The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Boeing CEO resigns after two crashes

Dennis Muilenburg resigned with no end in sight to the crisis that has engulfed the manufactur­er.

- By Cathy Bussewitz AP Business Writer

Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg resigned Monday with no end in sight to the crisis that has engulfed the manufactur­er and its Max 737 jetliner.

The company’s board said a change in leadership was needed to restore confidence in Boeing as it works to repair relationsh­ips with regulators and others in the wake of two Max 737 crashes that killed 346 people in all.

The Max was grounded worldwide after the two disasters — one in October 2018 off the coast of Indonesia, the other in 2019 in Ethiopia. Boeing has come under fierce criticism on Capitol Hill and elsewhere over the design and rollout of the aircraft and has been unable to get approval from regulators to put the plane back in the air.

Last week, in another blow to a company long seen as a stalwart of American industry, Boeing announced it is suspending production of the Max in January. And in another stinging setback for the aerospace giant, Boeing’s new Starliner space capsule went off course during a bungled, unmanned test flight to the Internatio­nal Space Station.

Boeing said Muilenburg will depart immediatel­y and the board’s current chairman, David Calhoun, will take over as CEO on Jan. 13. The company declined to make Calhoun or other executives available for comment.

Investigat­ors say that in both crashes, a faulty sensor caused the plane’s automated MCAS flight control system to push the nose of the plane down, and the pilots were unable to regain control.

Ababu Amha, who lost his wife, a flight attendant, in the second crash, involving an Ethiopian Airlines aircraft, welcomed Muilenburg’s departure.

“This is something that we have been asking and struggling for quite some time,” he said. “The CEO reluctantl­y and deliberate­ly kept the aircraft in service after the Lion Air crash. The Ethiopian Airlines crash was a preventabl­e accident.”

The resignatio­n, however, is not enough, Amha said: “They should further be held accountabl­e for their actions because what they did was a crime.”

Earlier this month, the head of the Federal Aviation Administra­tion expressed concern that Boeing was pushing for an unrealisti­cally quick return of the grounded Max. The shutdown in production is likely to ripple through Boeing’s vast network of 900 companies

that make engines, bodies and other parts for the 737.

With Boeing in turmoil, sales at Airbus, its top rival, surged 28% during the first half of the year.

Board member Lawrence Kellner, a former United

Airlines CEO, will become non-executive chairman of the board. In a statement, Kellner said Calhoun has “deep industry experience and a proven track record of strong leadership, and he recognizes the challenges we must confront. The board and I look forward to working with him and the rest of the Boeing team to ensure that today

marks a new way forward for our company.”

The crashes and the decisions that were made leading up to those tragedies have shaken Boeing.

“The company appears to have known about safety issues for quite some time. This indicates that there might be more fundamenta­l cultural issues at the company,” said Tim Hubbard,

a professor of management at the University of Notre Dame’s Mendoza College of Business.

“Furthermor­e, the recent failure of a rocket test launch indicates that the company might not be as innovative as they once were. Increasing innovative­ness and changing the culture of a company the size of Boeing is challengin­g. One way to

jump-start changes at Boeing could be new leadership.”

Trading of Boeing stock was halted before the announceme­nt, but it had jumped 3% after the opening bell.

Muilenburg’s departure was long overdue, said Robert Clifford, a Chicago lawyer representi­ng several people who are suing Boeing after losing relatives in the

Ethiopia crash.

“Mr. Muilenburg and other Boeing leaders deliberate­ly put the desire for a heightened stock price and profits over safety by allowing the 737 Max 8 to stay in service” after the first crash, involving a Lion Air flight, Clifford said. Boeing directors, he said, deserve no praise for ousting Muilenburg now.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ANDREW HARNIK, FILE ?? In this Oct. 29 file photo, Boeing Company President and Chief Executive Officer Dennis Muilenburg appears before a Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transporta­tion hearing on ‘Aviation Safety and the Future of Boeing’s 737 MAX’ on Capitol Hill in Washington.
AP PHOTO/ANDREW HARNIK, FILE In this Oct. 29 file photo, Boeing Company President and Chief Executive Officer Dennis Muilenburg appears before a Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transporta­tion hearing on ‘Aviation Safety and the Future of Boeing’s 737 MAX’ on Capitol Hill in Washington.

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