Three air-bag accidents at Boeing plant lead to extra safety measures

Three air-bag accidents at Boeing plant lead to extra safety measures

SEATTLE - Workers at planemaker Boeing's Everett plant near Seattle are following extra safety measures after three air bag-related accidents, including the death of a technician last month, the company said on Friday.

No one was seriously hurt when an air bag deployed on Dec. 13 as a seat supplier technician was working on a Zodiac Aerospace seat on a plane being readied for delivery, Boeing spokesman Wilson Chow said.

"We understand that employees are concerned," Chow said, adding the company was holding meetings with workers and was implementing additional safeguards and inspections.

"We are confident the system is safe to work on and to be around, and the seat-belt air bag poses no risk to the flying public," Chow said.

The accidental discharge of a seat-belt airbag happened because a bent connector pin caused a short circuit, he said.

Chow confirmed a third incident but could not provide specifics, such as injuries or cause.

A technician for aircraft interior supplier Jamco America died after being struck in the face when a passenger seat air-bag inflator discharged while he and another technician from a different supplier were working on a 777 on Nov 13, the Seattle Times newspaper reported.

A source who declined to be named said that workers were now following extra safety measures, including using caution tape to cordon off the seats.

The Dec 13 incident involved an actual air bag deployment, Chow said, while the Nov 13 incident happened as the system was partially assembled.

"There is widespread concern," Connie Kelliher, spokeswoman for International Association of Machinists, District Lodge 751, told the newspaper.

"We are actively involved and working to ensure our members concerns are addressed."

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