Saturday, February 15, 2025

SMS Simplified

SMS Simplified

Human nature is to make the simplest things complex and incompatible with daily

routines. Simplicity is not about removing anything or everything but about

focusing on what is essential to achieve the desired outcome. Simplicity is not

about sacrificing functionality but about making the system as user-friendly as

possible while achieving its core objectives. It is an ongoing process that requires

careful planning, evaluation, and refinement. Simplicity often leads to improved

user satisfaction, easier maintenance, and more efficient operations. Finding the

right balance between simplicity and functionality can be a continuous process of

refinement. 


A safety management system

(SMS) for aviation is built on

a few simple core principles.

Conventional wisdom is that

safety in aviation, both

airports and airlines must be

a priority. A priority refers to

the relative importance or

level of urgency assigned to a

task, goal, or item when

compared to other tasks,

goals, or items. Prioritization

is a common practice in

various aspects of life, including work, personal life, and aviation SMS decision- making.





Safety refers to the condition of being free from harm, danger, risk, or injury. It

encompasses various aspects of life and environments, and its primary objective is

to protect individuals, communities, and assets from potential hazards or threats.

Safety measures and practices are implemented to reduce the likelihood of

accidents, injuries, or harm and to create an environment in which people can live,

work, and interact without undue risk. When safety is a priority the management

of safety becomes a subjective matter. What is viewed as a danger to one person,

may not be viewed as a danger to another person. Airport and airline operational

safety must be defined as paramount to operations for processes to function

within a safety management system.


There are differences

between priority and

paramount, but they are

related terms that both refer

to the importance or

significance of something.

Both are used in slightly

different contexts and convey

slightly different nuances.

Priority is a noun that

represents the state or quality

of being more important or urgent than other things. It often refers to a specific task, goal, or objective that is given higher importance or preference over others.


Priorities can be ranked or ordered based on their level of importance or urgency. For example, in a to-do list, tasks are prioritized from most important to least

important, focusing on the most critical tasks first.


Paramount is an adjective that describes something as being of the highest or

supreme importance, significance, or authority. When something is described as

paramount, it means that it is the most important or essential thing in a particular

context. This term emphasizes that nothing else should take precedence or surpass

the thing described as paramount. Paramount is the supreme overarching

objective supporting a safety policy, and a safety policy must be paramount for a

simplified SMS to function.


While both priority and paramount relate to the importance of something, priority

refers to items ranked by importance for processes to function and provide their

expected output, while paramount is the authority by which an SMS enterprise is

authorized by their accountable executive (AE) to rank items by importance and

classify events within the safety critical areas and safety critical functions

classification system.


In the context of time management and task organization, setting priorities helps

individuals or organizations determine which tasks or activities should be

addressed first and which can be delayed or given less attention. Prioritization is a

valuable skill because it allows individuals to allocate their time, resources, and

energy efficiently to achieve their objectives and meet deadlines.

Priorities can be categorized in various ways, but a common method is using a

scale such as high priority for goals that are critical and require immediate

attention. These are often associated with important deadlines or significant

consequences if not addressed promptly.


Medium priority are goals that are important but not as urgent as high-priority

goals. They can be scheduled and addressed after high-priority tasks.

Low priority are goals that are less critical and can be deferred if necessary. These

are typically less time-sensitive and may not have immediate consequences if

postponed.


Commonly applied hazard priority level action times are level 1 (immediately) level

2 (24 hours), level 3 (7 days), level 4 (28 days), level 5 (90 days), level 6 (12

months), level 7 (indefinite). High priority goals are levels 1,2 & 3, medium priority

goals are levels 4 & 5, and low priority goals is level 6. Level 7 is a priority level

beyond the foreseeable future.


The specific criteria for setting priorities can vary depending on individual goals,

organizational objectives, and the context in which decisions are made. Effectiveprioritization involves considering factors such as deadlines, importance, resources

available, dependencies between tasks, and overall strategic goals.

Ultimately, the goal of prioritization is to ensure that the most important and time-

sensitive tasks are completed first, helping individuals and organizations make

efficient use of their time and resources to achieve their desired outcomes.


When an SMS incident report is received the occurrence has already happened

and the onsite immediate corrective actions have been taken. An example are

immediate tasks after a runway excursion. The immediate steps are to evacuate

the aircraft, notify the airport operator who then activates the airport emergency

plan.


When an accountable

executive receives the first

occurrence report their

immediate priority is to

establish an emergency

response center and

communicate with local

authorities, ensure comfort

for passengers and their

families, communicate with the flight crew and determine if the incident warrants

a temporary suspension of operations. Within a day, the AE needs to notify Transportation Safety Board (TSB), and at the directive of TSB schedule equipment and crews to remove the aircraft for the airport operator to return the runway back to service. Within a week the AE responsibility, for both airports and airlines, is to verify that special cause variations are removed from operations.

The next priority level is the medium priority level and accountable executives

needs to produce a draft report within 28-90 days with a preliminary root cause

analysis and recommended corrective action plans (CAP). Within 12 months of the

The root cause analysis library.incident both airports and airlines should have their preliminary report and CAPs designed, developed, and scheduled for implementation.


A
rush to judgement and pre-data root cause analysis is a hazard to aviation safety.

It is tempting to provide answers when everyone is looking for quick solutions and

the cause of an incident. The AEs (both airport and airlines) must refrain from

providing untrue statements of the cause of and planned corrective actions. None

of this is known until available data has been collected and analysed. A premature

root cause statement is tampering with processes, it corrupts the processes, and it

is overcontrolling of processes. Overcontrolling a process is more damaging to the

output itself than leaving an imperfect process alone.


Yes, it takes hard work and

time to set up a simplified

safety management system.

However, when it is set up

and adapted by the SMS, it

becomes a simple task to

monitor and keep track of

special cause variations.

SMS is made complex when

operators, both airports and

airlines, take short-cuts and remove items from their SMS. Removing SMS

requirements adds burdens and work to the SMS, and it makes an SMS unreliable and without a definite purpose. Compare a simplified SMS to the cruise control

system in a vehicle. It takes hard work to build it, but at the end, a cruise control

system is use-friendly and makes it simple for the driver to monitor progress.

Building a simplified safety management system involves a daily quality control

system. Daily quality control is a prerequisite for the triennial required audit. A

simplified SMS includes commitment and leadership, an SMS policy, hazard

identification of hazards affecting operations and risk analyses and risk

assessment.


Analysis and assessment are two distinct, but related processes used in various

fields to gather information, evaluate situations, and make informed decisions.

Analysis involves the process of examining data, information, or a situation to gain

a deeper understanding, identify patterns, and extract meaningful insights.

Assessment, on the other hand, is the process of evaluating something based on

specific criteria or standards to determine its quality, performance, or suitability.

The nature of an analysis is a process that seeks to uncover relationships, trends,

or causes and effects within a dataset or a problem. It may involve breaking down

complex information into smaller components to facilitate understanding. The

nature of an assessment is a structured approach and a specific process that

involves measuring or quantifying aspects of a subject against predefined criteria.

It is often used to make judgments or decisions based on established standards or

benchmarks.


An analysis can be an ongoing or continuous process, and it may not have a fixed

endpoint. It is often used to inform decision-making and problem-solving as

situations evolve.

An assessment is typically conducted at specific points in time or at predetermined

intervals to gauge performance or compliance with standards. It often leads to a

final judgment or rating.


An assessment is to assess the value and the effect of a risk analysis and includes

monitoring of the if the risk analysis predictions maintain its assigned path, and if

the analysis output remains focused on the target. Within an SMS, the priority of a

risk assessment is to evaluate likelihood, severity and exposure applied to a risk

analysis.


In summary, analysis is about understanding and gaining insights, while assessment

is about evaluating and making judgments based on predefined criteria.The foundation of a simplified SMS is daily quality control, and includes risk

mitigation, processes, incident reporting and Investigation, training and education,

communication and performance monitoring and measurement.

The output of a simplified SMS is continuous improvement, or continual

improvement. Continuous improvement is to make adjustments, while continual

improvement is to make changes.


Other outputs from a

simplified SMS are

emergency preparedness,

documentation and records

keeping, processes

conforming to regulatory

requirements, personnel

involvement, and reviews,

evaluations, and

assessments.


A simplified SMS is for

airport and airline operators to easily adapt to changing circumstances, which is

the continuous safety improvements required by an SMS.

When design and development of a simplified SMS is completed, and systems are implemented, a simplified SMS is to remain resilient, adapt to changing conditions, analyse what goes right every day, monitor for special cause variations, and adjust or make changes to processes.


A simplified SMS is strategy applied to monitor progress.


OffRoadPilots





SMS Simplified

SMS Simplified Human nature is to make the simplest things complex and incompatible with daily routines. Simplicity is not about removing a...