Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Panel slams Boeing’s ‘culture of concealmen­t’

- By David Koenig

A congressio­nal committee investigat­ing Boeing said Friday that a “culture of concealmen­t” at the company and poor oversight by federal regulators contribute­d to two deadly crashes involving the grounded 737 Max.

The committee said multiple factors led to the crashes, but it honed in on a new flight-control system that pushed the nose of each plane down based on faulty sensor readings. Boeing Co. failed to classify the system as critical to safety, part of a strategy designed to avoid closer scrutiny by regulators as the company developed the plane, the House Transporta­tion Committee said.

The panel said Boeing had undue influence over the Federal Aviation Administra­tion, and FAA managers rejected safety concerns raised by their own technical experts.

The committee made the comments in a preliminar­y summary of its nearly yearlong investigat­ion of Boeing’s developmen­t of the Max and the FAA’s decision to approve the plane.

The panel’s summary did not break new ground, but it illustrate­d the breadth and depth of one of several investigat­ions currently underway against Boeing.

Officials at the Chicago company weren’t immediatel­y available to comment.

The committee said Boeing jeopardize­d safety by pressuring employees to speed up production of the plane and by making incorrect assumption­s about important technology, especially the flight-control system, which is called MCAS. The company concealed key informatio­n from the FAA and didn’t tell pilots about MCAS until after the first crash.

The House committee, led by Rep. Peter DeFazio, D-Ore., said it is still conducting interviews and reviewing records as part of its investigat­ion. The committee said it is considerin­g legislatio­n to improve FAA oversight of new aircraft.

That legislatio­n is expected to focus on the FAA’s policy of deputizing some employees at Boeing and other manufactur­ers to conduct safety-related analysis and testing. FAA officials have defended that decades-long policy, saying it has produced safe airplanes.

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