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Very Interesting Dated Article about FAA & how it works (or doesn't)

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Very Interesting Dated Article about FAA & how it works (or doesn't)
Business: Sunday, June 04, 1995
Is The Faa Up To The Job? -- A Question Of Safety -- Do Airplane Makers Dominate Regulators?

Terry Mcdermott

Boeing has delivered again. When the 777 begins commercial service Wednesday, it will have met a customer deadline Boeing agreed to five years ago. Boeing's many admirers see another triumph for the company. But others - air-safety critics and experts in complex computer systems - wonder if five years meant Boeing and federal safety regulators had to do too much, too quickly, for this highest of high-tech passenger jets.

- Today: A examination of the Federal Aviation Administration, which critics say is more eager to help manufacturers meet their deadlines than be an independent safety watchdog. - Tomorrow in The Times: Did Boeing give itself enough time to develop and test the 777's ultracomplex computer systems and protect flights from software bugs? - Wednesday in The Times: Polly Lane reports from her airline seat on United Airlines' inaugural 777 flight from London to Chicago. -----------------------------------------

With 150 computers controlling more than 3 million parts, all of it built to move at 600 miles an hour and withstand collisions with everything from flocks of geese and lighting bolts to human error, the Boeing 777 is the most complex machine ever built.

While praising it as a shining example of American industrial prowess, some critics also see the 777 as an illustration of contradictions and inadequacies in the country's air-safety system.

In particular, they worry that modern aircraft manufacturers such as Boeing have outstripped the financial and technical capacity of the main air-safety agency, the Federal Aviation Administration.

In scores of interviews with industry executives, government regulators and safety experts, and in thousands of pages of government records and industry documents, the portrait of the FAA that emerges is one of an agency dominated by the industry it regulates, and nearly overwhelmed by the scope and difficulty of its many jobs.

There is a wary consensus that the FAA stands aside and watches as industry charges ahead. Unresolved is whether the FAA is standing so far away that it can no longer tell when something goes wrong and the safety of airplanes is compromised.

While strongly disagreeing with this portrayal, FAA officials acknowledge the agency over time has delegated ever more of its responsibility to private industry.




The FAA's own staff is stretched thin and does little more than randomly audit the safety tests new airplanes must pass. An overwhelming majority of the work certifying the safety of the 777 has been done by Boeing employees, not the FAA. Some tests were changed from the original test plan. Some were never done. Most were never even reviewed by the FAA.

The agency inspects many more pieces of paper than it does airplanes. It has, for example, more economists doing cost-benefit analyses of proposed safety rules than it has inspectors in Boeing's factories.

FAA and U.S. Department of Transportation officials argue that commercial aviation remains safe. Their position is supported by almost all available data. Contemporary air travel remains one of the safest means of transportation ever devised.

The flying public has been protected largely because the overriding economic interests of companies and personal pride of individuals in commercial aviation both are biased toward safety.

The danger inherent in this is that safety concerns can be overridden if the need for profits becomes too great, development becomes too hasty, or personal pride too weak.

Some of the agency's staunchest supporters say the industry ought to be responsible for safety. Asked who should run the test program for the 777, an executive in the FAA's Seattle Aircraft Certification Office, said:

"It is their program. I didn't spend a dime on it."

Boeing retained control of the 777 testing regime from beginning to end and shielded it from public review by claiming the need to protect trade secrets. The FAA honors these claims, agreeing with Boeing's refusal even to release a full list of tests performed on the airplane. Boeing declined repeated requests for interviews for this story.

Agency staff frequently liken their role to that of police.

"You know the Texas Ranger approach?" one test engineer said. "There's only one riot so you send one marshal, right."

This metaphor might provide little comfort to taxpayers, who perhaps expect more than riot-control from 48,000 federal employees charged with keeping airplanes in the air.

UNDER SIEGE

This spring, following the Oklahoma City bombing, security was increased at all federal offices. Additional guards and metal detectors were placed in their lobbies, and tank traps in their plazas.

The extra precautions imparted a sense of embattlement to Washington, D.C. This is nothing new at the FAA, which has been under siege for years.

While not as large as the largest federal agencies, the FAA is of considerable heft. The agency spends $8 billion a year, three-quarters of it on air-traffic control. The rest is used to regulate virtually all other aspects of American aviation, everything from engine design to a flight attendant's pre-flight announcements.

Under the FAA's control are:

-- 48,000 employees, one for every six airplanes in the U.S.

-- 18,000 airports.

-- 420 FAA-staffed control towers.

-- 90 district offices.

-- 6,500 commercial airliners.

-- 275,000 private airplanes.

-- 4,400 licensed repair stations.

-- 500 pilot-training schools.

-- 650,000 pilots, all of whom must be licensed, as must all mechanics, factories, parts, hot-air balloons, helicopters and airliners.

These people, things and responsibilities are scattered throughout the United States and, in the case of manufacturers, the world. Given this breadth of purpose and place, the FAA is foremost a bureaucracy, and without question suffers from some classic bureaucratic flaws.

The FAA has been repeatedly and at times harshly criticized by Congress, which has characterized it as recalcitrant; by the aviation industry, which sometimes regards its regulators as incompetent and overbearing, at other turns meek; by the Department of Transportation's inspector general, which has accused the FAA of laxity; and most cuttingly by the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB), which has at times accused the FAA of almost wanton disregard for safety.

There is much about the agency that just doesn't seem to work:

-- Staff levels and expertise fluctuate.

The FAA is fodder in the constant Beltway war among parochial, political and ideological interests. It is forever being pushed this way by political pressures, pulled that way by budget economics. Funding fluctuates and causes cyclic waves in the work force. This inconsistency limits the agency's ability to hire technical experts and drives some of the its best people into early retirement or private industry. A program to hire "at least one world-class expert" in every technical specialty was begun in 1979. It has never been fully staffed.

-- Training is inadequate.

No one ever seems to have enough money to train the employees who are hired. In one recent two-year period, only 1 percent of FAA engineers responsible for approving aircraft software attended a software-training course, even though software technology is changing rapidly.

-- Record-keeping is haphazard.

Much of the voluminous data collected from airlines, manufacturers and the agency's own employees is never analyzed. Inspector-general audits find databases poorly maintained and sometimes rife with error. FAA databases "are inaccurate, inconsistent, and often incompatible," the General Accounting Office has testified to Congress.

-- Research and development of new technology is lamentable.

Developing a new automated air-traffic-control system has become such a nightmare that agency officials, after a decade of screw-ups, now come to news conferences equipped with flow-charts and diagrams of decision matrices to explain where the process went off-track this time.

In 1992 testimony to Congress, the accounting office analyzed the FAA's attempt to develop a congressionally mandated statistical program for analyzing safety.

The FAA spent four years and $7 million and had made "little progress," the GAO said. In that time, the agency developed a concept, published a plan, then, when a new FAA administrator arrived, started over from scratch. Completion of the program is "still years away," the GAO concluded.

"You can't acquire and improve the kind of technology in this business on seven- to 10-year cycles. The technology only has about a three-year life cycle. By the time you've installed it, it's obsolete," said Joseph Del Balzo, a former acting FAA administrator.

-- Decision-making is diffuse.

Roger Fleming, senior vice president of operations for the Air Transport Association, a trade association for airlines, said the FAA's emphasis on consensus management created an almost complete lack of individual responsibility for decisions, with timidity and uncertainty pervasive.

-- Oversight is weak.

In a 1991 letter from NTSB Chairman James Kolstad to FAA Administrator James Busey after a crash, the board virtually accused the FAA of killing people.

"The Safety Board questions the FAA's depth of commitment to provide effective quality assurance and safety oversight of the Air Traffic Control system," the letter said. "The fatal accident, which might have been prevented if FAA . . . had identified that mandatory redundancies were not present, demonstrates conclusively an inadequate and ineffective quality-assurance and safety-oversight program . . . . (The FAA's) Office of System Effectiveness is . . . in effect evaluating itself. It is organized in such a way that no actual oversight exists."

ACTORS AND THEIR ROLES

Conversation with government managers invariably includes discussion of agency tables of organization. With the FAA, almost every such conversation includes the caveat that the table of organization you are being shown is out of date, sometimes by as many as two cycles of reorganization.

One recent conversation with an FAA manager included so many references to managers who were no longer the people named on the chart he was using that he quickly switched to a shorthand description of who, in fact, held what position.

"That's an actor," he said, crossing one name out of a key position and writing in the name of a temporary replacement. This one's gone, that's an actor, he said, crossing out two more.

The pencil continued across the sheet.

"She's moved here. Actor, actor."

By the time he was done, three-quarters of the people on the year-old chart had been eradicated.

The FAA is an independent agency within the Department of Transportation. The agency's chief executive is a presidentially appointed administrator. He serves directly beneath the secretary of transportation. Washington being Washington, these relationships are in constant flux. So is the agency.

It is run by political appointees who are constantly shuffled and who themselves then shuffle the chairs beneath them. The average tenure of transportation secretaries over the past 15 years has been 22 months. The average tenure of FAA administrators has been 18 months. That's when there is an administrator. For long stretches, the office has been unoccupied.

David Hinson, the current FAA administrator, was nearly forced to sign a blood oath when he took the job, guaranteeing he would stay in it through President Clinton's term of office. Hinson said the past turnover was "terrible. No, terrible is the wrong word. The right adjective is that's unfortunate."

"You can't keep jerking an organization around, based on the arrival of a new plan," said one former senior FAA executive. "I can't think of an organizational plan we haven't tried. We never stay with one long enough to know if it works or not. It takes a year after a reorganization just to settle in. By then, we're off to another plan."

One ironic result of this constant change is an agency that resists change. The churning up above promotes resistance from career staff down below, said one senior airline executive.

"If they don't like what's going on, the full-time people simply hunker down and wait for the guy to leave."

FISH BONES AND BUCKETS

As a society, we have at least two fundamentally different conceptions of aviation safety.

To the FAA, as well as to the industry it oversees and represents, safety is an airplane that flies.

To nervous passengers, safety is an airplane that might not.

To say that a modern airliner is safe or unsafe, given these contrary definitions, is futile. Airplane safety very seldom is or is not. It is a matter of degrees and margins; it is layered.

You might peel away one layer, puncture others, and normally what will happen is the margin will shrink, but the plane will not in most cases crash. For one small example, most airliners have at least three electrical generators. Even if all three fail, there is usually a battery backing them up.

All commercial transport airplanes fly almost all the time. They almost never crash. This is indisputable. You are more apt to die eating dinner than flying in a modern airliner.

This year, more people worldwide will die being transported by horses than airplanes. More people die every day in automobiles than die in airplanes in a year. Many more people will choke to death on various chicken bones, fish bones, and other foods, some as innocent as a piece of whole-grain bread, than will die in airliner crashes.

According to the National Safety Council, in some years your chances of drowning in a five-gallon bucket are nearly as good as dying in an airliner crash.

An airline passenger dies in a crash on average once every 2 billion miles. In other words, if you boarded an airliner today and started flying nonstop at 500 mph, you could expect to crash sometime in the year 2451.

But airplanes do crash.

That airplane you are about to board might not get where it's going. It might crash and if it does, chances are, you will die.

The FAA is charged with preventing this.

The question of how offers a clear distinction between the reigning political ideologies of the day. One regards government regulation as overbearing, and one sees it as insufficient.

The distance between these positions is not merely extreme. It is infinite. Somewhere in the vague middle is the FAA. It's a tricky place to be.

WHO'S IN CHARGE?

Like most FAA administrators before him, David Hinson came from the industry he oversees. A former Navy pilot, he has spent his career in aviation, eventually founding and running Midway Air, a small carrier that ended in bankruptcy. He has also sold airplanes for McDonnell Douglas. He is an unabashed advocate.

There is, for example, a handsome scale model of the Boeing 777 prominently displayed in his office. Hinson does not discriminate, he said, taking care to point out a McDonnell Douglas MD-11 across the room.

In this, he is a willing soldier in the Clinton administration's effort to transform trade policy into foreign policy. His boss, Transportation Secretary Federico Pena, last month told Boeing employees, "We in the administration are going to do everything we can to support your sales . . .. We'll travel to every continent of the world to help Boeing sell airplanes."

Pena and Hinson, in fact, led a delegation of American officials on a trip to Saudi Arabia in 1993 to sell airplanes, including the 777, which the FAA at that point had not even begun flight testing.

Hinson sees no conflict in this.

"I think that's the president's view, that the United States government has a role to play in promoting American commerce, not just airplanes, but American commerce in general. He's not bashful about that and I don't think the secretary is, either. I'm not. I'm certainly not bashful about promoting American airplanes.

"This is a very good airplane, by the way," Hinson said of the 777. "I flew it three hours, three months ago . . . . I used to be an engineering pilot, so I know what I'm doing. So I flew it 2 hours and 51 minutes and did 26 items on a work card.

"It's going to be a fine airplane, like they all are. All of them. There are no bad airplanes now."

The process of proving that an airplane is "fine" takes five years. Flight testing, which is often thought of as the entire test of a new aircraft, is more akin to the final exams at the end of a school year.

The overall system is not much different in principle than applying for a building permit. The process begins with a manufacturer's application to the FAA for certification of the airplane's design. Filing this application, a single sheet of paper, starts the clock on a five-year process that covers 1,800 subsets of things to be tested.

The basic process is simple:

Agree on the rules that apply to the airplane.

Assure that the design meets the rules.

Assure that the airplane and all its parts meet the design.

Test the airplane to make sure it does what the design predicted.

Assure that the manufacturer has a system to build each airplane according to the design.

The end of all this - the graduation ceremony - is the awarding of three certificates: a Type Certificate, given to the design; a Production Certificate, given to the factory; and an Airworthiness Certificate, given to each airplane that is built.

This work is done within the FAA's Aircraft Certification Service (ACS), which is divided into different "directorates" for large, small and foreign airplanes, for engines and helicopters. The ACS headquarters is in Washington, D.C. The different directorates are in the regions of the country where most of their activities take place. The Transport Directorate, which certifies airliners, is in Renton.

In Hinson's view, aircraft manufacturers have become so skilled, what they need mainly from government is efficiency, not impediments. Throughout the agency, people talk about providing a service to industry, routinely referring to manufacturers and airlines as "customers."

Tom McSweeney, head of the Aircraft Certification Service, said the agency "is always in the situation of, if we drag our feet and we don't do our job right, the applicant suffers an economic burden, significant.

"I'm sure Boeing has delivery penalties with United (Airlines, the first purchaser of the 777), and if we miss our (schedule) by a week because we screwed up, you better believe the administrator would hear about it. I would hear about it in a heartbeat."

Indeed, throughout the 777 testing program, Boeing repeatedly warned the FAA against delays. One 1991 letter, obtained under the Freedom of Information Act and written by Boeing's John Miller, chief engineer on the program, argued against an FAA request to audit what it considered "critical" software.

This "would have a major impact on the work schedule," Miller wrote, adding that such audits "could even delay the program." The FAA and Boeing refused to say how the conflict was resolved, but it is clear from numerous such exchanges that the certification schedule and much of its content was dictated by Boeing. Boeing routinely reminded the FAA that technical documents submitted for review "should be returned to Boeing immediately following use by the FAA . . .. Boeing does not authorize the FAA to retain any portion of the materials being supplied."

Even most safety-test data is kept by Boeing. FAA inspectors must request it for review.

This system of record-keeping began for the most mundane of bureaucratic reasons. Several years ago, the General Services Administration, which functions as a sort of landlord for federal agencies, decreed that federal offices could only have an amount of file storage proportionate to the number of employees.

The FAA no longer had enough room for its files. The agency solved the problem by making manufacturers store the test data themselves.

RULES OF THE GAME

FAA headquarters in Washington is across the street from the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum. While the museum, with its banners and videos and souvenir shops, is more obvious about it than the FAA with its standard-issue tile-floor and steel-desk office building, both places are in a way celebrations of flight.

The museum contains aviation's past. The FAA, through its husbandry of aviation's rules, determines its future.

One shortcoming in the museum's history is its limited acknowledgement of the degree to which aviation's successes have been shaped by its failures. Keeping heavy vehicles in the air has been, for much of the time people have attempted it, a difficult task. The panorama of human flight is littered with corpses.

Dead bodies are everywhere at the FAA. Visions of them, stacked like cord wood, dominate the psyche of the place.

Failure and fear of it, to a significant degree, shape what might be regarded as the operative definition of safety, the Federal Aviation Regulations. The regulations, called the FAR, do indeed define a lot of things. At 198 chapters, they would seem to be about as much definition of anything as anyone could want.

"Each system," the FAR says, "must be designed and installed so that the error in indicated pressure altitude, at sea level, with a standard atmosphere, excluding instrument calibration error, does not result in an error of more than +/-30 feet per 100 knots speed for the appropriate configuration in the speed range between 1.3 VS0 with flaps extended and 1.8 VS1 with flaps retracted."

"Flight level means a level of constant atmospheric pressure related to a reference datum of 29.92 inches of mercury," the FAR says.

This goes on for more than 4,000 pages, but even at that length, the FAR is often not as specific as it needs to be.

McSweeney, the certification director, said: "Most of our rules are very, very general in their safety intent. You go into many of our rules, it doesn't say you need four of this and two of that. You need to be able to show for a certain kind of maneuver the airplane is stable. Well, what the hell does stable mean?"

The process of approving a new airplane is largely a question of answering such questions, of applying the agency's rules to the technology.

We forget sometimes that aviation is still a relatively recent phenomenon. The Wright brothers' famous first flight in 1903 occurred within memory of people still alive. What this means is that the culture of aviation is still attached to the uncertainty of its beginnings. There is still as much "flying by the seat of the pants" as computerized "flying by wire."

In practice, this is less evident all the time, but in the life of the mind, a lot of pilots still have some of that attitude. And certain parts of the FAA, notably its certification branch, have more of the pilot mindset than do others.

Hand me that wrench. Pull on that stick. We'll get this thing up. This is cowboy country, a land of baling wire and barrel rolls. It's Neil Armstrong overriding the computer on the lunar lander.

"You're not looking for something to fail, you're looking, how can I fly this thing," said a lead FAA test pilot on the 777 program.

"No airline pilot is going to walk up to a brand-new airplane and say, `This looks unsafe to me.' Well, he gets in there and says, `I can fly anything you can pull out of the hangar.' "

This subjectivity is at the core of the way the FAA approaches airplanes. It reveals itself in the agency's general disregard for data analysis, in the wide latitude given individual safety inspectors, in the variable interpretations of rules from region to region across the country and in the agency's approach to testing.

Even in the many instances where the FAR are definitive on one subject or another, the law provides an all-purpose escape clause that allows the agency to abide by the FAR, or do whatever the administrator decides. It is a reflection of the basic service culture of the agency, which sees itself in association with, not antagonistic to, the industry it regulates.

Overwater flights by twin-engine airplanes like the 777 are a good example. The FAR say large transport aircraft - known to the world outside the FAA as commercial airliners - are not allowed to fly farther than two hours from any airport, that is, over oceans, unless an airplane has at least three engines. Even in cases like this, the FAA is willing to accommodate industry if industry is persuasive enough.

It often is.

THE WIZARDS

Boeing's theoreticians, if not quite the kings of this domain, are at least its wizards, making not just the planes but the rules. They are able - magically, it seems at times - to conjure up just about anything.

Need a plane that will haul 500 people? Here's a 747-400. Want a hypersonic transport to haul 700? We've got one on the boards. Need a fuel-efficient plane to fly over the ocean? Try one of these nifty twin-engine 767s.

They're not allowed to fly that far from land? We're working on that.

Indeed, they were. Boeing, beginning in the early 1980s, began building a case for the possibility of two-engine planes flying as far as three hours from the nearest airport, something that would make ocean crossings possible. Called Extended-Range Twin-Engine Operations (ETOPS), this concept ran head-on into the FAA prohibition against it and won in a walkover.

When asked how the government determined ETOPS was feasible, three different FAA executives said the question really ought to be addressed to Dick Taylor, the Boeing vice president who pushed the idea at innumerable industry gatherings in the 1980s.

It was Taylor who produced the logic-shaking argument that airplanes with fewer engines are less likely to fail than airplanes with more engines simply because there are fewer engines. "In fact," he wrote, "the probability of a jet engine-caused accident is minimized by reducing the number of engines on an aircraft."

(If you carry this argument out, of course, you conclude that a one-engine airplane would be safer than a two-engine plane; and a no-engine airplane safer than either. This argument gained more supporters than its nearly comic tautological quality might predict.)

McSweeney: "I know when he first came into the FAA, that was years back, I know he stood up in front of a bunch of FAA people who went, `You gotta be kidding me.' "

He wasn't, and beginning in 1985 twin-engine planes were allowed to fly routes up to two hours from land, providing they demonstrated superior reliability over a period of years. This proved to be a camel's nose under the tent. In 1988, the FAA began allowing three-hour ETOPS flights. The economies of this so delighted airlines, Boeing decided to go for the whole camel, not just the nose.

When it began developing the 777, Boeing again approached the FAA. This time, the company wanted the rules changed to allow the new plane to begin flying the long, over-ocean routes as soon as it entered service, skipping the usual two- to three-year reliability demonstration. Since the whole concept of ETOPS was based on what the FAA called "demonstrated as opposed to projected reliability," this seemed impossible.

"We were very skeptical in the beginning," said McSweeney. "What we didn't say was no. What we said was, `If you can show us.' Quite frankly, I don't think anybody ever thought they'd get there. But we didn't say no. We didn't say it's absolutely impossible. We said, `It's entirely possible if you do it right.'

"And that's always our position. We do not hold back industry, but we also make them meet the rules."

In this case, the rules that had to be met, however, were not the old ones, but brand new rules written specifically to accommodate the request.

DELEGATED EXPERTISE

Last year, during the testing of the 777, an FAA official noted in an internal memo the complaint of a European counterpart. The Europeans were conducting tests simultaneously with the FAA so the 777 could be flown to their countries. The European said that in trying to get certain information about the airplane, he had been told by FAA engineers "they don't know what is going on with the certification program because (Boeing employees) are taking care of it."

The FAA official who authored the memo, Kanji Patel, castigated the engineers not so much for not knowing, but for telling the Europeans they didn't know.

"So next time, when your (European) counterpart asks you a question for which you are responsible, please find the correct information and call him/her back at a later time."

Within the industry, the FAA's new-airplane-certification work is highly praised, described as one of the best things the agency does. But it is just as frequently said that the best thing the agency does in certification is stay out of the way of the manufacturers, who control the process from beginning to end.

In fact, most of the hands-on testing of a new plane is done by regular line employees, paid by the manufacturer, assigned for temporary duty to the FAA.

The FAA has been using these "designees" since the 1940s.

The agency argues that designees effectively multiply its work force and allow it to do things it would otherwise be unable to accomplish. The use of designees has been studied repeatedly and generally been found to be effective, if a little bit troubling.

Most outside examinations of the system conclude the use of designees could cause the FAA to completely lose touch with the certification process, its technical skills to disappear. The FAA needs to develop more of its own expertise, they say.

The FAA asserts it has spent more than 100,000 hours certifying the safety of the 777, more time than on any certification effort in history. But the fact remains that a tiny percentage of the hands-on testing of the 777's complex systems was conducted by FAA employees.

The 777 is many times more complex than the space shuttle or an atom smasher. The only machines in frequent use by consumers that might rival it in complexity are computer-controlled telephone switching and routing networks. And they do not fly.

The 777 is unusual even among sophisticated airplanes in its complete reliance on computers for sensing the plane's environment, translating it into instructions, and sending those instructions back along electronic pathways to fly the aircraft. The pilot mostly watches. Most of the 150 computers on board are integrated with one another and the software code that governs what they do is dauntingly complex.

"You can't look at it, you can't feel it; it's collections of ones and zeros and there's no way you can test it, in and of itself, and be sure that it's good," one engineer said.

When software fails, nothing breaks, there's no visible evidence, it's just zeros and ones diving invisibly off the ends of connector pins. Judging the reliability of such systems requires specific expertise and intimate knowledge of how they are designed and built.

Yet GAO investigators have determined the more complex the task, the more likely the FAA is to let the manufacturer judge it. A 1993 internal FAA study said the agency's engineers did not understand the complex flight-management system on the 747-400 and had delegated oversight of it and 10 other systems entirely to Boeing employees. The study said FAA staff "were not sufficiently familiar with the system to provide meaningful inputs to the testing requirements or to verify compliance with the regulatory standards."

This was at the absolute edge of responsible use of the designee system, the FAA study said. In reviewing this, the GAO concluded delegation has since increased; if there was an edge, the FAA had gone over it.

In reply, Anthony Broderick, associate FAA administrator for regulation and certification, said the need for scientific skill was overstated:

"In general, the GAO report places far too much emphasis on FAA certification personnel having detailed scientific knowledge. It is far more important for our engineers to understand the regulation and how they can be acceptably complied with . . . FAA engineers do not have to design airplanes."

The FAA does not keep records that identify who did what in the testing and certification process. Test reports, even the test schedule, are treated as trade secrets by Boeing and so are unavailable for any public review. But it is clear that an overwhelming majority of safety tests on the 777 were conducted by Boeing employees under supervision of other Boeing employees designated to act as FAA agents. Most of the work of these designees is only loosely supervised. Most test reports are not even glanced at. The FAA's technical specialists make spot checks. Internal FAA documents talk about "following threads" through complex systems.

Do you read all test results for all the systems in your area of responsibility, an FAA avionics specialist was asked?

"Impossible," he said. "The ones that pass we don't even look at; they're fine. That means we trust that the work was done as expected."

In summary, Boeing designed the airplane, wrote the plan to test the design, executed it, and largely affirmed that it had been executed.

Joseph Del Balzo, the former acting administrator, said that in some ways the FAA has made virtues of necessity.

"At the end of the day you end up with a set of regulations. What the FAA must do is rely on industry to meet the regulations. FAA will never have the capacity to do more than that. The agency does nothing hands-on and never will.

"Even if you had the resources, I'm not sure you would want to. If you don't have the confidence in industry it will never work anyway. That doesn't mean mistakes weren't ever made. They were. They are."

CLOSE ENOUGH?

The FAA's influence on the certification of a new airplane is greatest at the very beginning of the program.

"This is not a business that lends itself to `you guys build it, we'll be at arm's length and when it's ready to test, you bring it to us and we'll test it,' " Hinson said. "That is a disaster in the making. That is a bad idea that has outlived its time."

The agency's relative lack of staff depth is less a hindrance when the plane is still only a concept. At that level, when the work is more narrowly contained, research papers are written, issues are seriously debated, argued and worked out.

Then all hell breaks loose.

The five-year development and testing of the 777 has been an often-frantic affair in which seemingly stringent testing requirements were liberally bent, if not broken, in order to meet deadlines.

When schedules slipped, tests on what were to have been "mature" systems became tests on systems still under development. For example, the final version of the 777's flight-control computer software was delivered in April this year - 11 months over schedule and just four weeks before the first airplane was delivered to United Airlines.

Changes like this, FAA officials say, were to be expected.

"You are going to have problems and corrective actions," a senior executive of the Transport Directorate said. "If there's a problem, what does that mean? It means that they've identified something and corrected it."

A test pilot said: "We don't say, boy, this is a piece of junk, it's never going to go. We just get in and say, OK, this is how it worked. We come back in the post-flight and say, this is how it's supposed to work. And this is how it did work. You've got some work to do. There's no such system, there's no such thing as they can't fix it. They made it in the first place. There's nothing that can't be fixed. It's just a matter of when."

In part, this is why you have a test program: to identify problems.

The difference in the case of the 777, however, is that a significant portion of the test process was supposed to be conducted after development ended.

In order to qualify for the immediate permission to fly the plane on long ocean routes (ETOPS), Boeing had proposed that a series of stringent tests on a mature aircraft replace the normal two years of demonstrating reliability in service.

It was a hurdle that many people thought Boeing couldn't clear.

The FAA accepted the test plan. But a senior FAA test pilot said agency employees at the working level never took completely seriously all of Boeing's proposed test plans.

"We knew that was B.S. as soon as we saw it," the pilot said of the ETOPS testing regime. "Their original theory was that it's going to be so good that the airplane will never have a squawk on it. Just fly off into the sunset and live happily ever after. We knew that wasn't true and the people in the trenches at Boeing knew that wasn't true. And we said, well, we'll take a look at it.

"In truth, they only got about halfway to where they thought, the perfect airplane, maybe 60 percent. But it was so much better than any other certification program that's ever been done that it's amazing . . . It's amazing to me they did as well as they did."

FAA managers assert the 777 met the rules, albeit rules that were not as firm as had been assumed.

For example, getting ETOPS approval required a special series of 1,000 flight tests beyond the regular testing. The FAA had said publicly that development work was supposed to be done by the time the airplane entered those tests. It wasn't completely finished. The tests went ahead anyway.

"It goes without saying that in any program you're going to have minor things come up that have to be adjusted. To say that that airplane would have to go all the way through the 1,000-cycle program and never change - that's not the real world," said one of the FAA managers on the program.

In other words, the final determination is subjective?

"Right," he said. "The intent of the condition was as close to maturity as you can get."

McSweeny calls this subjectivity the "ability to look behind the rule" for the rule's intent. It is not, he says, a license to evade the rule.

The question of subjectivity goes beyond ETOPS. Subjectivity suffuses an FAA process that many suppose ought to be objective. But interpreting rules too strictly would stifle innovation, McSweeney and others argue.

"When we talk to our people about our rules and regulations, we spend a lot of time talking about the safety objective of the rule. My feeling is if we just applied the letter of the rule as it was written . . . well, our industry wouldn't be where it is now because we would have been holding them back."

The rules could be changed, but, McSweeney asked: Do you know how long it takes to write a rule?

THE NEVER-ENDING STORY

Moses spent 40 days on the mountain top getting the Ten Commandments. Franklin Roosevelt needed only 100 days to change the course of American history. The atomic bomb was invented in three years.

Not everything goes quite so fast.

The FAA has been trying to figure out its rules on flame-proofing aircraft interiors for 30 years. The agency has been proposing, amending, recommending, and reproposing requirements for flight data recorders for 40 years, and some aircraft still in service have 1960s-technology recorders.

The agency's rule-making process is so slow, a former administrator said, it seemed designed to prevent rules, not make them. The histories of some rule-making proposals fill entire shelves.

Certification rules are based on decades of monitoring airplanes in service. This surveillance of airline operations is the other half of the FAA's effort to make commercial airplanes safe.

FAA staff monitor by telephone, computer and written report a huge, if largely unorganized, agglomeration of data daily. Major noninjury events, such as near collisions, are treated as if they were accidents. Equipment failures are routinely reported and analyzed. Much of this is done nonsystematically by the same technical staffs that certify new airplanes. Maintenance logs are checked by inspectors assigned to each airline.

All of this monitoring of airplanes in service is regarded as one of the agency's highest priorities. Ninety to 95 percent of their work is proactive, executives say.

There is probably no point on which the agency and its critics are farther apart.

The critics say the agency has a "tombstone mentality," doing nothing until people die in an accident, then doing only what industry allows.

Nothing could be further from the truth, said the FAA's McSweeney.

"Almost exclusively, all safety problems get resolved before they cause accidents," he said. He points to all the nonaccident-related rules the agency issues annually in the form of Airworthiness Directives. These directives are orders issued to airlines and manufacturers for corrective actions in some operation or airplane design. The FAA issues on average 350 of them a year. Only a handful of fatal accidents occur each year; obviously, most of the directives are the result of something other than accidents.

Yet the agency gets little credit, the FAA says, largely due to its defensive position vs. the National Transportation Safety Board. The NTSB, with significant staff support from the FAA, investigates every major civilian air accident. Few things are more riveting than an air-carrier crash.

"A great big smoking hole in the ground is a pretty spectacular sight from the public standpoint," said one FAA executive.

The NTSB issues recommendations at the end of every investigation. The FAA is compelled by law to respond to the recommendations. Most often, the FAA agrees with and attempts to implement the NTSB's recommendations. About one fifth of the time, according to NTSB data, it does not. The NTSB makes similar recommendations on highway, marine and railroad safety. The FAA's rate of acceptance is annually among the highest.

But the public nature of air crashes and, frequently, the reasons the FAA cites for not accepting NTSB recommendations have fostered the impression that the NTSB wants safer airplanes and the FAA does not.

WHAT'S A LIFE WORTH?

The FAA is required by a series of executive orders dating to the Carter administration to determine the cost of any rule changes it makes. Some rule proposals must go through 17 different types of cost-benefit analyses.

These calculations are done both by the FAA's own economists and by outside agencies, such as the Office of Management and Budget. Sometimes these analyses predict a proposed rule would cost far more than it would save. The "savings" are often human lives.

The NTSB does not consider the costs of its recommendations.

"We'll develop recommendations on what's realistic, not what's economic," said Mike Benson, a spokesman for the board.

John Rodgers, head of the FAA's cost-benefit office, defends the practice as a decision-making tool. "All that you try to do is do something a little more orderly, a little more comprehensively than `by guess and by golly.' "

Calculating human lives as cost savings (the going rate is $2.7 million per) can seem cold-blooded.

For example, the NTSB recently recommended the FAA require infants in airplanes to ride in child-safety seats. The FAA has thus far resisted this requirement, raising the convoluted but interesting objection that doing so could have the effect of actually killing more children.

This argument holds that if infants were required to have their own seats, rather than ride on someone's lap, the airlines would make them pay. Selling seats is the business airlines are in, after all. The net result would be that fewer families could afford to fly and would be forced from the relative safety of the sky to the bloody battlefield of the open road, where accident rates are far higher.

Since so few infants actually die in air crashes, the benefit of having the safety seats - the number of infants who would not die - is simply too small to offset the cost, the FAA says.

NTSB Chairman James Hall, in arguing for the rule change, said it should be enacted regardless of cost, "One death is too many," he said.

Secretary of Transportation Pena similarly campaigns for "zero accidents."

These notions strike many people in aviation as absurd.

"The cost of attaining zero accidents, even if it were feasible, would be infinite," said Stuart Matthews, president of the Flight Safety Institute, a group that lobbies for air safety. "Then you would have no more flying."

"We probably push for safety improvements that don't make much sense," said Clinton Oster, former director of the Aviation Safety Commission. "We're not applying the same standards to other transport modes."

If zero is an impossible goal, what is appropriate? The operative definition, as expressed in the FAA's design standards, is that an airplane part or system must be designed in such a way that it will fail, at most, one time in a billion opportunities.

That's the design standard. In practice, airplanes crash about once every 2 million flights. Most of those crashes are due to what the aviation industry calls "human factors." Human error, in other words, and human incompatibility with the airplanes they're trying to operate - the so-called man-machine interface.

These errors occur throughout the system, from pilots in the air to manufacturing defects back in the factory. They are much more resistant to cure than many aviation problems. The structural integrity of a component is measured. The blood-sugar level of a lathe operator in Boeing's Everett plant on the morning after the celebration of his daughter's college graduation is not.

In its place, the FAA has inspectors assigned to every aviation manufacturer, nominally, at least, in the world. In practice, many plants are seldom visited. Much of the inspection is delegated to the large manufacturers. Boeing, for example, is responsible for the integrity of the parts it buys from outside suppliers.

The FAA then assigns permanent staff to inspect Boeing's factories.

BEAT COPS

The Boeing plant in Everett where the new 777 is being assembled is frequently described as the world's largest building, containing 472 million cubic feet. It is large in another way, as well. It is, after the White House and the State Department and possibly a few others, arguably the most important building in the United States' foreign-policy apparatus.

Boeing annually is the largest single exporter in the U.S. and, as the market for new airplanes continues to expand abroad, looks to get ever larger. As such, the company and its output are essential ingredients in the increasingly contentious new world order of economics.

The responsibility for policing this building, as well as the rest of the Boeing empire, has recently been placed in the very small hands of K.C. Yanamura, newest and - as a speech-communications major in charge of assuring the quality of the most complex machines in the world - one of the least likely industrial beat cops in the country.

Boeing has 110,000 employees. Yanamura has nine FAA inspectors. Three of the nine are in Everett. The FAA thinks this is a fair match. The plant used to have just one.

Manufacturing inspectors are charged with ensuring that airplanes get built the way they are designed. Plant inspectors r