WASHINGTON, Feb 13 (Reuters) - U.S. Transportation
Secretary Sean Duffy said on Thursday he had asked Boeing's ( BA )
CEO to come to Washington, D.C., "as soon as possible" to
discuss quality and safety issues at the company.
The U.S. planemaker has been under scrutiny after a series
of crises involving safety, including when a door panel flew off
a new Alaska Airlines 737 MAX 9 in mid-air last year.
Duffy added he would "visit Boeing ( BA ) myself to evaluate
firsthand the measures being implemented to ensure its planes
meet the highest safety standards," in a post on X.
Boeing ( BA ) did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The door panel incident resulted in the Federal Aviation
Administration maintaining tougher oversight of the company.
During his confirmation hearing, Duffy said the federal
government needed to make sure the company was implementing its
safety plan.
He also said at the time that he would maintain a cap on
production of Boeing's ( BA ) 737 MAX planes put in place after the
mid-air panel blowout last year, until he is satisfied it can be
safely raised.
In January 2024, then FAA chief Mike Whitaker imposed the 38
planes per month production cap after the Alaska Airlines
incident.
While Boeing ( BA ) has yet to reach production of 38 MAX jets a
month, limiting production of its dominant cash cow delays its
financial recovery and prevents it from narrowing a gap in the
global jet market against archrival Airbus.