International Civil
Aviation Organization Recommends Adopting Global
Standards
By ANDY PASZTOR
International air-safety
officials have taken a big step toward blocking voluntary incident reports from
being used by criminal prosecutors or plaintiffs' lawyers.
A
policy-making panel of the International Civil Aviation Organization, an arm of
the United Nations, on Wednesday recommended adoption of global standards
intended to shield voluntarily collected safety data from criminal proceedings
and civil litigation stemming from an accident or incident.
The move is
still subject to comment, possible changes and formal approval by the more than
160 countries that are members of ICAO. Industry officials anticipate that
process could take years.
The standards would become binding at that
point, with many countries likely passing legislation to lock them
in.
Still, the package approved Wednesday is the most concrete step yet
by ICAO to support mandatory international standards in this arena. Proponents
argue that when voluntary safety data is used as evidence in criminal or civil
proceedings, it discourages airlines, pilots and other groups from continuing to
freely provide such information.
Currently, standards protecting such
aviation data vary widely from country to country, depending on local customs
and laws. France, Italy, the U.K., Brazil and South Korea are among the nations
where air-safety experts complain the actions of prosecutors have had a chilling
effect on voluntary data programs. In a few countries, even transcripts of
cockpit-voice recorders-which are supposed to be among the most closely guarded
parts of safety investigations-have been used and sometimes made public by
prosecutors or judges.
In the U.S., Congress has explicitly protected
certain safety data from Freedom of Information Act requests, and judges
typically have refrained from demanding unfettered access to data.
But
there aren't any binding legal protections to ensure that continues.
For
the first time, the proposal provides detailed language and a road map to
protect incident reports and voluntary safety data world-wide, according to Ken
Quinn, a Washington aviation lawyer and co-chairman of an ICAO-sponsored task
force that took nearly four years to draft the recommendations.
Now, the
industry has "guidance that is specific" and offers protections "far greater
than we have today," Mr. Quinn told an international safety conference on
Thursday. He described the move as "considerable progress," and urged countries
to implement changes in advance of final ICAO action.
The proposal, among
other things, includes language emphasizing that prosecutors and judges could
demand to see data only after determining that the need for such access would
significantly outweigh the continued safety benefits of voluntary
collection.
If some data ends up released to a court or criminal
proceeding, the proposal requires maintaining confidentiality by keeping the
material out of public files and sharply restricting who has access, according
Mr. Quinn
In addition, Mr. Quinn said the package envisions setting up
programs to train prosecutors and judges about the potential setbacks to safety
resulting from using voluntary data for purposes it was never intended to
serve.
John Hickey, the Federal Aviation Administration's No. 2 safety
official, said the latest ICAO move highlights the importance of proactive
collection and sharing of voluntary safety data.
"This is going to be the
basis of how we improve safety" in coming decades, Mr. Hickey told the
conference.
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