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The US Federal Aviation Administration(FAA) is facing mounting criticism for backing the airworthiness of Boeing's 737 Max jets as the number of countries that have grounded the aircraft grows in the wake of the Ethiopian Airlines crash over the weekend, reported AP News.
On the FAA website they issued an official statement reading, “Thus far, FAA review shows no systemic performance issues and provides no basis to order grounding the aircraft.”
The Ethiopian disaster came just five months after the deadly crash of another new Boeing 737 Max 8 operated by Lion Air in Indonesia.
Representative Peter DeFazio, the chairman of the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee, said in a statement to AP News on Tuesday, 12 March, that he's concerned that international aviation regulators are providing more certainty to the flying public than the FAA.
The FAA has increasingly become cozy with airplane manufacturers and airlines when it should be more pro-active in safety, said Bill McGee, aviation adviser for Consumer Reports.
The magazine and website on Tuesday called on airlines and the FAA to ground the 737 Max planes until an investigation into the cause of the Ethiopian crash is completed to see if it's related to the Lion Air crash in October .
"They have not presented any evidence that the problems that we've seen with these two crashes are not problems that could potentially exist here in the US," McGee said.
"Increasingly the FAA is relying more and more on what the industry calls electronic surveillance," added McGee, who has written about aviation for nearly two decades. "Not going out and kicking the tires, seeing the work being done, making sure it's being done properly."
Former Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood also called for the US to ground the 737 Max, just as his agency halted flights of another Boeing plane six years ago because of safety concerns.
LaHood was Department of Transportation secretary in 2013 when the department grounded the Boeing 787 because of overheating lithium-ion battery packs. The planes were idled for less than a month, until Boeing crafted new fire-resistant compartments around the batteries, reported AP News.
LaHood said current Secretary Elaine Chao should do the same thing with the Max 8, even if it means overruling the FAA, which has taken no action in the face of the dozens of other countries banning the plane from their skies.
But veteran accident investigators defended the FAA, which has said there's no data to link the two crashes.
"I don't see the facts to justify what they've done," John Goglia, an independent safety consultant and former member of the National Transportation Safety Board, said of the moves by other countries to stop the Max 8 from flying. "If they have facts, I wish they would share them with the rest of the world so we can protect the air-travelling public."
John Cox, president and CEO of the aviation consultancy Safety Operating Systems, said countries that have grounded the Max 8 may have linked the Ethiopian and Indonesian crashes even though investigators had yet to analyse the Ethiopian plane's black boxes.
"The FAA is on solid ground so far," said Cox, a former airline pilot and accident investigator. "But politics may overwhelm them if enough members get together and demand the planes be grounded."
Democratic Senators Richard Blumenthal of Connecticut and Dianne Feinstein of California already have urged FAA to do just that, signalling that the agency may soon face escalating pressure from Capitol Hill.
"My fear is that the FAA is simply trying to save face and avoid acknowledging the safety defect that they failed to find when they certified the plane's safety," said Blumenthal, a member of the Senate Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation.
The European Union Aviation Safety Agency, which covers 32 countries, announced on Tuesday, 12 March, that it would ban the planes from flying in its airspace. Other countries that have either grounded the planes or temporarily banned them include China, the United Kingdom, India, Indonesia, Singapore, Oman, Malaysia and Australia.
Airlines that have stopped using the planes include Gol Airlines of Brazil, Cayman Airways, Ethiopian Airways, Jet Airways of India, Aeromexico, Norwegian Air Shuttle, Turkish Airlines, Eastar Jet of South Korea, Smartwings of the Czech Republic and LOT of Poland.
Sandy Morris, an aerospace analyst at Jefferies in London, called the string of bans on the Boeing Max jets unprecedented.
"It seems like a rebellion against the FAA," Morris said to AP News.
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