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Boeing removes Stephanie Pope as part of operational restructuring

Boeing removes Stephanie Pope as part of operational restructuring
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David Calhoun CEO | Wikipedia

Boeing has made a significant leadership change as part of an operational restructuring aimed at addressing production and safety challenges in its commercial aircraft division. The move involves the removal of executive Stephanie Pope from the company's c-suite to focus on the recovery and financial stabilization of Boeing Commercial Airplanes, the company's most revenue-generating subdivision.

As of February 19th, Pope's position as chief operating officer (COO) was eliminated, with her responsibilities now narrowed down. She remains the executive vice president, president, and CEO of Boeing Commercial Airplanes. Boeing announced that it would not be using the COO title going forward and has no plans to fill the role.

Pope had served as COO for about a year since her appointment in December 2023 when the position was created. She has been seen as a potential successor to former company CEO David Calhoun.

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The decision to eliminate the COO position comes after several troubling incidents, including a midair door plug blowout on an Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 MAX flight in January 2024 and two fatal crashes involving the same aircraft model. These events highlighted the need for improved production quality and stricter safety protocols within Boeing's commercial manufacturing divisions.

These incidents also led to increased regulatory and consumer scrutiny, culminating in the departure of CEO David Calhoun. Pope assumed leadership of Boeing Commercial Airplanes from Stan Deal shortly after Kelly Ortberg became the new CEO.

Under Ortberg's direction, Boeing is realigning its senior management team to tackle long-term challenges more effectively. Ortberg expressed confidence in Pope's leadership, stating:

"Stephanie and her team are all over this. They’re doing a very good job. Our customers are giving us good feedback in this area, and we’re getting decent feedback from the FAA, too."

The restructuring has been positively received by Boeing customers, with major clients like aircraft lessor Avolon offering supportive remarks about Pope's leadership. However, more leadership changes are expected; Chief Aerospace Safety Officer Mike Delaney is set to retire this year without a named successor yet.

Additionally, Boeing plans to simplify its board of directors. Sabrina Soussan, a former CEO from the energy industry who joined Boeing's board in

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