FAA approves Boeing 737 MAX to resume flights
By Kelvin Osa Okunbor
The Federal Aviation Administration yesterday cleared the way for the Boeing 737 MAX to take to the skies again — 20 months after the troubled jet was grounded in the wake of two crashes that claimed 346 lives.
In addition, regulators in other countries want to recertify the aircraft.
The FAA said in a statement that before any of the planes can be flown with passengers again, required changes to the plane must be installed — and the agency must inspect the individual jets, CNN reported.
That process is expected to take between a few weeks and a few months, it added.
The 737 MAX was grounded in March 2019 after the crash of Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 near Addis Ababa, killing all 157 aboard. In October 2018, all 189 aboard a Lion Air 737 MAX were killed when it crashed in Indonesia.
In September, a scathing congressional report said the crashes were the “horrific culmination” of “repeated and serious failures” by Boeing and the FAA.
The plane maker has said it “learned many hard lessons as a company from the accidents … and from the mistakes we have made.”
A key safety system — the Maneuvering Characteristics Augmentation System, or MCAS — was linked to both crashes. The system, designed to help counter a tendency of the plane to pitch up, could be activated after data from only a single sensor.
The FAA now requires new safeguards, including a requirement that it receives data from two sensors.
Some of the relatives of those who perished in the crashes have objected to the return to service for the plane.
They argue that Boeing made mistakes in the design of the MAX, the newest version of a long-serving plane, which made their version dangerous — and that the FAA made errors approving the original version and recertifying it to fly, according to CNN.
“The plane is inherently unstable and it is unairworthy without its software,” said Michael Stumo, whose daughter Samaya Rose Stumo died in the 2019 crash. “They haven’t fixed it so far. The flying public should avoid the MAX in the future. Change your flight.”