Navigating The Maze Of SMS Jargon

Feb. 28, 2012
Do you sometimes find yourself lost in the maze of jargon that surrounds SMS?

A recent story in the national press and television laughed about the family of four who became lost at dusk in a corn maze. They called 911 and the local fire department and television camera crews came to everyone's rescue. Yes, the story ended well but for the embarrassment of the parents.

Do you sometimes find yourself lost in the maze of jargon that surrounds safety management systems (SMS)? Let's try to clarify a few terms that can be confusing. Also, let's show that SMS is often a matter of formalizing your current safety program.

The International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) guides the direction of required safety programs. Its safety management manual (Google the term "ICAO SMM") describes the multitude of suggested requirements for a safety management system. The requirements apply to airlines, charter companies, MROs, airports, air traffic organizations, and others.

Each organization must have a formal means to collect, analyze, and apply results from three different types of data:

  • Reactive
  • Proactive
  • Predictive

FAA aligns guidance with ICAO. Different data need different methods to collect, analyze, and use the information to promote safety. Let's look at the three data types in more detail:

REACTIVE DATA

The event has already occurred. The damage is done. Depending on the severity of an event, you hear about it on the news. However, many other events, such as a runway incursion, high value ramp damage, or worker injury, may remain known only to the airline or company personnel involved.

Companies usually have accident/event procedures in place. They are prepared to launch an investigation team and establish fact-based contributing factors. There are very good processes to interview those involved or witnesses to an event. Companies usually have the means to determine the cause and take actions to ensure that the event never happens again.

Afterward, the FAA and any number of industry organizations and publications help disseminate accident/event data. This helps reduce the chance that the event may be repeated at another carrier. We learn from one another.

The event investigation process, the data collected, and the final report is merely a reaction to the event – hence, the term "reactive" data. There is high value in learning from the reactive data from big events. The industry has relied on such information for a long time in the successful effort to ensure continuing safety.

PROACTIVE DATA

Collecting, analyzing, and applying proactive data is not new. Only the emphasis on the term "proactive" is new. Aviation organizations have auditing, quality, and safety departments that apply a multitude of operational measures to assess current performance and safety. The FAA Continuing Analysis and Surveillance System (CASS) exemplifies a robust data system. For CASS, the company is responsible for collecting data and assessing the opportunities for improvement. Traditional audits with the International Air Transport Association (IATA), the Coordinating Agency for Supplier Evaluation (C.A.S.E.), and the National Aviation Authority are nothing new. In SMS language, these audits represent your proactive data.

PREDICTIVE DATA

We are a very safe industry. The positive data from 2011 broke all safety records. The United States has gone nearly three years without an airliner accident fatality and the accident rate is considerably down worldwide. Today’s aviation news is more likely to describe a long wait in a TSA line than an airliner safety issue. We must continue on that increasing safety path.

SMS regulations encourage us to take our data collection to the next level. Predictive data systems are a means to use daily/normal operations to help identify a company’s strengths and weaknesses.

Sometimes there is confusion between the terms used in “system safety” vs. the language used in “threat and error management.” Using the language of system safety, predictive data helps identify the small hazards in advance of assigning a risk level. Using the language of threat and error management, predictive data helps identify the threats so that they can be managed before they become errors.

In any language, it is a matter of identifying and addressing challenges as early as possible. How can you establish systems to gather and apply predictive data?

Most likely, frontline employees see the hazards before management does. Predictive data, therefore, must be worker-centered. Companies must make it easy for employees to speak up. Voluntary reporting systems are likely the best means to achieve this goal.

FAA cooperates with the industry through programs such as the Aviation Safety Action Program (ASAP). It protects workers from FAA action when they report mistakes early. Progressive companies use ASAP as a means to report not only events but also to report the conditions (threats) that may lead to events.

Another new program created by FAA with the Airlines for America (A4A) (formerly Air Transport Association), is the Maintenance and Ramp Line Operations Safety Assessment system (MRLOSA). MRLOSA is a formal means for workers to conduct peer-to-peer assessments during normal operations. Such data may be the very best means to gather and use predictive data. This system was discussed in detail in the September ’11 GSW magazine.

The bottom line, the SMS maze is not that complex. This article has shown that the SMS requirement for reactive, proactive, and predictive data is straightforward. It is already aligned with many of your existing data systems. The SMS guidance, when scaled to individual operations, makes good logical safety sense.

This article started by talking about being lost in a corn maze. However, we can see that SMS does not have to be complicated. The corn maze analogy is a tempting way to do a bit of “government bashing,” but is an unfair way to depict a system that can help us achieve a bit more safety from an already safe system.

About the Author: Dr. William Johnson has spent more than 30 years as senior executive and scientist for engineering companies specializing in technical training and human factors before joining FAA in 2004. He is also an aviation maintenance technician and a pilot, and has been for more than 45 years.