Regional Airline Association Embarks on Strategic Safety Initiative

June 11, 2009
Multi-part initiative to look at human factors in accidents

Aggressive Industry Program Seeks to Achieve Goal of Zero Accidents

WASHINGTON , June 11 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- In testimony before the United States House of Representatives Aviation Subcommittee today, Regional Airline Association President Roger Cohen told Congress that the industry has embarked upon a Strategic Safety Initiative that will push for new advances in aviation safety. The multi-part Initiative will look at human factors that have led to accidents in order to avoid incidents in the future. The program will bring together safety experts and calls for several measures in partnership with labor, management, regulators, Congress and other industry stakeholders.

"Flying is the safest form of travel, and we want to keep it that way," said Roger Cohen , President of RAA. "We need to take bold action to address every single issue that could possibly affect the culture of safety that is the fundamental cornerstone of the aviation industry."

RAA's Strategic Safety Initiative has four elements.

1) Safety Board - RAA is bringing together safety professionals to review procedures and address issues that can even be perceived as a contributing factor to an accident.

2) Fatigue Study - The Association will commission an independent and scientific study, analyzing the impact of fatigue and other human factors that may affect pilot performance.

3) Fatigue Awareness Management Program - RAA will create a fatigue awareness management program for use by its member airlines.

4) Industry-Government Partnership - The industry is reaching out in partnership with Congress, across the government, and to fellow stakeholders in labor and throughout the aviation industry to explore the full range of issues which could help improve safety and prevent future accidents. Among those issues:

-- Establish a single, integrated FAA database of pilot records -- Extend the period for background checks from five to 10 years -- Conduct random fatigue testing -- Examine commuting -- Analyze information from cockpit voice recorders in settings other than accident investigations -- Mine check ride data for trends

"We need to take the next steps into the new frontier of information management to better track trends and analyze human factors," said Mr. Cohen. "This initiative will look for more ways we as an industry can reach our goal of zero accidents."

This initiative is in addition to stringent training programs regional airlines already have in place. These include nine different FAA and industry approved safety programs such as FOQA, ASAP, ASIAS, LOSA, DOD, IOSA, AQP, VDRP and ATOS. In addition, as a common practice, the industry tests pilots every six or nine months on critical skills through check rides. Check rides are pass/fail exams the pilots must successfully complete in order to fly. When pilots take these check rides they must demonstrate 100% proficiency. This goes above and beyond what is required by the FAA. In addition to the safety programs, our member airlines also institute a variety of training programs, they follow stringent hiring practices, have fatigue management and maintenance programs in place.

Regional Airline Association

Founded in 1975, the Regional Airline Association (RAA) represents regional airlines before legislative and regulatory agencies, and also provides a wide array of technical, educational, and promotional support to regional airlines and their supply company partners. RAA's 32 member airlines operate one half of all U.S. scheduled passenger flights and carry more than one in five domestic passengers. RAA members serve more than 600 U.S. airports, and some 70 percent of those airports depend on regional airlines, exclusively, for their only source of scheduled air service.

SOURCE Regional Airline Association