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Geoff Goodyear Safety Systems

 
 
 
 
 
I have long waxed poetic about the potential benefits of an industry-wide approach to Safety Management Systems (SMS). Well, watch out everybody – because here it comes!

One truly does need to be careful what one wishes for. As we speak, statutory SMS is already a reality for some of our airline colleagues and should be making an appearance in our 702-703 world in a year or two.

My first unwitting exposure to the Safety Management process came when I was a weekend warrior training with the Airborne Regiment in Edmonton. I could only imagine the initial risk analysis that went on at National Defence Headquarters: define the hazard. “We want to throw healthy, marginally intelligent soldiers out of an airplane.” The risk would be defined as, “They will leave rather large holes in the ground upon landing. We will give them parachutes. That should prevent any divots!” It was at this point I was given a large cumbersome packsack with lots of heavy string, and sent to Edmonton.

The ensuing process was one of extended periods of hard physical training followed by periods of unbridled terror. We trained for several weeks and were becoming anxious to crawl aboard any airplane and get on with it. Finally, our platoon waddled aboard the Hercules with the usual nervous laughter and forced bravado that comes from such situations. The bravado was not due to testosterone levels, as the webbing from the harness cut off the circulation of all blood and hormones from the nether regions. It was not a comfortable existence and I tell you now that paratroopers do not jump out of a sense of duty, but only to minimize the time spent in their harnesses.

My first revelation came as I watched my colleagues line up at the open door of the Hercules. The ‘go’ light illuminated and this line of clumsy green men began to fall out the door. I anticipated seeing bodies falling down from the aircraft with chutes deploying as they descended. Hollywood rubbish! Think about it. You are stepping out into a 150-mph slipstream in one direction, from an aircraft moving at 150 mph in the opposite direction. I did not have time to rationalize what I was witnessing before I was at the door threshold and GONE. It was a terribly violent, exciting experience and the memory is as vivid now as it was then.

Toward the end of the course we had the opportunity to do a night jump. At this point we knew what to expect and we had developed a faith, however misplaced, in our equipment. Going out the door at night was an incredible experience. All the noise of kit preparation and shuffling to the aircraft door, all around you bathed in red light, Jumpmasters yelling to be heard over the engines, and then… stepping into the abyss. Your chute opens and there is no noise now except the popping of the chutes of your platoon mates. Everything around you goes silent and still. It is difficult to detect your own movement and while you can see the ground you have no depth perception.

It was time to go home and I was in a hotel lobby waiting for the airport shuttle. Standing very proudly in my CF greens, spit polish shoes, new gold parachute wings on my chest, I kept an upward angle on my chin and a downward angle on my gaze as I observed the mere mortals milling about the area. At this point a little old lady sauntered up and insisted that as I was obviously the bus driver, the least I could do was help her with her luggage. I never even got a tip.

There are several morals here which might apply to SMS. Preconceived notions can be a setup for shock. Keep an open mind as we navigate through SMS implementation. The more you can do now to plug in and inform yourself, the more you will eliminate a lot of shock when you are standing at the edge of that door. The other moral is, if you are ever wearing a uniform, give little old ladies a wide berth. They are bad for the ego.

Bottom line…. I think SMS will be a good thing for our industry. It will help us lower our accident rate and give us credibility with our clients and suppliers.

I wouldn’t worry about it anyway. By the time SMS gets around to us, Transport Canada’s implementation team will be a well-oiled machine, all operators will be willing and knowledgeable participants in this grand scheme, birds will be singing, the Leafs will win the cup and income tax will be abolished.

I don’t think anyone expects it to go without any hiccups, but by informing yourself and plugging in now, the abyss may not be as deep or as dark as it appears.