NASA Aviation Safety Reporting System Turns 30

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Nov. 9, 2006

J.D. Harrington
Headquarters, Washington
202-358-5241

Les Dorr, Jr.
Federal Aviation Administration, Washington
202-267-3883

Michael Mewhinney 
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif. 
650-604-3937 

RELEASE: 06-345

NASA AVIATION SAFETY REPORTING SYSTEM TURNS 30

WASHINGTON -- NASA's Aviation Safety Reporting System (ASRS) recently 
marked its 30-year anniversary. The confidential reporting system is 
widely used by pilots and other airline employees to identify 
potential safety hazards.

Established in 1975 under a memorandum of understanding between NASA 
and the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), the system collects, 
analyzes and responds to voluntarily submitted aviation safety 
incident reports to reduce aviation accidents and improve safety. The 
confidential reports are also used to identify deficiencies and 
discrepancies in the National Aviation System that need to be 
remedied.

"Since the implementation of the Aviation Safety Reporting System in 
1976, more than 474,000 reports have been submitted by pilots, 
mechanics, air traffic controllers, flight attendants and other 
airline personnel," said Linda Connell, director of the ASRS. The 
system is located at NASA Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif. 
"Many of those reports have had a direct impact on making the 
nation's airways safer, and we're extremely proud of that safety 
record."

"ASRS is an excellent tool that has helped us spot rare and infrequent 
emerging threats and hazards," said FAA Associate Administrator for 
Aviation Safety Nicholas A. Sabatini. "To continue putting downward 
pressure on the accident rate, we need this kind of information about 
trends, about precursors, and about what is going on every day in the 
aviation system."

Over the past 30 years the ASRS has issued more than 2,500 safety 
alerts to the commercial and private aviation community and 
approximately 42 percent of the alert recipients have taken action to 
correct the hazardous condition and improve safety. 

For example, in 1978 an analysis of ASRS incident data assisted in the 
development of new procedures and improved runway and airline taxi 
marking systems by the FAA and the National Transportation Safety 
Board. In 1991, another ASRS data analysis helped in the 
establishment of additional new procedures and improved runway and 
taxi marking systems.

In another incident, an ASRS safety alert concerning a passenger's bag 
in a DC-10 aircraft that was smoldering due to an animal-shaped 
butane cigarette lighter sparked the FAA to issue a notice to airport 
security personnel to watch for toy-shaped cigarette lighters.

Data from ASRS has helped lead to revisions in formatting and content 
of aviation checklists and manuals for flight crews. Thanks in part 
to safety alerts published by the ASRS, the FAA now requires 
pre-flight inspections for ice on the outside of the aircraft to 
reduce the potential for hazardous ice-buildup on wings and other 
parts of the aircraft. 

ASRS safety information also helped the FAA develop new regulations 
requiring increased separation behind Boeing 757 aircraft to reduce 
wake turbulence and avoid wake vortices. It has led to new safety 
regulations governing the use of passenger electronic devices to 
reduce their impact on aircraft communication and navigation systems, 
and improvements in runway warning lights and markers. 

"The ASRS is the largest repository of aviation human factors 
incidents in the world," Connell said. "The system has conducted more 
than 5,800 database searches for government agencies, students, 
research organizations, aircraft manufacturers and a wide variety of 
other organizations. We're particularly proud that in the 30 years of 
its existence, the ASRS has never breached the confidentiality of its 
reporting system."

Through its Web site the ASRS has provided public access to a wide 
variety of aviation safety information, publications, database 
reports, and the confidential incident report forms. The ASRS has 
become a model for safety reporting systems worldwide and spawned the 
creation of the Patient Reporting System, among others.

For information about ASRS on the Internet, visit:

http://asrs.arc.nasa.gov 

For information about NASA and agency programs on the Internet, visit:

http://www.nasa.gov/home 

	
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