The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Audit slams US safety oversight of Southwest Airlines

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THE Federal Aviation Administra­tion’s lax oversight allowed Southwest Airlines to put millions of passengers at risk, according to a new audit that adds to scrutiny of the US regulator.

The audit shows the FAA, already facing questions for its certificat­ion of the grounded Boeing 737 MAX, permitted domestic-focused Southwest to operate planes purchased from other carriers in an “unknown airworthin­ess state.”

Southwest operated more than 150,000 flights that did not meet US standards, the FAA’s inspector general said in the report.

The airline was “putting 17.2 million passengers at risk,” according to the Transporta­tion Department’s internal watchdog.

The criticism relates to 88 planes Southwest acquired from internatio­nal airlines between 2014 and 2018 that FAA officials cleared for service without ensuring the planes met US safety standards. The airline said it has since addressed thoroughly inspected nearly all of those aircraft.

FAA officials relied on summary data provided by Southwest “rather than conducting a comprehens­ive review of aircraft records themselves,” the audit said.

The regulator “used the carrier’s summary documentat­ion to complete their review expeditiou­sly to meet the air carrier’s timelines, rather than performing an independen­t analysis,” the report said.

The report also faulted the FAA for not doing enough to ensure that Southwest addressed discrepanc­ies between company estimates of plane weight and actual weight.

The audit comes as new FAA chief Steve Dickson has sought to win back credibilit­y for the agency on Capitol Hill after it was slammed for lagging regulators in other countries in grounding the Boeing 737 MAX in March 2019 following two deadly crashes. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Southwest Airlines put millions of passengers at risk with planes that did not meet US safety standards, according to a new audit.
— AFP photo Southwest Airlines put millions of passengers at risk with planes that did not meet US safety standards, according to a new audit.

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