A sweeping piece of aviation legislation passed last week by the U.S. House includes an obscure amendment that allows airliners to continue flying with partial safety upgrades, even though they don’t fully meet current safety standards.
As passed by the House on July 20, the FAA Reauthorization Act allows the Federal Aviation Administration to approve certain interim design changes without taking public input. Boeing and other airplane manufacturers lobbied for the change.
As a safeguard, the amendment requires the FAA to set a deadline “by which all noncompliant conditions related to the design change must be addressed.”
Aerospace industry officials who pushed for the amendment say it’s in the interests of the flying public to deploy safety upgrades faster.
But some critics argue the proposed fast-track approval could degrade the level of scrutiny of safety-related changes by shortening the FAA review process and not allowing public and industry experts to review changes before they are approved.
Michael Stumo, a sharp critic of Boeing’s safety culture ever since his 24-year-old daughter Samya Rose Stumo died in the 2019 crash of an Ethiopian Airlines 737 MAX, said the new approval process lacks transparency and invites waivers of design changes behind closed doors.
“The exclusive reason for this is to avoid the public and anyone else having a say or seeing what’s going on,” said Stumo. “They just want to make it secret.”
And while the new fast-track process should add some near-term safety enhancements, the concern is that this could allow Boeing to delay costly longer-term upgrades needed to bring the jets fully into compliance with regulations.
Former FAA safety engineer Mike Dostert, who provided his analysis of the proposed amendment to congressional staff, said the speedier approval process in the FAA bill “is not about safety; it’s about reducing costs.”
In an effort to address concerns, House Transportation Committee staff added, with unanimous bipartisan support, a series of safeguards before the amendment was finalized, including the requirement that the FAA must set deadlines by which all safety standards are met.
The Senate considers the FAA Reauthorization Act next, and Congress is targeting it to become law in September when the agency’s current authorization expires.
Peter Prowitt, chief operating officer at the Aerospace Industries Association, said that, when an extensive safety redesign is required, the goal is to deploy some interim improvements quickly rather than waiting for the entire design package to be ready.
“This is a way for us to accelerate the implementation of safety measures without having to wait for a more extended process,” Prowitt said. “The FAA administrator would have the discretion to decide.”
Prowitt, whose association represents airplane, jet engine and component manufacturers, also noted a U.S. competitiveness rationale: A similar accelerated approval process for interim design changes is already available to Airbus from Europe’s FAA counterpart, the European Union Aviation Safety Agency, or EASA.
Hassan Shahidi, CEO of the Flight Safety Foundation, a well-regarded organization focused on safety advocacy, said the new process can be acceptable as long as the FAA is required to conduct a complete risk assessment.
He added that the setting of a deadline to fix outstanding noncompliance issues is also an essential element, even if these are not immediate safety risks.
“There may be a number of compliance issues and all of them need to have a deadline, based on risk,” Shahidi said.
Under the comparable European fast-track process, EASA requires such a timetable.
Dostert, the former FAA safety engineer, said the addition of the deadline is “a real positive improvement” over what Boeing and the industry asked for. Still, he remains wary that the inserted safeguards may not be enforceable in practice.
“Where are the consequences if they don’t meet the deadline?” he asked.
Airliners that don’t comply with FAA standards
At the root of the request for this amendment is a perhaps startling fact: Although Boeing commercial jetliners are certified before entering service as meeting all FAA safety regulations, the reality is that the planes in the sky do not.
Both the 737 MAX and the 787 Dreamliner, Boeing’s two most important jets, do not fully comply with FAA safety standards.
For example, the 787 does not meet the lightning protection standard designed to prevent a wing fuel tank explosion that the FAA stipulated as a special condition when the largely carbon composite jet was certified to carry passengers.
Though the jet has a very effective system to reduce flammability in the wing tank — to reduce flammable vapor, inert gas is pumped in as fuel is used up during flight — it does not have the required level of protection against ignition sources inside the wing.