The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Transport Canada looks to top FAA plans

- ALLISON LAMPERT REUTERS

MONTREAL - Transport Canada is mulling a Canadian supplement to the Boeing 737 MAX’s U.S.developed flight manual, as the regulator weighs going beyond steps taken by the Federal Aviation Administra­tion (FAA) to end a global grounding of the model after two fatal crashes.

Transport Canada is among a core group of regulators, including the European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA), that are evaluating needed changes for the 737 MAX to fly again after nearly a year.

Transport Canada told Reuters by email on Wednesday it would not hesitate to add “Canadian-unique” nonnormal procedures as a supplement to the MAX’s aircraft flight manual, although its goal is still a “harmonized approach” with the FAA for the steps pilots must take during events related to system failures or malfunctio­ns.

Canada’s remarks illustrate the challenges faced by the FAA in securing a common global blueprint with foreign regulators for the 737 MAX to fly again.

Boeing has acknowledg­ed that the timing of decisions to remove the no-fly order could vary among different regulators around the world that have each pinpointed their own concerns over the 737 MAX jet.

“We are not bound exclusivel­y with what the FAA comes out with,” said David

Turnbull, director of national aircraft certificat­ion for Transport Canada, during government hearings on Tuesday.

The FAA declined comment.

Transport Canada did not specify which Canadianun­ique procedures it was referring to.

Following the crash of a Lion Air MAX jet in 2018, Transport Canada added the requiremen­t of a five-step memorized pilot checklist in the case of a runaway stabilizer.

Canada is holding hearings on aircraft certificat­ion to study how the 737 MAX jet was approved to fly in the country.

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