U.S., European regulators to meet with Boeing this week on 737 MAX software audit

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U.S., European regulators to meet with Boeing this week on 737 MAX software audit
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U.S. and European aviation safety regulators will meet with Boeing this week in ...

- U.S. and European aviation safety regulators will meet with Boeing this week in an effort to complete a 737 MAX software documentation audit - a key step toward the grounded plane’s eventual return to service.

The European Union Aviation Safety Agency and Federal Aviation Administration both confirmed on Tuesday that they will meet in the Seattle-area with Boeing before heading to a Rockwell Collins facility in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, in an effort to complete the audit. In early November, EASA and FAA met with Boeing at the Rockwell Collins facility in Cedar Rapids and did not approve the audit. Instead, they sought revisions to the documentation of the 737 MAX software fix and flagged a number of issues, Reuters reported.

Reuters has reported previously that the FAA is unlikely to approve the plane until at least February and perhaps until March or later.

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