[SystemSafety] Fwd: Measurement + Control

RICQUE Bertrand (SAGEM DEFENSE SECURITE) bertrand.ricque at sagem.com
Mon Dec 16 11:51:35 CET 2013


My experience is clearly that each time you make explicit what was implicit in a contractual relationship involving safety engineering, the reaction is systematically : "this what not foreseen at that level of detail in the contract", "this is far too much difficult and detailed job for our teams.".

The odds today are that the entities outsourcing safety engineering have themselves no more clue about what is implicit ...


Bertrand Ricque
Program Manager
Optronics and Defence Division
Sights Program
Mob : +33 6 87 47 84 64
Tel : +33 1 59 11 96 82
Bertrand.ricque at sagem.com




-----Original Message-----
From: Peter Bernard Ladkin [mailto:ladkin at rvs.uni-bielefeld.de]
Sent: Monday, December 16, 2013 11:40 AM
To: RICQUE Bertrand (SAGEM DEFENSE SECURITE); Andrew Rae
Cc: systemsafety at lists.techfak.uni-bielefeld.de
Subject: Re: [SystemSafety] Fwd: Measurement + Control

On 12/16/13 10:09 AM, RICQUE Bertrand (SAGEM DEFENSE SECURITE) wrote:
> Beware that this depends highly on the different industrial sectors and their own culture.

Yes.

Let me bring in some other considerations to the business of "outsourcing".

We were originally concerned with outsourcing in the case in which some other organisation than the operator of (say) a plant undertakes critical operations and maintenance activity. And we were concerned with how effective or ineffective this might be in ensuring appropriately safe operations and activity.

Ronald Coase's transaction-cost theory of the firm (1937) says that people organise themselves into something called a firm when internal transaction costs are lower than external transaction costs for key transactions. The existence of such an organisational form as the firm is of course due ultimately to the polity - the theory only suggests when people begin to make use of that form. BTW, Coase died in September this year at the age of 102.

Outsourcing is effective, on this model, when certain predicted external transactional costs are lower.

It is not as simple as this, of course, even were there to be some agreed way to reduce standards of safety to a transactional cost.

But attempting to do so seems to be broadly helpful. I illustrate with an example, contentious though it may be. There used to be one National Health Service in Britain, which maintained all health-related actions in-house. When time came to consider out-sourcing, the first thing that needed to happen was to develop measures of performance, so that the performance of alternative service providers could be contractually specified. That was hugely hard, for reasons we do not need to go into but which are well-known to anyone who has thought about how to measure how good health care is.

But when you have a set of measures, of course you can also assess in-house institutions, that is, internal NHS providers, according to those measures also. So, for the first time, the performance of various NHS entities was evaluated. And many of those entities were found to be lacking. Reviewers were called in; investigations were undertaken; countermeasures were proposed (often involving shutting the unit). Serious discussion amongst dedicated, involved people ensued. Whatever the outcome of individual cases, service-provision problems were identified and resolved through deliberation across many organisational levels and I consider this a Good Thing. Various regional hospitals have been closed (Stafford and Cumbria come recently to mind). Units have been argued over (Leeds paediatrics, Bristol hearts). And some alternative providers have lost their contracts (Serco, general-practice provision in Cornwall). This has all happened since 1990, starting with the "internal market", which was basically about management but as I understand it without externally-derived performance measures. Then in 1997 this was renounced but then reintroduced about a decade ago once the advantages of some performance measures were acknowledged. Whatever one may think about its mythical failings, the British NHS provides some of the best, some would argue the best, value for money in health care in the world.

Now, performance measures can be played - consider the UK Research Assessment Exercise for universities. But having *some* measures seems to be mostly advantageous.

The same surely holds for activities such as outsourcing operations and maintenance of safety-critical kit. To outsource, there has to be some kind of contract, and that contract must specify performance. Both sides have to agree that the specified performance levels are appropriate, and both of them must at least think that they are indemnified in case of accident. You can't any more have a manager throw a rule book at a junior employee and say "follow the rules" and then blame himher when an accident occurs. There is now an interface saying just what that service entity replacing the junior employee has to do and what constitutes success. And the manager cannot ignore hisher responsibility for specifying it and adhering to it. There is a contract specifying the interface.

Problems arise here I when much of the activity needed to ensure appropriate safety is implicit, and I think this is what Colin Howard and Ingo Rolle were emphasising. Much of the knowledge required to ensure safety is not explicit but implicit in many such operations. So outsourcing is going to be risky until that implicit knowledge is made explicit and put into contracts. How to do that and how long it might take is a question concerning which I have little experience. But it is surely one major topic for IEC 62879 HF&FS to consider.

PBL

Prof. Peter Bernard Ladkin, Faculty of Technology, University of Bielefeld, 33594 Bielefeld, Germany
Tel+msg +49 (0)521 880 7319  www.rvs.uni-bielefeld.de




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