Wingnut a wrong'in?
Ref:
More on that bollocks CC speech, via Creepy - see here: http://www.auntypru.com/forum/thread-161...ml#pid9534
I now fully concur with Ol'Tom's OP - i.e. Carmody is a wrong'in and definitely not the reform CEO that the industry so desperately needs -
MTF...P2
Ref:
(11-14-2018, 04:27 PM)Gobbledock Wrote: Wingnut in cloud cuckoo land???
I heard a rumour about two bizzare things that Carmody is meant to have said at the AAA conference in Brisbane;
1. An audience member asked him what his thoughts were on GA declining, mostly due to CAsA embuggerance. He said ‘GA is growing, it’s not in decline, and no, CAsA does not have an effect on GA’. Apparently the audience started laughing. And;
2. Wingnut mentioned that the regulatory reform program has been going on for 20 years!! Hey Shane you complete fool, you missed 10 years!!! It’s 30 years
Aagh the AAA, back to the piss boys and girls!
More on that bollocks CC speech, via Creepy - see here: http://www.auntypru.com/forum/thread-161...ml#pid9534
Quote:On regulatory reform, Carmody said CASA had been working hard on finalising its regulatory program after more than two decades.
Six flight operations regulations known as “the six-pack” – Parts 91, 119, 121, 133, 135 and 138 — were on track to be made this year. Part 149 on self-administering organisations was made earlier this year.
He said his aim, politics notwithstanding, was to get the remaining lower priority regulations through early next year.
“So that’s seven on track for this year with about three to go and then the job will be done,’’ he said. “We’re pushing pretty hard to get that done because it changes people’s perceptions of us as an organisation because we deliver.’’
The CASA boss said a key transformation now underway related to how CASA managed and improved its surveillance, including the 320 aerodome operators (about 195 certified aerodromes and 127 regulated aerodromes).
He said there had been a been minor drop for the quantity of registered aerodromes and a steady increase in the requests for new certifications, mostly from the mining and resources sector.
CASA also planned to have another look at “Sector Risk Profiles” (SRPs) that aim to identify sector-specific risks.
These presented stakeholders with risk profile compiled using the authority’s data as well as information from the Australian Transport Safety Bureau and the Bureau of Infrastructure, Transport and Regional Economics.
“At the moment the document is a fixed document in time,’’ he said. “So we’ll have another look at the aerodrome SRP sometime next year as the current one has probably almost reached its intended life.
“But ultimately it will be a living sector risk profile— this is what I intended to achieve across all sectors – so it can dynamically updated.
“This is something my information technology systems don’t support at the moment but certainly will.’’
The SRP would also be expanded to include unregulated aerodromes but CASA would try to align it with the post-implementation review of PART 139 early next year, Carmody said.
Also established this year was regular risk profiling for airspace that would soon be developed to include an ongoing risk analysis for aerodromes.
“We have the capacity to conduct surveillance risk profiling now on a monthly basis, but we hope to increase that to a daily or weekly soon,’’ he said.
The CASA boss said the authority was now grading surveillance differently, switching from non-compliance notices to safety alerts , safety findings or safety observations .
He said improved options for information sharing meant members of the aviation community could ask copies of the sector analysis relevant to them which outlined the top five factors from CASA’s Authorisation Golder Performance Indicator tool.
A National Surveillance Selection Process established in July also provided a systematic national approach to prioritising and scheduling planned surveillance.
It would be one of the pillars of surveillance along with national sector campaigns, CASA’s response to incidents and accidents and regulatory services.
“Put simply, we have 1032 surveillance events planned for the financial year – across all disciplines and across our entire area of responsibility,’’ he said.
“This is effectively looking more deeply into how we plan and conduct our surveillance activities.”
For aerodromes, Carmody said the NSSP would provide CASA with an opportunity to apply a consistent, risk management approach to surveillance.
It would allow it to schedule surveillance at least 12 months ahead and it was looking to couple it with a mobile client tool to establish greater standardisation of surveillance events and data.
Carmody also signalled he would oppose any move to water down CASA’s role to put commercial considerations ahead of safety.
“In our current form, we were established with our focus being first and foremost on safety,’’ he said.
“This stemmed from the tragic Monarch and Seaview accidents in 1993 and 1994 – a long way in the memory for some but for many of us not that far back at all – when the Civil Aviation Authority … was found to have failed in its safety responsibility because it placed commercial considerations ahead of safety of passengers.
“I will do my utmost while I’m in the job to ensure that this never occurs again.
“Our key role is the safety regulation of civil air operations in Australian territory and the operation of Australian aircraft outside Australian territory.
“And the Act that I have sitting on my desk says that in exercising my powers and performing my functions, CASA must regard the safety of air navigation as our most important consideration.
“And that remains our focus” - P2 comment: Hmm...why do those spin & bulldust weasel words sound so familiar?
Ah yes...
I now fully concur with Ol'Tom's OP - i.e. Carmody is a wrong'in and definitely not the reform CEO that the industry so desperately needs -
MTF...P2