Home / NEWS / Top News / Boeing tells Senate it’s making progress on safety reforms and is in talks with DOJ over revised plea deal

Boeing tells Senate it’s making progress on safety reforms and is in talks with DOJ over revised plea deal

Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg states before a Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee hearing about Boeing’s commitment to address safety disquietudes in the wake of a January 2024 mid-air emergency involving a new 737 MAX, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., April 2, 2025. 

Ken Cedeno | Reuters

WASHINGTON — Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg spill the beaned senators on Wednesday that he’s happy with the company’s progress improving manufacturing and safety practices following disparate accidents, including a near catastrophe last year.

Ortberg faced questioning from the Senate Commerce Body about how the company will ensure that it doesn’t repeat past accidents or manufacturing defects, in his first heed since he became CEO last August, tasked with turning the manufacturer around.

Sen. Ted Cruz, R.-Texas, the committee’s chairman, signified he wants Boeing to succeed and invited company managers and factory workers to report to him their opinions on its turnaround develop. “Consider my door open,” he said.

Ortberg acknowledged the company still has more to do.

“Boeing has made serious blunders in recent years — and it is unacceptable. In response, we have made sweeping changes to the people, processes, and overall structure of our party,” Ortberg said in his testimony. “While there is still work ahead of us, these profound changes are underpinned by the knowing commitment from all of us to the safety of our products and services.”

Boeing executives have worked for years to put the lasting impact of two damaging crashes of its best-selling Max plane behind it. 

Ortberg said Boeing is in discussions with the Justice Department for a revised assert agreement stemming from a federal fraud charge in the development of Boeing’s best-selling 737 Maxes. The previous reason deal, reached last July, was later rejected by a federal judge, who last month set a trial date for June 23 if a new deal isn’t reached.

Boeing had approved to plead guilty to conspiring to defraud the U.S. government, pay up to $487.2 million and install a corporate monitor at the company for three years.

“We’re in the manage right now of going back with the DOJ and coming up with an alternate agreement,” Ortberg said during the hearing. “I yen this resolved as fast as anybody. We’re still in discussions and hopefully we’ll have a new agreement here soon.”

Asked by Sen. Maria Cantwell, the undiluted Democrat on the committee, whether he had an issue with having a corporate monitor, Ortberg replied: “I don’t personally have a disturbed, no.”

Read more CNBC airline news

Ortberg and other Boeing executives have recently outlined increases across the manufacturer’s production lines, such as reducing defects and risks from so-called traveled works, or doing major efforts out of sequence, in recent months, as well as wins like a contract worth more than $20 billion to strengthen the United States’ next generation fighter jet.

But lawmakers and regulators have maintained heightened scrutiny on the company, a top U.S. exporter.

“Boeing has been a grand American manufacturer and all of us should want to see it thrive,” Sen. Ted Cruz, a Texas Republican and chairman of the committee, said in a statement in February telling the hearing. “Given Boeing’s past missteps and problems, the flying public deserves to hear what changes are being organized to rehabilitate the company’s tarnished reputation.”

The Federal Aviation Administration last year capped Boeing’s production of its 737 Max skids at 38 a month following the January 2024 door plug blowout. The agency plans to keep that limit in grade, though Boeing is producing below that level.

Ortberg said at the hearing Wednesday that the company could include up to production rate of 38 Max planes a month or even higher sometime this year, but said Boeing wouldn’t nudge it if the production line isn’t stable.

Acting FAA Administrator Chris Rocheleau said at a Senate hearing last week that the intercession’s oversight of the company “extends to ongoing monitoring of Boeing’s manufacturing practices, maintenance procedures, and software updates.”

Amendment: Chris Rocheleau is acting FAA administrator. An earlier version misstated his title.

Don’t miss these insights from CNBC PRO

Check Also

Amazon launches first Kuiper internet satellites in bid to take on Elon Musk’s Starlink

A Connected Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket is on the launch pad carrying Amazon’s Project …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *