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Regulatory surveillance

Regulatory surveillance has not always proven effective at verifying whether operators are, or have become, compliant with regulations and able to manage the safety of their operations. Furthermore, Transport Canada (TC) hasn’t always intervened on a timely basis to ensure transportation operators in the air, marine and rail sectors take appropriate corrective actions.

The situation

*Note: In 2018, the TSB included “safety management and oversight” as a single issue on the Watchlist. For Watchlist 2020, these two issues have been separated into the issues of Safety management and Regulatory surveillance to allow a greater focus on their individual elements.

Transcript

Transportation operators are responsible for compliance with regulations and managing the safety of their operations.

Simply having regulations and standards is not enough.

Investigations show that audits and inspections are not always effective at verifying compliance with regulations or that operators are effectively managing safety across Canada’s air, marine and rail modes.

More effective and timely surveillance is needed to identify safety management processes that are not working, and to intervene in a timely manner. 

The issue of regulatory surveillance will remain on the Watchlist until effective oversight strategies and processes are implemented.

Learn more about Watchlist 2020 at tsb.gc.ca/watchlist

All transportation operators are responsible for managing the safety risks within their organizations and operations. Regulations help by providing operators a guiding framework and stipulating certain minimum requirements and levels of safety. However, it is up to operators to meet those requirements; it is TC’s responsibility to inspect and audit operators to confirm that they are compliant with these regulations and that minimum levels of safety are met.

However, inspections and audits, whether conducted by TC or by others on its behalf (in the marine industry), have not consistently proven effective, and the TSB has noted various deficiencies and concerns over the years in each sector of transportation—specifically:

AIR – TC is not always effective at identifying gaps in a company’s safety management processes and intervening in a timely manner. Moreover, at times, there has been an imbalance between the use of traditional inspections to verify compliance with regulations and auditing company safety processes to assess if they are working.

MARINE – TC’s surveillance program is not always effective, nor does it address all commercial vessels. For example, small vessels Footnote 1 go largely uninspected and TC places responsibility for safety on authorized representatives (AR).Footnote 2 However, many owners or ARs of small vessels have limited awareness of key sections of the Canada Shipping Act, 2001, or of the broader regulatory framework. Meanwhile, for larger vessels,Footnote 3 TC delegates most statutory inspections to third-party recognized organizationsFootnote 4, and then monitors the regulatory compliance of these vessels through compliance inspections. The monitoring of these organizations and the vessels being inspected is not consistent, resulting in situations where regulatory compliance on board these vessels goes unverified.

RAIL – Some transportation companies are not managing their safety risks effectively, as evidenced by increases in the main-track train accident rate, the number of uncontrolled movements and the recent number of employee fatalities. Furthermore, TC’s follow-up and intervention is not always effective at changing unsafe operating practices.

The risks to people, property, and the environment

There is an expectation by Canadians travelling on and using services provided by TC-inspected and -approved transportation companies that these operations are safe and that they meet the basic regulatory requirements — and if not, that TC will take proactive steps so that operators are returned to compliance in a timely manner.

However, when this does not happen and surveillance measures are not sufficient to identify safety deficiencies—or if TC is unable to intervene to ensure that operators take appropriate corrective actions—then unsafe or non-compliant operating practices may continue. As a result, minimum levels of safety may not be met, putting in jeopardy the safety of people, property, and the environment.

TSB recommendations

The TSB has issued recommendations addressing the issue of regulatory surveillance in the air, marine, and rail sectors. None of the responses, from any sector, have yet been assessed by the Board as “Fully Satisfactory.” Refer to the TSB’s website for a full description of the TSB’s assessment rating system.

In the air sector, Recommendation A16-14 calls for TC to “enhance its oversight policies, procedures and training to ensure the frequency and focus of surveillance, as well as post-surveillance oversight activities, including enforcement, are commensurate with the capability of the operator to effectively manage risk.” Although it has been four years since the recommendation was issued, in March 2020 the TSB assessed TC’s response as only Satisfactory in part.

In the marine sector, Recommendation M17-02 calls for TC to “require commercial passenger vessel operators to adopt explicit risk management processes, and develop comprehensive guidelines to be used by vessel operators and Transport Canada inspectors to assist them in the implementation and oversight of those processes.” TC has consulted with industry on the content of the regulatory proposal. In early 2020, TC was in the process of pre-publication and had not yet consulted with industry on its updated regulatory proposal; therefore, the Board was unable to determine the proposal’s practicality or effectiveness, and so was unable to assess TC’s response.

In the rail sector, Recommendation R14-05, issued in the wake of the 2013 disaster at Lac-Mégantic, Quebec, calls for TC to “audit the safety management systems of railways in sufficient depth and frequency to confirm that the required processes are effective and that corrective actions are implemented to improve safety.” While TC has conducted a cycle of audits to verify operator compliance with the revised SMS Regulations, it has just begun to verify operators SMS for effectiveness. The TSB’s most recent assessment of TC’s response (dated February 2020) is Satisfactory intent.

Actions taken

Issues on the Watchlist are complex and difficult to solve, requiring action from many stakeholders including operators and the regulator. Even when more needs to be done, some initial steps have often been taken. These are listed here.

AIR — In 2019, TC developed and implemented guidance, tools, and training to improve the quality of findings produced during surveillance activities, as well as the decisions made related to the oversight of commercial aviation, and its risk-based planning methodology.

MARINE — TC has updated its Concentrated Inspection Campaign checklist to be used during statutory and risk-based inspections on passenger vessels that are more than 15 GT or carry more than 12 passengers. TC says it will use the information collected during these inspections to assess the level of regulatory compliance and to determine if further action is needed. TC has also recently proposed a tiered system that would expand the applicability of SMS regulations to more vessels.Footnote 5

RAIL — Since 2018, TC has made significant progress in its SMS oversight program, including:

TC has also completed a comprehensive audit program to ensure that Class 1 railways have deployed an SMS framework that is compliant with regulatory requirements.

Actions required

This issue will remain on the Watchlist until the following measures have been taken: