving

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Boeing said Wednesday that the head of its 737 jetliner program is leaving the company in an executive shake-up weeks after a door panel blew out on a flight over Oregon, renewing questions about safety at the company.

Boeing announced that Ed Clark, who had been with the company for nearly 18 years and led the 737 program since early 2021, was leaving immediatel­y.

Clark oversaw the factory in Renton, Washington, where final assembly took place on the Alaska Airlines 737 Max 9 involved in last month’s accident. Federal investigat­ors said bolts needed to help keep a panel called a door plug in place were missing after repair work on the plane.

Katie Ringgold, a vice president in charge of delivering 737s to airlines, will succeed Clark as vice president and general manager of the 737 program and the Renton factory, according to an email to employees from Stan Deal, the CEO of Boeing’s commercial airplanes division.

The company announced several other appointmen­ts, including naming longtime executive Elizabeth Lund to the new position of senior vice president for commercial airplanes quality.

The moves are part of the company’s “enhanced focus on ensuring that every airplane we deliver meets or exceeds all quality and safety requiremen­ts,” Deal said in his email to staff. “Our customers demand, and deserve, nothing less.”

U.S. ports getting cybersecur­ity boost

President Joe Biden on Wednesday signed an executive order and created a federal rule aimed at better securing the nation’s ports from potential cyberattac­ks.

The administra­tion is outlining a set of cybersecur­ity regulation­s that port operators must comply with across the country, not unlike standardiz­ed safety regulation­s that seek to prevent injury or damage to people and infrastruc­ture.

“We want to ensure there are similar requiremen­ts for cyber, when a cyberattac­k can cause just as much if not more damage than a storm or another physical threat,” said Anne Neuberger, deputy national security adviser at the White House.

Nationwide, ports employ roughly 31 million people and contribute $5.4trillion to the economy, and could be left vulnerable to a ransomware or other brand of cyberattac­k, Neuberger said. The standardiz­ed set of requiremen­ts is designed to help protect against that.

The new requiremen­ts are part of the federal government’s focus on modernizin­g how critical infrastruc­ture like power grids, ports and pipelines are protected as they are increasing­ly managed and controlled online, often remotely. There is no set of nationwide standards that govern how operators should protect against potential attacks online.

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