GOALS
The goals of the QA program are to protect
personnel from hazardous conditions, increase the time
between equipment failure, and ensure the proper repair
of failed equipment. The goals of the QA program are
intended to improve equipment reliability, safety of
personnel, and configuration control. Achievement of
these goals will ultimately enhance the readiness of ship
and shore installations. There is a wide range of ship
types and classes in the fleet, and there are equipment
differences within ship classes. This complicates
maintenance support and increases the need for a
formalized program that will provide a high degree of
confidence that overhaul, installations, repairs, and
material will consistently meet conformance standards.
THE QA LINK TO MAINTENANCE
What does QA have to do with repair work?
Accomplishment of repairs and alterations according to
technical specifications has been a long-standing
requirement in U.S. Navy ships. Ultimate responsibility
to ensure this requirement is met rests with the person
performing the maintenance. To do the job, a worker
must be
1. properly trained,
2. provided with correct tools and parts,
3. familiar with the applicable technical manuals
and plans, and
4. adequately supervised.
These elements continue to be the primary means of
assuring that maintenance is performed correctly. As a
supervisor, you can readily see where you fit in.
Once the need for maintenance is identified, you
must consider QA requirements concurrently with the
planning and performing of that maintenance. Technical
specifications will come from a variety of sources, and
determining which specifications apply to the particular
job will be the most difficult part of your planning effort.
Once you make that determination, the maintenance
objective becomes two-fold:
1. Ensure that the maintenance effort meets all
specifications.
2. Ensure that the documentation is complete,
accurate, and auditable.
If you consider the philosophy of QA, you will find
it is unique in that it does not recognize degrees of
success. Quality assurance is a pass-fail process! In our
educational system, a student who is 95 percent correct
in answering exam questions walks home with straight
As. By contrast, if one of your workers is not 95 percent
correct in meeting maintenance standards, he or she has
not only failed miserably, but has guaranteed that the
work must be redone. This will cost you additional time,
effort, and money. It is vital that you approach
maintenance planning from the standpoint of first-time
quality.
THE QUALITY ASSURANCE
ORGANIZATION
The QA program for naval forces is organized into
different levels of responsibility. For example, the
COMNAVSURFPAC QA program is organized into the
following levels of responsibility: type commander,
readiness support group/area maintenance coordinator,
and the IMAs. The QA program for the submarine force
is organized into four levels of responsibility-type
commander, group and squadron commanders, IMA
commanding officers, and ship commanding
officer/officers in charge. The QA program for Naval
Surface Force for the Atlantic Fleet is organized into five
levels of responsibilityforce commander, audits,
squadron commanders, IMAs, and force ships.
The QA program organization (Navy) begins with
the commanders in chief of the fleets, who provide the
basic QA program organization responsibilities and
guidelines.
The type commanders (TYCOMs) provide
instruction, policy, and overall direction for
implementation and operation of the force QA program.
Type commanders have a force QA officer assigned to
administer the force QA program.
The commanding officers (COs) are responsible to
the force commander for QA in the maintenance and
repair of their ships. The CO is responsible for
organizing and implementing a QA program within the
ship to carry out the provisions of the TYCOMs QA
manual. Quality assurance is a collateral duty
assignment except where the manpower authorization
provides QA billets.
The CO ensures that all repair actions performed by
ships force conform to provisions of the QA manual as
well as to other pertinent technical requirements. (Level
I certified ships maintain continuity of Level I [nuclear
and non-nuclear] certification during the operating
cycle and assure that all repair actions performed within
Level I boundaries are completed and documented as set
forth by the QA manual.)
6-3