Times Colonist

Transport Canada official: Boeing Max 8 software must go

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OTTAWA — A Transport Canada official is urging global aviation regulators not to let Boeing’s 737 Max 8 aircraft fly again until the company removes anti-stall software that has been tied to two crashes that killed 346 people.

The federal department has confirmed the authentici­ty of an email sent last week to aviation regulators in the United States, Brazil and the European Union by Jim Marko, manager of aircraft integratio­n and safety assessment at Transport Canada.

In that email, first reported by the New York Times, Marko expressed uneasiness with Boeing’s attempts, so far unsuccessf­ul, to find a fix for the software known as MCAS.

“Judging from the number and degree of open issues that we have, I am feeling that final decisions on acceptance will not be technicall­y based,” he wrote.

“This leaves me with a level of uneasiness that I cannot sit idly by and watch it pass by. The only way I see moving forward at this point (and I say at this point because it’s almost Christmas and we can always believe in miracles) is that MCAS has to go.”

In a statement, Transport Canada said Marko’s email “reflects working-level discussion­s between highly trained aircraft certificat­ion experts of key aviation authoritie­s who have been given wide latitude for assessing all issues and looking at all alternativ­es for the safe return to service of the aircraft.”

The department added that Marko’s views “have not been subject to systematic review by Transport Canada.”

The Max 8 has been grounded worldwide since March after Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 crashed after taking off from Addis Ababa, killing all 157 people on board. That followed a similar crash of another Max 8 in October 2018 shortly after takeoff from Jakarta, Indonesia, killing 189 people.

The MCAS software, which automatica­lly pushes the nose of the aircraft down in certain circumstan­ces, has been fingered for blame in both crashes.

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