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US Senator calls FAA's proposed fine of $3.1 Million Boeing inadequate

Democratic U.S. Senator Richard Blumenthal says the Federal Aviation Administration’s proposed fine of $3.1 million against Boeing for safety violations is insufficient and asks the agency to explain the calculation. Blumenthal sent a letter to FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford on Tuesday, a Republican appointee by President Donald Trump. The letter stated that such fines were easily absorbed by Boeing as a cost of doing business and not a deterrent against dangerous behavior. "Until penalties are raised to a level that makes the company invest in real safety improvements, risks for the flying public will continue."

Requests for comment from the FAA and Boeing were not immediately responded to.

Blumenthal is the leading Democrat in a Senate panel that investigated Boeing safety concerns. He chaired this committee when it examined a mid-air cabin explosion incident involving a brand new Alaska Airlines 737 MAX aircraft on January 20, 2024. Blumenthal's panel released a report that showed Boeing whistleblowers raised serious concerns about its manufacturing processes.

The FAA reported that it found hundreds quality system violations in the Boeing 737 factories in Renton, Washington and Wichita (Kansas) at Spirit AeroSystems, a Boeing subcontractor, between September 2023 and February 2024.

Blumenthal wrote that if there were discretion in the way penalties are calculated, or if a reduction is likely to occur, the FAA could send the message that safety violations have no serious consequences.

Alaska Airlines' incident, in which a 737 MAX was found to be missing four bolts, damaged Boeing’s reputation. The FAA subsequently imposed a cap on production of 38 aircraft per month and grounded the MAX 9 planes for two weeks.

Boeing also presented two unairworthy planes to the FAA for approval, according to the FAA.

The FAA determined that a Boeing employee pressed a coworker performing tasks for the FAA into signing off on a 737 MAX to meet the company's delivery schedule despite that coworker having determined that the aircraft didn't comply with regulatory standards.

Alaska Airlines' incident prompted U.S. Justice Department, under Trump's Democratic predecesor Joe Biden, to open a criminal probe and declare that Boeing did not comply with a deferred prosecution 2021 agreement after the company misled the FAA in the 737 MAX certification process.

Blumenthal wrote: "The public should be confident that fines aren't just token gestures but actual enforcement tools."

(source: Reuters)