Premises Description

The Boeing Company (founded 1916, headquartered Seattle WA through 2001, Chicago IL 2001-2022, today Arlington VA) is through the 20th century and today one of the largest U.S. aerospace and defense manufacturers. Boeing operates and historically operated through the asbestos era a major network of U.S. aerospace manufacturing plants:

  • Renton WA — historic 707/727/737 commercial airliner plant
  • Everett WA — 747/767/777/787 wide-body assembly plant
  • Seattle WA — Boeing Field, Plant 2, multiple legacy operations
  • Wichita KS — Boeing Wichita military aerospace and Stearman heritage (sold to Spirit AeroSystems 2005)
  • St. Louis MO — McDonnell Douglas legacy site (acquired 1997)
  • Long Beach CA — Douglas legacy commercial airliner plant
  • Charleston SC — Boeing 787 South Carolina assembly
  • Philadelphia PA — Boeing Rotorcraft (former Boeing Vertol)
  • Mesa AZ — military rotorcraft

Each of Boeing’s major plants operated through the asbestos era with extensive asbestos-containing infrastructure: pipe covering on plant steam and process piping, block insulation on boilers and heat exchangers, refractory in heat-treat furnaces and metal-processing equipment, gaskets and packing at process flanges and pumps, electrical insulation on plant motor and switchgear systems, and spray-applied asbestos fireproofing on aircraft-hangar structural steel and plant structural members.

Plaintiffs alleged in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation that Boeing — as premises owner — exposed its IAM and UAW aerospace machinist workforce and contractor pipefitters, insulators, boilermakers, and trade workers to extensive asbestos.

The Boeing Company has been named as a Premises Defendant in publicly filed U.S. asbestos personal-injury and wrongful-death litigation.

Workers Exposed

  • IAM / UAW Local members at Boeing aerospace plants
  • Refinery pipefitters and millwrights working Boeing capital projects
  • Insulators (HFIAW Local members) on Boeing construction and turnaround crews
  • Boilermakers (IBB Local members) building Boeing plant equipment
  • Electricians (IBEW Local members) working Boeing plant electrical systems
  • Construction-trade workforces on Boeing aircraft-hangar and plant capital projects

If You Worked at a Boeing Plant

If you worked at a Boeing Company aerospace manufacturing plant during the asbestos era — as a Boeing employee or as a dispatched contractor trade worker — and have since been diagnosed with mesothelioma, asbestosis, lung cancer, or another asbestos-related illness, you may have legal rights.

Free, confidential case evaluation: Speak with O’Brien Law Firm — (314) 936-2956