Regulatory Compliance Without SMS Is
A Selective Picture Of Safety
NOTE: This post is from one of our frequent contributors to this blog, "Birdseye59604.
Technical
regulations are static requirements of operations while process regulations are
operational safety management. During the Pre-SMS days, when technical regulatory
requirements were applied as operational processes, the assumption was that more
technical regulations automatically produced a safer operational environment.
Regulatory compliance
without SMS is like a bias selection of a still picture.
|
A
car has a breaking system, a steering system, an acceleration system, a power
system, a torque system, a display system and several other systems. When it comes
off the assembly plant it is regulatory compliant and have met all standards
required. A speedometer indicating mph or km/hr, headlights showing white, with
correct intensity and alignment, a steering wheel of approved shape and size
and operating pedals placed in order as required.
A
vehicle operator has a license to operate, has passed both a knowledge test and
practical test to drive. The road system, consisting of highways for cross
country travel, access roads to local places and streets for city addresses. All
aspects conform to regulatory requirements.
An
airplane comes off the assembly line in the same manner as a car. The system
has put in place runways and airways for travel between points of destinations.
An airplane is regulatory compliant with wings, flaps, power units, control-input
units, and pilots who have a pilot
license to operate and qualified of aircraft type.
When SMS is Regulatory compliant, that is when operational facts are discovered |
After
major accidents, more technical regulations and standards are put in place to
make flying safer. Unless operations have processes in place to manage safety,
or risks (as there are inherent risks in
flying), aviation is only safe as long as an airplane conforms to static regulatory
compliance on the ground.
At the moment it moves, another world of managing
safety opens up. Safety does not miraculously comply to safety regulations and
standards unless it is managed.
It
was not until a Safety Management System came into play in aviation that
operations had a tool to manage and make safety happen.
A
Safety Management System (SMS) is safety in operation, safety in human factors,
environmental factors, organizational factors, supervision factor and it is to
make regulatory compliant operating processes. When these processes are in
place, the risk in flying is reduced to a level of certainty of processes
effectiveness.
BirdsEye59604
The comment, "...not until SMS came into play in aviation that operations had a tool to mange and make safety happen." This very concept is the basis for CONTROL !
ReplyDeleteGo to www.dtitraining.com click on Workshops and Symposium to learn how this all can work in your organization.