The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Boeing’s Chicago HQ a ‘ghost town’

- ERIC M. JOHNSON REUTERS

SEATTLE — Twenty years ago, just days before the 9-11 attacks on the United States crippled the aerospace industry, Boeing Co. moved its headquarte­rs from its historic Seattle manufactur­ing hub to a stylish downtown Chicago skyscraper.

The move was central to Boeing's plan to forge a new identity as a diversifie­d global juggernaut, distancing top executives from the daily operations inside far-flung business units, and getting closer to Wall Street and major customers.

Two decades on, in the midst of a fresh crisis shaking the industry, Boeing's corporate hub is in a state of limbo.

A new crop of top executives based mainly on the coasts are managing industrial and safety certificat­ion problems at its major divisions and the lingering fallout from the 737 MAX and coronaviru­s crises. At the same time, tax incentives heaped on Boeing by Chicago and Illinois run out at year-end.

Once the symbol of a new Boeing, the vision of a corporate epicentre rising above its constituen­t parts has fallen at odds with the imperative of recapturin­g engineerin­g dominance and repairing relationsh­ips with customers and federal regulators.

Chief executive Dave Calhoun, for example, spent the beginning of the year at Boeing's factory in South Carolina dealing with production-related defects that have hobbled the program, people familiar with the matter said.

Other top executives, like newly minted CFO Brian West, are also based primarily on the U.S. East Coast and a hush has descended on the exclusive but functional top floor, although the pandemic has also been a major factor, the people said.

"It's a ghost town," one of the people added.

“As with other companies, we have adapted to hybrid ways of working in the midst of the global pandemic to engage with our people, and our customers and other stakeholde­rs.”

CUTTING COSTS

The headquarte­rs — a 36-floor, Us$200-million riverfront skyscraper — sits at the crossroads of a cost-cutting campaign that has seen Boeing shed real estate, including its commercial airplane headquarte­rs in Seattle.

Several people close to the company say cost cuts and a more hands-on corporate culture have raised questions about Boeing's long-term future in the city, and in turn the broad direction Boeing intends to take as it tries to regain its stride.

Boeing, however, insists significan­t operations still take place there and rebuffs any suggestion that the giant may leave its Midwest base.

"Chicago is strategica­lly important to Boeing's U.S. and global operations," a spokespers­on said.

"As with other companies, we have adapted to hybrid ways of working in the midst of the global pandemic to engage with our people, and our customers and other stakeholde­rs."

Boeing and employees have invested nearly $50 million in support of Chicagolan­d communitie­s in recent years, Boeing said.

Despite the new focus, others caution exiting the city would risk a local firestorm and remains far from Boeing's immediate priorities amid a slew of industrial and regulatory problems.

NEUTRAL LOCATION

Boeing left its Seattle home after 85 years following its 1997 merger with St. Louisbased rival Mcdonnell Douglas, a decision that angered rank-and-file mechanics and engineers.

Boeing was seeking a postmerger headquarte­rs in a neutral location separate from those existing divisional power centres.

But some critics viewed Boeing's Chicago move as a symbol of a company that prized near-term profits and shareholde­r returns over longterm engineerin­g dominance, a charge repeated after crashes of 737 MAX jets that killed 346 people in 2018 and 2019.

"It began as a way of signaling that they would make future investment­s without regard to any legacy loyalties," Teal Group analyst Richard Aboulafia said.

"To some, it has merely become a way of indicating that they will not make any future investment­s at all."

INCENTIVES EXPIRING

Chicago, Cook County and Illinois awarded Boeing more than $60 million in tax and other incentives over 20 years to relocate. Those credits have expired or will expire at yearend, though Boeing will receive 2021 funds next year, the spokespers­on said.

The incentives, which were temporaril­y swept up in a trade spat with Europe's Airbus over mutual claims of unfair support, required Boeing to keep 500 full-time employees at the office.

Boeing reported 513 fulltime employees in Chicago for 2020, a city spokespers­on said.

Boeing also employs thousands of people in Chicago and the Metro East region in southern Illinois near St. Louis, a state spokespers­on said.

But analysis last year by the Better Government Associatio­n, which scrutinize­s Illinois state decisions, found that Boeing fell short of the 500-employee mark in at least four years.

"Numbers reported by the company to the state and city differ, have never been audited, and in some years fell short of the public target," it said.

The indirect impact from Boeing employees in the Chicago area had been pegged at $4.3 billion over 20 years, Pam Mcdonough, a former director of the Illinois Department of Commerce and Community Affairs, said in a Linkedin article last year.

"These large projects are complicate­d and strategic but do result in tremendous benefits both financial and civic."

Boeing spokespers­on

 ?? REUTERS ?? The Boeing logo is displayed on its world headquarte­rs office building in Chicago.
REUTERS The Boeing logo is displayed on its world headquarte­rs office building in Chicago.

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