Boeing has ousted the head of its 737 Max program, which comes roughly six weeks after a door plug blew out mid-flight on a 737 Max aircraft and a safety review found that the plane had taken off with missing bolts.
Ed Clark, who headed the 737 Max program, is departing the company effective immediately, according to a Feb. 21 memo to staff from Stan Deal, CEO of Boeing’s commercial airplanes division. A company spokesperson provided The Epoch Times with a copy of the memo.
Mr. Deal said in the memo that the changes are part of an “enhanced focus” on ensuring that every airplane that the company delivers “meets or exceeds all quality and safety requirements.”
“Our customers demand, and deserve, nothing less,” Mr. Deal said.
Boeing’s increased focus on safety comes after the company admitted in mid-January that its 737 Max production quality wasn’t up to standard following greater scrutiny sparked by the midair door plug blowout.
A panel covering an unused emergency door blew out not long after takeoff on an Alaska Airlines-operated Boeing 737 Max 9 aircraft on Jan. 5, prompting a rapid decompression and forcing an emergency landing.

The incident led the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) to ground all 737 Max 9s, order “enhanced inspections” on the planes, and launch an investigation into Boeing to see if the company failed to ensure proper production safety standards.
Boeing stated that it was cooperating fully with the probe, with Mr. Deal saying in mid-January that the Alaska Airlines incident showed that “we are not where we need to be” in terms of quality and that the company would undertake “immediate actions to bolster quality assurance and controls” across its factories.
While carrying out the resulting FAA-mandated inspections, some of Boeing’s customers found additional issues, including loose door plug bolts.
Besides the issues with bolts, an employee also reportedly discovered improperly drilled holes on some of the 737 Max fuselages.
























