United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby celebrated the February 22, 2024 opening of its new flight training center facility in Denver, Colorado.
Heng Zhang | The Denver Post | Getty Images
United Airlines CEO Scott Kirby said he was boeing companyAfter meeting with the manufacturer’s new CEO, he recovered.
It’s an optimistic change of attitude from United Airlines’ CEO.
Earlier this week, Kirby had lunch with new Boeing CEO Robert “Kelly” Ortberg in the Dallas area. Kirby said in an article LinkedIn Post On Thursday, he “was not only encouraged by what I heard, but I came away with renewed confidence that Boeing is on the right path and will do so sooner than most people expect.” recovery.
United and Boeing have 484 outstanding orders, according to the manufacturer’s website.
Ortberg also met with American Airlines Chief Executive Robert Isom said earlier this week, according to a person familiar with the matter.
Ortberg, who previously ran commercial and defense supplier Rockwell Collins and has more than three decades of experience in the aerospace industry, took over at Boeing a week ago and spent part of his first day in Renton, Wash. Spent on the Boeing 737 factory floor. Ortberg will be based in Seattle, a departure from previous leaders.
“His engineering background at Rockwell Collins, combined with an instinct for staying close to Seattle’s frontline team, makes for a winning combination,” Kirby wrote Thursday. “It’s clear from our discussions He is 100% committed, understands the cultural changes needed to turn things around, and is committed to listening to his employees and customers.”
United Airlines and other major customers such as Southwest Airlines Boeing has been grappling with jetliner delays as it tries to recover from the latest safety crisis after a door jam burst on a passenger plane. Alaska Airlines The 737 Max 9 earlier this year.
No one was seriously injured in the crash, which occurred when the airline failed to install the bolts that held the door jam in place before taking delivery of the plane, but was preceded by a series of other manufacturing defects on the Boeing plane.
“In speaking with our customers and industry partners today, I can tell you that without exception, everyone wants us to succeed,” Ortberg said in a note to employees on his first day on the job last Thursday. said. “In many cases, they need us to be successful.”