The FAA announced it would increase its oversight on Boeing as machinists return back to work following a 53-day-long strike.
However, the inspector general of the Transportation Department, FAA’s parent agency, said last week that weaknesses in FAA oversight are limiting its ability to find and fix problems at Boeing.
The aerospace manufacturer and its new chief executive face a daunting to-do list, including improving quality and increasing ...
Boeing is under federal scrutiny yet again, but this time it isn’t for midflight door malfunctions, faulty wheels, or ...
The FAA says it maintained its enhanced on-site presence at each Boeing factory in the duration of the strike and plans on further strengthening and target its oversight as workers being returning to ...
Following the resolution of the Machinists’ strike, federal officials will be stepping up the agency’s oversight of the 737 ...
In the report, the Transportation Department’s inspector general outlined weaknesses found in the FAA’s oversight of Boeing 737 and 787 production lines, issuing 16 recommendations to improve ...
Amid Surveillance Push, FAA Still Largely Reliant On Boeing’s Data is available to both Aviation Week & Space Technology and AWIN subscribers. Subscribe now to read this content, plus receive critical ...
The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board has released 600 pages of materials connected to an investigation of an ...
Production delays with the Boeing 777X plane The experimental 777X is Boeing's newest widebody plane, banking 481 orders from more ... stored plane parts from FAA inspectors.