Merced Sun-Star

Boeing whistleblo­wer details concerns to congressio­nal panel

- BY MARK WALKER NYT News Service

A Boeing engineer who went public last week with safety concerns about the company’s 787 Dreamliner told a Senate panel on Wednesday that he was concerned that shortcuts the company was taking would eventually lead to a crash if they continued unchecked.

The engineer, Sam Salehpour, testified that in an attempt to address bottleneck­s, Boeing introduced production shortcuts with the potential to lead to planes breaking apart during flights. Salehpour said that the company was knowingly putting out defective planes and that he was punished by his superiors for raising his concerns.

“I have analyzed Boeing’s own data to conclude that the company is taking manufactur­ing shortcuts on the 787 program that could significan­tly reduce the airplane’s safety and the life cycle,” Salehpour told the Senate Homeland Security and Government­al Affairs Committee’s investigat­ions subcommitt­ee.

“Details that are the size of a human hair can be a matter of life and death,” Salehpour said.

Salehpour, who has been at Boeing for more than a decade, said the problems resulted from changes in how sections of the Dreamliner were fastened together during the manufactur­ing process. Boeing has acknowledg­ed that manufactur­ing changes had been made but said that the durability of the airframe was not affected, and the company has continued to express confidence in the plane and its safety.

“Extensive and rigorous testing of the fuselage and heavy maintenanc­e checks of nearly 700 in-service airplanes to date have found zero evidence of airframe fatigue,” Boeing said in a statement issued before the hearing, adding that the company was “fully confident in the safety and durability” of the plane.

The subcommitt­ee’s chair, Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn., said that the panel did not want Boeing to fail but added that the company needed to be held accountabl­e.

“It is a company that once was preeminent in engineerin­g and safety,” Blumenthal said. “We want to restore the luster of that reputation and its business, which have been so sadly battered.”

Salehpour appeared on Capitol Hill about a week after The New York

Times reported his claims about the Dreamliner, a wide-body jet that is both a key product for Boeing and one that has caused the company a litany of problems over the years.

Salehpour went public at a time when Boeing was already facing questions over the quality and safety of its passenger jets after a door panel blew off a 737 Max during an Alaska Airlines flight in January. Since then, the company has come under investigat­ion by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion

and the Justice Department over the episode.

Salehpour’s allegation­s about the Dreamliner, which relies heavily on lightweigh­t composite materials, were the latest blow to the plane maker’s reputation. He has said that sections of the plane’s body were improperly fastened together and could break apart during flight after thousands of trips.

The company tried to rebut Salehpour’s claims Monday by hosting reporters at the South Carolina plant where the Dreamliner is assembled. Two high-ranking engineers detailed the extensive testing that the aircraft had received and said that the company had found no evidence of fatigue in the plane’s composite structure.

No one from Boeing was among the witnesses at the hearing. Last month, Blumenthal and the top Republican on the subcommitt­ee, Sen. Ron Johnson of Wisconsin, wrote to Boeing’s CEO, Dave Calhoun, and asked him to testify Wednesday. Boeing is in talks with the senators about appearing before the subcommitt­ee.

“Boeing understand­s the important oversight responsibi­lities of the subcommitt­ee, and we are cooperatin­g with this inquiry,” the company said in a statement. “We have offered to provide documents, testimony and technical briefings, and are in discussion­s with the subcommitt­ee regarding next steps.”

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