Title: Safety Management Systems
1Safety Management Systems
2The Company WestJet Culture Safety Management
Plan Policies Organization Processes Training Com
munication SMS Benefits () Conclusion
3WestJet Snapshot
- Ten years in operation
- More than 43 million guests flown since 1996
- (average of 851,043 guests/month in Q4 2005)
- Eight year average revenue growth of 54
- Nine year average growth 50.0 (RPM) / 47.8
(ASM) - Fleet of 54 Boeing 737 NG aircraft (63 aircraft
in 2006) - Over 5,000 WestJet employees
4Available Seat Miles (Annual - billions)
5Revenue (Annual - billions)
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7Culture Aligning Interests
- Turn employees into capitalists so they think
and behave like owners - Employee Share Purchase Plan
- Dollar for dollar matching of employee
contributions - 86 participation with average of 12 of base
salary - Profit sharing - 73.9 million distributed over
nine years - Share options
- 86.6 outstanding held by pilots
- 3.7 million new grants to pilots in 2004
8Culture Aligning Interests
- Culture of ownership, caring, empowerment,
teamwork - WestJet vocabulary Guests, WestJetters,
Teams, Big Shots, Beanland, WestJettitude - PACT Pro-Active Communication Team
- employee association
- no unions
- PACT and Management seek mutually beneficial
solutions for - the Company and its shareholders
- the Employees
- the Guests
9Implementing the Regulations
- Transport Canada regulations apply to
- Aircraft Maintenance Organization Certificate
- Air Operator Certificate
- WestJet has made SMS a company-wide initiative
- Maintenance
- Flight Operations
- Inflight
- Airports
- Occupational Safety Health
- Environment
- Corporate Divisions
10- WestJet differs from many airlines (perhaps your
own) - Business model
- Growth
- Equipment type(s)
- Route structure
- Employee relations
- CULTURE
- Airlines will also differ in Safety Management
Systems - common elements and components
- different programs, processes and
infrastructures
11Safety Management Plan
Guiding document for implementation and operation
of SMS
- Policies
- Safety Organization
- Roles and Responsibilities
- Processes
- Audit
- Training
- Communication
- Emergency Response
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13Policies Fundamental Assumption of Risk
Causation
Human Error Caused by system design To be
expected TEM Model System Review
- At-Risk Behaviour
- Caused by
- complacency
- time pressures
- condoned behaviour
- other human factors
- Must be actively measured and managed
- Individual Coaching
Reckless Behaviour Willful non-compliance Can
not be tolerated Discipline
14Operational Safety Organization
Safety Action Committee
Safety Representatives
Safety Services
15Safety Department Mission Statement
To support effective safety programs and
proactive risk management by promoting safety as
an inherent value of WestJets culture
16Safety Organization
Accountable Executive
Accountable Executive VP Technical Services VP
Op. Development EVP People CFO EVP Culture
Airports EVP Marketing Sales Director, Safety
Safety Management Committee (meets monthly)
Director, Safety Maint. Safety Officer Manager,
Flight Safety Airports Safety Advisor Inflight
Safety Advisor SST Advisors SMEs
Safety Action Committee (meets weekly)
17Roles and Responsibilities
-
- Accountable Executive
- Senior Managers
- Executive Vice Presidents, Vice Presidents,
Directors - Managers and Supervisors
- Front-line Employees
- Safety Department
- Safety Representatives
- Safety Committees
- Safety Action Committee, Safety Management
Committee - Lead Investigator
- Safety Review Teams
18Safety Processes
- Reactive and Proactive Processes
- Hazard / Root Cause Analysis
- Risk Assessment
- Risk Mitigation
- SMS Database
- Safety Planning Performance
- Change Management
- SMS Quality Assurance
19Risk assessment Safety survey LOSA Job safety
analysis
Flight incident report Ground incident report
Injury report FDM statistics
Safety Management Systems
Basic Risk Management Process
20FDM Report
21FDM Report
22Organizational Error Profile (XX Airlines and
LOSA Archive Comparison Airlines)
LOSA Report
LOSA Report
23Risk Management Matrix
Risk Management Matrix
CAP Corrective Action Plan HF Human Factors
24Database Findings / Causes / Actions Page
25Training
Training must ensure that personnel are
trained and competent to perform their safety
management duties Canadian Aviation
Regulations 107.03(d)
- Safety Management Plan specifies initial and
recurrent training standards for - Safety Department
- Senior Managers
- Managers Supervisors
- Front line Employees
- as appropriate to the individuals
responsibilities in the safety management
system. - WestJet Safety Management Plan Section 9
26Training
Initial, update and recurrent training covers (as
required)
27Communication
Safety Newsletter Corporate communications Executi
ve presentations WestNet (company intranet) Base
visits Indoctrination training Department
meetings SAC, SMC meetings Jetsmarts
(e-learning) Managers conference Job
descriptions Performance appraisals
28SMS VIDEO
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30Communication
- Easy to understand for ALL employees
- Dynamic introduction to SMS fundamentals
- focuses on proactive risk management
- Features many employee groups
- Dispatch, Maintenance, Flight Crew, Scheduling
- Ramp Agents, CSAs, Training, FOQA
You have many elements of SMS in place NOW
31Examples of SMS Savings
Fuselage Ice Occurrence (Reactive Risk
Assessment) Repairs Downtime 30,000 30,000
/ yr. Single Agent De-icing (Proactive Risk
Assessment) Each Occurrence 50,000 50,000
/ yr Workers Compensation Premiums (Integrated
Risk Management) Forecast Annual Savings
100,000 - 500,000 / yr Category A or B
Occurrence
32Summary
Safety Management Systems will
- Formalize and document many current safety
processes - Introduce new and improved safety programs
- Force greater consistency and rigor in
operational risk management - Bring new challenges
- Evolve with new regulations, your company and
the industry - Change corporate culture
33Safety Management Systems