Los Angeles Times

Boeing manager tried to halt 737 Max work, lawmaker says

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A Boeing Co. manager sought to halt production of the 737 Max over safety concerns before the first of two fatal crashes that led to the jet’s worldwide grounding, a top House lawmaker charged Tuesday.

Rep. Peter A. DeFazio (D-Ore.), chairman of the House Transporta­tion and Infrastruc­ture Committee, included the new allegation­s in a statement for a hearing Wednesday at which Boeing Chief Executive Dennis Muilenburg will testify. The CEO testified Tuesday before a Senate committee about the 737 Max, which has been banned from flying since March.

“We now know of at least one case where a Boeing manager implored the thenvice president and general manager of the 737 program to shut down the 737 Max production line because of safety concerns, several months before the Lion Air crash in October 2018,” DeFazio said in his opening statement, which was released by the panel.

DeFazio’s accusation­s pile pressure on Muilenburg as the embattled CEO prepares for a second day of grilling on Capitol Hill. Muilenburg is fighting to save his job amid heightened scrutiny from Boeing directors. He’s also trying to salvage the U.S. industrial titan’s reputation after months of bruising disclosure­s about shortcomin­gs in the design and certificat­ion of the Max, Boeing’s bestsellin­g jet. The crashes — one in Indonesia in October and one in Ethiopia in March — killed everyone aboard the two planes, a total of 346 people.

Even as senators peppered Muilenburg with blistering questions, Boeing stock rose as investors seemed convinced that the testimony wouldn’t impede the Federal Aviation Administra­tion’s review of whether the grounded Max can safely resume commercial flight after a redesign of flight control software. The shares climbed 2.4% to close at $348.93, the third-best performanc­e in the Dow Jones industrial average.

DeFazio didn’t detail the nature of the safety concerns raised by the Boeing manager or how the company responded. The Chicago plane maker didn’t immediatel­y comment.

At least one whistleblo­wer also told the committee that the company sacrificed safety for cost savings, DeFazio wrote. Boeing also considered adding a more robust alerting system for the feature involved in two crashes before ultimately shelving the idea, according to DeFazio.

“We may never know what key steps could have been taken that would have altered the fate of those flights, but we do know that a variety of decisions could have made those planes safer and perhaps saved the lives of those on board,” DeFazio said.

DeFazio’s statement is the first detailed look at findings by the House committee, which is conducting what the chairman called the “most extensive and important” investigat­ion he’s seen during his time on the panel.

Some of the statement was crafted as questions for Muilenburg.

“There are areas we are exploring that remain murky, and we need to bring clarity to those issues,” DeFazio said. “But there is a lot we have learned over the past seven months, and we expect you to answer a number of questions to improve our understand­ing of what happened and why.”

About 20 relatives of crash victims attended Tuesday’s hearing before the Senate Transporta­tion Committee, whose chairman, Sen. Roger Wicker (RMiss.) opened the session by promising the inquiry would get to the bottom of what went wrong.

“Both of these accidents were entirely avoidable,” Wicker said. “We cannot fathom the pain experience­d by the families of those 346 souls who were lost.”

A flight safety feature known as MCAS, designed to lower the nose of the plane in some conditions, was activated in both crashes as a result of a malfunctio­n, and in both cases, pilots didn’t respond and lost control.

Boeing had lobbied regulators to keep any explanatio­n of the feature from pilot manuals and training. “Those pilots never had a chance,” said Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.). Passengers “never had a chance. They were in flying coffins as a result of Boeing deciding that it was going to conceal MCAS from the pilots.”

Muilenburg said Boeing had always trained pilots to respond to the effect caused by an MCAS failure — a condition called runaway trim — which also can be caused by other problems.

Muilenburg apologized directly to victims’ family members.

The Associated Press was used in compiling this report.

 ?? Andrew Harnik Associated Press ?? BOEING
Co. CEO Dennis Muilenburg appears before a Senate panel as families hold photos of crash victims.
Andrew Harnik Associated Press BOEING Co. CEO Dennis Muilenburg appears before a Senate panel as families hold photos of crash victims.

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