Gbarentine's Blog

Known 'Best Practices' for AIRFIELD SAFETY - Airport Personnel
- Eliminate distractions in the operational area.
- Air traffic and airport operations should meet following each snow removal day and/or any other unusual event to discuss lessons learned.
- Eliminate confusing call signs for vehicles operating in the airport operations area.
- Maintain a well defined mowing plan and procedures, including specific area "Designations".
- Use a patch, or spot system, for mowing and/or farming operations.
- Use two vehicles for runway inspections to reduce "Time-on-Runway".
- Use high visibility vehicles to increase conspicuity for pilots, controllers and other drivers operating on the AOA (airport operations area).
- All vehicle lights (high beams, flashers, beacons, and strobes) should be turned on when crossing or operating on runways, taxiways or the AOA.
- Vehicle flashers and beacons help ATC, aircrews and other vehicle operators see vehicles in the AOA — especially during periods of reduced visibility and at night.
- Airport authority should distribute current airport diagrams to all airport users — especially FBO's for transient and student pilots and to other users within 50-100 miles of busy GA airports.
- Airport authority should coordinate with local fire department, ARFF, and associated training for access to the airfield. Create a "Letter of Agreement" on staging points, alert drills, etc.
- Re-designate confusing taxiways.
- Eliminate problem runways.
- Use current diagrams in all AOA access vehicles.
- Carry a current airport diagram with all AOA personnel badges.
- Obtain and use airport diagrams. Use the FAA runway safety website to find airport diagrams for all airports.
- The airport authority is encouraged to share its driver's training program. (Even FAA employees are required to take training if they are on the airfield.)
- Utilize CD-based pilot and driver's education training materials and electronic programs.
- All AOA access authorized personnel, including taxi-qualified mechanics, should complete a driver's training program — to include recurrent training.
- Require and schedule FAA employee driver's training and recurrent training/testing.
- Ensure on-airport farming operators are trained and aware of airport operations and its inherent dangers. Ensure farmers know and adhere to agricultural leased boundaries.
- Encourage inclusion of surface safety training in maintenance school curriculum for taxi and/or tow-qualified mechanics.
- Offer training and awareness education to local contractors working on the airport, and monitor them.
- Ensure drivers know where to look for traffic when a pilot isn't talking to the tower or broadcasting on CTAF.
- AOA access authorized personnel should have an awareness and understanding of the "uniqueness of helicopter operations".
- Conduct "Clearing Turns" prior to entering ANY runway.
- Place signs and marking placards in all AOA access vehicles.
- Know who has access to the airfield.
- Maximize controlled access to the airfield, including wildlife.
- Enforce a "No Tailgating" policy to ensure vehicles remain within proximity until gate is closed and secure to prevent unauthorized "Tailgating".
- Inform the public. Get signs up, "NO TRESPASSING". Enforce "No Trespassing" through ordinance.
- Keep the runway a runway, no racing.
- Conduct opposite flow runway inspections. Runway inspections should be conducted toward the flow of aircraft landing and departing as much as possible.
- Enforce maximum use of existing service roads; stay off of the runway as much as possible.
- Build and maintain access roads to Navaids from service roads or taxiways, not from runways.
- Use tunable radios.
- Enforce a policy of "No Cell Phone" use for personnel while operating on the airfield.
- Install and/or remove additional signs (including surface painted) and markings to eliminate confusion.
- Create an airport sign plan and adhere to it.
- Use lighted runway closure markers to warn pilots of a closed runway.
- Install signs at the entry point to the AOA and runway safety areas.
- Prevent potential obstructions.
- Use standardized "12 inch" and highlighted hold position markings.
- Maintain runway and taxiway markings.
- Install elevated runway guard lights (ERGL's) at known Hot Spots and/or high risk intersections.
- For new construction, use in-pavement runway guard lights (RGL) at known Hot Spots and/or high risk intersections.
- Update the airport remarks section in the Airport Facility Directory with all applicable data including runway safety information.
- Determine and publish "line-of-sight" restrictions — can aircraft at opposite ends of the runway see each other?
- Increase awareness and advertise of local wildlife issues.
- Advertise seasonal crops, which might affect line-of-sight for pilots.
- Issue NOTAMS for snow removal operations and mowing operations.
- Designate and publish a "Calm Wind" runway at part-time and non-towered airports.
- Advertise crop dusting operations in the area.
- Encourage CTAF usage when the airport is "Non-Towered" in the AFD, Hot Spot Brochure, Airport Website, and Posters at ALL on-site facilities.
- Encourage local flight schools to emphasize runway safety during initial and recurrent training & BFR's.
- Encourage pilots to have a "heads up" policy when taxiing.
- Use follow-me vehicles when the ramp is unusually close to a runway and/or for a confusing taxiway route.
- Attend and conduct safety seminars and programs on RUNWAY SAFETY.
- Improve safety by teaching, advocating, stressing and understanding situational awareness.
- Cite specific airport RUNWAY SAFETY web pages.
- Use Hot Spot brochures.
- Distribute RUNWAY SAFETY materials to every aviation entity.
- Package and distribute runway safety materials to: Flight Schools, Flight Safety International, Maintenance Centers, Aircraft Manufacturers, etc.
- Realize that every airport is unique and presents its own set of RUNWAY SAFETY challenges.
- Stay alert; stay alive.
- Declare war on errors; make it everyone's responsibility.
- Look for runway incursion potential when reviewing airport construction safety plans, especially for haul routes.
- Always think SAFETY FIRST.
Author
-
-
Gbarentine
Hi, I work for a small commercial airport in Hot Springs, Arkansas...
-
Member since 06/15/09
-
77 posts
Post Comments
Add Your Comment!
Log in to leave a comment or Create an account » All comments» Comments RSS