In aviation maintenance, as in all other aspects of the aviation sector, safety is paramount. Four safety management practices that can be applied to make any maintenance operation safer are:
Most successful maintenance organizations have tangible safety metrics that help define their results in terms of safety. For instance, lost-time injury frequency is a metric used to identify potentially unsafe maintenance practices or procedures.
Back injuries and falls are common injuries at overhaul facilities, but by analyzing lost-time injury frequency data, procedures can be put in place to prevent injuries.
Many of us have dealt with situations where communications between management and those performing the work have broken down. This leads to an increase in:
In large organizations, open communication starts at the ground level through open-door policies, regular feedback, and trust in the decision-making of subordinates. These same policies can be extended to both smaller companies and the upper management in larger organizations.
Due to the highly regulated nature of the aviation industry change often comes slowly. However, competition necessitates change, and through a process of continuous improvement it can be negotiated successfully.
A tool for continuous improvement suggested by the ASQ is a four-step quality model—the plan-do-check-act (PDCA) cycle:
According to the American Society for Quality (ASQ), "Continuous improvement is an ongoing effort to improve products, services or processes. These efforts can seek 'incremental' improvement over time or 'breakthrough' improvement all at once."
According to James Reason in the paper A Roadmap to Just Culture: Enhancing the Safety Environment, "A safety culture depends critically upon first negotiating where the line should be drawn between unacceptable behavior and blameless unsafe acts."
In aviation maintenance errors happen all the time.
By establishing policies that differentiate willful acts of misconduct from inadvertent errors, employees will be more likely to report mistakes or hazardous situations thereby creating a safer work environment. You must define the behaviors that meet your definition of Acceptable Level of Safety (ALoS).
Safety is a top priority in the aviation sector. From my time in the aviation field and the classroom, the application of the 4 key practices can result in positive safety outcomes in the aviation maintenance sector:
Last updated in April 2024.