San Francisco Chronicle

FAA chief: Oversight system ‘not delivering safe aircraft’

- By David Koenig

The new chief of the Federal Aviation Administra­tion said Tuesday that his agency is midway through a review of manufactur­ing at Boeing, but he already knows that changes must be made in how the government oversees the aircraft manufactur­er.

FAA Administra­tor Michael Whitaker suggested that Boeing — under pressure from airlines to produce large numbers of planes — is not paying enough attention to safety.

Whitaker said that FAA has had two challenges since Jan. 5, when an emergency door panel blew off a Boeing 737 Max 9 jetliner over Oregon.

“One, what is wrong with this airplane? But two, what’s going on with the production at Boeing?” Whitaker told a House subcommitt­ee.

“There have been issues in the past. They don’t seem to be getting resolved, so we feel like we need to have a heightened level of oversight.”

Whitaker, who took over the FAA about three months ago, was making his first appearance on Capitol Hill since the blowout over Oregon.

Separately, investigat­ors with the National Transporta­tion Safety Board were expected to release a preliminar­y report on last month’s incident as early as Tuesday.

Whitaker’s testimony before a House Transporta­tion subcommitt­ee was wide-ranging. Leaders of the panel had spelled out questions they wanted answered, but few lawmakers stuck to the script — they asked about everything from the Max 9 incident to raising the retirement age for pilots to migrants being housed at airports.

Whitaker said the FAA is halfway through a sixweek audit that has involved placing “about two dozen” inspectors in Boeing’s 737 plant in Renton, Wash., and “maybe half a dozen” at a Wichita, Kan., plant where supplier Spirit AeroSystem­s makes the fuselages for 737s.

The inspectors are looking for gaps in the quality of work during the manufactur­ing process that might have contribute­d to a door plug blowing off an Alaska Airlines Max 9 at 16,000 feet over Oregon.

Whitaker said he expects the FAA will keep people in the Boeing and Spirit factories after the audit is done, but he said the numbers haven’t been determined.

For many years, the FAA has relied on employees of aircraft manufactur­ers to perform some safety-related work on planes being built by their companies.

That saves money for the government, and in theory taps the expertise of industry employees, but it was criticized after two deadly crashes involving Boeing Max 8 planes in 2018 and 2019.

“In order to have a truly safe system, it seems to me that we can’t rely on the manufactur­ers themselves to be their own watchdogs,” Rep. Colin Allred, D-Texas, said during Tuesday’s hearing.

Whitaker has said that the self-checking practice — in theory, overseen by FAA inspectors — should be reconsider­ed, but he again stopped short of saying it should be scrapped. But he said closer monitoring of Boeing is needed.

“The current system is not working because it is not delivering safe aircraft,” Whitaker said. “Maybe we need to look at the incentives to make sure safety is getting the appropriat­e first rung of considerat­ion that it deserves.”

No Boeing representa­tives were scheduled to testify. The company did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment on Whitaker’s remarks.

Boeing and the FAA have been under renewed scrutiny since last month’s incident on an Alaska Airlines Max 9.

 ?? Ellen M. Banner/Tribune News Service ?? Boeing employees work on the 737 Max in June at Boeing’s plant in Renton, Wash. FAA has placed “about two dozen” inspectors at the plant.
Ellen M. Banner/Tribune News Service Boeing employees work on the 737 Max in June at Boeing’s plant in Renton, Wash. FAA has placed “about two dozen” inspectors at the plant.
 ?? ?? Whitaker
Whitaker

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