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US investigating if Boeing made sure a part that blew off a jet was made to design standards

The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating whether Boeing failed to make sure a panel that blew off a jetliner in midflight last week was safe and manufactured to meet the design that regulators approved.
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This photo released by the National Transportation Safety Board shows the door plug from Alaska Airlines Flight 1282 on Monday, Jan. 8, 2024, in Portland, Ore. A panel used to plug an area reserved for an exit door on the Boeing 737 Max 9 jetliner blew out Jan. 5, shortly after the flight took off from Portland, forcing the plane to return to Portland International Airport. (National Transportation Safety Board via AP)

The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating whether Boeing failed to make sure a panel that blew off a jetliner in midflight last week was safe and manufactured to meet the design that regulators approved.

Boeing said Thursday it would cooperate with the investigation, which is focusing for extra doors when those exits are not required for safety reasons on Boeing 737 Max 9 jetliners.

One of two plugs on an Alaska Airlines jetliner blew out shortly after the plane took off from Portland, Oregon, leaving a hole in the plane.

鈥淭his incident should have never happened,and it cannot happen again,鈥 the FAA said. 鈥淏oeing鈥檚 manufacturing practices need to comply with the high safety standards they鈥檙e legally accountable to meet.鈥

The FAA notified Boeing of the investigation in a letter dated Wednesday.

鈥淎fter the incident, the FAA was notified of additional discrepancies on other Boeing 737-9 airplanes,鈥 an FAA official wrote. Alaska and United Airlines reported on door plugs that they inspected in some of their other Max 9 jets.

The FAA asked Boeing to respond within 10 business days and tell the agency "the root cause" of the problem with the door plug and steps the company is taking to prevent a recurrence.

鈥淲e will cooperate fully and transparently with the FAA and the NTSB (National Transportation Safety Board) on their investigations," said Boeing, which is headquartered in Arlington, Virginia.

Earlier this week, Boeing CEO David Calhoun called the incident 鈥渁 quality escape.鈥 He told employees that the company was 鈥渁cknowledging our mistake ... and that this event can never happen again.鈥

The door plugs are installed by Boeing supplier Spirit AeroSystems, but investigators have not said which company鈥檚 employees last worked on the plug on the Alaska plane that suffered the blowout.

The day after the blowout, the FAA grounded Max 9 jets, including all 65 operated by Alaska and 79 used by United Airlines, until Boeing develops inspection guidelines and planes can be examined. Alaska by Max 9s through Saturday.

NTSB investigators said this week they have not been able to find four bolts that are used to help secure the 63-pound door plug. They are not sure whether the bolts were there before the plane took off.

Despite a hole in the side of the plane, pilots were able to return to Portland and make an emergency landing. No serious injuries were reported.

A physics teacher in Cedar Hills, Oregon, found the missing door plug in his backyard two days later. It will be examined in the NTSB laboratory in Washington, D.C.

On Friday, a Seattle law firm filed a class-action lawsuit against Boeing, saying passengers on the Alaska flight suffered physical and psychological injury and emotional distress. It seeks unspecified damages for the treatment of health conditions, travel expenses and the loss of personal items.

Boeing declined to comment on the lawsuit.

The FAA's move to investigate Boeing comes as the agency is again under scrutiny for its oversight of the aircraft maker. Members of Congress have in the past accused the FAA of being .

Sen. Maria Cantwell, D-Wash., chair of the Senate committee that oversees FAA, asked the agency to detail its oversight of the company.

鈥淩ecent accidents and incidents 鈥 including the expelled door plug on Alaska Airlines flight 1282 鈥 call into question Boeing鈥檚 quality control,鈥 Cantwell said in a letter to FAA Administrator Mike Whitaker. 鈥淚n short, it appears that FAA鈥檚 oversight processes have not been effective in ensuring that Boeing produces airplanes that are in condition for safe operation, as required by law and by FAA regulations.鈥

The incident on the Alaska plane is the latest in a string of setbacks for Boeing that began in 2018, with the first of two crashes of Max 8 planes in Indonesia and Ethiopia 鈥 and more than four months apart 鈥 that killed a total of 346 people.

Justin Green, a lawyer who represents for the Ethiopia crash, said he was happy to see the FAA ground the Max 9s so quickly after the Oregon incident.

鈥淚 would like to think it is because the FAA learned something after its failure to ground the Boeing 737-8 Max鈥 after the first crash, Green said, 鈥渂ut you also need to consider that Alaska Air occurred in the U.S. with a plane full of U.S. citizens and garnered far more attention than the Lion Air crash鈥 in Indonesia.

Max 8 and Max 9 planes were grounded worldwide for nearly two years after the second crash. Since then, various manufacturing flaws have at times held up deliveries of Max jets and a larger Boeing plane, the 787. Last month, the company asked airlines to for a loose bolt in the rudder-control system.

David Koenig, The Associated Press