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January 28 2026 / 03:13 PM
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FlyersRights
The nation’s largest airline passenger advocacy group is calling for urgent inspections and corrective action over a potential design flaw in the aircraft

In the wake of last summer's catastrophic Boeing 787-9 crash that killed 260 people, the nation's largest airline passenger group is demanding immediate inspections and fixes for a dangerous design defect in the popular commercial jet.

FlyersRights revealed that, in November 2025, it formally called on the Department of Transportation and Federal Aviation Administration to order immediate 787 inspections for lavatory water leaks that could damage or short circuit critical electronics located below the lavatory. The unsolved Air India Flight 171 Boeing 787 crash occurred after power to both engines was mysteriously shut off during takeoff.

FlyersRights President Paul Hudson announced neither DOT Secretary Sean Duffy nor FAA Administrator Bryan Bedford had responded to the letter, which was co-signed by seven aviation safety experts.

Although the leak problem had been known for years, the FAA, in the aftermath of the crash, merely ordered inspections to be completed over the next five years, by 2030. Hudson and other safety advocates say that's clearly not soon enough.

In the U.S. alone, American and United Airlines operate about 140 Boeing 787-9s. Worldwide, airlines fly approximately 1200 of the widebody jets. The Air India crash was the 787-9's first fatal accident. 

Seven air safety advocates joined FlyersRights in calling on the FAA and Boeing to launch an urgent review of water risks to the plane's electronics and to implement a permanent solution as soon as feasible. 

 

These advocates included:

Ed Pierson (Executive Director for the Foundation for Aviation Safety and former Senior Manager for Boeing's 737 factory)

Group Captain Ajit Agtey (former Chief Test Pilot, India Air Force)

Chris Witkowski (Director, Air Safety, Health and Security Department, Association of Flight Attendants-CWA and member of the FAA Aviation Rulemaking Advisory Committee (1991-2025))

Geoffrey Barrance (retired aeronautical and avionics safety engineer (1963-2002))

Captain Daniel Gellert (former airline pilot, test pilot, Aviation Safety Counselor, and FAA/NTSB-trained aircraft accident investigator)

Dr. Javier de Luis (aerospace engineer, MIT Lecturer on Aeronautics and Astronautics)

Chris Moore (engineer and father of Ethiopian Airlines 737 MAX crash victim Danielle Moore)

Jan 28, 2026

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