Aircraft Maintenance Technology

MAY 2016

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FROM THE FA A 40 MAY 2016 AIRCRAFT MAINTENANCE TECHNOLOGY neers. Training support resources are available at www.humanfactorsinfo.com as well as at the CASA website. PEAR is significant because the categories can represent the holes of error in the cheese or the human resilience represented by the solid part of the cheese. PEAR overlaps with SHELL but is easier to understand. On the Bow Tie, PEAR is an ideal way to offer the proactive barriers that prevent the event of focus. The purpose here is not to make you a PEAR expert but it is to insist that the concept is alive and well. If you want more detail then Google "Johnson PEAR Model." JUSTIFYING YOUR HUMAN FACTORS INTERVENTIONS Engineering/maintenance managers know where the most significant hazards are. Fostering the posi- tive safety culture, using the technical publications, and ensuring fitness for duty are a few of the most common opportunities to address hazards. However, organizational-specific information, discovered by voluntary reports or SMS data will identify specific hazards, like aircraft ground movement, availability of specific tools/equipment, scheduling challenges, shift turnover communications, and more. Unlimited resources would permit organizations to address all hazards, but that's not the real world. For that reason organizations must apply risk assessment to look at the likelihood that the hazard may cause an error and what is the severity of such an outcome. But organizations must also determine the financial and safety impact of a hazard in order to prioritize which hazard reductions have the highest payoff. That's where the FAA Maintenance Human Factors Return on Investment tools can come in handy. Figure 2 shows that one does not have to be an economic expert to calculate return on investment. In fact, it is more about under- standing your hazards and the associated number of events (or potential events) that will result in an unmanaged hazard. SMS data can help assign costs if you are motivated to assign costs. The aviation maintenance expert will assign cost to the hazard intervention and predict the level of confidence in the esti- mation. The rest is multiplica- tion and division. The tools and detailed directions are available in the tools section at www.humanfactorsinfo.com . FATIGUE RISK ASSESSMENT Many have seen me write or speak that SMS, regu- lated or not, is the best approach to fatigue manage- ment regulations in maintenance. Most authorities do not have strict rules for fatigue risk management. Even when there are national industrial fatigue rules they are usually trumped by a variety of stipulations that permit aviation maintenance personnel to work more consecutive days and longer hours than they should. Proper SMS will quickly discover if there is a maintenance fatigue issue in an organization. By design, an SMS must identify such hazards, deter- mine the corrective action, promote the action, and assess the impact. My recent experience suggests that industry is becoming increasingly aware of the hazards associ- ated with worker fatigue. I believe that SMS programs have an impact on the awareness of worker fatigue hazards. The number of users on the two-hour FAA web-based training continues to grow (estimated at over 200k users in the past five years. (Course # ALC- 258 available at www.faasafety.gov.) The video, titled "Grounded," is available as part of that training or accessible on YouTube. DEMAND REMAINS HIGH FOR MAINTENANCE HUMAN FACTORS SUPPORT Industry has stepped up to address the hazards asso- ciated with human factors challenges in maintenance. For the most part, they have done that without exten- sive regulations. The safety and business case speak louder than regulations. FAA intends to continue to support the maintenance human factors website and is open to all suggestions for additions to our website and associated resources. FIGURE 2. The FAA ROI Model. FA A

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