Prentice Reid

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The FAA was stripped of some of its most fundamental authority—to decide, for instance, whether a manufacturer like Boeing was qualified to certify its own work. Under the new law, delegation to private industry was considered the default. If regulators had doubts about a system—the Dreamliner’s batteries, say, or the MAX’s flight controls—they first had to make a formal case for why they should retake certification control from airplane makers.
Flying Blind: The 737 MAX Tragedy and the Fall of Boeing
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