There I Was… Cleared for the Approach
March 10, 2026

In business aviation, safety is often treated as a destination: an audit to pass, a certification to earn, a checkbox to tick. But at BASC, we believe safety isn’t a finish line — it’s a mindset. It’s how we respond to the unexpected, how we learn from our teams, and how we build systems that don’t just avoid failure — they anticipate it.
Today’s Mission Monday post is about that mindset shift — what it means to be proactive rather than reactive in our safety culture. We’ll explore the role of fatigue, Just Culture, and resilience engineering — and how we can reshape how our teams think about error, performance, and improvement.
Let’s begin with a hard truth: even in the most well-trained, well-equipped, and well-led flight departments, errors will happen.
Fatigue will set in. A procedure will be skipped. A checklist item will be misread. Humans — even highly trained aviation professionals — are fallible.
What matters isn’t whether people make mistakes. What matters is what the system does in response.
Too often, we ask: “Who messed up?”
We should be asking: “What set them up to fail — and how can we fix it?”
Fatigue in aviation is nothing new — but our understanding of how it manifests and undermines decision-making is still evolving.
It’s not just about falling asleep in the cockpit (though that happens, too). Fatigue impacts:
As someone who flew for over 15 years in air ambulance and charter operations, I can tell you: fatigue doesn’t always look like nodding off. Sometimes it’s just subtle fog — a delay in processing. A missed radio call. A shortcut taken
At BASC, we encourage members to treat fatigue not as an individual failure, but as a systemic indicator. What policies allow it to persist? What metrics are we using to detect it? And how can we address it proactively, not after an incident?
If fatigue is one saboteur, blame culture is another.
For decades, aviation safety programs struggled under a punitive model: when something went wrong, we asked “Who’s responsible?” We thought accountability meant punishment.
But in high-reliability organizations, accountability looks different. It means we’re all responsible for improvement — and we can’t improve if we silence those closest to the error.
This is where Just Culture becomes essential.
Just Culture is not about letting people off the hook. It’s about recognizing that most human errors are symptoms of deeper system weaknesses — unclear policies, normalization of deviance, fatigue-inducing schedules, poor communication.
When team members trust that their organization will respond constructively to mistakes, they speak up sooner. And that’s when real learning begins.
Reactive safety is like building a fence at the edge of a cliff.
Proactive safety builds a road that avoids the cliff altogether.
In proactive cultures:
It means being curious, not just compliant.
A concept we introduce in BASC education sessions is resilience engineering — the idea that complex systems are safer when they can adapt.
Think about a flight department:
Each of these is a weak signal. Alone, they may not trigger an event. But when they align, they create the path to failure.
Resilience means:
That’s what we help our members build — not perfect operations, but resilient ones.
Here are three actionable steps any flight department — regardless of size — can take right now to move toward a more proactive safety culture:
Rather than waiting for something to go wrong and analyzing it, ask: “If this trip fails, what will have caused it?” This opens up foresight thinking and empowers crew to speak up about concerns.
Do you have fatigue reporting tools that are actually used? Are there consequences (formal or informal) for using them? Consider surveying crew anonymously.
Use real examples — even non-aviation ones — to highlight how errors should be treated as learning moments. Reinforce your commitment to systems thinking, not scapegoating.
At BASC, our mission isn’t just to audit flight departments. It’s to build partnerships that help organizations thrive in complexity.
Here’s how we do it:
Our model is collaborative by design. We don’t show up with a red pen. We show up with questions, curiosity, and commitment.[2]
Safety culture doesn’t just happen in audits or training events.
At BASC, we’re proud to work alongside aviation professionals who know that safety isn’t static — it’s alive. It’s shared. And it starts with how we think.
Let’s make this a week where Mission Monday isn’t just a post — it’s a principle.
Fly smart. Stay safe. Lead with intent.
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