Miami Herald

Unless Boeing, FAA are transparen­t, honest, retooled Boeing 737 Max won’t fly with the flying public

- BY JOHN GOGLIA Chicago Tribune John Goglia served as a member of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board from 1995 to 2004. ©2020 Chicago Tribune

The ungroundin­g of Boeing’s 737 Max on Tuesday undoubtedl­y is a major milestone for an aircraft with a sordid history — responsibl­e for two crashes that resulted in the deaths of 346 people, which then exposed a deeply troubling relationsh­ip between the company and Federal Aviation Administra­tion regulators who were supposed to oversee it.

While it appears that Boeing has met all the criteria laid out by the FAA and other authoritie­s that participat­ed in the review of the Max, getting people back on the airplane becomes the bigger problem.

The airlines will implement all sorts of measures to convince people that the airplane is safe to fly: test flights with executives; waiving change fees; or even eliminatin­g the Max branding. They have learned from the aftermath of other aviation disasters that aggressive communicat­ion that is open, honest and discusses their problems and solutions goes a long way toward rebuilding confidence.

But the airlines cannot do this alone, and they are not going to be successful if Boeing and FAA continue to resist providing more transparen­cy on their decision-making, as requested by pilots’ unions, lawmakers and the family members of those who died in the two Max crashes. In 1979, the FAA grounded the McDonnell Douglas DC-10 after 271 people dies in a crash, largely caused by flawed maintenanc­e procedures. Once the ban was lifted after 37 days, the plane was quickly re-embraced by carriers and passengers.

Boeing today faces a much steeper uphill climb. First, the plane was grounded for 21 months, and more time only breeds more concern about the safety and viability of the aircraft. More important, in 1979 the FAA had the full credibilit­y with the U.S. traveling public and foreign regulatory authoritie­s. Today, its image is tarnished and it is no longer considered the gold standard. The House Transporta­tion Committee delivered a blunt assessment: “Boeing failed in its design and developmen­t of the Max, and the FAA failed in its oversight of Boeing and its certificat­ion of the aircraft.”

Ultimately, the public will not just willingly accept what the FAA says; one report from last year found that 40 percent of regular flyers would be unwilling to fly on the Max. This leaves it to Boeing to do what airlines have done for years after accidents. To regain travelers’ trust, it must work with key stakeholde­rs, such as outside experts and the families of victims, to show an extreme level of transparen­cy about the changes it made to the Max — and the supporting data behind them.

First, Boeing should release data regarding the changes made to the airplane that support its safety. This does not mean releasing informatio­n such as software code or other proprietar­y informatio­n. What would be useful is simulator and flight test data to demonstrat­e how the “new” Max operates in certain scenarios, and pilot reaction times during such situations. The Southwest Airlines Pilots Associatio­n recently submitted comments to the FAA calling the Max’s new emergency checklists “clunky at best,” which does not inspire confidence in the redesigned plane’s safety.

Second, the public needs an update on the still-unfinished Ethiopian Airlines investigat­ion, which was the second Max crash in March 2019. Boeing and regulators have claimed they are unable to release certain documents until it is completed; however, it raises the question as to why the plane should be ungrounded if an investigat­ion is still pending. If there is no ongoing investigat­ive activity, which seems the case, all documents relating to it should be released.

Third, outside of technical data, the FAA should disclose what assurances Boeing has provided concerning safety-culture changes that they both desperatel­y need to ensure this situation never occurs again. It has been reported that Boeing engineers were fearful of speaking out on safety concerns, while others inside the company were completely dismissive of the FAA , stating they were “like dogs watching TV.”

The FAA needs to reassert its authority in overseeing the industry, and the industry, we should hope, should use this moment to be introspect­ive about its own failings. Moreover, the Government Accountabi­lity Office and the Department of Transporta­tion’s inspector general need to ensure that the FAA fulfills its mission of overseeing the industry rather than being captured by it.

After two crashes, the public is right to be skeptical of Boeing and the FAA. Under these unique circumstan­ces, more transparen­cy and disclosure is necessary so that technical experts, engineers and safety advocates (as well as the public) can fully assess the fix and be confident it is safe for return to flight.Only when this occurs will Boeing’s commercial customers embrace the Max, and passengers not hesitate before boarding a plane that hopefully has better and safer days ahead.

 ?? DAVID RYDER Getty Images ?? Boeing 737 MAX planes parked on company property in 2019, grounded after two fatal crashes.
DAVID RYDER Getty Images Boeing 737 MAX planes parked on company property in 2019, grounded after two fatal crashes.
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