CBS News
Boeing, Spirit AeroSystems tout safety moves since mid-air panel blowout
Boeing and Spirit AeroSystems touted changes in how they operate in the seven months since the in-flight blowout of a panel from a 737 Max, executives from the plane maker and supplier told federal investigators on Tuesday.
The two-day hearing into the January 5 accident is being conducted by the National Transportation Safety Board. Four bolts that helped secure the panel, called a door plug, were not replaced after a repair job in a Boeing factory, but the company said the work was not documented, the government agency found in a preliminary report.
Members of the NTSB are questioning executives at Boeing and Spirit — which makes fuselages for Max jets — about the near-tragedy that greatly damaged Boeing’s reputation and has it facing new legal jeopardy.
“Every fuselage goes through a final product verification which is a dedicated area in the Spirit factory where we have Boeing inspectors,” Doug Ackerman, vice president of supplier quality for Boeing commercial airplanes, told the panel, describing a change in procedure that began March 1.
The inspections involve “going over the fuselage front to back, inside and outside to identify any discrepancy,” said Ackerman, and typically take a couple of days. Boeing takes ownership of the fuselage as it exits the Spirit factory in Wichita, Kansas, he added. “We want to have acceptance verification at the location where it is manufactured.
The plane manufacturer and supplier were given a midday reprimand by Jennifer Homendy, chair of the NTSB, who sounded what she called a word of caution in a raised voice.
“This is not a PR campaign for Boeing. What I want to know, what we want to know, is what happened in March, April, May, June, July, August, September, leading up to this, leading up to what happened in January?” Homendy said. “You can talk all about where you are today, there’s going to be plenty of time for that,” she said. “This is an investigation on what happened on January 5. Understand?”
The safety board will not determine a probable cause after the hearing — that could take another year or longer. The federal agency is calling the unusually long hearing a fact-finding step.
Additional witnesses include Elizabeth Lund, who has been Boeing’s senior vice president of quality — a new position — since February, and officials from Spirit AeroSystems.
The hearing includes testimony about manufacturing and inspections, the opening and closing of the door plug in the Boeing factory, safety systems at Boeing and Spirit, and the Federal Aviation Administration’s supervision of Boeing, according to its agenda.
—The Associated Press contributed to this report.
CBS News
Want to live an extra 5 years? Those over 40 should exercise like this every day, researchers say
Exercising like the most active 25% of Americans can help those over 40 add an extra 5 years to their life on average, according to new research.
In the study, published Thursday in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, researchers created a predictive model to estimate the impact of different levels of physical activity on life expectancy using data about people who were at least 40 years old from the National Health and Nutritional Examination Survey and other sources.
Though it was an observational study, which doesn’t prove cause and effect, the findings suggest increased focus on physical activity can potentially pay off in terms of Americans’ lifespans.
“Our findings suggest that (physical activity) provides substantially larger health benefits than previously thought, which is due to the use of more precise means of measuring (it),” the authors wrote.
So how much do you have to exercise to gain the potential benefits? The total physical activity of the most active 25% of Americans was equivalent to 160 minutes of walking at a normal pace, or about 3 miles per hour, every day, according to the study.
If all Americans over 40 matched this level of activity, life expectancy at birth would bump from 78.6 years to nearly 84 years, about a 5-year increase in average lifespan.
If the least active Americans committed to an extra 111 minutes of walking daily, the effects were even more dramatic, the estimates indicate — adding almost 11 years to the average lifespan.
This isn’t the first time research has highlighted the health benefits of walking.
A study last year from the same journal found walking just 11 minutes per day could significantly lower the risk of stroke, heart disease and some cancers.
Other viral fitness trends like the “hot girl walk” and “fart walk” have also encouraged Americans to get their walking shoes on for a number of physical and mental health positives.
CBS News
After two “Forever” postage stamp hikes, the USPS lost nearly $10 billion in 2024
The U.S. Postal Service on Thursday said its annual loss widened to almost $10 billion, although revenue rose slightly after two postage rate hikes this year, part of Postmaster Louis DeJoy’s plan to get the postal agency on a better financial footing.
The USPS said it lost $9.5 billion in the fiscal year ended September 30, compared with a loss of $6.5 billion a year earlier. The postal service blamed the wider loss on billions spent on noncash contributions to worker compensation.
Excluding that expense as well as what it described as other “certain expenses that are not controllable by management,” the USPS said it would have lost $1.8 billion in fiscal 2024, compared with a loss of more than $2.2 billion a year earlier. Revenue rose 1.7% to $79.5 billion in the most recent fiscal year.
The USPS is in the midst of a 10-year overhaul engineered by DeJoy, who has argued that higher postal rates and other changes are essential to staunch the postal service’s financial bleeding. Under his original plan, the USPS had aimed to turn a profit in fiscal 2024, but instead, the agency has now reported mounting losses for two consecutive years, raising questions about the effectiveness of the turnaround effort.
DeJoy said the agency is focused on reducing its costs, but that it is also dealing with “many economic, legislative and regulatory obstacles for us to overcome.”
The USPS has raised postage rates twice in 2024, with a two-cent per stamp increase in January and a second boost in July, which raised the cost of a Forever stamp to 73 cents.
Fewer deliveries
Mail volume declined in the most recent fiscal year, although revenue increased due to the higher postage rates, the USPS said. It delivered 112 billion pieces of mail, magazines, packages and other items last year, a decline of 3.2% from the prior fiscal year, it said in a financial report.
Keep US Posted, an advocacy group of newspapers, magazines and other companies that rely on the USPS, described the agency’s $9.5 billion loss as “staggering,” and said it was $3 billion higher than expected. The group also blamed the rate hikes for driving customers away from the USPS, reducing mail volume.
“The bottom line is that these consistent financial losses are driven by stamp hikes which lead to disastrous mail volume losses, plus the complete failure of USPS to capture parcel market share in already crowded package delivery space,” said Keep US Posted executive director Kevin Yoder in a statement.
Yoder, a former Republican Congressman from Kansas, also criticized the USPS for focusing on packages rather than traditional mail delivery, which he said remains the largest revenue generator for the postal service.
CBS News
Behind the surprising Infowars purchase by The Onion
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.