4 Takeaways from Boeing's Congressional Grilling
In the first of a series of grillings on Boeing's
grounded 737 MAX, Daniel Elwell, acting administrator of the FAA, along with
National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Robert Sumwalt, testified before
the House Aviation Subcommittee on Wednesday, the latest in a round of inquiries
and investigations surrounding Boeing's 737 MAX. The safety of the aircraft has
come under intense scrutiny in the wake of two crashes taking the lives of all
346 people on board.
And safety, according to Representative Rick Larsen,
a Democrat from Washington and chairman of the House Aviation Subcommittee,
underpins the entire industry: "If the public does not feel safe about flying,
then they won't fly. If they don't fly, airlines don't need to buy airplanes. If
they don't need to buy airplanes, then airplanes don't need to be built. And if
there's no need to build airplanes, we don't need jobs in aviation. Therefore,
it is very clear, that the foundation of the U.S. aviation system is safety," he
said in his opening statement.
The three-hour hearing was held to start
producing answers on how the FAA certified the safety of the 737 MAX. So far,
requested information from Boeing has not been forthcoming, noted Transportation
and Infrastructure Committee Chairman Representative Peter DeFazio, a Democrat
from Oregon who opened his statement by saying that Boeing has yet to turn over
a single document as requested by the committee.
Here were the
four biggest takeaways:
Boeing should have been quicker
to report a flaw in the software
Earlier this month Boeing revealed
to the public that they discovered a software malfunction a year before the Lion
Air crash. After review, company experts concluded "the existing functionality
was acceptable until the alert and the indicator could be delinked in the next
planned display system software update." The FAA wasn't told until after the
Lion Air crash. "I am not happy with a 13-month gap between finding that anomaly
and us finding out about it," Elwell said. "We are looking into that and we will
make sure that software anomalies are reported more quickly."
Boeing has
been working on an MCAS software update for the 737 MAX that will address the
malfunction. Elwell indicated that the application for the update should be
forthcoming in the next week or so, which puts Boeing a step closer to getting
its planes in the air. Management at Boeing, according to an investor note from
Morgan Stanley, have found a "degree of optimism" as talks with customers and
regulators proceed around getting the 737 MAX flying again, "which could
potentially occur over the coming months."
Boeing did a poor job
communicating with pilots
It seems like a given. But since MCAS was
only supposed to kick in during extreme situations, Boeing didn't include it in
the pilot manual, and so Lion Air pilots didn't know about it-let alone the
possibility of malfunction. It was a fact that surprised Elwell, a former pilot:
"I, as a pilot, When I first heard about this, I thought there should have been
more text in the manual about MCAS," he said in response to a question from
Transportation and Infrastructure Committee Chairman Representative Peter
DeFazio, a Democrat from Oregon.
Boeing will still have plenty of
authority in the certification process
Elwell faced tough questions
around the certification process that critics say delegates too much authority
to Boeing. He defended the Organization Designation Authorization program called
ODA which allows aircraft manufacturers to designate "authorized
representatives" or ARs. These people, on the payroll of the company, can, for
instance, approve certain decisions in products. The problem, critics of the
system charge, is that ARs can be subject to conflict-of-interest or undue
pressure from a company manager.
"We've had ODA in one form or another
since the beginning of the FAA. We've had delegation of authority since 1927,"
said Elwell. "Just because it has evolved since 1927 doesn't mean it's evolved
to the place where it needs to be or should be," Larsen countered. "And perhaps
it's over-evolved in this case."
Pilot training must
improve
Boeing CEO Dennis Muilenburg has previously mentioned
erroneous readings as a link in a "chain of events" that led to the crashes. And
during the hearing, Ranking Member Sam Graves, a Republican from Missouri, who
expressed concern about tearing down the U.S. system based on what happened in
other countries, bolstered that view by raising questions about pilot errors in
the crashes and their levels of experience.
"The most important safety
feature you can have in any aircraft is a well-trained pilot that can fly the
aircraft," he said. He added: "For me the accident report reaffirms my belief
that pilots trained in the United States would have successfully been able to
handle this situation. The reports compound my concerns about quality training
standards in other countries."
Michel Merluzeau, Aerospace and Defense
Analyst with research firm AIR, believes the systems on an aircraft needs to be
designed for pilots of all experience levels. With the rise of the middle class
in Asia and their desire to travel, there is a need for more pilots, he says.
"With the number of new pilots we're getting, especially out of Asia, it is
absolutely essential that we do not gauge what needs to be done based on the
experience of a given country," he says. "You need to adjust the systems to
maintain the levels of very high safety standards that we've had for
decades."
On the pilot training and error front, NTSB Chairman Sumwalt
placed the responsibility firmly on Boeing: "If an aircraft manufacturer is
going to sell airplanes all across the globe, then it's important that pilots
who are operating those airplanes in those parts of the globe know how to
operate them," he said. "Just to say that the U.S. standards are very good and
this might be a problem with other parts of the globe, I don't think that's part
of the answer. I hate to use this term, but the airplane has to be trained to
the lowest common denominator."
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