Boeing executives meet with head of FAA over grounded plane
Two top Boeing executives met Thursday with FAA chief Stephen Dickson amid signs of further delays in the return of the grounded 737 Max. In an email to key congressional committees, the FAA said Dickson is instructing agency safety experts to take as long as they need to review changes Boeing is making to the plane after two fatal crashes. Boeing, meanwhile, struck an upbeat tone in describing the meeting. CEO Dennis Muilenburg and the new head of Boeing's commercial airplanes business, Stanley Deal, “had a productive meeting" with Dickson and FAA Deputy Administrator Daniell Elwell, said Boeing spokesman Gordon Johndroe. "Boeing reaffirmed with the FAA that safety is our top shared priority, and we committed to addressing all of the FAA’s questions as they assess MAX certification and training requirements," Johndroe said in a statement. "We will work with the FAA to support their requirements and their timeline as we work to safely return the Max to service in 2020.”<br/>
https://portal.staralliance.com/cms/news/hot-topics/2019-12-13/general/boeing-executives-meet-with-head-of-faa-over-grounded-plane
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Boeing executives meet with head of FAA over grounded plane
Two top Boeing executives met Thursday with FAA chief Stephen Dickson amid signs of further delays in the return of the grounded 737 Max. In an email to key congressional committees, the FAA said Dickson is instructing agency safety experts to take as long as they need to review changes Boeing is making to the plane after two fatal crashes. Boeing, meanwhile, struck an upbeat tone in describing the meeting. CEO Dennis Muilenburg and the new head of Boeing's commercial airplanes business, Stanley Deal, “had a productive meeting" with Dickson and FAA Deputy Administrator Daniell Elwell, said Boeing spokesman Gordon Johndroe. "Boeing reaffirmed with the FAA that safety is our top shared priority, and we committed to addressing all of the FAA’s questions as they assess MAX certification and training requirements," Johndroe said in a statement. "We will work with the FAA to support their requirements and their timeline as we work to safely return the Max to service in 2020.”<br/>