Aviation Safety Action Program

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The Aviation Safety Action Program (ASAP) is a US aviation proactive safety program. ASAP promotes safety by encouraging voluntary self reporting of safety occurrences and situations to the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) certificate holder. The reports are analyzed to reduce hazards and focus training.[1] Reporting is encouraged by providing the volunteer reporter protection from certificate action. ASAP forms a safety team between the FAA, the certificate holder (airline/operator), employee, and the operator's employee labor organization.[2] Safety improvement occurs without discipline, encouraging further and continued hazard reporting.[1]

FAA guidance[edit]

The US Department of Transportation FAA produces the Advisory Circular 120-66C directing how to implement the ASAP program at the certificate holder's company.[3] The Aviation Safety Action Program (ASAP) starts with all parties, FAA/Certificate holder/Union, signing a memorandum of understanding (MOU).[4] The time frame for ASAP report submission is limited. Reports are reviewed by the Event Review Committee (ERC) normally composed of the FAA, operator, and union representative. The ERC normally decides to accept an ASAP report unless it is ineligible. Accepted ASAP reports are reviewed for data and possible further action such as employee contact or additional training.[3]

ASAP ineligibility[edit]

ASAP reports are ineligible if: there is intentional noncompliance; safety is intentionally disregarded; actions are criminal; substance abuse; or intentional falsification.[1]

Sister programs[edit]

Other proactive safety programs include the Flight Operations Quality Assurance and NASA's Aviation Safety Reporting System.[citation needed]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "ASAP Info Sheet". ACSF.aero. ACSF. Retrieved May 30, 2020.
  2. ^ "Aviation Safety Action Program". faa.gov. FAA. Retrieved May 29, 2020.
  3. ^ a b "Subject: Aviation Safety Action Program" (PDF). FAA.gov. FAA. Retrieved May 30, 2020.
  4. ^ "Automated Memorandum of Understanding Generator". FAA.gov. FAA. Retrieved May 30, 2020.

External links[edit]