President Trump will meet Tuesday with the crew of the Southwest Airlines flight that made an emergency landing after a deadly engine failure en route from New York City to Dallas, according to a report.

The meeting will take place at the White House, but no other details have been released, according to the Dallas Morning News.

About 20 minutes into its April 17 flight, a fan blade broke in the Boeing 737’s left engine, leading debris to shatter a window through which passenger Jennifer Riordan, 43, was partly sucked.

Passengers dragged her back inside, but she died at a Philadelphia hospital after the crippled plane landed with Capt. Tammie Jo Shults, a former Navy flier, at the controls along with First Officer Darren Ellisor.

The names of the three cabin crew members have not been released.

National Transportation Safety Board Chairman Robert Sumwalt has cited “metal fatigue” for causing the engine failure. The NTSB is investigating the accident.

Southwest has said it would speed up its inspections and complete ultrasonic scans of CFM56 engines within 30 days.

Last week, the airline said it had inspected more than 8,000 engine fan blades and has not found any cracks or signs of metal fatigue, according to the newspaper.

Earlier this year, Trump appeared to take credit for 2017 being the safest year on record for commercial aviation.

“Since taking office I have been very strict on Commercial Aviation,” Trump said in a Jan. 2 tweet. “Good news – it was just reported that there were Zero deaths in 2017, the best and safest year on record!”

At that time, there had not been an accidental death on a domestic commercial flight since February 2009, when 49 people aboard a Colgan Air plane perished in a crash near Buffalo.