Safety managers are busy people. After all, they are constantly ensuring SMS documentation requirements are appropriately managed for all four pillars of the aviation safety management system (SMS).
It's easy to let something slip by if there are no mechanisms in place for quality assurance for your aviation SMS.
What does it mean to review the aviation SMS' safety policy?
How is this done?
Do I just slap another date on the bottom?
What do auditors look for when reviewing this requirement?
These are a few questions we'll seek to answer. Also, we will provide a free checklist for you to either:
Unless you can prove it to some people, there will always be those doubters and slackers. They may always live with their heads in the sand and balk at reviewing their safety policies. To them, the accountable executive's Safety Policy is like a sacred document, immutable. Write it once and it is perfect. No changes are required.
In aviation SMS there is an activity called conducting the gap analysis. Aviation service providers in their earlier planning stages perform a gap analysis of their operations using an industry-standard model. Gap analysis models come from regulatory agencies or standards bodies, such as:
You can liken a gap analysis to an internal evaluation of your existing documentation and risk management processes against one of these models. Each gap analysis model is composed of sections with questions. To give you an idea of the content of the gap analysis checklist, most gap analysis models are organized around ICAO's four components, or pillars:
In the ICAO gap analysis model, the first subsection under "Safety Policy" is "Management Commitment & Responsibility." At the bottom of the list in ICAO's version #3 gap analysis, it reads
Is the safety policy periodically reviewed to ensure it remains relevant and appropriate to the [organization]?
But "I'm a Canadian," you may retort. Well, in the Transport Canada gap analysis, in the "Safety Policy (Phase 2)", you will see
The safety policy is reviewed periodically for continuing applicability.
For the FAA, you will have to look not at the Preliminary Gap Analysis model, but at the advanced gap analysis model for
The safety policy is reviewed periodically to ensure it remains relevant and appropriate to the organization.
For the FAA's Part 5, gap analysis model, you will find
Do your safety management processes require your safety policy to be: Regularly reviewed by your accountable executive to ensure it remains relevant and appropriate to your organization?
OK, I think I made my point.
Aviation safety policies are usually a part of your SMS manual. For help writing an SMS manual, there are some good resources in this article. The safety policy can either be reviewed against:
I believe an aviation safety policy checklist is more useful when reviewing safety policies. The safety manager doesn't have to wade through paragraphs of often wordy and meaningless guidance material to get to the point.
Aviation safety policy checklists are as simple as going down the list and saying:
Most aviation service providers already have their safety policy if they have started an SMS implementation.
Where do you keep your safety policy? Many of you will hunt for it on some dusty shelf. Best practices dictate that the safety policy should be readily available to all stakeholders. Put it on your Website, or online with your aviation SMS database or safety portal if you have one.
Since your operating environment is constantly changing, your safety policy should also change. Don't be afraid to update this "sacred" document.
Safety policies are core documents supporting an aviation service provider's safety culture. They lay out employee expectations and the commitments of key safety personnel. Without an effective safety policy, employees are left without guidance and protection from management retaliation.
Safety policies guide safety culture.
You should not simply stop at your aviation safety policy. The truth is that all your safety policies and procedures require review. For many aviation service providers, this may be a huge task to do in one day. You may consider breaking up the review sessions into two or three meetings.
The better aviation SMS software suites have tools to ensure these policies and procedures do not slip through the cracks. They will send out email notifications whenever a policy or procedure requires review. The SMS database also has the ability to make the safety policy accessible to all employees. This is a huge plus for aviation service providers to be able to display safety policies to all employees in an online forum, not to mention the capability to remind the safety team that the policy requires review.
This is not a justification to go out and buy an aviation SMS database; however, there are other benefits of the SMS database that will help safety managers document the ICAO "Safety Policy" component. If you are just starting (or restarting) an SMS implementation, make sure you understand the data management requirements for the considerable SMS documentation you are expected to produce.
Finally, you must not forget to have the accountable executive review and acknowledge any changes made to the safety policy. Include the date the document was reviewed and accepted. In the real world, who is managing this? You go it: the safety manager.
After the safety policy has been reviewed, you should consider "promoting" it again. Promote the safety policy regardless of whether any changes have been made. Don't waste this safety promotion opportunity to strengthen the safety culture.
When there are changes to the safety policy, you should consider highlighting these changes in your next safety newsletter. Alternatively, you could publish the safety policy on the SMS database's electronic "Message Board." You may call your message board something different, like the
Regardless, your electronic message board should be able to
These best practices help improve the safety culture. Unfortunately, you won't be able to track these safety communications using spreadsheet SMS data management strategies. However, these best practices are easily practiced when you have access to an SMS database.
But there is a lot more the SMS database can do for you.
Are you ready to improve your safety culture? Watch these demo videos to learn whether we are a good fit for you.
Policies and procedures should be integrated into your aviation SMS. Do you have questions about SMS Pro?
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Last updated March 2024.