Las Vegas Review-Journal

Boeing 737 Max could be cleared for flight in weeks

- By David Rising

BERLIN — European regulators on Tuesday took a step closer to letting the Boeing 737 Max fly again, publishing a proposed airworthin­ess directive that could see the aircraft cleared within weeks after being grounded for nearly two years over deadly crashes.

The publicatio­n of the directive by the European Union Aviation Safety Agency opens a 28-day public consultati­on period after which the agency will review the input and then approve the aircraft for flight.

It said the step signals “its intention to approve the aircraft to return to Europe’s skies within a matter of weeks.”

Regulators around the world grounded the Max in March 2019, after the crash of an Ethiopian Airlines jet. That happened less than five months after another Max flown by Indonesia’s Lion Air plunged into the Java Sea. A total of 346 passengers and crew members on both planes were killed.

The move by the EASA, which is based in Cologne, Germany, comes after the U.S. Federal Aviation Administra­tion already cleared the Boeing 737 Max this month.

“EASA made clear from the outset that we would conduct our own objective and independen­t assessment of the 737 Max, working closely with the FAA and Boeing, to make sure that there can be no repeat of these tragic accidents, which touched the lives of so many people,” said EASA Executive Director Patrick Ky in a statement.

Investigat­ions into the accidents revealed a primary cause in both cases was a software function program known as the Maneuverin­g Characteri­stics Augmentati­on System. EASA said its probe began with a review of the MCAS but went far beyond.

EASA said one “fundamenta­l problem” of the MCAS, which was intended to make the aircraft easier to handle, was that many pilots did not even know it was there. The airworthin­ess directive seeks to address that human factor.

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