Washington, DC, January 16, 2019 — The Air Charter Safety Foundation (ACSF) is pleased to announce that the Denver-based Precision Aircraft Management is the newest charter operator to join the ACSF. The firm is yet one more aviation-based company that will participate in the Aviation Safety Action Program (ASAP) created in cooperation between the ACSF and Federal Aviation Administration.
Along with more than 185 other member companies, Precision Aircraft Management (PAM) supports the ACSF’s vision to advance and enable the highest levels of safety in personal and business aviation through the promotion and facilitation of risk management programs.
PAM’s Chief Pilot, Anthony Remboldt, said of his company’s membership, “We’re extremely happy to be new members of the ASCF. We were alerted to the foundation and its work by our FAA POI, in response to our interest in ASAP reporting. I have to say that one of our goals as being part of the ASCF is to bring us valuable ASAP reports and enable us to collaborate with other flight industry partners to promote safety and growth.”
“Precision Aircraft Management has the shared attitude among their team members that safety, above and beyond what is considered regulatory, must be a core value for their company,” said ACSF President Bryan Burns. “We are delighted that they will be participating in the ACSF-ASAP program as well.”
For further information, go to acsfdev.com or www.precisionacm.com.
About ASAP
The voluntary, self-reporting Aviation Safety Action Program (ASAP) helps identify and reduce possible flight safety concerns as well as mitigate risk. The ASAP uses employee input to identify significant safety concerns and issues, operational deficiencies, non-compliance with regulations, deviations from company policies and procedures, and unusual events. Each report is investigated and corrective actions are determined based on a non-disciplinary approach to flight safety.
About the ACSF
The ACSF has developed the industry audit standard, an all-inclusive audit tailored for Part 135 and 91K operators that acts as a detailed gap analysis of an operator’s management practices. The audit program consists of a thorough review of an operator’s processes, procedures and regulatory compliance and the operator’s implementation of and adherence to a safety management system.