Houston Chronicle Sunday

Senate investigat­ors also fault the FAA over the safety of Boeing’s 737Max jetliner

- By David Koenig

Boeing improperly influenced a test designed to see how quickly pilots could respond to malfunctio­ns on the Boeing 737 Max, and Federal Aviation Administra­tion officials may have obstructed a reviewof two deadly crashes involving the plane, Senate investigat­ors say.

In a report released Friday, the Senate Commerce Committee also said the FAA continues to retaliate against whistleblo­wers.

The FAA’s parent agency, the Transporta­tion Department, also hindered investigat­ors by failing to turn over documents, it said.

The report follows a similarly scathing review of the FAA by a House panel earlier this year. Both grew out of concern about the agency’s approval of the Boeing Max.

In a statement, the FAA said the report“contains a number of unsubstant­iated allegation­s” and defended its review of the Max, calling it thorough and deliberate.

“We are confident that the safety issues that played a role in the tragic accidents involving Lion Air Flight 610 and Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 have been addressed through the design changes required and independen­tly approved by the FAA and its partners,” the agency said.

Boeing didn’t commenton specific allegation­s.

“We take seriously the committee’s findings and will continue to review the report in full,” the Chicago-based company said.

All Max planes were grounded worldwide after crashes in Indonesia and Ethiopia killed 346 people. Following a lengthy reviewof Boeing changes, the FAA last month approved the plane to fly again if airlines update a key flight-control system and make other changes.

The Senate report, however, criticized a key part of the FAA review. It said that Boeing “inappropri­ately influenced” FAA testing of pilot-reaction time to a nosedown pitch of the plane.

According to a whistleblo­wer who was an FAA safety inspector, Boeing representa­tives watched and gave advice to help test pilots in a flight simulator respond to the problem in a few seconds.

The reaction of three flight crews still was slower than Boeing had assumed, according to the report. Each time the plane would have been thrown into a nosedown pitch, although recovery would have been possible, the investigat­ors said.

In the two Max crashes, a failure of the key flight system, called MCAS, pushed the nose down repeatedly, sending the planes into fatal dives.

The FAA countered that it was an FAA pilot who discovered a separate computer issue in the plane, a flaw that took Boeing additional months to fix.

Investigat­ors also said an FAA division manager firstwas invited then excluded from a review of the Max crashes, even though his position normally would call for him to participat­e in the review.

The official said he believes he was excluded to shield FAA from criticism.

The committee chairman, Roger Wicker, R-Miss., called the investigat­ors’ findings troubling.

“The report details a number of significan­t examples of lapses in aviation safety oversight and failed leadership in the FAA,” Wicker said in a statement. “It is clear that the agency requires consistent oversight to ensure their work to protect the flying public is executed fully and correctly.”

Wicker and the panel’s top Democrat, Maria Cantwell of Washington, have introduced legislatio­n to make changes in FAA’s process for certifying new planes.

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