An official website of the United States government
A .mil website belongs to an official U.S. Department of Defense organization in the United States.
A lock (lock ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .mil website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Home : News : Article View
NEWS | March 28, 2011

Air Guard diminishing the ‘human factor’ one Airman at a time

By Air Force Maj. Gabe Johnson 162nd Fighter Wing

TUCSON, Ariz. - The concerted efforts of Air Force safety officials and aircraft maintainers to remove the human element from preventable mishaps are deeply rooted in a humanitarian ethos – the idea that every Airman deserves to go home safe at night.

Maintenance Resource Management is the safety movement sweeping across the Total Force, picking up disciples along the way. Recently, 59 maintainers representing a spectrum of ranks and weapon system specialties visited the 162nd Fighter Wing here to become certified MRM instructors, enabling them to spread the word and change the service’s safety culture – one Airman at a time.

The program, which is derived from the established cockpit resource management concept used by aircrews, abolishes the authoritarian approach to safety and empowers the most junior Airman to speak up about possible risks.

Under MRM, all tasks are evaluated by a team of maintainers who are taught to rely on planning and preparation, decision making, communication, mutual support, task management and lessons learned.

Although the Air Force operates safer than it ever has during its history, proponents of MRM are working to bring the margin to zero – or close to it.

Following a study of aviation mishaps between 1992 and 2002, the Air Force determined that about 18 percent of its aircraft mishaps were attributable to maintenance human error. The study cited such mistakes as failure to follow published aircraft manuals, lack of assertive communication among maintenance technicians and improper assembly practices.

In 2005, the Air National Guard Aviation Safety Division made the MRM program available to the Guard's 88 flying wings. In 2006, the Department of Defense recognized the value of the program by adopting a variant of ANG MRM for training throughout the Air Force, and it is now widely used with substantial results.

Organizations that fully employ MRM experience up to a 67 percent reduction in preventable mishaps, injuries, lost workdays and lost equipment.

Air Force Col. Doug Slocum, the Air National Guard director of safety and the author of the MRM curriculum, saw the sites of his hometown as a boy from a beanbag chair in the back of this parent’s pick up.

“If you saw someone doing that today you’d call 9-1-1,” he said.

He uses this anecdote from his personal past to highlight how safety behavior evolves in a given culture, and he raises the question of what will be the safety norms – attitudes and behaviors – of 2025.

Slocum, an F-16 Fighting Falcon pilot by trade, is a student of history, statistics and human behavior – all of which are keys to his program. He notes that over time many of the mechanical traps in aviation were engineered out of the equation, yet mishaps still occur because of the human factor.

“In the human being aspect of getting work done, how do we work better together? We have to move to a level of excellence that has not been thought of before. We can be proud of our heritage, but from a safety standpoint we can’t look back in time and say that’s where we’d ever want to go again,” Slocum said. “Instead, we want to look at where we are now and, more importantly, where will we be in 20 years. What will be our acceptable safety behavior then?”

Air Force Lt. Col. Dave LaTour, chief of safety for the 150th Special Operations Squadron at McGuire Air Force Base, N.J., is one of the converted who now trains other MRM instructors.

“People are so afraid of failure that they rush toward success and inadvertently introduce failure. Rushing is all thrust with no vector. Instead of being in a hurry we want to be quick because quick is intentional and precise about where you are going,” LaTour said.

“Assumptions are also a challenge we have to overcome. We assume that because we are intelligent and proficient at our job that we don’t need someone to check our work, and we assume that rank either inhibits or empowers us when the reality is that we are equals when it comes to keeping each other safe.”

Air Force Lt. Col. Dom Sarnataro, a C-130 Hercules pilot and chief of safety for the 189th Airlift Wing at Little Rock Air Force Base, Ark., is a newly minted instructor from the Tucson course. He said MRM incorporates many of the safety practices he uses in the cockpit.

“MRM encourages members to read about safety mishaps from around the service,” he said. “I am safest at my job after I hear a safety brief about a pilot who got hurt. You naturally think, ‘That could happen to me.’”

Lessons learned factor into an overall MRM approach that helps maintainers assess risk.

“Take an engine change for example,” said Sarnataro, “there’s lighting within five miles, we have a younger guy on the job and it’s windy. All of these factors can add up to an unacceptable risk to get the job done. All it takes is one individual to speak up.”

And more teamwork for every task creates more opportunity to speak up.

“One Airman might be a 90 percent kind of worker,” he said, “meaning that nine out of 10 times his work is error free. But if he works alongside another 90 percent kind of worker he’ll get the benefit of another perspective and together they’ve cut their possibility of error from one in 10 to one in 100. If you have a 90 percent kind of supervisor check the team’s work, suddenly you have an overall error rate that’s all the way down to one in 1,000.”

According to Slocum, the future of Air Force maintenance safety could become automated to insulate people from preventable errors. He proposes a system of checks and balances that ensures real-time compliance with safety measures; a system that automatically verifies all steps involved in a certain task including the qualification of the maintainer and the supervisor’s inspection of the work.

He openly claims he’s no public speaker, yet to date he’s personally trained 60,000 Airmen in MRM.

“Safety is all about family, so I’ll call it a passion. At the end of every course I show a picture of my daughter Keira. Every day after work, each one of us deserves to go home safe to our family, and that’s our main objective in safety.”

 

 

Related Articles
U.S. Soldiers assigned to the 108th Medical Company Area Support, 213th Regional Support Group prepare dummies for a simulated casualty evacuation at Fort Indiantown Gap, Pennsylvania, July 17, 2025. The 108th Medical Company engaged in a weeklong field medical exercise to validate their readiness and elevate their medical and basic Soldier skills. (U.S. Army National Guard photo by Capt. Christopher Booker)
Pennsylvania Guard Medics Simulate Chaos in Exercise
By Capt. Christopher Booker, | July 18, 2025
FORT INDIANTOWN GAP, Pa. - Soldiers assigned to the Pennsylvania National Guard's 108th Medical Company Area Support, 213th Regional Support Group, are engaged in a comprehensive two-week field medical exercise here.The...

Nevada Air National Guard's 152nd Maintenance Group and 152nd Logistics Readiness Squadron personnel load Modular Airborne Fire Fighting System (MAFFS) equipment onto MAFFS #8, aircraft #554 at the Nevada Air National Guard Base on July 12, 2025. U.S. Northern Command activated two Modular Airborne Fire Fighting System (MAFFS) Aircraft, one from the 152nd Airlift Wing out of Reno, Nevada, and one from the 146th Airlift Wing out of Channel Islands Air National Guard Station in California. Two C-130 aircraft equipped with MAFFS and their associated personnel will support firefighting efforts in the Western United States. The 152nd Airlift Wing’s “High Rollers” and 146th Airlift Wing's “Hollywood Guard” report on July 14, 2025, and will be initially based out of Channel Islands Air National Guard Base in California and are anticipated to be in place through August 14, 2025.
Nevada Air Guard Wing Assists in Firefighting Efforts
By Senior Master Sgt. Paula Macomber, | July 18, 2025
RENO, Nev. – U.S. Northern Command has activated two Modular Airborne Fire Fighting System Aircraft, one from the Nevada Air National Guard’s 152nd Airlift Wing out of Reno, Nevada, and one from the 146th Airlift Wing out of...

Air Force Gen. Steve Nordhaus, 30th Chief of the National Guard Bureau, and Senior Enlisted Advisor John Raines, SEA to the CNGB, join Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and Air Force Maj. Gen. Thomas Suelzer, the adjutant general of Texas, for an aerial assessment of flood-affected areas in Central Texas and to visit Guardsmen on duty supporting civil authorities with response efforts, Kerrville, Texas, July 15, 2025. To date, National Guard search and rescue operations, led by the Texas National Guard, have resulted in the rescue of more than 525 Texans. Hundreds of Guardsmen remain on mission to continue working with interagency partners in search and rescue and recovery operations.
Nordhaus, Raines see Heroism, Partnerships in Central Texas
By Master Sgt. Zach Sheely, | July 18, 2025
KERRVILLE, Texas – Early on July 4, almost 30 inches of rain fell within hours across Central Texas’s Hill Country, surging the Guadalupe River and triggering catastrophic flash flooding.Within hours, Texas National Guard...