News

According to the NTSB report, the airplane was being flown to another airport for maintenance work on the autopilot system.
The Federal Aviation Administration’s ineffective compliance enforcement also led to the 2024 Alaska Airlines incident, the ...
The Federal Aviation Administration is investigating an emergency stop that occurred in Nashville last week. Here's what we ...
Because Boeing’s instructions for employees lacked “clarity and conciseness,” workers missed opportunities to fix a mistake ...
The National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) has issued its final report on the Alaska Airlines Boeing 737-9 that lost a ...
The US National Transportation Board (NSTB) has released its final report on the January 2024 in-flight depressurisation of ...
The National Aviation Hall of Fame’s 61st Enshrinement Dinner & Ceremony is scheduled for September 19 in the B-29 Doc Hangar in Wichita, Kansas. Tickets are now on sale for the event (6-10 p.m. CDT), ...
The Senate on Wednesday confirmed Bryan Bedford as FAA administrator, putting a former airline executive in charge of the ...
Boeing will be back in the hot seat Tuesday as the National Transportation Safety Board holds a hearing to present its findings from an investigation into the terrifying incident in which a door ...
The U.S. Senate Wednesday voted 53 to 43 to approve long-time Republic Airways CEO Bryan Bedford to head the Federal Aviation ...
The NTSB determined that "multiple system failures," including poor practices at Boeing and poor oversight by the FAA, caused the Alaska Airlines flight door plug blowout in January 2024.
The National Transportation Safety Board found Boeing and the FAA responsible for "multiple system failures," leading to Alaska Airlines' door blowing off mid-flight last year near Portland, Oregon.