Boeing to pause 737 production for one-day ‘quality stand down’
Boeing is to pause production and delivery of its 737 Max aircraft on 25 January, as it calls a “quality stand down” amid ongoing quality-control issues. The airframer states that the one-day stand down will take place at its Renton, Washington facility, where its production, delivery and support staff will pause operations “so employees can take part in working sessions focused on quality”. Boeing Commercial Airplanes chief Stan Deal says the sessions will allow workers involved in the 737 production to “pause, evaluate what we’re doing, how we’re doing it and make recommendations for improvement”. According to internal employee communications, the airframer states: “During the stand downs, teammates will participate in hands-on learning, reflection and collaboration to identify where quality and compliance can be improved and create actionable plans that will be tracked to closure.” Boeing is expected to roll out these sessions across its other facilities covering its other aircraft programmes. It is part of a wider series of steps the airframer is taking to shore up quality control, following a door plug blow-out involving an Alaska Airlines 737 Max 9 that had taken off from Portland, Oregon. <br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2024-01-24/general/boeing-to-pause-737-production-for-one-day-2018quality-stand-down2019
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Boeing to pause 737 production for one-day ‘quality stand down’
Boeing is to pause production and delivery of its 737 Max aircraft on 25 January, as it calls a “quality stand down” amid ongoing quality-control issues. The airframer states that the one-day stand down will take place at its Renton, Washington facility, where its production, delivery and support staff will pause operations “so employees can take part in working sessions focused on quality”. Boeing Commercial Airplanes chief Stan Deal says the sessions will allow workers involved in the 737 production to “pause, evaluate what we’re doing, how we’re doing it and make recommendations for improvement”. According to internal employee communications, the airframer states: “During the stand downs, teammates will participate in hands-on learning, reflection and collaboration to identify where quality and compliance can be improved and create actionable plans that will be tracked to closure.” Boeing is expected to roll out these sessions across its other facilities covering its other aircraft programmes. It is part of a wider series of steps the airframer is taking to shore up quality control, following a door plug blow-out involving an Alaska Airlines 737 Max 9 that had taken off from Portland, Oregon. <br/>