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Helicopters Magazine Careers in Aviation
Ken Pole Merlin Preuss on SMS
Written by Ken Pole   
321Call it ‘2010: An Airspace Odyssey,’ because that’s what it will have been by the time Transport Canada has a new Safety Management System (SMS) in place. This particular journey began in the mid-1990s and Merlin Preuss, the department’s director general of civil aviation, says that when everything falls into place at the end of this decade, Canada’s already enviable aviation record should be even more so.

Preuss explained in an interview that the first step was identifying issues and then developing potential solutions, which was completed last year. The next step is to truly engage all stakeholders, to convince the lingering naysayers that while the fundamental act of flight will always carry with it an element of risk, it can be managed to acceptable levels. “Every instructor in this department has been trained to do risk assessment,” he said. “When we talk about our mission in civil aviation, we’re also talking about a systemic approach to managing the risks.”

The latest numbers indicate that there were more accidents last year in Canada and the US than a year earlier. The tally here was 258 involving Canadian-registered aircraft, excluding ultralights, compared with 252 in 2004 but even so, last year’s count was below the 2000-04 annual average of 287. There were 18 accidents involving foreign aircraft in 2005 compared with 20 in 2004 and the 2000-04 average of 22. There also were 823 reportable incidents here in 2005, better than 909 the year before and the 2000-04 average of 837. The pattern was similar south of the border with 1,779 accidents in 2005 against 1,717 in 2004, and although one year is hardly a trend, Mark Rosenker, acting chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board, said it nonetheless underscored the “need to maintain a strong focus on safety in all segments of the aviation community.”

Preuss said there was a particularly vivid reminder in mid-2005 when there were six accidents of varying severity over a period of a few weeks. “The forecasts from Boeing and others is, ‘if we keep going this way, we could have an accident on the front pages every week.’ That’s not good for business.” That said, “it doesn’t matter whether it happens here or elsewhere,” which is why Transport Canada Civil Aviation (TCCA) is focusing on SMS development, which has involved pilot projects at several locations across the country. And internationally, TCCA works through the Montreal-based International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) and, on a north-south axis, with the Western Hemisphere Transportation Initiative and its spin-off Group of Experts on Aviation Safety, Security & Assistance which Preuss co-chairs with his Colombian counterpart.

“It’s catching on,” Preuss said of the SMS trend. “Good as it is, the current system is flatlined; it can’t get any better.” However, if he were starting from scratch, he would remove the word “safety” from the description. “A better way to describe is that it’s a risk management framework. If you really want to take this approach in your company – whether it’s an airport or airline or whatever – you end up changing the whole management to include risk assessment. In this case, we’re demanding, by regulation, risk assessment of safety issues.” Since assessing risk is in many ways a subjective exercise, proving success is a challenge. “You can prove when you fail!” Preuss pointed out. “You have a smoking hole somewhere.”

Also, while all kinds of SMS models are published around the world, they are fundamentally the same. There’s a reporting system and in each report a hazard, accident or occurrence is identified and analyzed. If corrective action is necessary, it is taken. If nothing has to be done, then it becomes a database entry. For example, if a major carrier’s maintenance manager receives a report about a blown tire, it likely is a fairly routine item to be filed. But what happens when periodic database analysis shows that there have been a dozen blown tires on a left bogey of a particular aircraft? Maybe a bogey’s axle bearing is shot. Is the maintenance manager going to accept that risk? Hardly. If a new bearing is in stock, there’s no additional cost except maintenance hours but if a new bearing or, worse, axle or even a whole bogey is involved, there are new costs to consider.

SMS takes that process a step further, with varying degrees of success. “Whether you’re talking about an airport in Ottawa or an AMO in Vancouver, we’re processbased,” Preuss said. “We do forensic audits against processes that are in place to prove that they’re meeting the standards, the regulations. That’s where we are today.” The next step after that is cultural and is fundamental if there’s to be a compliant SMS in Canadian civil aviation. The systems we now have in place are predominantly reactive in how they address the ‘smoking hole’ or a blown tire, and once a cause has been identified, repeat occurrences can be avoided or at least minimized. A better approach is to address a problem before it becomes an occurrence, incident or accident.

“You do that by creating within your organization a reporting culture,” Preuss said. “You start with the creation of a blame-free environment; as an employer, you assume that the person who walked in your door didn’t walk in there to screw up.” If something does go wrong, the cause is determined right down to the fundamentals. “People tend to take the first exit: ‘well, it was training.’ So they train more when in fact it maybe wasn’t training. Until you’ve got to the bottom of it, you’re not going to be successful. The cultural part here is to change the attitude of people not to stop at the Band-Aid but to get right down into this fundamental area of human and organizational planning. This is very complex, grey and fuzzy ... but it has to permeate the whole company.”

Montreal-based Air Transat could be a case study for SMS. While it hasn’t had a fatal accident since beginning service in 1987, it had a significant safety-related event with an Airbus A330 that ran out of fuel on a Toronto-Lisbon flight. It was cruising at 39,000 feet when the starboard engine lost power, followed by the port engine 13 minutes later. It was caused by fuel starvation; a system leak near the starboard engine, coupled with an open crossfeed valve, let fuel drain from both wing tanks. The leak had been noticed by the crew about an hour before engine shutdown and they had already diverted toward a military airfield in the Azores. Even so, the crew managed to hold the A330 in a glide for 20 minutes or 115 miles to avert an ocean ditching. The landing gear was damaged during the hot landing, and while all 13 crewmembers and 291 passengers survived, some of the latter were injured during the emergency evacuation of the aircraft.

Transport Canada fined Air Transat $250,000 for improper installation of an engine hydraulic pump. Later, when TCCA knocked on the carrier’s door after it had agreed to put SMS in place, Preuss had made it clear that he wanted every one of the vicepresidents present, including finance and marketing. “In the end, they went willingly,” he recalled. “I had the hammer, but I convinced them.” Preuss said it wasn’t Air Transat management’s reluctance to acknowledge they had a problem; it was simply such a different approach being proposed. He said TCCA’s regulatory oversight of Air Transat had given the department “really high confidence” in the company.

“Their reports indicated that they were as good a company as any other company,” he said. “So why did they almost kill 300-odd people? There’s no logical reason today why any of them are alive! A series of events permitted them to escape, that’s all. Statistically, it shouldn’t have happened.”

The chilling potential of the Air Transat incident drove TCCA to find out why this sort of thing happens, and led the regulators into human and organizational factors. “What were the priorities of the company at the time?” was a key question put by Preuss. “Did they put a lot of pressure on the maintenance people to get the aircraft out of the hangar for whatever reason? When we delved in, we found out that those things were true.” He said Air Transat’s initial reticence about SMS was that it had a “great” culture with safety their No. 1 priority. “But when we dug back in, it ended up that ‘no, it’s not No. 1,’ so we had to overcome that with education. And then, once the leadership understood what was meant to happen, it took a long time to get going.”

How deep does the human resources part of an analysis go? How would it address a maintenance person whose performance is affected by, say, financial or marital problems? “That’s what we do now,” Preuss said, “if the person shows up and is totally preoccupied with something at home, and that’s the reason the process or procedure wasn’t followed.” That’s where a reporting culture comes into play. “If that person walks in and says ‘I can’t work today because’ of whatever reason, a smart employer will say, ‘hey, I’m not going to take the risk of putting that person on the line.’ But to even be in a position where they could make that decision, the person has to walk in with confidence and report the problem without having to worry about getting fired.”

The final cultural element, which is why people such as the VP Marketing are routinely drawn into the SMS discussion, is to ensure that an operator cannot make any decision without somebody asking what the impact is on safety. “When you do that, you’ve got a compliant system,” Preuss said. “These will be things that you need to do to have the other parts work.” He acknowledged that many TCCA staff – imports from the private sector who have been turned into forensic inspectors and auditors – were still getting up to speed. “We’re changing their minds, their culture, to have them looking at performance rather than process. I’ve got to get them to think the same way we’re expecting the companies to think.”

But he’s had to do it without additional funding, by reallocating from within an already tight budget. “SMS is resource-intensive, which means we’re taking higher risk on some of the surveillance. But it’s not all loss, because as soon as we start working with the companies, there’s a safety bonus.” Preuss said a fair number of his former military colleagues are now flying for Air Transat and that they count it as “the best working environment they’ve ever been in.”

Preuss said that when TCCA’s internal system is up and running, it should be audited for effectiveness by an independent third party such as KPMG, if only for credibility in the industry. “The advantage is, first of all, we’re ‘walking the talk.’ Second, we can understand viscerally and with concrete examples what the industry is going through because we’re putting the same thing in place.” The only significant difference is that TCCA is missing a critical indicator: the fiscal bottom line. Government agencies don’t work that way, shouldn’t work that way in such a critical area. “But I should be able to gather everything else,” Preuss said, volunteering with a chuckle that his staff tend to find the former air force mechanical engineer “logical to the point of being anal.”

He took polite issue with industry concern about the way an ‘accountable’ executive must be identified within each company. “It’s a way to promote the cultural change,” he said. “If it doesn’t start at the top, it isn’t going to happen. It puts a face on the individual who’s responsible.” It could be argued that if the cultural change is successful, an operator’s personnel would naturally buy into the SMS process and regulatory oversight wouldn’t be needed. Not necessarily so, as was shown in Australia, where it was a tremendous challenge to reach to 10-20% of people who cause 80-90% of the problems.

But he conceded that ‘accountable’ has been problematic because of the way it has been redefined by some as ‘liable’ from a legal standpoint. “The thing that’s scaring some people is personal liability on the CEO.” That’s how the Canadian Environment Protection Act plays out; it holds senior officers in an offending company personally responsible if an accident results in pollution. Preuss insisted that the Aeronautics Act doesn’t, because while that punitive wording was part of the original package, the people who draft legislation evidently were persuaded that it wouldn’t have been right.

“Nobody is more personally liable under this system than they were yesterday,” he said. “I’m not predisposed to use a hammer. Culture change isn’t driven by a hammer. You need a hammer in the end to make sure it happens but if you don’t meet the requirements, what do we do today? We remove the certificate.” What about using the hammer to get their attention? “If you put personal liability in there, it gives everybody else a big hammer too, and as soon as people start worrying about personal liability, what happens? They don’t take decisions, you don’t get data and then you can’t go forward.”

What about the growing tendency toward class-action lawsuits whenever something goes wrong? Some lawyers were quick to initiate suits after an Air France Airbus A340 skidded off the runway at Toronto International Airport last August during a driving rainstorm and burst into flames. Only 43 people sustained minor injuries but the parasitic suits were for huge amounts of money. “That’s going to happen anyway,” Preuss allowed. “They’re going to go after the CEOs and the board, but they will find nothing in law, nothing in regulation, that indicates any personal liability.... Generally, you’re talking in your defence about due diligence. What better way to prove due diligence than to have an up-and-running SMS endorsed by the government? You can show that every time something came up, you followed the proper process. No judge is going to debate that with Transport Canada – at least they haven’t historically and I doubt they will in the future – and decide themselves what’s safe and what isn’t.”

If you hold a certificate in this country, Preuss said, “that means to me that you’re equipped and able to provide some service or another, whether that’s an airport or a nav system or an air operation. Then you will have an SMS.” There will be operations and/or activities that fall outside the SMS ambit but there’s uncertainty about where the cutoff line will be. Preuss assumes it will be above the individual general-aviation Cessna 172 pilot. For larger operators, the biggest savings are to be found in cost-avoidance measures. They could easily top six figures monthly, adding up hugely over the course of a year in an industry struggling to contain costs to be competitive. Preuss said ramp operations can be “a toilet” for carriers, flushing money away because of poor or non-existent quality assurance.

On the whole, industry generally is keen to see SMS in place, but Preuss said implicit trust is still not universal. “There are still naysayers who pop out,” he said, attributing it possibly to inadequate communication on his part. There’s also, to a degree, the longstanding private-versuspublic sector distrust, but the relationship is better than even just a decade ago.

And what about a decade from today? Preuss said the systems approach will be pervasive and he has seen a lot of other countries pick up on it. “It will permit globalization to happen a lot faster because right now we still have all kinds of barriers,” he said. “There are very few northsouth but there are still a lot of them east-west and north- ‘way-south.’ So if you want to really open up the market, which is probably what will be the future, you’ve got to have a regulatory basis to do that.” It helps that SMS has evolved beyond the “buzzword” stage within ICAO. Bill Voss, Director of ICAO’s Air Navigation Bureau since January 2004 and before that Director of Terminal Business Service at the U.S. Federal Aviation Administration, is firmly behind the concept.

When it was suggested that some interests within ICAO “talk the talk but don’t walk the walk,” Preuss said that has been true in Canada too. “But it’s got to start somewhere and I’m doing everything I can to support their endeavour. In a way, if you can make even the processes work, you’re going to leapfrog a lot of learning.” He likened it to the huge boom in mobile phone technology in underdeveloped countries where telephone poles and lines have never taken root. “They’ve leapfrogged that whole infrastructure development and gone right to satellite. If you’re a regulator in some underdeveloped country and you want to go from building up a huge workforce of forensic auditors, if you want to skip that stage, go to SMS if you can do it. Then you set up the accountability framework inside the industry rather than creating an infrastructure in government, which can be very expensive and timeconsuming. SMS has tremendous potential to stabilize the industry. I don’t see a quicker, more efficient, more effective way to affect the areas that are going to have the worst accident rates.”

The long-term expectation is that as the SMS culture takes over, the need for regulatory oversight should diminish. “There are benefits if you start out with the target, to reduce the accident rate, and you’re successful by using this method,” Preuss said. Among other things, TCCA will do even fewer pilot checkups than the small number it does today. Rather, the focus will be on showing Canadians and the department that every pilot on an airline is competent. “If the system works, why would we do checkups on Air Canada pilots? Most of the checking we do is on the people who are doing the checking on behalf of the government. That’s the system that’s on the verge of now going to the next step. When they put in a competent quality-assurance, transparent system that we can verify, we’ll let them go.”