Santa Fe New Mexican

Relatives of passengers killed in Boeing crash protest in D.C.

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Families of the passengers who died in one of the Boeing 737 Max crashes lobbied Transporta­tion Secretary Elaine Chao on Tuesday to slow what they consider a rush to let the plane fly again.

Two of the relatives who took part in the two-hour meeting said Chao promised that the government will take as long as necessary to ensure that the plane is safe but stopped short of agreeing to an entirely new, top-to-bottom review.

A spokesman for Chao said the department and the Federal Aviation Administra­tion have taken unpreceden­ted steps to understand the accidents and the FAA’s certificat­ion of the plane in 2017. One of those steps, he said, included Chao’s appointmen­t of a special committee to review the FAA’s process of certifying planes.

After the meeting, several dozen relatives held a vigil on the steps of the Transporta­tion Department headquarte­rs in Washington to mark the six-month anniversar­y of the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302.

They carried pictures of many of the 157 people who died. Another 189 died in the October 2018 crash of a Max jet operated by Indonesia’s Lion Air.

The group of 11 family members who met with Chao want the FAA to conduct a completely new review of the Max instead of mainly examining changes Boeing made to flight-control software that was implicated in both crashes.

They also want pilots to train on flight simulators before they fly the plane. Boeing, which wants to avoid further delays in bringing the plane back, believes that computer training is adequate for now, with simulator sessions later.

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