Despite safety successes in recent years, our Army is missing
opportunities to prevent aviation accidents. As of June 14,
2012, 16 Class A accidents and nine fatalities had been
reported throughout the aviation community, compared to 15
Class A accidents and seven fatalities during fiscal 2011.
Current accident trends include breakdowns in standards,
discipline and maintenance, with human error cited as a
contributing factor in every Class A this year.
Where do these breakdowns occur? Indiscipline among
crewmembers, poor quality mission briefings and lack of
coordination between maintenance shifts and maintainers all
have been revealed during recent investigations. These trends
are reversible, but we must address them now before the next
catastrophic accident happens. Three critical issues are of the
utmost importance, and it is incumbent upon commanders, leaders
and trainers emphasize each area within their formations.
First, aviation leaders must reinforce a command climate of
accountability. Violations of regulations and procedures must
never be tolerated, no matter how popular a crewmember or
maintainer is within the unit or chain of command. Observations
from recently deployed units reveal that engaged leadership
works, and units that aggressively attack the causes of minor
incidents find it a profoundly effective mitigation strategy
for reducing major accidents. Safety is a mindset that must
permeate the organization, and when on-the-spot corrections are
occurring at the squad or section level, the team is safer.
Every individual must do what is right, even when no one is
looking.
Second, individual leaders should review their unit's
three-step mission approval process. Investigations from this
fiscal year show repeated breakdowns in step two, specifically
regarding mission planning and briefing. Interaction between
the crew and their mission briefing officer is paramount to
identify, assess and mitigate risk for a specific flight or
mission. A disturbing trend revealed in several mishap
investigations is that even on a medium risk mission, the
mission briefing officer had not conducted a face-to-face
and/or over-the-shoulder briefing. Ensuring missions are
thoroughly briefed and detailed throughout the approval process
makes a difference in saving lives and protecting our combat
power. Command and control of attached units in a dispersed
area of operations is a challenge; it is imperative that the
mission approval process is robust and include commanders who
make the tough calls on crew mix, mission assignment and
accepting the risk inherent in any mission.
Finally, maintainers both on and off the flight line are as
important as the pilots executing the mission. Aviation
maintenance not only generates, but also preserves, combat
power when managed by the book. Specifically, when
transitioning a prescribed load list and an aviation stock list
from one unit to another during the relief in place period,
properly handling and documenting maintenance on parts is
essential to avoiding the installation of a bad part on an
aircraft. With around-the-clock maintenance, proper
documentation of maintenance actions and a thorough handover
between shifts, maintainers can be sure their tasks are
conducted to standard.
For risk mitigation suggestions and strategies specific to
aviation, visit the U.S. Army Combat Readiness/Safety Center
Aviation Directorate web page at
https://safety.army.mil/atf/Home/tabid/1565/Default.aspx.
Tools hosted on the site include recently updated crash rescue
posters and videos, Flightfax magazine, and the Safety
Awareness Program -- Aviation, an initiative to develop and
implement an anonymous aviation hazard reporting system.
More information on Army Safety may be found at
https://safety.army.mil.