www.politico.com Open in urlscan Pro
2606:4700:4400::ac40:9205  Public Scan

URL: https://www.politico.com/news/2024/01/25/boeings-737-max-9-will-likely-be-flying-by-friday-should-it-00137944
Submission: On January 26 via manual from US — Scanned from US

Form analysis 2 forms found in the DOM

GET https://www.politico.com/search

<form class="slide-search__form" action="https://www.politico.com/search" method="get">
  <input class="slide-search__input" type="search" name="q" id="searchTerm" aria-label="Search for any story" placeholder="Enter search term...">
  <button class="slide-search__run" type="submit" aria-label="Start search"><b class="bt-icon bt-icon--search"></b><span class="icon-text">Search</span></button>
  <button class="slide-search__close" id="search-close" type="button"><b class="bt-icon bt-icon--close" aria-label="Close Search"></b></button>
</form>

<form class="form-section">
  <input type="hidden" name="subscribeId" value="0000014f-1646-d88f-a1cf-5f46b7bd0000">
  <input type="hidden" name="processorId" value="00000179-61ab-d60d-a9f9-f5bf392e0000">
  <input type="hidden" name="validateEmail" value="true">
  <input type="hidden" name="enhancedSignUp" value="true">
  <input type="hidden" name="bot-field" value="" class="dn">
  <input type="hidden" name="subscriptionModule" value="newsletter_inline_standard_Playbook - POLITICO" class="dn">
  <input type="hidden" name="captchaUserToken" value="" autocomplete="off">
  <input type="hidden" name="captchaPublicKey" value="6LfS6L8UAAAAAAHCPhd7CF66ZbK8AyFfk3MslbKV" autocomplete="off">
  <div class="sign-up-21--msg sign-up-21--msg-spinner" aria-hidden="true">
    <div class="msg-content">
      <p>Loading</p>
      <svg class="sign-up-21--msg-icon-lg sign-up-21--spinner-icon-lg" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="48" height="48" viewBox="0 0 24 24" fill="none" stroke="#4D8AD2" stroke-width="1" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round">
        <line x1="12" y1="2" x2="12" y2="6"></line>
        <line x1="12" y1="18" x2="12" y2="22"></line>
        <line x1="4.93" y1="4.93" x2="7.76" y2="7.76"></line>
        <line x1="16.24" y1="16.24" x2="19.07" y2="19.07"></line>
        <line x1="2" y1="12" x2="6" y2="12"></line>
        <line x1="18" y1="12" x2="22" y2="12"></line>
        <line x1="4.93" y1="19.07" x2="7.76" y2="16.24"></line>
        <line x1="16.24" y1="7.76" x2="19.07" y2="4.93"></line>
      </svg>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="sign-up-21--msg sign-up-21--msg-completed" aria-live="assertive" aria-hidden="true">
    <div class="msg-content">
      <p>You will now start receiving email updates</p>
      <svg class="sign-up-21--msg-icon-lg" width="48" height="48" viewBox="0 0 48 48" fill="none" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
        <path
          d="M44 22.1597V23.9997C43.9975 28.3126 42.601 32.5091 40.0187 35.9634C37.4363 39.4177 33.8066 41.9447 29.6707 43.1675C25.5349 44.3904 21.1145 44.2435 17.0689 42.7489C13.0234 41.2543 9.56931 38.4919 7.22192 34.8739C4.87453 31.2558 3.75958 26.9759 4.04335 22.6724C4.32712 18.3689 5.99441 14.2724 8.79656 10.9939C11.5987 7.71537 15.3856 5.43049 19.5924 4.48002C23.7992 3.52955 28.2005 3.9644 32.14 5.71973"
          stroke="#4D8AD2" stroke-width="2" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round"></path>
        <path d="M44 8L24 28.02L18 22.02" stroke="#4D8AD2" stroke-width="2" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round"></path>
      </svg>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="sign-up-21--msg sign-up-21--msg-already-subscribed" aria-live="assertive" aria-hidden="true">
    <div class="msg-content">
      <p>You are already subscribed</p>
      <svg class="sign-up-21--msg-icon-lg" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="48" height="48" viewBox="0 0 24 24" fill="none" stroke="currentColor" stroke-width="1" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round">
        <path d="M14 9V5a3 3 0 0 0-3-3l-4 9v11h11.28a2 2 0 0 0 2-1.7l1.38-9a2 2 0 0 0-2-2.3zM7 22H4a2 2 0 0 1-2-2v-7a2 2 0 0 1 2-2h3"></path>
      </svg>
      <a href="/newsletters" target="_top"></a>
    </div>
  </div>
  <div class="sign-up-21--msg sign-up-21--msg-error" aria-live="assertive" aria-hidden="true">
    <div class="sign-up-21--msg-close">
      <svg width="20" height="20" viewBox="0 0 20 20" fill="none" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg">
        <path id="close" fill-rule="evenodd" clip-rule="evenodd"
          d="M17.513 16.6291L10.8839 9.99995L17.513 3.37082L16.6291 2.48694L10 9.11606L3.37088 2.48694L2.487 3.37082L9.11613 9.99995L2.487 16.6291L3.37088 17.513L10 10.8838L16.6291 17.513L17.513 16.6291Z" fill="#000"></path>
      </svg>
    </div>
    <div class="msg-content">
      <p style="color:#9E352C">Something went wrong</p>
    </div>
  </div>
  <fieldset class="form-container active">
    <div class="form-row row-email">
      <div class="form-row-container">
        <label class="data-form-label" for="email" aria-hidden="true">Email</label>
        <span class="sign-up-21--error-msg" aria-hidden="true">
          <span class="sign-up-21--exclamation">!</span>
          <span id="email-hint">Please make sure that the email address you typed in is valid</span>
        </span>
        <div class="form-row-container--input">
          <input type="email" name="subscribeEmail" aria-label="Email" placeholder="Your Email" required="">
        </div>
      </div>
    </div>
    <div class="form-row row-secondary-questions active">
      <div class="sign-up-21--secondary-questions-container">
        <div class="form-row-container">
          <label class="data-form-label" aria-hidden="true">Employer</label>
          <div class="form-row-container--input">
            <input type="text" name="job_employer" required="" aria-label="Employer" placeholder="Employer">
          </div>
        </div>
        <div class="form-row-container">
          <label class="data-form-label" aria-hidden="true">Job Title</label>
          <div class="form-row-container--input">
            <input type="text" name="job_title" required="" aria-label="Job Title" placeholder="Job Title">
          </div>
        </div>
      </div>
    </div>
    <div class="form-row row-notice">
      <span class="sign-up-21--notice">
        <span class="color-red">*</span> All fields must be completed to subscribe. </span>
      <button type="submit" class="submit-button" aria-disabled="true">Sign Up</button>
    </div>
    <div class="row-bottom">
      <p class="form-policy"> By signing up, you acknowledge and agree to our <a href="https://www.politico.com/privacy" target="_blank">Privacy Policy</a> and <a href="https://www.politico.com/terms-of-service" target="_blank">Terms of Service</a>.
        You may unsubscribe at any time by following the directions at the bottom of the email or by <a href="https://www.politico.com/feedback" target="_blank">contacting us here</a>. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google
        <a href="https://policies.google.com/privacy" target="_blank">Privacy Policy</a> and <a href="https://policies.google.com/terms" target="_blank">Terms of Service</a> apply. </p>
      <button type="submit" class="submit-button" aria-disabled="true"> Sign Up </button>
    </div>
  </fieldset>
</form>

Text Content

Skip to Main Content


POLITICO POLITICO LOGO

 * Congress
 * Pro
 * E&E News
 * Search
   Search


WASHINGTON & POLITICS

 * Congress
 * White House
 * Elections
 * Legal
 * Magazine
 * Foreign Affairs


2024 ELECTIONS

 * News
 * Results
 * GOP Candidate Tracker


STATE POLITICS & POLICY

 * California
 * Florida
 * New Jersey
 * New York


GLOBAL POLITICS & POLICY

 * Brussels
 * Canada
 * United Kingdom


POLICY NEWS

 * Agriculture
 * Cannabis
 * Cybersecurity
 * Defense
 * Education
 * Energy & Environment
 * Finance & Tax
 * Health Care
 * Immigration
 * Labor
 * Sustainability
 * Technology
 * Trade
 * Transportation


NEWSLETTERS

 * Playbook
 * Playbook PM
 * West Wing Playbook
 * POLITICO Nightly
 * POLITICO Weekend
 * The Recast
 * Inside Congress
 * All Newsletters


COLUMNISTS

 * Alex Burns
 * John Harris
 * Jonathan Martin
 * Michael Schaffer
 * Jack Shafer
 * Nahal Toosi
 * Rich Lowry


SERIES & MORE

 * Breaking News Alerts
 * Podcasts
 * Video
 * The Fifty
 * Women Rule
 * Matt Wuerker Cartoons
 * Cartoon Carousel


POLITICO LIVE

 * Upcoming Events
 * Previous Events


FOLLOW US

 * Twitter
 * Instagram
 * Facebook

 * My Account
 * Log In Log Out



Transportation


‘I THINK THEY’RE RUSHING THESE PLANES INTO THE SKY’: FEARS CLOUD RETURN OF
BOEING’S 737 MAX 9

United Airlines and Alaska Airlines, the two carriers with Boeing’s 737 MAX 9 in
their fleet, have begun fixing their planes — and could be flying again as soon
as this weekend.



Federal officials are investigating Boeing's oversight of production of a panel
that blew off a jetliner earlier this month. | NTSB via AP

By Oriana Pawlyk and Tanya Snyder

01/25/2024 05:29 PM EST

 * 
 * 

 * * Link Copied
 * * 
   * 
   * 

Boeing’s troubled 737 MAX 9 could start flying again as soon as Friday — but
some in Congress are questioning whether the planes are ready to take to the
skies.

The Federal Aviation Administration issued guidelines late Wednesday for the
inspections and other work that airlines must do to return the plane to service,
almost three weeks after a door panel blew off a plane in midair. United
Airlines and Alaska Airlines, the two carriers operating the MAX 9 in the United
States, said they expect some of their planes could be put back into service as
soon as this weekend, possibly even by Friday.



But Sen. Richard Blumenthal (D-Conn.) said he wasn’t convinced that Boeing and
its contractor, Spirit AeroSystems, had resolved the issues plaguing the MAX 9,
which have included loose bolts and other problems with fittings.



“I think we need to know more about how the inspection is being done, who is
doing it, and how the results will be made public,” Blumenthal said in an
interview on Capitol Hill. “I think they’re rushing these planes into the sky
without sufficient assurance to the American public.”

He added that the National Transportation Safety Board, which is investigating
the Jan. 5 incident in which a door plug on an Alaska Airlines flight blew out
midair, also should weigh in on whether it thinks the planes are safe to fly.
The NTSB on Thursday responded to Blumenthal’s suggestion by observing that as
the regulator, FAA controls that decision.

The two airlines’ combined 171 MAX 9 planes have been grounded since shortly
after the blowout. No one was seriously injured, but the incident has revived
concerns about production and quality control at the aerospace giant, along with
regulatory probes and promised congressional hearings.

Republican Sen. J.D. Vance of Ohio, echoed Blumenthal’s concerns Thursday.

“I’m extremely skeptical that the MAX 9 should be brought back into service
until we know a lot more about what happened,” said Vance, who along with
Blumenthal had been among the first lawmakers to speak out about the door
failure.

Boeing deferred questions on timing to the FAA and the airlines, but pointed to
a previous statement that the company continues to “cooperate fully and
transparently with the FAA and follow their direction as we take action to
strengthen safety and quality at Boeing.”

When asked if the timing was too soon, the FAA on Thursday pointed to FAA
administrator Mike Whitaker’s comments from the prior day. “We grounded the
Boeing 737-9 MAX within hours of the incident over Portland and made clear this
aircraft would not go back into service until it was safe,” Whitaker said in
conjunction with the FAA’s issued inspection guidelines, released Wednesday.

Other senators said they trust the FAA’s proposed fix for the MAX 9.

The Democratic chair of the Senate Commerce aviation subcommittee, Sen. Tammy
Duckworth (D-Ill.), said if the FAA clears them as safe to fly, “I don’t think
it’s too soon.”

But she agreed that Boeing has “a quality control, cultural problem” and ripped
what she called “their continued insistence on getting special exemptions in
order to put aircraft into service.”




Duckworth was referencing Boeing’s ongoing request for the FAA to exempt from
safety standards a de-icing system on its MAX 7 that is at risk of overheating.
Boeing is working on a fix and has argued that the problem can be mitigated in
the meantime by limiting the system’s use in certain conditions.

If the FAA grants that exemption, it would allow Boeing to deliver the Max 7 to
airlines once certified. “That’s not going to happen,” Duckworth said.

Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, the top Republican on the Senate Commerce Committee, on
Thursday backed the FAA’s procedure for returning the planes to flight but
demurred when asked if it may be too soon.

“We need to do everything necessary to prevent a similar accident from
happening,” he said.

Cruz helped organize a briefing for Commerce members last week with leaders from
FAA and NTSB to get an update on their investigations and “the factors that led
to this accident in particular” and what can be done “to ensure that something
similar cannot happen again,” he said.

Lee Moak, who helped lead a DOT investigation into two Boeing 737 MAX 8 crashes
that killed 346 people in Ethiopia and Indonesia in 2018 and 2019, said the FAA
and Boeing have “very good people” who are inspecting the planes and that the
airlines appear to have resolved the issues with the door plug bolts at fault in
the Alaska Airlines incident.

“It’s a very safe airplane and I think we should look forward to it continuing
to fly for many years,” Moak, who is a former commercial airline pilot, said in
an interview. “I’m very comfortable with the plane.” Moak is the former head of
the Air Line Pilots Association, the largest pilots’ union, and now runs a
strategic communications firm called Intrepid.

He added that though the incident was alarming, “the engineering of the
airplane, when you have a failure like this, is remarkable because the plane
came back safely,” he said.

Moak’s review of Boeing’s safety practices in 2020 — as well as the FAA’s
process for allowing manufacturers to certify their planes as safe to fly with
FAA oversight — concluded that the certification system was effective and should
stay in place, as it has produced “the remarkable level of safety that has been
attained in recent decades,” he said.

Sara Nelson, president of the Association of Flight Attendants, which represents
flight attendants at Alaska, United and 17 other airlines, said she had faith in
FAA administrator Mike Whitaker’s “stellar” leadership but added that it’s
“clear that this isn’t where this issue ends.”

She said the union supports “increased oversight and investigations into the
manufacturer’s quality control including limiting production lines.”

Syracuse University professor Kivanc Avrenli, whose research focuses on
commercial aviation safety, said “the quality control problems at Boeing date
back to the 1980s,” when a Japan Airlines crash killed 524 people. He said he
believes the bolt issues with the MAX 9 have been fixed, but suggested it’s hard
to know what other problems might be lurking undiscovered.

“Who knows? Maybe there is another issue with this aircraft and that’s going to
come out of the blue someday” because at its root, Boeing’s safety culture is
“deeply troubled,” Avrenli said.

Former NTSB Chair Robert Sumwalt, now executive director of the Boeing Center
for Aviation & Aerospace Safety at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University, said
the FAA and Boeing “have every reason to get this right” and that as a result,
he’s “confident” that the bolt issue will be rectified.

And he noted that Boeing needs to slow down production to ensure safety. The FAA
on Wednesday also said it won’t allow Boeing to expand production of its 737 MAX
models until the agency is satisfied that Boeing has rectified its quality
control issues.

“To those [who] are saying they can fix the issues without drastic change, my
question to Boeing would be, ‘How’s that working for you’?” Sumwalt said.

CORRECTION: A previous version of this story incorrectly identified a committee
on which Blumenthal sits. He is no longer on the Commerce Committee.


MOST READ


 1. ‘NOT A GOOD NIGHT FOR DONALD TRUMP’: WHY NEVER-TRUMPERS THINK HE’S REALLY
    LOSING


 2. AS SUPREME COURT WEIGHS TRUMP’S ELIGIBILITY, THE ‘10TH JUSTICE’ STAYS MUM


 3. ‘THEY’VE ALL TURNED THEIR BACKS ON HER’: HALEY HOSTS A HOMECOMING IN A
    HOSTILE STATE


 4. ‘PREPOSTEROUS’: FEDERAL JUDGE DECRIES EFFORTS TO DOWNPLAY JAN. 6 VIOLENCE,
    LABEL PERPETRATORS ‘HOSTAGES’


 5. TRUMP WANTS TO SEND TROOPS TO THE INNER CITIES. A TOP SENATOR WANTS TO REIN
    HIM IN.

 * Filed under:
 * Airlines,
 * FAA,
 * NTSB,
 * Federal Aviation Administration,
 * Richard Blumenthal,
 * Ted Cruz,
 * Boeing,
 * Tammy Duckworth,
 * Air Travel,
 * National Transportation Safety Board,
 * Association Of Flight Attendants,
 * Airlines For America,
 * Boeing 737 Max 8 ,
 * Mike Whitaker


POLITICO
 * 
 * 

 * * Link Copied
 * * 
   * 
   * 


PLAYBOOK

The unofficial guide to official Washington, every morning and weekday
afternoons.


Playbook

The unofficial guide to official Washington, every morning and weekday
afternoons.

By signing up, you acknowledge and agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of
Service. You may unsubscribe at any time by following the directions at the
bottom of the email or by contacting us here. This site is protected by
reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Loading

You will now start receiving email updates

You are already subscribed

Something went wrong

Email ! Please make sure that the email address you typed in is valid

Employer

Job Title

* All fields must be completed to subscribe. Sign Up

By signing up, you acknowledge and agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of
Service. You may unsubscribe at any time by following the directions at the
bottom of the email or by contacting us here. This site is protected by
reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Sign Up

Sponsored
Continue watching

WW1: what triggered it and what did we learn?
SPONSORED CONTENT
Recommended by



 * About Us
 * Advertising
 * Breaking News Alerts
 * Careers
 * Credit Card Payments
 * Digital Edition
 * FAQ
 * Feedback
 * Headlines
 * Photos
 * POWERJobs
 * Press
 * Print Subscriptions
 * Request A Correction
 * Write For Us
 * RSS
 * Site Map

 * Terms of Service
 * Privacy Policy
 * Do Not Sell or Share My Personal Information and Opt Out of Targeted
   Advertising

© 2024 POLITICO LLC




COOKIE SETTINGS

At this time, only residents from certain U.S. States have the right to opt-out.
To disable cookies, please use your device settings. You can learn more about
our privacy practices by reading our Privacy Policy


COOKIES

STRICTLY NECESSARY COOKIES

Always Active

These cookies are necessary for the website to function and cannot be switched
off in our systems. They are usually only set in response to actions made by you
which amount to a request for services, such as setting your privacy
preferences, logging in or filling in forms. You can set your browser to block
or alert you about these cookies, but some parts of the site will not then work.

ADVERTISING, ANALYTICS, FUNCTIONAL AND PERFORMANCE COOKIES

Always Active



Back Button


COOKIE LIST



Search Icon
Filter Icon

Clear
checkbox label label
Apply Cancel
Consent Leg.Interest
checkbox label label
checkbox label label
checkbox label label

Confirm My Choices