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US safety board to hold hearings on Boeing 737 MAX door occurrence

The National Transportation Safety Board stated on Wednesday it had actually set up 20 hours of hearings over two days on the January Alaska Airlines Boeing 737 MAX 9 inflight door plug emergency situation and would examine oversight by U.S. security regulators.

The NTSB said on its site the Aug. 6-7 hearings are set to last 10 hours each day and would focus on Boeing 737 MAX production and examinations, FAA oversight of Boeing and Spirit AeroSystems and occasions surrounding the elimination of the door plug in 2023. The hearing would also examine security management and quality management systems.

Boeing has actually faced mounting questions after a door panel detached throughout a Jan. 5 flight on a new Alaska Airlines 737 MAX 9, forcing pilots to make an emergency situation landing while travelers were exposed to a gaping hole 16,000 feet above the ground. The

FAA had actually grounded all MAX 9

airplanes for a number of weeks and required safety checks before they might resume flights. The firm also has actually barred Boeing from expanding MAX production as the company evaluates the planemaker's practices.

The NTSB said formerly that 4 key bolts were missing from the door plug that blew off the Alaska Airlines flight at 16,000 feet. The Justice Department has actually opened a criminal investigation into the incident.

NTSB Chair Jennifer Homendy informed

in April she

anticipated witnesses from Alaska, Boeing and Spirit would offer testimony.

The FAA and Boeing referred questions about the hearing to the NTSB. Last month, the NTSB stated Boeing might lose its status as a celebration to the probe after it breached rules by offering non-public information to media and hypothesizing about possible causes.

The NTSB said Boeing would no longer see details produced during its probe and unlike other celebrations, Boeing would not be permitted to ask concerns of other participants at the August hearing.

Elizabeth Lund, Boeing's senior vice president of quality, who had actually made remarks last month that broke the guidelines is anticipated to appear at the hearing, the NTSB stated last month.

The NTSB said last month it would subpoena Boeing witnesses to appear at the hearing. The NTSB stated Wednesday the complete examination will take approximately one year to 18 months from the mishap to finish.

(source: Reuters)