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Design, Development and Delivery of Safety Management System Training to Transport Canada: Six Years and Counting David Wilson, Stantec (formerly Jacques Whitford) Roger Barker, ISR

Design, Development and Delivery of Safety Management System Training to Transport Canada: Six Years and Counting David Wilson, Stantec (formerly Jacques

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Design, Development and Delivery of Safety Management System Training to

Transport Canada: Six Years and Counting

David Wilson, Stantec (formerly Jacques Whitford)

Roger Barker, ISR

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Outline

• The Mandate

• The Plan

• Course Design and Development– Transport Canada’s Start Point– Inclusion of International and Audit Content

• Course Delivery– Institutional Challenges– Regional Challenges

• Internal vs. External Reaction

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The Mandate

“The broad objectives of the SMS course are:

• For Delegated Officers (DOs) and Management to develop a detailed understanding of SMS, thereby instilling confidence and obtaining buy-in to TC’s SMS program

• For DOs to develop the skills necessary to execute their mandates in the assessment of SMS”

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Aviation mission and vision

To develop and administer policies and regulations for the safest civil aviation system for

Canada and Canadians using a systems approach to managing risks

– Continuous improvement – High level of public confidence

Flight 2005: A Civil Aviation Framework for Canada

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0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

3.0

Safe Environment

Safety Awareness Safe Person in Safe Environment

Supervision Driven

Team Driven

Behavior Driven

INC

IDE

NT

RA

TE

Command & Control Programs Management Systems

Evolution of Safety Management

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Towards Zero...

…is the condition to which risks are managed to acceptable levels.

WorkplaceSafetyStandards

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TC Requirements

• “Aviation organizations should establish and maintain a safety management system that conforms to all of the requirements of applicable Canadian Aviation Regulations (CARs) and Standards”

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TC Requirements

There are 9 parts to the CARs:1. General Provisions2. Aircraft Identification and Registration and Operation of a

Leased Aircraft by a NON-registered owner3. Aerodromes and Airports4. Personnel Licensing and Training5. Airworthiness

– Aircraft Certification (AC) – Maintenance & Manufacturing (M&M)

6. General Operating and Flight Rules7. Commercial Air Services8. Air Navigation Services9. Repeals and Coming into Force

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The Plan

• Phase 1: Analysis– Deliverable 1: Training Needs Analysis, Learning

Strategy, Final Work Plan and Background Update• Phase 2: Evaluation and Design for CBA and AMM

– Deliverable 2: Course Syllabus, Course Materials• Phase 3: Pilot Course

– Deliverable 3: Pilot Course, Course Evaluation• Phase 4: Course Delivery to CBA and AMM

– Deliverable 4: CBA Course, AMM Course

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The Plan cont’d

• Phase 5: Validation of Course Delivery to CBA and AMM– Deliverable 5: Confirmed Assessment Protocol, Course

Validation• Optional Phase 6: Adaptation for Other Functional Branches

– Deliverable 6: Adapted Course(s)• Optional Phase 7: Course Delivery to Other Functional

Branches– Deliverable 7: Other Functional Branch Course(s)

• Optional Phase 8: Validation of Course Delivery to Other Functional Branches– Deliverable 8: Course Validation(s)

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Course Design

• Definition of the target population

• Identification of the SMS knowledge level of target audience

• Review of CARs and notices of proposed amendments (NPAs) to CARs relating to SMS

• Review all applicable national and international (e.g., UK, Australia and GAIN) aviation SMS policies and guidelines

• Assessment of the existing safety culture within the target audience

Safety Metrics Assessment

• Survey-based tool from sub-consultant

• Distributed internally to approx. 1000 DOs: 150 replies

• Intent was to identify:– Internal issues/barriers within TC– Issues/barriers external to TC (customer,

industry, etc.)

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Training Needs Assessment

• Front line staff were fully aware of their needs and challenges– Different measures are required to measure safety and

SMS;– The interdependencies of attitude, behaviour, and

motivation cannot be ignored– Inspectors need practical demonstration of a functioning

SMS from the ground up,– If support, guidance, and structural leadership from

management are not forthcoming (as happened with Risk Management training), then SMS training will fail.

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Global Review of TC SMS • Global references:

– OHSAS18001

– GAIN

– CASA Australia - Guide to Aviation SMS

– SMS for Commercial Air Transport Operations - Guide to Implementation (UK)

– OGP Checklist for an audit of safety management

• Resulting additions to the TC model:– Continuous Improvement

– Feedback

– Annual Management Review of the SMS

– Contractors must meet safety standards which do not impinge on the SMS of the organisation

– Inter and Intra-company Safety Performance Comparison

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The TC SMS Model

1. Safety Management Plan• Safety Policy

• Non-punitive Safety Reporting Policy• Roles, Responsibilities & Employee Involvement

• Communication• Safety Planning, Objectives & Goals

• Performance Measurement• Management Review

2. Document Management• Identification & Maintenance of Applicable Regulations

• SMS Documentation• Records Management

6. Emergency Preparedness

5. Quality Assurance

4. Training

3. Safety Oversight• Reactive Processes • Proactive Processes

• Investigation and Analysis• Risk Management

Course Development

• Addressing Gaps:– Audit Approach– Approach to Assessing SMS: Assessors vs.

Inspectors– The TC SMS Model vs. Plan-Do-Check-Act

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Course Delivery

• Initial 4-day course (‘03-’04)– 19 deliveries

• V2: 4-day course (’04-’05)– 18 deliveries

• V3: 3-day course (’05-’09)– 15 deliveries (eLearning course starts in fall ‘09)

• 2-day awareness course

• 2-day multi-model course

• ½ day refresher course

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3-day Course Content• History of SMS• Introduction to TC SMS• SMS Elements

– Safety Management Plan– Documentation– Safety Oversight– QA, Training, EPR

• Safety Performance Measurement • Safety Culture • Implementation of SMS • SMS Evaluation Guide• Process to Assess Industry SMS• Completing the Assessment

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The Assessment should get to the “Real” Issues !!

DD

Addition of Broader Audit Approach

• DOs used to inspections and checklist-driven audits

• ‘Process’ vs. ‘procedure’ view not well differentiated: had to get up out of the trees

• No methodology for producing defensible, quantified assessments of SMS: development of the SMS Assessment Process

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SMS Assessment Process

• Pre-Assessment

• On-Site Observations

• Post Assessment and Follow Up

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Assessment Criteria

Plugging the Holes with PDCA

• Gaps in management system elements identified in course design were not addressed until V2/V3 of the course:– Management review– Proactive process (risk management)

• Some backlash from attendees as a result, however intent was to arm DOs as best possible to allow them to engage industry

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Institutional Challenges

• SMS needs a Paradigm shift within aviation from :– DOs are responsible for aviation safety

• responsible for operator’s actions and take accountability for them

– Operators must get all actions approved by TC

– Audits of operators are only done by DOs and the operators cannot be trusted to do carry out internal ones themselves

– Conflict of interest in the "old way of doing things"

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Regional Challenges

• Different degrees of involvement and engagement by Regional Directors

• Regional cultural differences: adversarial vs. partner approaches from POIs/PMIs

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Internal vs. External Reaction

• Within TC:– Sounds good in theory– Are we prepared to back this up?– How does this system scale from large to

small?– Will TC really enforce the SMS CARS?

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Internal vs. External Reaction cont’d

• Within industry:– Larger operators/AMOs/airports: we do this

now (but may lack some rigour…)– Hazard analysis and identifying risk significant

activities often a weakness– Smaller operators: what is it exactly that you

want me to do (and when exactly do I get to make a living…)?

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In Conclusion

• Training of TC Civil Aviation a major undertaking (time, personnel, cost)

• Paradigm shift just now starting to show broadly in TC

• Communicate, communicate, communicate: can it ever be enough?

• We see senior managers taking more of a lead, and see that aviation experts are needing to become more proficient in management

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In Conclusion cont’d

• SMS is about risk control - the loop of hazard-risk-objectives-measures-audit-management review drives a big shift in the way management perceive their roles and forces communication into the organizations

• Tough part awaits: small operators

• Grateful to have been able to play a role

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Questions