Los Angeles Times

Trying to ease jitters over the 737 Max

-

executive, Dennis Muilenburg, told a gathering of the trade group Global Business Travel Assn. in August.

“This is certainly a challengin­g situation and the respect and confidence of the f lying public is extremely important to us,” he said. “And we know that trust has been damaged over the last few months and we own that and we are working hard to reearn that trust going forward.”

When hundreds of 737 Max planes were grounded in March, the process of getting the popular aircraft flying again was predicted to take a matter of weeks.

Since then, Boeing has conducted more than 700 test flights of the 737 Max with new software updates and has invited more than 200 pilots to informatio­nal sessions with the company, according to Boeing representa­tives.

Boeing is sticking to its timeline of a return to service for the 737 Max by the end of the year, but some analysts doubt the plane will fly again until 2020. United and Southwest airlines have pulled the 737 Max from their f light schedules until at least December.

American Airlines said Wednesday that it plans to return the plane to service on Jan. 16, more than a month beyond its previous forecast.

The Fort Worth-based airline promised to release in the coming weeks its policies and procedures for people who don’t want to fly in the 737 Max.

Boeing and the airlines will have their work cut out for them when it comes time to get airline passengers feeling good about booking flights on the plane.

At least 20% of U.S. travelers say they will definitely avoid the plane in the first six months after flights resume, according to a study led by consultant Henry Harteveldt. More than 40% said they’d be willing to take pricier or less convenient flights to stay off the 737 Max. A separate UBS Group survey found that 70% would hesitate to book a flight on Boeing’s best-selling jet.

The 737 Max was grounded after the crashes of Indonesian Lion Air Flight 610 in October 2018 and Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 in March. A combined 346 people died in the crashes. There were no survivors from either flight.

Before the 737 Max was grounded, Boeing had reported more than 5,000 orders for the plane from at least 79 customers.

So far, Boeing has delivered fewer than 400 of the planes, most of which are being stored at remote airfields such as the Southern California Logistics Airport near Victorvill­e, where Southwest has parked 34 of the planes.

United Airlines has 14 of the 737 Max jets stored at Phoenix Goodyear Airport, west of Phoenix. American Airlines has 24 737 Max planes that are grounded, 15 stored at Tulsa Internatio­nal Airport and nine at the Roswell Internatio­nal Air Center in New Mexico.

The Federal Aviation Administra­tion has met with internatio­nal air regulators from China, the European Union, Brazil and Canada, among others, to discuss a software fix and new pilot training that Boeing has been developing to ensure the jets are safe to fly.

The challenge of reintroduc­ing a plane with a questionab­le safety record is not unpreceden­ted.

In 1979, the DC-10, built by McDonnell Douglas, was grounded for 37 days after a crash near Chicago O’Hare Internatio­nal Airport killed all 271 people on board.

More than a year after the accident, McDonnell Douglas Corp. hired a marketing and communicat­ions firm to reassure the flying public about the aircraft. The manufactur­er believed that 5% to 10% of travelers had reservatio­ns about getting back into the DC-10.

The campaign included television, newspaper and magazine ads featuring former NASA astronaut Charles “Pete” Conrad, who was the third man to walk on the moon. In the ads, Conrad said of the DC-10, “I’m convinced it’s the world’s most thoroughly tested commercial jetliner.”

Although the plane went on to develop other safety concerns that made passengers nervous, including another crash in 1989, the DC-10 continued to fly commercial passengers until 2007.

Still, worry persisted, leading American Airlines to rename its DC-10 Luxury Line the less controvers­ial “American Airlines Luxury Liner.”

To regain the trust of future 737 Max fliers, marketing and crisis management experts say, Boeing and airlines need to organize a public demonstrat­ion of their confidence in the plane. One academic suggested that Boeing executives fly the plane with their family members and pets on board before the 737 Max is deployed for commercial use.

“I think they have to do something,” said Steve Goldman, who teaches crisis management at MIT. “They really need to go the extra mile.”

Goldman’s idea may sound extreme but the head of the FAA has already vowed to personally f ly in the 737 Max before approving it for public use. United Airlines Chief Executive Oscar Munoz made a similar promise.

“All the people in the world have to be assured and made confident that this is an aircraft that’s safe,” he told CNBC last month. “We’ve said from Day One that I would fly the first one on United, but more importantl­y, that the safety and the security of our employees and customers is paramount.” It’s not a new idea. After the crash in 2000 of the supersonic Concorde in France, which killed 113 people, British Airways employees were the first passengers in a test flight that was designed to demonstrat­e the safety of the plane.

But the timing of the flight was awful: The plane landed on Sept. 11, 2001, shortly before terrorists flew hijacked airplanes into New York’s World Trade Center, the Pentagon in Arlington, Va., and a field in Shanksvill­e, Pa. All flights in the U.S. were grounded for three days, generating concerns about airline safety that lingered for years.

Other experts suggest airlines and Boeing take a more reserved approach by first publicly accepting responsibi­lity for the plane’s safety problems and then explaining how the plane has been fixed.

“It’s an overused word but it applies here: They have to be transparen­t,” said Eric Rose, a crisis management consultant with Englander Knabe & Allen in Los Angeles.

Michael Belch, a marketing professor at San Diego State University, said that if he were advising Boeing and the operators of the 737 Max he would recommend that they first try to win the confidence of the pilots who will be asked to fly the planes.

Americans are increasing­ly distrustfu­l of regulators and government agencies, he said, but passengers would feel safe in the cabin if the pilots in the cockpits expressed confidence in the fixes that were implemente­d.

“Primarily, you need to get the pilots to say, ‘I’m comfortabl­e with this,’” he said.

Pilots began expressing misgivings about the 737 Max after the first fatal crash, and the Southwest Airlines pilots union on Monday sued Boeing for at least $115 million in lost compensati­on caused by the grounding and accused the company of putting profits ahead of safety. Boeing said the suit was without merit.

American Airlines already appears to be emphasizin­g the role of its pilots in reassuring passengers of the safety of the plane. Some of the air carriers’ pilots had voiced their concern about the plane’s automated antistall system in a meeting with Boeing after the first crash.

“Once the aircraft is cleared to fly again, American will continue to look at ways to reiterate to our customers that our pilots are the best in the business and would never fly an unsafe aircraft,” American Airlines spokesman Curtis Blessing said. “All of our customers can be assured that an American Airlines pilot would never operate an unsafe aircraft.”

Steve Dahms, a business developmen­t expert from San Diego who flies extensivel­y on American Airlines, said he’d be hesitant to board a 737 Max until regulators publicly announce fines and even criminal proceeding­s filed against Boeing executives who were responsibl­e for the plane’s safety problems.

“Without that informatio­n,” he said, “I will feel less than safe.”

 ?? Toshihiko Sato Associated Press ?? AFTER THE 2000 crash of the supersonic Concorde in France, which killed 113, British Airways staff were passengers in a test flight designed to show the jet’s safety.
Toshihiko Sato Associated Press AFTER THE 2000 crash of the supersonic Concorde in France, which killed 113, British Airways staff were passengers in a test flight designed to show the jet’s safety.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States