ABC News March 6, 2020

Lawmakers fault Boeing, FAA following 737 Max investigation

WATCH: Boeing halts production of 737 Max planes

A few days before the one-year anniversary of the Ethiopian Air crash that led to the grounding of the 737 Max, a House committee released its preliminary findings from its investigation into the troubled jetliner -- placing blame on both the Federal Aviation Administration and Boeing.

"Both Boeing and the FAA gambled with the public's safety in the aftermath of the Lion Air crash, resulting in the death of 157 more individuals," the House Transportation and Infrastructure Committee wrote in its 14-page report.

(MORE: 346 potentially saved if Boeing was 'more forthcoming' with communications, lawmaker says)

The Ethiopian Air crash was the second accident involving the 737 Max within nearly five months.

The committee's findings were that a failure of oversight from the FAA coupled with corporate pressure, lack of transparency and design failures from Boeing led to the two fatal plane crashes that killed nearly 350 people.

Mulugeta Ayene/AP, FILE
In this March 11, 2019, rescuers work at the scene of an Ethiopian Airlines flight crash near Bishoftu, or Debre Zeit, south of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

Within a few weeks, committee chairs plan to introduce legislation to address "failures" in the aircraft certification process, lawmakers wrote in the report.

Currently under the Organization Designation Authorization (ODA) program mandated by Congress, some of the aircraft certification process is delegated to manufacturers like Boeing. Critics of the ODA program said it was this delegation that created a conflict of interest.

(MORE: FAA chief tells lawmakers aircraft certification system 'is not broken,' despite Boeing 737 Max crashes)

"Boeing failed to appropriately classify MCAS as a safety-critical system, in turn concealing critical information about MCAS from pilots and diminishing the focus on MCAS as a 'new system' in order to avoid greater FAA scrutiny and increased pilot training requirement," the report said.

FAA Administrator Stephen Dickson pushed back against the notion that the system is broken during a house committee hearing in December, but conceded that there is room for improvement.

Elaine Thompson/AP, FILE
In this Aug. 15, 2019, file photo, dozens of grounded Boeing 737 Max airplanes crowd a parking area adjacent to Boeing Field in Seattle.

In a statement following the committee's release, FAA said it welcomes the observations of the committee and are willing to embrace "hard lessons" and "seek continuous improvement."

"While the FAA’s certification processes are well-established and have consistently produced safe aircraft designs, we are a learning agency and welcome the scrutiny." the FAA said in a statement Friday, responding to the committee's findings. "We are confident that our openness to observations and recommendations will further bolster aviation safety worldwide."

MORE: New software issues could delay return of Boeing's 737 Max

Boeing told ABC News in a statement that they will review the report.

"We have cooperated extensively for the past year with the Committee's investigation," they wrote in a statement.

Grounded for almost a year, Boeing's latest return to service estimate for the 737 Max is mid-2020.