Boeing unauthorized 737 work issue should have been caught years
earlier, NTSB says
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[August 08, 2024]
By David Shepardson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The head of the National Transportation Safety
Board said on Wednesday the Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 9 mid-air
emergency was entirely avoidable because the planemaker should have
addressed unauthorized production work long ago.
"This accident should have never happened. This should have been caught
years before," NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy told reporters on the second
day of a hearing into the Jan. 5 incident in which a panel blew off an
Alaska Airlines flight after takeoff from Portland, Oregon.
"There have been numerous, numerous Boeing audits, FAA audits,
compliance reviews, compliance actions plans, noting a history of an
unauthorized work, unauthorized removals," she added.
Federal Aviation Administration official Brian Knaup said at the hearing
the agency has found additional issues with unauthorized removals by
Boeing. "We have an open enforcement action around removals," Knaup
said, adding the FAA has increased investigations of hotline and
whistleblower reports.
He defended the FAA's oversight of Boeing before the accident. "We
believe we conducted effective oversight," Knaup said, but conceded it
was better since the accident. "Safety culture isn't a compliance
thing."
He said the FAA has increased unannounced audits and acquired dedicated
space for personnel at Boeing's 737 factory and at supplier Spirit
AeroSystems, which Boeing is in the process of acquiring.
The NTSB's Homendy added there was no guarantee the door panel issue
would not occur again.
Boeing created no paperwork for the removal of the 737 MAX 9 door plug -
a piece of metal shaped like a door covering an unused emergency exit -
or its re-installation during production, and still does not know what
employees were involved. The plug was missing four key bolts when it was
delivered to Alaska Airlines, NTSB has said.
Boeing did not immediately comment.
If Boeing had learned from prior unauthorized work, "then this would
have been caught and this would have been prevented," Homendy said,
adding the board was also scrutinizing FAA oversight of Boeing.
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National Transportation Safety Board Chair Jennifer Homendy attends
a NTSB hearing on the Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 MAX door accident
at NTSB headquarters in Washington, U.S., August 6, 2024. REUTERS/Kaylee
Greenlee Beal
"We have a lot of questions -- there was information known," Homendy
said about FAA oversight of Boeing, citing defects, missing and
incorrect documents, as well as incorrect policies that "have been
issues for years. This is not new."
After the incident, the FAA barred Boeing from expanding production
beyond 38 planes per month and announced a 90-day review of the
planemaker. It has required significant quality and manufacturing
improvements before it will allow the planemaker to hike production.
FAA Administrator Michael Whitaker said in June the agency was "too
hands off" in Boeing oversight. The FAA's approach before the
mid-air accident was "too focused on paperwork audits and not
focused enough on inspections," Whitaker added. The FAA has also
boosted the number of inspectors at Boeing and Spirit factories.
"We will continue our aggressive oversight of the company and ensure
it fixes its systemic production-quality issues," the FAA said on
Wednesday.
The FAA disclosed on Wednesday it has 16 open enforcement actions
involving Boeing, with eight of them launched since the Alaska
Airlines incident.
Last week, Senate Commerce Committee Chair Maria Cantwell and
Senator Tammy Duckworth introduced legislation to review and
strengthen safety management systems at the FAA.
Homendy said the NTSB plans to conduct a safety culture survey of
employees at Boeing's factory in Renton, Washington, that builds the
737 MAX.
(Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Michael Perry, Nick
Zieminski and Matthew Lewis)
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