CHICAGO,
May 4 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ --
Boeing (NYSE: BA) has named
Mary
Armstrong as vice president of Environment, Health and Safety, a new
organization designed to integrate and expand the focus of the separate
environmental groups and initiatives that currently exist within the company.
Armstrong had previously been president of
Boeing's Shared Services Group
(SSG).
Armstrong will report to John Tracy, senior vice president of Engineering,
Operation & Technology. The new organization's activities will be guided by a
new Environment, Health and Safety Strategy/Policy Council that includes
Boeing Chairman, President and CEO Jim McNerney.
"We have a long history of continuously improving the environmental
performance of our products and services, and we have worked hard to ensure
compliance with the environmental rules and regulations that affect our
operations," McNerney said. "With this new organization, we are sharpening
our focus on important environmental issues that bear on our business by
identifying and integrating them into a strategic plan that will be managed
centrally and include work we do with our suppliers and customers."
The new Environment, Health and Safety organization will combine the
existing Safety, Health and Environmental Affairs (SHEA) functions of SSG with
new functions focused on:
-- Establishing enterprise strategies and objectives to address current
and potential future environmental issues associated with Boeing
products, services, facilities and technologies, and those of its
business partners.
-- Defining and implementing enterprise environmental management systems
and tools for integrating environmental risk management into the
company's core operating processes, such as design and manufacturing.
-- Establishing standards, processes and guidelines for routinely
tracking Boeing's and its business partners' performance to these
environmental plans and objectives.
"Given Mary's background in chemical process engineering and R&D, her
extensive leadership experience on programs, and her focus on environmental
compliance as leader of SSG, she is the ideal choice to lead this new
organization in establishing an integrated environmental strategy for Boeing,"
Tracy said.
SHEA groups in the Boeing Commercial Airplanes and Integrated Defense
Systems business units also will be strategically aligned with the new
Environment, Health and Safety organization.
The EO&T organization that Tracy leads is responsible for achieving
excellence in the enterprise technology groups and the Engineering,
Manufacturing, Program Management, Supplier Management and Quality Assurance
functions of Boeing.
"The strong interconnections these groups and functions have to each
other, to our products and services, and to our technology investments, will
allow Boeing to better integrate and leverage its environmental initiatives
across the enterprise," Tracy said.
Armstrong, who was named president of SSG in 2004, has 23 years'
experience at Boeing. Among the positions she has held during that time are
vice president/general manager of Commercial Airplanes Fabrication, vice
president/general manager of Boeing Aircraft Systems & Interiors, vice
president of Boeing Facilities Services, and process engineer for
Manufacturing R&D. She has bachelor's and master's degrees in chemical
engineering from the University of Washington and University of Rochester,
respectively.
Armstrong will be succeeded as president of SSG by Tim Copes, formerly
vice president of Technical Services for Commercial Aviation Services. Copes,
who joined Boeing in 1992, has held numerous leadership positions in the
Manufacturing, Quality, and Engineering functions, including vice president of
Quality and Mission Assurance for Boeing Integrated Defense Systems, director
of Manufacturing for the Sonic Cruiser program for Boeing Commercial
Airplanes, and both director of Manufacturing and director of Quality for the
777 family of products. He also has a bachelor's degree in mechanical
engineering from the University of Wisconsin and master's degrees in
mechanical engineering and management from the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology.