FAA rule means more aviation entities required to have a safety management system

Washington — Commercial and charter airlines, aircraft manufacturers, and air tour operators must establish a safety management system, according to a Federal Aviation Administration final rule that went into effect May 28.

The rule describes a safety management system as “a formal, top-down, organizationwide approach to managing safety risk and ensuring the effectiveness of safety risk controls.” All SMSs must include components covering:

  • Safety policy
  • Safety risk management
  • Safety assurance
  • Safety promotion

Whereas the traditional industry approach to safety “was based on the reactive analysis of past accidents,” a SMS “helps organizations proactively identify potential hazards in the operating environment, analyze the risks of those hazards, and mitigate those risks to prevent an accident or incident,” FAA says.

- Digital Partners -

The rule further calls on those required to have an SMS to “share hazard information with each other and work together to identify and address hazards and safety issues.”

A 2023 FAA final rule required an SMS in more than 200 commercial airports nationwide. The latest rule, which stemmed from investigations of separate fatal incidents, extends beyond a 2020 Congressional mandate requiring aircraft manufacturers to implement a SMS.

- Digital Partners -

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