My question is :

 

If the RAA in Australia can train "Accident investigators" why can't the
GFA ??

 

Ben

 

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of
[email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, 25 April 2012 9:22 PM
To: [email protected]; Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in
Australia.
Subject: Re: [Aus-soaring] GFA Site/accident

 

Hi Mike, Mike Borgelt in particular, and All,

 

Very nicely put.

 

I note in particular your comment "...and the amount of knowledge gained
from NZ investigations is not significantly higher than here." I suspect
that you could widen "NZ" to "Worldwide".

 

At the risk of seeming outrageous, let me say that to the ATSB and its
previous incarnations, investigating glider accidents is, within the
bigger picture of accident investigation, "just plain boring".

 

How so? Let me explain.

 

Unless I am missing something, there are basically only two factors to any
gliding accident - mechanical failure, or pilot error( or incapacity). In
an ultimate analysis, everything can be reduced to these two fundamentals.
[There is no doubt that these fundamentals also apply to any accident
scenario where human beings are involved.]

Some pundit will no doubt be able to quote the "exact" figures for
gliding, but in gliding accidents MUCH less than 10% of accidents can be
attributed to mechanical failure. I will leave it to you to work out what
the remainder is allotted to! ....... However, do not jump to conclusions.
In (unfortunately far too many cases), WHAT happened is quite easy to
determine. WHY it happened cannot be determined at all! Nevertheless the
fundamental premise  that I have posited above must apply. 

 

Gliders, in comparison to say modern airliners are relatively simple
machines - just ask the boys in South Africa who developed the JS1.They
are reputed to have put in over 70,000 total hours to get to official Type
Approval! 

 

So, in a few instances of  gliding accidents there is a mechanical
problem. As gliders are such simple machines, any mechanical failure
should be relatively easy to determine. This does not require the input of
the ATSB. As Wombat has said, the ATSB generally leaves it to either one
of the other two entities who CAN legally investigate - the State Police,
or the State Coroner.

 

If you are particularly observant, you will note that neither Wombat nor
I, have mentioned the GFA in this context. Legally they do not have a
role. In practice they are generally requested to supply expert advice to
the Investigating Authority. Apart from anything else, this keeps the GFA
"in the loop".

 

[It is a digression, but it would seem in fact that these two bodies
Police/Coroner co-operate. Maybe some legal eagle might be able to explain
just what are the current arrangements, which may possibly vary from State
to State. I posit that in theory each one of the 3 entities is able to
carry out an independent investigation if it so chooses?]

 

So much for mechanical failures. 

 

What about Pilot Error?

 

Well pilots have been crashing, and in many cases dying, since man took to
the air. Every possible means of crashing has been explored from that time
until now. I suspect that all the possibilities for human error were
exhausted long ago: Hence the lack of ATSB interest. 

 

As a result of these experiences the GFA  produced a Manual of Standard
Procedures. You are of course perfectly free to ignore the accumulated
wisdom of ages, as set out in this document and taught by every accredited
instructor, but you do so at your peril.

 

Regards,

Gary

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

----- Original Message ----- 

From: Mike Cleaver <mailto:[email protected]>  

To: Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia.
<mailto:[email protected]>  

Sent: Wednesday, April 25, 2012 4:40 PM

Subject: Re: [Aus-soaring] GFA Site/accident

 

John and others

The ATSB has a system for classifying accidents and incidents - see on
their web site
http://www.atsb.gov.au/about_atsb/investigation-procedures.aspx and 
http://www.atsb.gov.au/about_atsb/investigation-procedures.aspx#fn2 
- the latter identifies what the various levels of investigation involve
in terms of ATSB resources.

Sport and recreational aviation accidents - even fatal ones - are almost
never accorded a classification higher than 4, which means that after the
recording of various factual information, the investigation is either
carried out with one or two ATSB investigators or may be referred to
another agency. In the case of a fatality this is often the police force
in the State or Territory where the accident occurred - either for
potential crime investigation or more likely for the Coroner to
investigate. The Police/Coroner will usually seek the assistance of the
GFA in the case of a gliding accident, but the GFA generally regards
itself as under-resourced to carry out aviation accident investigations,
as no funding is provided from Government sources to train and equip
investigators.In any event the funding provided by Government to the ATSB
is such that most accidents are not investigated in any level of detail,
unless they involve passenger transport operations in large or medium
capacity aircraft. The days when ATSB investigated sport aviation
accidents to any greater extent than this ended over 20 years ago, and are
not likely to return. 

While gliding fatalities are investigated by TAIC in New Zealand, that is
not the case here, and the amount of knowledge gained from NZ
investigations is not significantly higher than here.

A further factor that militates against the GFA conducting and publishing
accident reports is the fact that, unlike Government agencies, the
investigator may be held personally liable for the way findings are
reported, and challenged by relatives of the deceased or others who have
suffered personal or property loss, or by survivors of the event who may
claim some degree of negligence (read financial compensation for some
assumed fault by the GFA or its members) or defamation as a consequence of
the reporting.
This has the potential to affect all of us, whereas an ATSB investigation
is rarely handled this way. Note that this is a fact in spite of the
acknowledged purpose of accident investigations being to prevent
recurrences and identify procedures or training that may assist in this
goal: accident investigators do not lay blame for occurrences (and
sometimes it is hard to read into their reports any reference to even
obvious breaches of the law or safe operating procedures).

This is why we have to wait so long for a Coroner to produce a report
before we can make changes to the system, especially where training or
procedure changes are involved, or airworthiness actions.

Wombat


On 25/04/2012 12:09 PM, john.mcfarlane wrote: 

I would have thought that this is a mandated reportable incident via the
Fed Gov body delegated with that authority - ATSB.

Will there be a formal report from the ATSB?

  _____  

From: [email protected]
Sent: Monday, 23 April 2012 4:17
To: Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia.
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Aus-soaring] GFA Site/accident

Re accident prevention, in this instance we will have to wait on the
Coroner's report, which I would not expect any time soon. It may be able
to pinpoint a problem, and if so we - that is the collective we - can then
act. However I am not holding my breath on this one.

Regards,

Gary

 

 
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