Boeing will halt production of 737 Max in Jan.

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  • Boeing will halt production of 737 Max in Jan.
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CHICAGO, Ill. (AP) - Boeing Co. recently announced that it will temporarily stop producing its grounded 737 Max jet starting in January as it struggles to get approval from regulators to put the plane back in the air.

The Chicago-based company said production would halt at its plant with 12,000 employees in Renton, Wash., near Seattle. But the company said it didn’t expect to lay off any workers “at this time.”

The move amounts to an acknowledgment that it will take much longer than Boeing expected to win approval from the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration and other global regulators to fly the planes again.

The Max is Boeing’s most important jet, but it has been grounded since March after crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia that killed a total of 346 people. The FAA told the company last week that it had unrealistic expectations for getting the plane back into service.

Boeing has missed several estimates of a return date for the plane, and the company hasn’t announced a current target date.

Even if no employees are laid off, ceasing production still will cut into the nation’s economic output because of Boeing’s huge footprint in the nation’s manufacturing sector. Through October of this year, the U.S. aerospace industry’s factory output has fallen 17% compared with the same period last year, to $106.4 billion, in part due to previous 737 Max production cuts.