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AIRBORNE LAW ENFORCEMENT ASSOCIATION

AIRBORNE LAW ENFORCEMENT ASSOCIATION. Safety Management System Workshop --------------------------------------------------------- Keith Johnson Safety Program Manager. IHSS. Safety is most important Need to collect data Collect flight hours

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AIRBORNE LAW ENFORCEMENT ASSOCIATION

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  1. AIRBORNE LAW ENFORCEMENT ASSOCIATION Safety Management System Workshop --------------------------------------------------------- Keith Johnson Safety Program Manager

  2. IHSS • Safety is most important • Need to collect data • Collect flight hours • Collect Serious Incident Information • ALEA Incident Reporting System – Proposal • Expedite Accident Reporting • Increased training • Reduce Accidents by 80% over 10-years • Focus on Leadership • Non-punitive reporting • Accountability • Accidents can be eliminated • ALEA on International Helicopter Safety Team

  3. The topic of the day SAFETY

  4. “SAFETY” • It holds the key to our future • It affects everything we do (SMS) • Every accident affects everyone

  5. SAFETY PRIORITIES • SAFETY has the highest priority • MISSION has a lower priority • Each person is critical to eliminating accidents • Inclusive communications chain*

  6. SAFETY PRINCIPLES • Always operate in the safest manner possible • Never take unnecessary risks • Safe does not mean risk free • Key to safety is the i.d. and management of risk • An absence of accidents does not necessarily equate to safety • Familiarity and prolonged exposure without an incident leads to a loss of appreciation of risk How does this apply flying patrol?

  7. Safety Goals • Zero accidents • Zero injuries • Zero harm to environment • Improve public perception of law enforcement aviation

  8. An effective Safety Management System is essential to achieving & sustaining a zero accident.

  9. ELEMENTS OF THE ORGANIZATION • Flight Operations • Ground Operations • Maintenance • Training • Safety • Safety Management System is all inclusive

  10. ACCIDENT ELIMINATION • Must be proactive – Reached plateau • Pilots focus on flying aircraft • Two person crews • Focus on risk management • Adverse Trends • Identify and eliminate adverse trends • Incidents - Investigate & disseminate findings • Factory emergency procedures training • Don’t reinvent the wheel • No new causes of accidents • Copy successful organizations • Accreditation – Platinum Program

  11. JUDGMENT & ACTION ERRORS • Failure to manage known risks • Mission urgency & risk taking • Will to succeed • Flight profile unsafe • Crew Qualifications • Aircraft Suitability • Mission Requirements • Environment • Judgment errors committed • Failure to follow procedures • Poor CRM • Poor Aircraft Control • Over confidence • Loss of situational awareness

  12. What is an SMS? • Coordinated, comprehensive set of processes designed to direct and control resources to optimally manage safety. • Makes safety management an integral part of the overall operations/business plan. • Based on leadership and accountability.

  13. What Does Having an SMS Give? • We will now concentrate on describing the three key processes generically • Once you understand these, the rest becomes more readily apparent • But first some more definitions…

  14. Why is Having an SMS Important? • Widely recognized as best practice • Eliminates accidents • Reduces costs • Limits exposure (reduces total risk) • Reduces probability of having an accident • Reduces severity of risks • Reduces exposure to risk • Increases likelihood of completing the mission

  15. 1. Safety Management Plan Description of SMS components: • Definition of fundamental approach to safety • Philosophical approach – Vision, Mission, Values • Safety policy – SMS policy statement • Business and department goals – set/reviewed annually • Clearly defined roles and responsibilities a) Openly documented and briefed • Top leadership involvement a) Safety is an agenda item, resource allocation, openness, involved in daily activities, promoting awareness

  16. Plans Policy / Plan Process / Do Ops Manual What should it look like? A Framework for Safety Management Worksheets Checklist Security Policy Maint . Alcohol Schedule & Drugs HSE Policy QA Policy Audit Safety Training FAA Drills Plan Audits Regs . Task / Check – Feedback - Action ERPs CRM STRUCTURE No Structure

  17. Safety Management Training Requirements • Safety orientation for all new personnel • Document competency requirements • Document training requirements • Have regularly scheduled safety meetings • Key personnel educated on safety management best practices

  18. JHSAT ACCIDENT CAUSATION JUDGMENT & ACTION ERRORS • Fail to manage known risks • Mission urgency • Risk taking • Failure to follow standards • Unsafe flight profile • Crew qualifications • Aircraft suitability • Mission requirements • Environment • Aircraft control deficiencies

  19. JHSAT STUDY RESULTS Three themes came from JHSAT study: • Better training • Operational oversight • Safety Management

  20. SAFETY RECOMMENDATIONS • More consistent & comprehensive NTSB involvement and investigation • Collect worldwide fleet hour data as previously performed by FAA • 3. Promote the Safety Management Systems • 4. Establish safety website to disseminate information • 5. Use proximity detection equipment on aircraft • 6. Use flight recording devices and cockpit image recording systems • 7. Develop strategy to improve ADM

  21. Resultsof full year 2000 dataset

  22. Introduction to the Toolkit • The Toolkit contains SMS guidance material and a sample SMS Manual • The Toolkit provides a foundation for your own system • The issued IHST SMS Toolkit is Version 1.0… • Feedback

  23. Resulting Actions • Fire the PIC, 30 day suspension for SIC • Stuff happens! Get over it! • Seek restitution… someone pays! Do these actions prevent future events of this type? Is there an alternative?

  24. Just Culture • A ‘blame culture’ undermines open reporting • A ‘no-blame culture’ is also flawed as it undermines accountability & responsibility • If other personnel could make the same error occasionally then we must change the controls not discipline the personnel • Holding people accountable through a disciplinary process is only relevant for: • Gross negligence • Persistent sub-standard performance • Wilful recklessness

  25. Just Culture Process

  26. Management of Changes • Operational procedures • Location, equipment or operating conditions • Maintenance and Operations Manuals • Personnel made aware and understand changes • Level of management & authority to approve changes

  27. Performance Based SMS • Rather than specify an organizational configuration or architecture, the SMS Toolkit deals with “SMS Attributes.” • These attributes describe the performance of a successful SMS. • Meeting the performance standard is what is critical… the configuration or architecture is dependent on the size and scope of the operation.

  28. Attributes of a SMS • SMS Management Plan • Safety Promotion • Data information management • Hazard identification and risk management • Hazard reporting • Occurrence investigation and analysis • Safety oversight programs • Safety training requirements • Management of change • Emergency preparedness and response • Performance measurement & improvement

  29. The Attributes of an SMS 1) SMS Management Plan • Policies, objectives • Organizational structure and key individuals • Elements defined • Expectations described • Commitment to compliance with safety and regulatory requirements

  30. The Attributes of an SMS • Safety Promotion • Safety Policy • Messages, memos from management • Posters, flyers, website • Safety training • Recognition program • Just Culture process in place

  31. The Attributes of an SMS • Document and Data Information Management • Safety policies, regulations, objectives and SMS requirements publicized • Change control system in place for applicable documents; training • Periodic review of documents

  32. The Attributes of an SMS • Hazard Identification and Risk Management • Proactively identify potential hazards • Hazards are considered when making changes • Risk Assessment • Identified hazards are tracked for closure

  33. The Attributes of an SMS • Occurrence and Hazard Reporting • Corrective actions monitored for effectiveness, employees receive feedback • A non-punitive disciplinary policy in place for reporting hazards (Just Culture process) • Safety data analyzed, hazards are monitored to identify trends • Anonymous submittals of hazards

  34. The Attributes of an SMS • Occurrence Investigation and analysis with technically qualified investigators • Investigations conducted to determine root causes, and identify what can be done to prevent future occurrences • Identify causal factors and the contributory factors, including organizational factors • Acts of “omission” and “commission” identified • Reports provided to manager that has accountability and authority

  35. The Attributes of an SMS • Safety Assurance Oversight Programs • Internal assessments at regularly scheduled intervals, including contractors • Utilizing checklists tailored to the organization’s operations when conducting safety evaluations • Independent assessment of evaluator’s processes • Sharing the results and corrective actions with all personnel • Utilizing available technology such as Health Usage Monitoring Systems (HUMS) to supplement quality and maintenance programs as well as supporting programs to monitor and evaluate aircrew operations

  36. The Attributes of an SMS • Occurrence Investigation and Analysis • Technically qualified investigators • Investigations conducted to determine root causes, and identify what can be done to prevent future occurrences • Identify causal factors and the contributory factors, including organizational factors • Acts of “omission” and “commission” identified • Reports provided to manager that has accountability and authority

  37. The Attributes of an SMS • Safety Management Training Requirements • Include a safety orientation for all new personnel, stressing the organization’s commitment to safety and everyone’s roll in the SMS • Document competency requirements for personnel • Have a system to track training requirements • Make effective use of conferences, workshops, literature and trade journals

  38. The Attributes of an SMS 9) Management of Changes • Identify required changes in training, documentation or equipment • Changes in location, equipment or operating conditions analyzed for any potential hazards • Screen, review, approve, implement

  39. The Attributes of an SMS 10) Emergency Preparedness and Response • Be readily available at the work stations of those that may be the first to be notified or required to respond • Be relevant and useful to people on duty • Be exercised periodically to ensure the adequacy of the plan and the readiness of the people who must make it work • Be updated when contact information changes • Be briefed to all personnel along with their responsibilities • Should be practiced so personnel receive training in emergency response procedures

  40. The Attributes of an SMS 11) Performance Measurement and Continuous Improvement • Safety performance monitoring used as feedback to improve the system • Address individual areas (preflight, FOD, fueling) • Are SMART (Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Results Oriented, Timely) • Linked to the organization’s operations/business performance measures

  41. LEADERSHIP SAFETY & STANDARDS • Management’s role & responsibilities • Intentional non-compliance • Know procedures produce known outcomes • Standards produce repeatable results • Bad rules produce bad results • Standards are mechanisms for changing bad rules

  42. STANDARDS • Standards increase likelihood of repeatable results • Known procedures produce known results • Bad rules produce produce bad results • Enhance conflict resolution • Airlines cover almost every situation and the proper response in writing – Why? • Just follow the rules and eliminate majority of accidents

  43. DEVIATION FROM STANDARDS • Behavior is a function of consequences • Run a red light, you get a ticket • I.D. & correct immediately • Be consistent – No freebees • Be fair • Counsel, train, discipline, ground and remove

  44. BREAKING RULES Breaking the rules usually does not always result in an accident, however: It always results in a greater risk for the operation! Never take UNNECESSARY RISKS!

  45. NON-COMPLIANCE Non-compliance rarely results in an accident or incident, however: It always results in greater risk for the operation!

  46. Intentional Non-Compliance Research Shows – Once you start deviating from the rules, you are almost twice as likely to commit an error with potentially serious consequences! We could eliminate 70-80% of the accidents just by following the rules. * NOTE: Read the NTSB accident reports on the HAI website. Should be a requirement for all personnel Honest mistakes vs. intentional non-compliance

  47. Why is Insight Important for Safety Leaders? • With this insight: • You will understand the hazards & risks you face • You will understand how to control them • You will know how these controls are working in service • You will learn from when controls fail • You can drive improvements to take us towards achieving & sustaining a zero accident rate • Your “Culture of Safety” needs to be a culture that: • Embraces the concept of an SMS as a means to the a zero rate end • Drives continuous improvement

  48. Are We Rewarding the Right People? • Supervisors know who will & won’t break the rules • Rule breakers are often rewarded for mission accomplishment • Reward systems are often upside down. We should reward the normal, positive performance that complies with organization standards. • What you reward today will get done tomorrow

  49. Success Solutions • Reinforced bad behavior breeds continued bad behavior • Rationalization of the gravity of the situation seems to lessen the risk in our minds, but in reality does not • Habitual rule breaking is often condoned by management when they look the other way • Does complacency play a role in this issue?

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