A breakdown for Boeing and the FAA after years of trust
When Dennis Muilenburg, Boeing’s ousted chief, was summoned to Washington last month, he scarcely knew he was in for a dressing-down from the head of the Federal Aviation Administration.FAA chief Steve Dickson — a former Delta Air Lines employee who in August took over the reins at the world’s most influential aviation regulator — had announced the day before that Boeing’s 737 MAX would not return to the skies before 2020.The plane was grounded worldwide last March after two crashes in less than five months left 346 people dead.The meeting between the two men was tense, according to a US official.Muilenburg had promised airlines and investors the MAX would be back in the sky by December 2019.Ominously, he warned a delay could force a temporary halt to production, something that could inflict pain on the entire US economy.But Dickson was unswayed, telling Muilenburg to focus on fixing the MCAS anti-stall system implicated in the crashes.Strikingly, he also publicly accused Boeing of making statements “designed to force FAA into taking quicker action.” The souring relations between the two men alarmed Boeing board members, including Larry Kellner, former head of Continental Airlines, according to people with knowledge of the matter.The board feared a complete breakdown in the crucial relationship with the FAA.Boeing needs the agency’s support both to emerge from the unprecedented crisis, which has cost it billions of dollars, and also to certify the airworthiness of other jets like those in Boeing’s long-haul 777x aircraft line.Ten days of talks followed. And on December 23 Muilenburg’s unceremonious firing was announced in a terse Boeing statement that offered no thanks for his years of service.David Calhoun, chairman of Boeing’s board, had finally dropped Muilenburg after having earlier assured him of his support in the face of blistering attacks from lawmakers and the victims’ families.Adding insult to injury, Muilenburg was informed just hours before the announcement, according to a knowledgeable person.The bonds of trust between Boeing and the FAA had been fraying since October.That month, as lawmakers intensified a probe of the 737 MAX’s certification, Dickson leveled explosive accusations against Boeing.He said the company had concealed important documents, including exchanges between employees, showing that the MCAS system, which was meant to prevent stalling, made piloting the aircraft difficult during simulator training.

