Showing posts with label safety culture. Show all posts
Showing posts with label safety culture. Show all posts

Sunday, April 2, 2023

Safety Management System (SMS)

 02 Apr 23:

It's not rocket science. It's safety science, a simple process to follow, tried and true. Developed in the late 1980s for high reliability organizations that want to build resilience into their operation. Incorporated about 8 years ago into Part 121 airline operations, and now moving into airport ops. Scalable to any operation, even one person surrounded by a supporting team.


We've been following the process for 25+ years and have proven, safety award winning programs in military and civilian aviation to prove it. We'd be honored to help guide your organization along the same trail. 

Protect people and preserve property = major return on investment.

Fly smart,

Clark and Skipper

(850) 449-4841

Safety Management Systems

Friday, March 31, 2023

MANAGING PRACTICAL DRIFT

31 Mar 23:

MANAGING PRACTICAL DRIFT 

What is the problem? Each year, workers are injured or killed and post incident investigations have often led to the identification of human factors (i.e., human characteristics that influence behavior) as contributing to the cause of the incident. In these cases, system workers may have failed to follow safety procedures and/or did not use safety equipment that could have either prevented the incident from occurring or lessened the extent to which they were injured. What is it that leads workers to engage in behaviors that are not safe? One explanation is by a process known as Practical Drift which is described as, “the slow uncoupling of practice from procedure.” Post pandemic another explanation is that increasing production goals slowly drift away from perceived protections. What may have worked before may not work as well due to massive changes in workforce experience, and practiced professionals may not be quite as practiced as they were before. 

In closely coupled systems of high reliability organizations, a failure of one safety net could result in a catastrophic mishap. Team resource management practices are one effective mitigation, buoyed by robust communications across all teams and information sharing. 

The following are some of the reasons why Practical Drift can occur. Some may seem absurd, but all must be considered:

• Bad habits, (i.e., “we’ve always done it this way”) 

• Seasoned workers relying on experience rather than written procedures - Consider in person training or e-briefs over bulletin training 

• Changes in procedure without authority 

• Over-confidence 

• Complacency 

• Belief that working faster is appreciated - "On Time" metric focus over safety metrics.

• A lack of belief in “safety first” - Regulatory agencies, executives and management must set the safety tone

• Employees lacking knowledge or necessary skills 

• Expediency, (i.e., a belief that work is done faster when corners are cut) - It is faster to do a job once correctly versus twice

• Competition to outperform other employees or other organizations 

• Defiance, attitude, and/or emotions - The safety culture must permeate the entire industry, from the newest employee to the most seasoned regulator or legislative authoritty.

• Lack of focus - Employee health and wellness must be valued

• Laziness

Safety management systems do not need to be complex, this Old Salt Capn Jack managed a 5 Star safety program at a large chemical company with a first generation digital camera and powerpoint.

What can be done about Practical Drift? 

1. Engage employees in a manner that could lead to a more profound sense of mindfulness in their work. Create work that considers protections to be a key component of efficient production. One mishap can wipe out years of potential profit. 

2. Increase safety awareness through conversations and dialogue with and between all levels, from senior leadership down, through and including every employee. Eliminate silos within companies and across sister organizations. We're only as good as the weakest link in the chain mail. Creative collaboration is in order.

3. Engage employees at all levels in conversations about Practical Drift. Employees must be educated and made aware of Practical Drift if they are to identify, understand and be willing to address it when it occurs in themselves and others within the entire system. Communications are circular, employees expect and deserve feedback on safety reports and improvement recommendations. 

4. Take time to build quality relationships in the workplace across all levels. Risk management communications should be engaging and frequent. 

5. As the Marines say, Gung Ho - Work together.

Adapted from the Shortline Safety Institute's online resource, as part of their campaign to continuously improve rail safety.

FMI: 

SLSI: https://www.shortlinesafety.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/ManagingPracticalDrift_SLSI_SafetyTip_2.pdf

Contact our team if you're looking to set up a Safety Management System, we have a few decades of award winning programs to draw experience from.

Fly Smart,

Clark and Skipper

(850) 449-4841



Thursday, July 12, 2018

Aviate Navigate Communicate

12 Jul 18:

One of the first things we learned in flight training was to AVIATE, fly the aircraft, at all times, especially during an emergency. In a multi crew aircraft, make sure at least one person is flying before jumping into checklists or emergency procedures. Then NAVIGATE, make sure we know where we are going, and third on the list was to COMMUNICATE, with ATC, crew, passengers, or the company.

NTSB accident data suggests that pilots who are distracted by less essential tasks can lose control of their aircraft and crash. In light of this pilots are reminded to maintain aircraft control at all times. This may mean a delay in responding to ATC communications and passenger requests, or not responding at all unless positive aircraft control can be maintained throughout.

In other words, Fly the Aircraft First! Here is a video from the FAA Safety Team.



It's all part of a Risk Management plan:
-Identify hazards to Personnel, Aircraft, external pressures and environmental risks

-Classify Severity and Frequency. A hazard that can result in death and has a high chance of occurring must be dealt with immediately, examples are Inadvertent VFR into IMC or icing conditions in non rated aircraft.

-Develop a mitigation plan to transfer the risk, eliminate or accept

-Implement the plan

-Assess the plan and make changes as needed.

Since we are on the subject of risk management, did you know that it is one of the 4 pillars of a Safety Management System (SMS)? SMS pillars are:

-Safety Culture
-Risk Management
-Safety Assurance
-Safety Promotion

-Safety culture is developing a positive culture of beliefs and norms and applying those to planning and practice.
-Risk management, well we just talked about that, but we have a method and stick with it.
-Safety assurance is checking our plan and making sure it is producing the desired effects, and not generating negative consequences. Adjust as needed, check again, just like using Control and Crosscheck to fly the airplane.
-Safety promotion is sharing our positive attitudes and demonstrated behaviors with our fellow aviators, like attending a Wings Seminar in person or online, giving PIREPS or checking more pages on our blog :)

Here is a link to a Fact Sheet from the FAA.


Fly Smart!
Clark