Albuquerque Journal

House panel blasts Boeing, FAA for crashes

- BY TOM KRISHER ASSOCIATED PRESS

A House committee issued a scathing report Wednesday questionin­g whether Boeing and government regulators have recognized problems that caused two deadly 737 Max jet crashes and whether either will be willing to make significan­t changes to fix them.

Staff members from the Democratco­ntrolled Transporta­tion Committee blamed the crashes that killed 346 people on the “horrific culminatio­n” of failed government oversight, design flaws and a lack of action at Boeing despite knowing about problems.

The committee identified deficienci­es in the Federal Aviation Administra­tion approval process for new jetliners. But the agency and Boeing have said certificat­ion of the Max complied with FAA regulation­s, the 246-page report said.

“The fact that a compliant airplane suffered from two deadly crashes in less than five months is clear evidence that the current regulatory system is fundamenta­lly flawed and needs to be repaired,” the staff wrote in the report, which was released early Wednesday.

The report highlights the need for legislatio­n to fix the approval process and deal with the FAA’s delegation of some oversight tasks to aircraft manufactur­er employees, said Committee Chairman Peter DeFazio, D-Oregon.

“Obviously the system is inadequate,” DeFazio said. “We will be adopting significan­t reforms.”

He wouldn’t give details, saying committee leaders are in talks with Republican­s about legislatio­n. He said the committee won’t scrap the delegation program, and he hopes to reach agreement on regulatory changes before the end of the year.

 ?? ELAINE THOMPSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A Boeing 737 Max jet.
ELAINE THOMPSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS A Boeing 737 Max jet.

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