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Office of Inspector General Audit Report: Long Term Success of Atsap Will Require Improvements in Oversight, Accountability, and Transparency: Project
Office of Inspector General U. S. Depart
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Office of Inspector General Audit Report: Long Term Success of Atsap Will Require Improvements in Oversight, Accountability, and Transparency: Project - Office of Inspector General U. S. Depart
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Synopsis "Office of Inspector General Audit Report: Long Term Success of Atsap Will Require Improvements in Oversight, Accountability, and Transparency: Project"
On July 19, 2012, we issued a report on the Federal Aviation Administration's (FAA) oversight of the Air Traffic Safety Action Program (ATSAP)-a voluntary non-punitive reporting program for air traffic controllers to report safety concerns, such as operational errors and events that present hazards to aviation. We found that, although FAA completed ATSAP implementation at all air traffic control facilities in 2010, the Agency will need to make significant improvements before ATSAP will be able to effectively identify and address the root causes of safety risks. For example, due to ATSAP provisions designed to protect controller confidentiality, much of the ATSAP data that FAA collects are not validated, raising questions about the effectiveness of these data for analyzing safety trends. We also found that FAA's oversight of ATSAP lacks effective program management controls. For example, FAA does not have a formal process to review the effectiveness of decisions made by the program's review committees to ensure that report acceptance criteria are rigorously followed and that conduct issues are dealt with appropriately. Failure to address potential deficiencies in transparency and accountability may lead to the perception that ATSAP is an amnesty program in which reports are automatically accepted, regardless of whether they qualify under the program's guidelines.