Boeing Executives mocked their Regulator and joked about Safety - Politics Forum.org | PoFo

Wandering the information superhighway, he came upon the last refuge of civilization, PoFo, the only forum on the internet ...

Talk about what you've seen in the news today.

Moderator: PoFo Today's News Mods

#15058826
Boeing: internal emails reveal chaos and incompetence at 737 Max factory
Executives mocked their regulator and joked about safety in hundreds messages given to congressional investigators


Boeing is more than a year into the worst crisis in its 103-year history and it just got worse.

The fatal crashes of two of company’s 737 Max jets – which claimed 346 lives – have already shone a harsh light on Boeing’s corporate culture and its cosy relationship with its regulator. Then on Thursday hundreds of pages of internal messages were delivered to congressional investigators in which Boeing executives mocked their regulator, joked about safety and said the Max had been “designed by clowns”.

Shocking as the emails are, they will come as no surprise to those following the Boeing story. Last month Edward Pierson, a former senior manager at Boeing’s 737 factory in Renton, Washington, told Congress he had witnessed “chaos” at the factory where the Max was built and had warned management that “Boeing was prioritizing production speed over quality and safety”.

Lawmakers also heard the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), Boeing’s regulator, allowed the Max to keep flying even after its own analysis found the plane could have averaged one fatal crash about every two or three years without intervention.

That decision came a month after the Lion Air crash in October 2018 that claimed 189 lives, and four months before an Ethiopian Airlines crash that killed another 157 people.

New software meant to prevent stalling has been blamed for both crashes and it is now clear training on that software could well have prevented them. But training costs money and the release of the latest messages shows Boeing was doing all it could to block any regulatory requirement for airlines to train pilots in a simulator on the differences between the 737 Max and its predecessor the 737 NG.

Boeing claimed the planes were so similar that experienced pilots could be trained on the differences in a one-hour lesson on an iPad.

Avoiding extra training was a big cost saving. Before the grounding Boeing promised to offer Southwest Airlines a $1m discount per plane if regulators required simulator training.

What will happen now? Senator Richard Blumenthal has called the emails “astonishing and appalling” and called for more congressional hearings.

But the outrage over the emails is unlikely to address the structural issues that led to these tragedies. Boeing is simply too big to fail. The company is the US’s largest export manufacturer, it supports 8,000 suppliers across the US and its woes are big enough to trim the economic fortunes of the entire country. In a clear sign of the scandal’s impact, on Friday aircraft parts maker Spirit AeroSystems announced it is laying off 2,800 employees at its facility in Wichita, Kansas, due to the grounding of the plane. According to the White House Council of Economic Advisers, last year Boeing’s troubles cut gross domestic product from March through June by 0.4 percentage points.

Nor is oversight likely to get much of a boost from the Trump administration. Donald Trump has used two executive orders to cut regulatory oversight and hand more of that supervision over to businesses. Trump’s 2019 budget proposed an 18% cut to the transportation department.

Boeing sacked Dennis Muilenberg, its CEO, in December. The FAA has a relatively new administrator. Both organisations have promised change but there is still little sign that Boeing, the FAA or the Trump administration are really prepared to put human lives ahead of the bottom line.

The Guardian
#15058950
Donald wrote:Idiots. A smart corporate officer should have an instinctual aversion to anything other than boring statements of fact or record. They should be Vulcan-like, avoiding any kind of inappropriate banter or gossip whatsoever.

They never dreamed in their worst nightmares that their internal communications would be made public like this. And in order to work effectively, they must be able to have a *ahem* 'frank and open' exchange of views. Lol. This data dump of Boeing's internal communications into the public domain will likely have a bad effect on morale and productivity.
#15058951
Anyone responsible should be put on trial for these disasters. This is what they do in China.

How could executives and other company officials be so blase about technology which is killing people and then not seeming particularly bothered either. They should be put on trial.

The 737 Max should be done away with. Let's boycott this poorly designed piece of nonense!
#15058959
I’m sorry, but when the article says “Thursday” is it referring to the Thursday just passed? As in, the dump occurred 2 days ago when the crash also happened?

It’s as if no one can even be bothered lying properly anymore lol..
#15058961
ness31 wrote:I’m sorry, but when the article says “Thursday” is it referring to the Thursday just passed? As in, the dump occurred 2 days ago when the crash also happened?

It’s as if no one can even be bothered lying properly anymore lol..

It was Boeing itself which handed over the internal emails to Congress. And this occurred long after the two crashes which prompted the current furore.
#15058970
Political Interest wrote:Anyone responsible should be put on trial for these disasters. This is what they do in China.

How could executives and other company officials be so blase about technology which is killing people and then not seeming particularly bothered either. They should be put on trial.

The 737 Max should be done away with. Let's boycott this poorly designed piece of nonense!

I think I recall reading that something like $17 billion in sales was attributed to the Max 737 (and that it was Boeing's biggest money maker last year). These are giant figures. So, they are still looking for a way to fix the problem with duct tape.

The public will never trust this airplane.

The scale of the loss is enormous and Boeing is still not willing to accept it.

I won't be at all shocked if they succeed and eventually the plane is reserved.

And people just forget.
#15058972
Boeing got too greedy! Why am I not surprised? They played with the life of their customers by cutting safety precautions to maximize profits in the name of share-holder value.

The FAA was happy to play along by serving as a rubber-stamp agency approving everything Boeing told the regulators.

Last year, Airbus delivered almost three times as many aircraft as Boeing. At this rate, Boeing can't be saved no matter how many sanctions Trump imposes on Europe.
#15058981
Some German commie wrote:Boeing got too greedy! Why am I not surprised? They played with the life of their customers by cutting safety precautions to maximize profits in the name of share-holder value.

You value human life above shareholder profits? What are you, some sort of Commie bastard? :eh:
#15058983
Potemkin wrote:You value human life above shareholder profits? What are you, some sort of Commie bastard? :eh:


I'd say those people are ineffectual fools.

At least, when the Law of the Jungle is in play.

It is not an erosion of democracy to point out hi[…]

@FiveofSwords , when do you plan to call for a r[…]

Left vs right, masculine vs feminine

There are intelligent and stupid ways to retain p[…]

Russia-Ukraine War 2022

Friedrich Engels once said, “All that exists dese[…]