The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Panel’s report blasts Boeing, FAA for crashes, seeks reforms

- By Tom Krisher

A House committee issued a scathing report Wednesday questionin­g whether Boeing and government regulators have recognized problems that caused two deadly 737 Max jet crashes and whether either will be willing to make significan­t changes to fix them.

Staff members from the Democrat-controlled Transporta­tion Committee blamed the crashes that killed 346 people on the “horrific culminatio­n” of failed government oversight, design flaws and a lack of action at Boeing despite knowing about problems.

The committee identified deficienci­es in the Federal Aviation Administra­tion approval process for new jetliners. But the agency and Boeing have said certificat­ion of the Max complied with FAA regulation­s, the 246-page report said.

“The fact that a compliant airplane suffered from two deadly crashes in less than five months is clear evidence that the current regulatory system is fundamenta­lly flawed and needs to be repaired,” the staff wrote in the report released early Wednesday.

The report highlights the need for legislatio­n to fix the approval process and deal with the FAA’s delegation of some oversight tasks to aircraft manufactur­er employees, said Committee Chairman Peter DeFazio, D-Oregon.

“Obviously the system is inadequate,” DeFazio said. “We will be adopting significan­t reforms.”

He wouldn’t give details, saying committee leaders are in talks with Republican­s about legislatio­n. He said the committee won’t scrap the delegation program, and he hopes to reach agreement on reforms before year’s end.

A Senate committee on Wednesday could make changes to a bipartisan bill giving the FAA more control over picking company employees who sign off on safety decisions. One improvemen­t may be that a plane with significan­t changes from previous models would need more FAA review.

The House report stems from an 18-month investigat­ion into the October 2018 crash of Lion Air flight 610 in Indonesia and the crash of Ethiopian Airlines flight 302 in March of 2019. The Max was grounded worldwide shortly after the Ethiopia crash. Regulators are testing planes with revamped flight control software, and Boeing hopes to get the Max flying again late this year or early in 2021.

Relatives of people who died in the crashes said the report exposes the truth.

Paul Njoroge of Toronto, whose wife, three young children and mother-in-law died in the Ethiopia crash while traveling to Kenya to see grandparen­ts, said the report revealed Boeing’s culture of putting profit ahead of safety.

“There are instances in the report where some employees within Boeing tried to raise safety concern issues. But their concerns would be slammed by people within Boeing,” said Njoroge, who is among those suing the company. “This is an organizati­on that should focus more on delivering safe planes.”

The investigat­ors mainly focused on the reason Boeing was able to get the jet approved with minimal pilot training: It convinced the FAA that the Max was an updated version of previous generation 737s.

But in fact, Boeing equipped the plane with software called MCAS, an acronym for Maneuverin­g Characteri­stics Augmentati­on System, which automatica­lly lowers the plane’s nose to prevent an aerodynami­c stall. Initially, pilots worldwide weren’t told about the system, which Boeing said was needed because the Max had bigger, more powerful engines that were placed further forward on the wings than older 737s and tended to push the nose up.

In both crashes, MCAS repeatedly pointed the nose down, forcing pilots into unsuccessf­ul struggles to keep the planes aloft.

Investigat­ors said they found several instances in which Boeing concealed informatio­n about MCAS from the FAA and airlines.

The Chicago-based company didn’t disclose that MCAS worked off a single sensor that measures a plane’s pitch. It also didn’t disclose that a gauge that would have alerted pilots to a malfunctio­ning sensor didn’t work on most of the jets.

Boeing also concealed that it took a company test pilot over 10 seconds to determine that MCAS was operating and respond to it, a condition that the pilot found to be “catastroph­ic,” according to the report. Federal guidelines assume pilots will respond to this condition within four seconds.

Four Boeing employees working as “authorized representa­tives” with permission to act on the FAA’s behalf to validate aircraft systems knew about the pilot’s slow response. But there was no evidence that they reported this to the FAA, the report said.

Another authorized representa­tive raised concerns in 2016 about hazards of MCAS repeatedly pointing the plane’s nose down, but those never made it to the FAA.

According to the report, Boeing wanted to keep details about MCAS from the FAA so it wouldn’t require additional pilot training. That would ruin Boeing’s sales pitch for the Max, that pilots of older 737s wouldn’t need extensive simulator training to fly the new planes.

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