The Los Angeles Post
U.S. World Business Lifestyle
Today: April 17, 2025
Today: April 17, 2025

FAA has doubled its enforcement cases against Boeing since a door plug blew off a 737 Max

NTSB Boeing
August 07, 2024

A federal Aviation Administration official said Wednesday that the agency has 16 pending enforcement cases against Boeing, half of which have been opened since a door plug blew off a 737 Max in midflight.

The increase in cases was disclosed Wednesday during a National Transportation Safety Board hearing into the accident, which happened during an Alaska Airlines flight on Jan. 5.

Brian Knaup, who helps manage the FAA's oversight of Boeing, said one of the open cases involves the removal of parts that have already been installed on airplanes in production.

FAA has doubled its enforcement cases against Boeing since a door plug blew off a 737 Max
NTSB Boeing

That is apparently what caused the mistake that led to the Alaska Airlines accident: Bolts that were removed to open the door plug for maintenance workers were not replaced when the panel was closed and the plane left a Boeing factory near Seattle.

Knaup's comment came near the end of a two-day hearing that included discussion of Boeing's poor tracking of parts-removal jobs. The company failed to document who opened the door plug, and the missing bolts were never found.

Another FAA official overseeing Boeing, Bryan Kilgroe, said he is kept awake at night wondering โ€œespecially considering all that has happened since Jan. 5, is why is it so difficult to sustain a corrective action for the long term?โ€

Boeing said it had no comment.

The safety board released released testimony by Boeing employees who said they were pressured to build planes too quickly and not raise safety concerns.

NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy cited two employees who worked on aircraft doors where the Alaska Airlines plane was assembled and claimed they were moved to other areas โ€” โ€œBoeing prisonโ€ and โ€œa cageโ€ โ€” after the door-plug blowout.

โ€œWhat sort of impression does that give your employees if you sideline them ...? It is retaliation," Homendy said. She said โ€œsideliningโ€ the two workers runs against Boeingโ€™s policy, which is not to retaliate against workers for unintentional mistakes.

Homendy said the NTSB will survey workers at Boeingโ€™s factory in Renton, Washington, where the Alaska Airlines plane was produced, about the company's safety culture.

Representatives from Boeing and key supplier Spirit AeroSystems described their โ€œsafety management systems,โ€ which encourage employees to voluntarily report safety concerns without fear of punishment. Boeing officials touted their โ€œSpeak Upโ€ program for reporting concerns about quality and safety.

However, the president of the machinists' union local said Boeing often ignores safety concerns raised by the union until he lodges a complaint with federal regulators.

โ€œIt really sounds great,โ€ the official, Lloyd Catlin, said of Boeing's safety plan. "In action on the factory floor, it is not.โ€

The FAA has been roundly criticized for lax regulation of Boeing ever since two deadly Max crashes in 2018 and 2019 killed 346 people. Those charges gained new momentum after the Alaska Airlines accident.

The agencyโ€™s new chief, Mike Whitaker, told Congress in June that FAA oversight โ€œwas too hands-offโ€ but is improving. Knaup, a California-based FAA manager, said inspections have increased since the blowout.

FAA safety inspectors โ€œcan talk to anyone thatโ€™s on the (Boeing factory) floor at any time when they are doing an audit, and we do that,โ€ he told the NTSB.

Door plugs are installed on some 737s to seal a cutout left for an extra exit that was not required on the Alaska jet. The plug on the Alaska plane was opened at a Boeing factory to let workers fix damaged rivets, but bolts that help secure the panel were not replaced when the plug was closed.

The accident on Alaska Airlines flight 1282 occurred minutes after takeoff from Portland, Oregon, on Jan. 5. The blowout left a hole in the plane, oxygen masks dropped and the cockpit door flew open. Miraculously there were no major injuries, and pilots were able to return to Portland and land the plane safely.

A Boeing official said Tuesday that the company is redesigning door plugs so they cannot be closed until they are properly secured. Elizabeth Lund, who was named Boeingโ€™s senior vice president of quality shortly after the blowout, said the company hopes to complete the fix within about a year, and that 737s already in service will be retrofitted.

Related Articles

Boeing secures $2.38 billion contract for 15 additional U.S. Air Force KC-46A tankers Vietnam Airlines to request bids for 50 narrowbody jets next year Airbus nears deal on funding, payment terms with Spirit Aero, source says Spirit Aero gets help from Boeing, Airbus to prop up weak finances
Share This

Popular

Business|Food|Sports

Coca-Cola is giving BodyArmor a major makeover in hopes of jump-starting sales

Coca-Cola is giving BodyArmor a major makeover in hopes of jump-starting sales
Business|Lifestyle|US

Queens family business Bartunek Hardware celebrates 100 years

Queens family business Bartunek Hardware celebrates 100 years
Business|Economy|US

US jobless benefit claims fall last week as labor market remains strong despite recession fears

US jobless benefit claims fall last week as labor market remains strong despite recession fears
Business|Economy|Europe|Fashion and Beauty|Finance|Political|Stock Markets|US

LVMH's Arnault blames Brussels if US, EU do not find fix on tariffs

LVMH's Arnault blames Brussels if US, EU do not find fix on tariffs

Technology

Business|Political|Technology|US

Musk's SpaceX is frontrunner to build Trump's Golden Dome missile shield

Musk's SpaceX is frontrunner to build Trump's Golden Dome missile shield
Business|Technology|US

Ford recalls more than 148,000 vehicles, NHTSA says

Ford recalls more than 148,000 vehicles, NHTSA says
Crime|Technology|US

10-year-old girl kidnapped by man she met on Roblox, police say

10-year-old girl kidnapped by man she met on Roblox, police say
Asia|Business|Economy|Political|Technology|US

TSMC upbeat on outlook as robust AI demand offsets tariff uncertainty

TSMC upbeat on outlook as robust AI demand offsets tariff uncertainty

Access this article for free.

Already have an account? Sign In