Before moving to the
Federal Aviation Administration, Stephen Dickson retired from service as the Senior Vice President-Flight Operations for
Delta Air Lines. In this role, he was responsible for the safety and operational performance of Delta's global flight operations, as well as pilot training, crew resources, crew scheduling, and regulatory compliance. He also flew in line operations as an
Airbus A320 captain, and previously flew the
Boeing 727,
737,
757, and
767 during his career. Dickson is a strong advocate for commercial aviation safety and improvements to the US
National Airspace System, having served as chairman of several industry stakeholder groups and Federal advisory committees. After retiring from Delta, Dickson was nominated by President Trump to be the Administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration prior to 15 May. He was confirmed in the Senate Commerce Committee by a 14–12 vote on July 10, 2019, to lead an outfit which had been without a permanent head since January 2018. He was confirmed by a 52–40 vote of the full Senate on July 24, and replaced Acting Administrator
Daniel Elwell in the midst of the
Boeing 737 MAX groundings. Senator
Maria Cantwell led the opposition to Dickson's appointment because of his retaliation against a whistleblower at Delta.
Administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration Dickson's first action as the Administrator of the FAA was inviting pilots for simulator tests of the Boeing 737 MAX, which was announced on August 22, 2019. On September 18 the same year, Dickson announced that he would only re-certify the MAX once he flew the aircraft himself to test the new software. He completed the test flight on September 30, 2020, saying that the aircraft responded well, although the FAA was not yet ready to re-certify it. In November 2019 the FAA revoked Boeing's authority to issue airworthiness certificates for each new individual 737 MAX aircraft. This authority had previously been held under the
Organization Designation Authorization. The FAA reiterated that the aircraft was not ready for re-certification. On February 16, 2022, Dickson announced his resignation as FAA Administrator, effective March 31, 2022. == Criticism ==