Houston Chronicle

FAA rapped for leaving safety up to Boeing

- By Paul Roberts

In the wake of two fatal crashes of Boeing’s new 737 MAX 8, the Federal Aviation Administra­tion faces growing criticism for delegating much of the safety certificat­ion of the aircraft to the aerospace company itself.

As The Seattle Times reported Sunday, some of the agency’s own engineers complained they were pressured to hand off too much safety analysis to Boeing on a new flight control system for the MAX, and that system is suspected of playing a role in both October’s Lion Air crash and the Ethiopian Airlines crash March 10.

But the 737 MAX is hardly the first instance where the top federal aviation regulator outsourced at least some of its oversight duties to the very industry it is supposed to be overseeing.

When overheatin­g batteries grounded Boeing’s 787 Dreamliner in 2013, members of the flying public were surprised to learn that safety tests for those new lithium batteries had been conducted not by the FAA, but by Boeing.

In fact, the practice of delegating safety certificat­ion-and the controvers­y surroundin­g that -goes back many decades.

In the mid-1990s, the FAA came under intense criticism for allowing Boeing to control much of the safety certificat­ion process for the 777, the first generation of computer-guided aircraft and one of the most complex pieces of machinery ever assembled.

According to a Seattle Times report from 1995, Boeing not only controlled every part of the 777 testing regime from start to finish, but also shielded that process “from public review by claiming the need to protect trade secrets.” The FAA went so far as to support Boeing’s “refusal even to release a full list of tests performed on the airplane.”

At the time, critics questioned whether the company-led certificat­ion might overlook or discount important safety questions. Critics also wondered whether the decision to allow Boeing to run the certificat­ion process was motivated at least in part by Boeing’s financial need to meet a delivery deadline to United Airlines, the 777’s launch customer.

Industry’s role in such safety assessment­s wasn’t always so controvers­ial.

From the 1940s onward, much of the testing of new aircraft was conducted by employees of the manufactur­ers who were on temporary assignment with the FAA. These so-called “designees” allowed the FAA to carry out safety certificat­ions for an industry that each year was producing a larger number of ever more complex aircraft.

By the 1980s, the designee system had been refined to a high polish.

The FAA’s authority over the certificat­ion process began to shift away from the agency as aerospace companies lobbied Congress to change the certificat­ion process, said Jim Hall, a former chair of the National Transporta­tion Safety Board who currently works as an aviation safety consultant.

Companies like Boeing have been “wanting to to acquire more authority over the certificat­ion process ever since since the 1990s,” Hall said.

Hall and others spoke out against these efforts by industry to move more of that certificat­ion authority from the FAA. But in 2005, the power shift accelerate­d.

The FAA also has moved more of the oversight function out of the agency and into the companies themselves. Under a process known as Organizati­on Designatio­n Authorizat­ion, or ODA, companies that had received special approval by the FAA could create in-house bodies that oversee the designees who were working on certificat­ion.

In many cases in which the FAA demanded changes by a company during a certificat­ion process, the in-house bodies “have been quite aggressive in pushing back against the agency.

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