The union representing 15,000 American Airlines pilots said on Wednesday it strongly opposes an effort in Congress to extend an exemption from modern cockpit alerting requirements for the Boeing 737 MAX 7 and 10. Boeing faces a December deadline to win approval from the FAA of the 737 MAX 7 and 10 variants, or it must meet new modern cockpit-alerting requirements that could significantly delay the plane's entry into service. Allied Pilots Association President Capt. Edward Sicher said "Boeing needs to proceed with installing modern crew alerting systems on these aircraft to mitigate pilot startle-effect and confusion during complex, compound system malfunctions." The FAA declined to comment. Boeing, which did not immediately respond to a request for comment, has said it is safer to have one common cockpit alerting system for all versions of the 737. Reuters reported on Monday that Boeing does not anticipate winning regulatory approval for its 737 MAX 10 before next summer, according to an FAA letter to Congress. Last week, Senator Roger Wicker, the top Republican on the Commerce Committee, proposed extending the deadline for Boeing to win approval for the two new variants until September 2024 and hopes to attach the proposal to an annual defense bill. There is no indication yet if Wicker's proposal has the support of other key lawmakers including committee chair Senator Maria Cantwell, a Democrat. Cantwell's office did not immediately comment. The requirements were adopted as part of a certification reform bill passed after two fatal 737 MAX crashes killed 346 people and led to the best-selling plane's 20-month grounding. Relatives of many of those killed in the MAX crashes also oppose giving Boeing an extension. They wrote a letter in July opposing the extension and suggest Boeing had resorted "to bullying Congress."<br/>
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American Airlines Group is headed to trial with Points Guy next September to decide if frequent flyers have the right to manage their travel rewards from all carriers on a third-party website. The parties notified a federal judge in Fort Worth, Texas, on Wednesday their settlement talks had failed. American sued Points Guy in January on claims the travel app, launched in September 2021, improperly profits from the carrier’s proprietary data and violated the AAdvantage program’s trademark and customer privacy rules. The airline seeks a court order requiring Points Guy to strip all links and any data captured and stored on the site associated with AAdvantage member accounts. Started in mid-2010 as a blog offering tips on how to best accumulate and use airline miles, the Points Guy has expanded considerably in recent years with credit card reviews and travel news. The site claims to have 10 million unique visitors each month and more than 3m followers on social media. The company said its miles-tracking app, launched a year ago, has been used to track over 18b points and miles.<br/>