What is complacency? - It’s the self-satisfaction accompanied by a loss of awareness of the dangers.
Two very experienced AMTs (one with 22 years and the other with 33 years of experience) missed 140 cracks during a 100-hourly inspection. This resulted in one fatality and 95 people experiencing a very close call when 18 ft of fuselage went missing during a flight.
The whole world screamed, how could this possibly happen? How could these 2 men miss that many cracks?
With complacency can come Expectancy, where the AMT will often see what he expects to see and not what is actually there. If other factors are also present such as fatigue, lack of resources, and stress (from a different source) then the chance of an error becomes very real.
Because of the repetitive nature of a lot of aviation maintenance work, complacency is an ever-present danger. As a person becomes complacent his stress level (for that task) decreases and with it his performance. A greater stimulus will now be required in order to obtain a response.
The accident in which complacency played a major role was 1988's Aloha 243, the infamous convertible.
Other human factors that played a role in the Aloha accident:
Some things you can do:
As we become more experienced in life and at work, it starts to become very easy to be complacent.
Fighting complacency involves cultivating vigilance. In this case, vigilance means vigilance of your own feelings and behavior, as well as the vigilance of others' behaviors.
Some ways to help yourself practice vigilance are:
Last updated in May 2024.