Docket: T-2056-13
Citation:
2016 FC 120
Ottawa, Ontario, February 3, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Brown
BETWEEN:
|
CANADIAN UNION
OF PUBLIC EMPLOYEES
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Applicant
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and
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CANADA
(MINISTER OF TRANSPORT)
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SUNWING
AIRLINES INC.
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Respondents
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Introduction and Summary of Findings
[1]
This is an application by the Canadian Union of
Public Employees [CUPE or the Applicant] for judicial review of two decisions
made by a delegate of the Minister of Transport [Transport Canada or Minister]
acting under the Aeronautics Act, R.S.C. 1985, c A-2 [Aeronautics Act].
The first decision verbally approved an amendment to the Respondent Sunwing
Airlines Inc.’s [Sunwing] Flight Attendant Manual [FAM] concerning emergency
evacuation procedures, made on November 27, 2013. The second decision gave
written approval to the same amendment two days later on November 29, 2013.
[2]
Because this case involves an amendment to
Sunwing’s FAM, I will set out the relationship between Transport Canada and
Sunwing and the regulatory context relating to the FAM amendment process. An
amendment to a FAM must be made in accordance with the Flight Attendant Manual
Standards [FAMS], under section 705.139 of the Canadian Aviation
Regulations, SOR/96-433 [CAR], which regulations are issued under the Aeronautics
Act. The FAMS set out topics that must be addressed in a FAM amendment;
however, the FAMS do not specify what should be said in regard to any
particular topic. The operator, in this case Sunwing, must submit a proposed
FAM amendment to Transport Canada for approval; note that Transport Canada’s
approval is required pursuant to subsection 705.139(3) of the CAR which states:
The Minister
shall, where the Flight Attendant Manual Standard is met, approve those parts
of a flight attendant manual, and any amendments to those parts, that relate
to the safety and emergency information contained in Part A of the Flight
Attendant Manual Standard.
|
Lorsque la Norme
relative au manuel des agents de bord est satisfaite, le ministre approuve
les parties du manuel de l'agent de bord portant sur les renseignements
visant les procédures de sécurité et les procédures d'urgence contenues dans
la partie A de cette norme et toutes les modifications qui sont apportées au
manuel.
|
[3]
In addition to satisfying the requirements of
the FAMS, a FAM amendment must also go through a Document Review process
outlined in Transport Canada’s Cabin Safety Inspector Manual [CSIM]. The CSIM
requires that both a “preliminary review” and a “comprehensive review” be conducted by a Cabin Safety
Officer, i.e., an employee of Transport Canada.
[4]
I accept counsel for the Minister’s description
of the relationship between operator and regulator: “[a]s
a regulator, Transport Canada’s role is to notify and attempt to work with the
operator to address ineffective procedures, whenever such procedures become
apparent. Air operators have the responsibility to revise their procedures
whenever necessary, either to improve an already-effective process or to
correct a flawed one. As soon as an operator becomes aware that its former
procedures are ineffective, it should address the inefficiency.”
[5]
The essence of the FAM amendment in this
proceeding is to require that a command shouted by flight attendants at the
start of an emergency evacuation be based on a situational analysis, instead of
being mandatory in all cases as was previously the case. Prior to the
amendment, Sunwing’s flight attendants were directed by Sunwing’s FAM - at the
start of any emergency evacuation and before assessing the doors - to always
use an oral shouted command or “blocking signal”
command. The shouted blocking signal command had to be directed to an “able-bodied person”. The blocking signal command
required flight attendants to identify relevant passengers and then shout the
words: “you and you hold people back”. Before
the challenged FAM amendment, this blocking signal command was the first thing
flight attendants had to do in an emergency, whether or not it was necessary to
hold people back.
[6]
The amendment to Sunwing’s FAM changed the
mandatory nature of the blocking signal command. After the amendment, the
blocking signal command would be used only on an “as
required” basis, to be determined given the situation actually at hand
in the aircraft at the time. The effect of the amendment changed the blocking
signal command into a context or situationally-based command, from its previous
mandatory nature.
[7]
The FAM amendment in this case was requested by
Sunwing, but the request was made at the suggestion of Transport Canada. The
amendment to Sunwing’s FAM was approved because both Sunwing’s and Transport
Canada’s safety officials decided that giving the blocking signal command in
all cases, i.e., whether needed or not, resulted in inefficiencies in carrying
out emergency aircraft evacuations.
[8]
All parties agree that giving the blocking
signal command took extra time, and to that extent did or might slow down an
emergency evacuation. They all agree that in an emergency evacuation, time was
critical and could save lives. The time lost by giving the blocking signal
command was between 0.5 and 1.5 seconds, according to the Applicant. To
emphasize, the parties agreed that time counted; the faster the slides were
ready for passengers to exit the plane, the less time the emergency evacuation
would take, and the faster passengers would get off the plane to safety.
[9]
While CUPE agreed that eliminating the mandatory
nature of the blocking signal would save time, it raised a number of objections
to the manner in which the amendment to the FAM was effected.
A.
Specific Context in which the FAM Amendment was
Requested and Made
[10]
Before summarizing the procedural history of
this matter, and discussing the record and my findings, I wish to outline
further context in which the impugned decisions were made.
[11]
Sunwing applied to Transport Canada for an
exemption from a general regulatory requirement then in place to the effect
that the ratio of passengers per flight attendant must be at least 40:1.
Sunwing asked that its own ratio be 50:1; instead of having one flight
attendant for every 40 passengers, Sunwing asked to have one flight attendant
for every 50 passengers. The exemption would reduce the required number of
flight attendants (represented by the Applicant CUPE) from 5 to 4 per aircraft,
given there are 189 passengers/seats on the Boeing 737-800 aircraft deployed in
Sunwing’s fleet.
[12]
On October 18, 2013, Transport Canada granted
Sunwing the ratio exemption to 50:1. However the exemption was granted provided
Sunwing satisfy a number of conditions. One such condition (Condition 11) was that
Sunwing conduct and pass a partial demonstration of a simulated evacuation
using its normal and emergency operating procedures. Essentially, this
condition required Sunwing’s flight attendants to open 50% of its aircraft’s
doors, deploy slides, and complete other tasks within 15 seconds; if it
succeeded, the partial demonstration would be deemed a success and the
exemption condition satisfied.
[13]
To this end, Sunwing conducted four partial demonstrations
of its emergency evacuation using normal operating procedures. The tests were
carried out over two days. These tests were carefully monitored by numerous
officials from both Transport Canada and Sunwing. Video recordings were also
made both from inside and outside the aircraft.
[14]
Sunwing failed the first two tests because
Sunwing took more than 15 seconds to complete the various tasks.
[15]
The third and fourth tests were conducted on
November 27, 2013. While there was a dispute, the video footage for the third
attempt indicates Sunwing may have succeeded at the third attempt, although
Transport Canada decided at the time that Sunwing had not met the requirements in
its third attempt.
[16]
Having observed the first three tests, and
between the third and fourth tests, Transport Canada suggested, and Sunwing
agreed, that shouting the blocking signal command should no longer be mandatory
but rather carried out on an “as required”
basis.
[17]
This change required an amendment to Sunwing’s
FAM. Therefore, on November 27, 2013, between the third and fourth tests, at
Sunwing’s request and Transport Canada’s suggestion, Transport Canada verbally
approved an amendment to Sunwing’s FAM such that the blocking signal command
was no longer mandatory. This is the first decision under review in this
application.
[18]
The fourth test was then conducted on November
27, 2013, without use of the blocking signal command. Sunwing completed all
required tasks within the 15 seconds allotted. As a result, Transport Canada
decided this condition of its exemption was satisfied.
[19]
Transport Canada then asked Sunwing to conduct a
risk assessment concerning the FAM amendment as verbally approved. Officers of
Sunwing met the next day and completed a formal Risk Assessment.
[20]
On November 29, 2013, two days after the last test,
Sunwing applied in writing for Transport Canada’s approval of an amendment to
its FAM to remove the mandatory nature of the blocking signal commands in its
FAM, such that they “will be used as required.” Sunwing
appended a draft Cabin Safety Bulletin to its written request, but it was not
sent to, nor requested nor reviewed by Transport Canada, which approved Sunwing’s
FAM amendment the same day by letter dated November 29, 2013. CUPE initiated
two separate judicial review applications in respect of these decisions.
[21]
First, CUPE moved to set aside Transport
Canada’s conditional exemption to the ratio requirement granted on October 18,
2013, and did so in Court File Number T-1950-13. Justice Bell heard that
judicial review on May 13, 2015, and agreed with the parties that the
application was moot. Further, the Court declined to exercise its discretion to
hear the matter notwithstanding its mootness. Mootness had been alleged by
reason of the fact that effective June 15, 2015, the regulation requiring a 40:1
ratio was amended to require a ratio 50:1: see Canadian Union of Public
Employees v Canada (Transport) 2015 FC 1421, which was decided after the
hearing in this case. That is, as a result of the June 15, 2015 amendment, the
50:1 ratio the Applicant obtained from the Minister by exemption became the
regulatory norm for operators in Sunwing’s position. Sunwing advises it relies
on these new regulations as the basis for operating on a 50:1 ratio, and that
it continues to rely on the partial evacuation demonstration test to benefit
from the changed regulations.
[22]
CUPE’s second judicial review proceeding is the
one at bar commenced December 17, 2013. In this proceeding, CUPE originally
requested that the following three decisions be set aside: (1) Transport Canada’s
verbal decision of November 27, 2013, to approve the amendment to Sunwing’s
FAM, (2) Transport Canada’s decision that Sunwing satisfied Condition 11, i.e.,
that Sunwing passed the required partial demonstration evacuation test, and (3)
Transport Canada’s written decision of November 29, 2013, to approve the
amendment to Sunwing’s FAM.
[23]
However, at the hearing (having advised opposing
counsel shortly beforehand) counsel for CUPE advised CUPE no longer took issue
with the decision by Transport Canada that Sunwing had satisfied Condition 11;
i.e., issue (2) above was no longer in issue. Therefore, the issues before this
Court are issues (1) and (3) above, namely the verbal and written approvals to
amend Sunwing’s FAM.
B.
The Record
[24]
As a further preliminary matter, I turn to the
record. The decisions in issue were made by front-line decision-makers
representing Sunwing as the aircraft operator and the regulated party, and
Transport Canada as the regulator. Because there is virtually no written
record, both parties filed affidavit material including exhibits.
Cross-examinations were conducted. While CUPE moved to strike certain evidence
filed by the Respondents (the Dann Affidavit), Prothonotary Aronovitch
dismissed CUPE’s motion on January 29, 2015. CUPE did not appeal that decision;
additionally in its factum CUPE advises it has “no
issue” with the Dann Affidavit, now describing it as “marginally relevant background evidence”. There was
no objection taken to the other affidavits and exhibits filed. While the position
of the parties is not determinative, in my opinion, the material filed by all
parties should be considered on judicial review because it is useful background
evidence. It was known to the parties, provided under oath and is credible in
that it has been tested by cross-examination as determined by the parties. It
is both relevant and helpful; indeed and notwithstanding the differences
between judicial review and a de novo review, in my view, no meaningful
judicial review could be conducted in this case without this additional
material: see Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada v Canadian
Copyright Licensing Agency, 2012 FCA 22.
C.
Summary of Conclusions
[25]
For the reasons that follow, I find Transport
Canada’s written decision to allow Sunwing’s proposed FAM amendment was not
reasonable. I make this finding in part because the written decision was made
without a “comprehensive review” required by
Transport Canada’s CSIM; what took place in this case cannot reasonably be said
to have constituted a “comprehensive review”, particularly
in that Transport Canada neither asked for nor reviewed the Risk Assessment
prepared by Sunwing in support of its proposed FAM amendment. In addition, the written
decision unreasonably relied on deficient and irrelevant anecdotal evidence of
Transport Canada’s Cabin Safety Officer and was marred by other unreasonable
aspects discussed below. Stepping back and reviewing the decision as an organic
whole, the written decision lacked justification and does not fall within the permitted
range of outcomes on judicial review. Therefore, judicial review is granted for
the reasons that follow.
II.
Facts
[26]
The following is a more detailed outline of the
facts.
[27]
The Applicant is a large national union that
represents flight attendants at Sunwing in this application. For added context,
the Applicant also represents flight attendants with other airlines, though not
in this proceeding.
[28]
The Respondents are the Minister who is the
regulator, and the subject of the regulator, namely the aircraft operator,
Sunwing.
[29]
The events leading up to the application for
judicial review began when Sunwing applied for an exemption to section 705.104
of the CAR. This exemption, if granted under subsection 5.9(2) of the Aeronautics
Act, would permit Sunwing to operate with a ratio of one (1) flight
attendant for every fifty (50) passenger seats, instead of the one (1) to forty
(40) ratio otherwise required by section 705.104 of the CAR as it read at that
time. At that time, Canada was virtually alone in the world in requiring a
ratio of 1:40; most other countries required a ratio of 1:50. Transport Canada
had long supported moving to a 1:50 ratio. More recently the ratio has been
changed to 1:50 for all such aircraft operators. The exemption was granted by
Transport Canada to Sunwing on October 18, 2013, subject to conditions,
including Condition 11 which was to complete a partial demonstration emergency
evacuation using Sunwing’s normal and emergency operating procedures.
[30]
In order to pass Condition 11 of the test for
exemption, Sunwing had to successfully complete a partial demonstration
emergency evacuation within 15 seconds, a usual standard per international
norms. Sunwing failed its first and second attempts on tests that took place
November 22, 2013. Sunwing ran overtime on the first attempt due to slowness to
respond to a command, to identify a blocked door, and to open a blurry/foggy
window door. The second attempt actually succeeded within time but an incorrect
door was readied.
[31]
In my view and based on the evidence, the
shouted blocking signal command did not slow down the second attempt and had
little relevance regarding the first.
[32]
After each attempt, Sunwing representatives
present during the test and Transport Canada safety staff debriefed the failed
attempt to identify why the attempt failed and how to improve on safety
measures.
[33]
The next round of tests was conducted on
November 27, 2013. While Transport Canada officials ruled Sunwing failed its
third test, Sunwing disagreed suggesting there had been a stopwatch error. It
pointed to video recordings showing Sunwing had successfully completed the test
within 15 seconds. However, there was a technological issue that prevented
Transport Canada representatives from sending the video to Ottawa for review.
It appears the third test was completed within 15 seconds.
[34]
I conclude that the shouted blocking signal
command did not affect the result in the third test any more than it did the
outcomes on the first and second tests.
[35]
As usual, a debriefing was held after the third
test. During this debriefing, one of the four Transport Canada Cabin Safety
Inspectors present, Inspector Luc Mayne, said that the oral shouted blocking
signal command “you and you hold people back” was
unnecessary, and was slowing down the emergency landing evacuation partial demonstration
procedure. This, he said, made the procedure less safe instead of safer, given
that precious seconds could be saved in times of emergency if the command were
not mandatory. He told of a situation in which he personally had been able to
reach cabin doors quickly and efficiently to open them in an emergency
evacuation, before the passengers had had time to get out of their seats,
without having given a blocking command.
[36]
Also present at the tests was Transport Canada’s
Team Lead, Inspector Darlene MacLachlan, a Transport Canada Cabin Safety
Inspector herself.
[37]
At that time, Inspector Mayne said he would
verbally approve a change of oral shouted blocking command signal procedure in
Sunwing’s FAM to make it non-mandatory. Sunwing requested and Transport Canada
then verbally approved Sunwing’s request to amend its FAM to make the shouted
blocking command non-mandatory. It was Transport Canada’s evidence that in
these actions Inspector Mayne represented all Transport Canada Safety Officers
present at the tests. This decision is the first of the two being challenged in
this application.
[38]
Then the fourth partial demonstration test took
place without the shouted blocking signal command. It was successful. All
tasks were completed within 15 seconds. Transport Canada’s team leader,
Inspector MacLachlan, decided Sunwing had satisfied Condition 11 of the
exemption. This decision was challenged by CUPE in this application, but it is
no longer in issue.
[39]
Also on November 27, 2013, Inspector Mayne told
Sunwing staff to conduct a risk assessment of its proposed FAM amendment as
part of Sunwing’s normal amending procedures. The next day, November 28, 2013,
Sunwing staff met and completed a Risk Assessment concerning the proposed
amendment to its FAM. Sunwing’s Risk Assessment showed there was no change in
risk as a result of the amendment.
[40]
While Sunwing did no further testing although
Sunwing had conducted a brief exercise to see how long it would take a flight
attendant to go from the jump seat to a door; although no stopwatch was
used, this took between an estimated three and four seconds. Sunwing did not
test the time it would take for a passenger to get from his or her seat
in the aircraft to a door. On the basis of this one-time test, Sunwing
proceeded with the fourth test without the oral shouted command; Sunwing also
apparently relied on this exercise in support of its request for the FAM
amendment.
[41]
There is no express statutory or regulatory
requirement for Sunwing to give its Risk Assessment to Transport Canada before
obtaining approval of a FAM amendment.
A.
Cabin Safety Inspector Manual [CSIM]
[42]
Transport Canada has in place a document
entitled Cabin Safety Inspector Manual [CSIM]. The CSIM was designed to guide
Transport Canada Cabin Safety Inspectors (such as those involved in these tests)
in dealing with “any Cabin Safety documents”. In
my view, documents filed in support of Sunwing’s proposed FAM amendment are “Cabin Safety documents” for the purposes of the CSIM.
[43]
CSIM outlines a two stage review for FAM
amendments, a “preliminary review” followed by a
“comprehensive review” at para 4.12:
A preliminary
review should be performed prior to a comprehensive review of any
Cabin Safety documents and should be conducted promptly after receipt of
the operator’s submission. If after preliminary review, the submission
appears to be complete and of acceptable quality, or if the deficiencies are
minor and can be quickly resolved, then a comprehensive review of the
submission may begin.
[emphasis added]
|
Il convient
d’entreprendre, rapidement après l’avoir reçue de l’exploitant aérien et avant
d’en entreprendre un examen approfondi, un examen préliminaire de la
documentation de Sécurité des cabines soumise. Si cet examen préliminaire
révèle que cette documentation est complète et d’une qualité jugée acceptable
ou que ses lacunes, mineures, peuvent être rapidement corrigées, son examen
approfondi peut alors commencer.
[soulignement ajouté]
|
[44]
On September 29, 2013, Sunwing sent a letter to
Transport Canada requesting approval to amend its FAM to make blocking signal
commands situational or “as required”, and no
longer mandatory. Sunwing attached a draft Cabin Safety Bulletin to be issued
to its flight attendants and others outlining the change in oral shouted command
procedures. Later that day, Sunwing received a letter from Transport Canada
approving its requested FAM amendment. Transport Canada neither asked for, nor
received, nor reviewed Sunwing’s Risk Assessment before approving the FAM
amendment. The approval was given in writing by Inspector Mayne, a Transport
Canada Cabin Safety Inspector.
III.
Decisions
[45]
The decisions subject to judicial review are (1)
Transport Canada’s November 27, 2013, verbal decision to approve Sunwing’s FAM
as outlined above, and (2) Transport Canada’s subsequent written decision
approving the FAM amendment in detail on November 29, 2013.
IV.
Issues
[46]
CUPE says that the verbal and written approvals
of the amendment to Sunwing’s FAM are unreasonable. CUPE says that while
reasonableness is the test, because of the passenger safety context, serious
scrutiny is required. It says the amendments were allowed by Transport Canada
based on anecdotal and unverified assumptions. It says the “comprehensive review” required by Transport Canada’s
CSIM did not take place, and that there were other flaws in the analysis of and
rationale for the amended FAM rendering them unreasonable.
[47]
In opposition, the Respondents, the Minister of
Transport and Sunwing, submit that the onus is on the Applicant to demonstrate
reviewable error, that there is no reason to adopt a different or more exacting
standard of review because the impugned decision is binary, that Transport
Canada officials acted within their statutory authority, their decisions are
reasonable, and CUPE acted vexatiously in brining two separate applications for
judicial review.
[48]
I would express the issues as:
1.
What is the standard of review for the impugned
decisions?
2.
Were the decisions to amend Sunwing’s FAM
reasonable?
3.
Is the Applicant’s application for judicial
review vexatious?
V.
Relevant Provisions
[49]
The Canadian Aviation Regulations,
SOR/96-433 [CAR] state:
Flight Attendant Manual
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Manuel de l'agent de bord
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705.139 (1) Every air operator, other than an air operator that is
authorized solely for the transport of cargo in its air operator certificate,
shall establish and maintain, as part of its company operations manual, a
flight attendant manual for the use and guidance of flight attendants in the
operation of its aircraft.
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705.139 (1) L'exploitant aérien, autre que l'exploitant aérien qui
est autorisé aux termes de son certificat d'exploitation aérienne à
transporter uniquement du fret, doit établir et tenir à jour un manuel de
l'agent de bord, qui fait partie du manuel d'exploitation de la compagnie,
pour aider les agents de bord dans l'utilisation de ses aéronefs.
|
(2) A flight attendant manual shall contain the instructions
and information necessary to enable flight attendants to perform their duties
safely and shall contain the information required by the Flight Attendant
Manual Standard.
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(2) Le manuel de l'agent de bord doit contenir les instructions
et les renseignements permettant aux agents de bord d'exercer leurs fonctions
en toute sécurité, ainsi que les renseignements qu'exige la Norme relative au
manuel des agents de bord.
|
(3) The Minister shall, where the Flight Attendant Manual Standard
is met, approve those parts of a flight attendant manual, and any amendments
to those parts, that relate to the safety and emergency information contained
in Part A of the Flight Attendant Manual Standard.
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(3) Lorsque la Norme relative au manuel des agents de bord est
satisfaite, le ministre approuve les parties du manuel de l'agent de bord
portant sur les renseignements visant les procédures de sécurité et les
procédures d'urgence contenues dans la partie A de cette norme et toutes les
modifications qui sont apportées au manuel.
|
(4) An air operator shall provide a copy of its flight attendant
manual, including any amendments to that manual, to each of its flight attendants.
[emphasis added]
|
(4) L'exploitant aérien doit fournir à chacun de ses agents de
bord un exemplaire du manuel de l'agent de bord et toutes les modifications
qui y sont apportées.
[soulignement ajouté]
|
[50]
The FAMS is a skeletal document with little prose
except the “NOTE” at the end. Instead, it lists
subject headings which are to be covered in operator FAMS. The relevant
provisions are:
2A.18 Emergency Evacuation Commands
•General
◦Purpose
◦Technique
◦Correct use
◦Pacing
|
2A.18 Ordres d'évacuation d'urgence - Généralités
•Généralités
◦Objet
◦Technique
◦Utilisation correcte
◦Régulation
|
2A.19 Emergency Evacuation Commands - Applications
•General commands - land; inadvertent water contact; and ditching
•Blocked/jammed exit commands
•ABP commands
|
2A.19 Ordres d'évacuation d'urgence - Applications
•Ordres généraux - évacuation au sol; amerrissage imprévu;
amerrissage forcé
•Ordres issues bloquées ou coincées
•Ordres aux personnes bien portantes
|
…
|
…
|
2A.24 Evacuation Signals
•Descriptions
•Primary signal/variations
•Alternate signal/variations
•Crew member responsibilities at the evacuation signal
•Evacuation cancellation
|
2A.24 Signaux d'évacuation
•Descriptions
•Signal primaire et variantes
•Signal de rechange et variantes
•Responsabilités des membres de l'équipage au signal d'évacuation
•Annulation de l'évacuation
|
2A.25 Prepared
Emergency Landing/Ditching - Procedures (Cabin
Safety Technical Directive No. 201 SUPPORT MODULE P - Emergency
Preparation/Support Module-Ditching)
|
2A.25 Atterrissage ou amerrissage d'urgence préparé - Procédures (Directive technique de sécurité cabine
n° 201 - MODULE DE SUPPORT P - Préparation d'urgence/Module de support -
Amerrissage forcé)
|
NOTE: The carrier must develop procedures in a format that crew members
may use when preparing for an emergency landing or ditching that will serve
as a checklist. The selected format must include responsibilities of each
crew member for the purpose of cabin; passenger; galley; and self
preparation. All passenger advisory announcements must be included.
|
NOTA :
L'exploitant aérien doit préparer les procédures dans un format que les
membres d'équipage pourront utiliser pour préparer un atterrissage d'urgence
ou un amerrissage forcé et qui pourra servir de liste de vérifications. Le
format choisi doit comprendre une liste des responsabilités de chaque membre
d'équipage relativement à la préparation de la cabine, des passagers, de
l'office et pour leur propre préparation. Toutes les annonces à faire aux
passagers doivent être incluses dans le format retenu.
|
VI.
Submissions and Analysis
Issue 1: What is the standard of
review for the impugned decisions?
[51]
To determine the standard of review, I follow Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v Khosa, 2009 SCC 12 [Khosa], which
states:
[52] Dunsmuir states that “[c]ourts,
while exercising their constitutional functions of judicial review, must be
sensitive not only to the need to uphold the rule of law, but also to the
necessity of avoiding undue interference with the discharge of administrative
functions in respect of the matters delegated to administrative bodies by
Parliament and legislatures” (para. 27).
[53] The process of judicial review
involves two steps. First, Dunsmuir says that “[a]n exhaustive review is
not required in every case to determine the proper standard of review” (para.
57). As between correctness and reasonableness, the “existing jurisprudence may
be helpful” (para. 57). And so it is in this case. Dunsmuir renders moot
the dispute in the lower courts between patent unreasonableness and reasonableness.
No authority was cited to us that suggests a “correctness” standard of review
is appropriate for IAD decisions under s. 67(1)(c) of the IRPA.” Accordingly, “existing
jurisprudence” points to adoption of a “reasonableness” standard.
[54] This conclusion is reinforced by
the second step of the analysis when jurisprudential categories are not
conclusive. Factors then to be considered include: (1) the presence or absence
of a privative clause; (2) the purpose of the IAD as determined by its enabling
legislation; (3) the nature of the question at issue before the IAD; and (4)
the expertise of the IAD in dealing with immigration policy (Dunsmuir,
at para. 64). Those factors have to be considered as a whole, bearing in mind
that not all factors will necessarily be relevant for every single case. A
contextualized approach is required. Factors should not be taken as items on a
check list of criteria that need to be individually analyzed, categorized and
balanced in each case to determine whether deference is appropriate or not. What
is required is an overall evaluation. Nevertheless, having regard to the
argument made before us, I propose to comment on the different factors
identified in Dunsmuir, all of which in my view point to a
reasonableness standard.
[52]
In Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 [Dunsmuir],
the Supreme Court of Canada stated:
[55] A consideration of the following
factors will lead to the conclusion that the decision maker should be given
deference and a reasonableness test applied:
- A privative clause: this is a statutory
direction from Parliament or a legislature indicating the need for deference.
- A discrete and special administrative
regime in which the decision maker has special expertise (labour relations for
instance).
- The nature of the question of law. A
question of law that is of “central importance to the legal system … and
outside the … specialized area of expertise” of the administrative decision
maker will always attract a correctness standard (Toronto (City) v. C.U.P.E.,
at para. 62). On the other hand, a question of law that does not rise to this
level may be compatible with a reasonableness standard where the two above
factors so indicate.
[56] If these factors, considered
together, point to a standard of reasonableness, the decision maker’s decision
must be approached with deference in the sense of respect discussed earlier in
these reasons. There is nothing unprincipled in the fact that some questions of
law will be decided on the basis of reasonableness. It simply means giving the
adjudicator’s decision appropriate deference in deciding whether a decision
should be upheld, bearing in mind the factors indicated.
[…]
[64] The analysis must be contextual. As
mentioned above, it is dependent on the application of a number of relevant
factors, including: (1) the presence or absence of a privative clause; (2) the
purpose of the tribunal as determined by interpretation of enabling
legislation; (3) the nature of the question at issue, and; (4) the expertise of
the tribunal. In many cases, it will not be necessary to consider all of the
factors, as some of them may be determinative in the application of the
reasonableness standard in a specific case.
[53]
In this case, neither party identified existing
jurisprudence to establish the appropriate standard of review. There is no
privative clause, and no question of law central to our legal system arises in
this case. In my view, the starting point for the standard of review is
reasonableness.
[54]
What is most material in the contextualized
analysis required to establish the standard of review is that the Minister of
Transport and his delegates at Transport Canada are engaged in a discrete and
special administrative regime. The decision-makers, Transport Canada’s Cabin
Safety Inspectors, have special expertise in the area of passenger safety in
aircraft evacuations. In my view, the purpose of the FAM and FAMS is in part to
ensure passenger safety; one of the primary purposes of the FAM amendment in
this case was to best ensure passenger safety in aircraft evacuations.
[55]
As a consequence, I conclude that these decisions
by Transport Canada should be judicially reviewed on a standard of
reasonableness. Such decisions are entitled to deference. I appreciate there
are different margins of appreciation in this context, and in my view,
Transport Canada officials acting in this connection should be afforded a wide
range of appreciation given that passenger-safety decisions in this context
involve elements of factual appreciation, specialization and expertise.
[56]
The Applicant CUPE argued that judicial review
should be conducted through the lens of strict scrutiny. I do not accept this
is the law. It is enough for this Court to judicially review this decision on
the reasonableness standard, keeping in mind that the context, namely that the impugned
decision directly impacts the safety of the travelling public in emergency
evacuations of passenger aircraft.
[57]
In Dunsmuir at para 47, the Supreme Court
of Canada explained what is required of a court reviewing on the reasonableness
standard of review:
A court conducting a review for
reasonableness inquires into the qualities that make a decision reasonable,
referring both to the process of articulating the reasons and to outcomes. In
judicial review, reasonableness is concerned mostly with the existence of
justification, transparency and intelligibility within the decision-making
process. But it is also concerned with whether the decision falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law.
Issue 2: Were
the two decisions to amend Sunwing’s FAM reasonable?
A.
The Regulatory Framework: CAR, FAM, FAMS
[58]
The central issue in this case is whether the decisions
of Transport Canada are reasonable. In my view, the verbal decision was reasonable.
However, the subsequent written decision was not reasonable. My reasons follow.
[59]
First, there is no dispute that the amendment to
Sunwing’s FAM needed to respect and comply with the FAMS by virtue of
subsection 705.139(3) of the CAR which states:
705.139(3) The Minister shall, where the Flight Attendant Manual
Standard is met, approve those parts of a flight attendant manual, and any
amendments to those parts, that relate to the safety and emergency
information contained in Part A of the Flight Attendant Manual Standard.
[emphasis added]
|
705.139(3) Lorsque la Norme relative au manuel des agents de bord
est satisfaite, le ministre approuve les parties du manuel de l’agent de bord
portant sur les renseignements visant les procédures de sécurité et les
procédures d’urgence contenues dans la partie A de cette norme et toutes les
modifications qui sont apportées au manuel.
[soulignement ajouté]
|
[60]
In my view, the amended FAM complies with this
paragraph of the FAMS. This is because, as noted, the FAMS is almost entirely
skeletal. Almost without prose, the FAMS simply lists topics that a FAM
amendment must cover. The FAMS does not say what language should be included
under a topic. The supporting regulation, subsection 705.139(3) of the CAR only
requires that requirements of the FAMS be “met” before approval is given.
Therefore one might argue that the process followed in this case complied with
subsection 705.139(3) of the CAR because the amendment addressed one of the
topics listed in the FAMS.
[61]
However, in my respectful view, the FAMS is not
the only relevant provision governing an aircraft operator wishing to amend its
FAM in relation to safe emergency evacuation procedures. In my view, before a
Transport Canada Cabin Safety Inspector may approve this FAM amendment, he or
she must also follow the provisions of the CSIM. The CSIM sets out the roles
and responsibilities of a Cabin Safety Inspector; it is in effect his or her
job description as written and approved by the Minister.
[62]
In my view, the CSIM requires Cabin Safety
Inspectors to engage in a two-stage review process as a precondition to
approving an amendment to Sunwing’s FAM. First, there should be a “preliminary review”. Secondly, the Cabin Safety
Inspector should conduct a “comprehensive review”,
see CSIM pages 4-6 at para 4.12:
A preliminary review should be performed prior to a comprehensive
review of any Cabin Safety documents and should
be conducted promptly after receipt of the operator’s submission. If after
preliminary review, the submission appears to be complete and of acceptable
quality, or if the deficiencies are minor and can be quickly resolved, then a
comprehensive review of the submission may begin.
[emphasis added]
|
Il convient d’entreprendre, rapidement après l’avoir reçue de
l’exploitant aérien et avant d’en entreprendre un examen approfondi, un
examen préliminaire de la documentation de Sécurité des cabines soumise.
Si cet examen préliminaire révèle que cette documentation est complète et
d’une qualité jugée acceptable ou que ses lacunes, mineures, peuvent être
rapidement corrigées, son examen approfondi peut alors commencer.
[soulignement ajouté]
|
[63]
The CSIM applies to reviews of operator
submissions concerning “any Cabin Safety documents”.
In my view, documents in support of an amendment to a FAM are “Cabin Safety documents”; such an amendment directs
cabin flight attendants how to conduct safe emergency aircraft evacuations.
[64]
In my view, CSIM is a Transport Canada-imposed
guideline; Cabin Safety Inspectors are generally obliged to and should follow
CSIM in relation to amendments to a FAM. In my view, the preliminary and “comprehensive review” requirements of the CSIM, are
safety-related and mandatory. The use of the word “should” does not detract
from this conclusion where passenger safety is concerned. In my view, the requirements
of CSIM are designed to enhance passenger safety; passenger safety could be
compromised if the CSIMs is ignored or discounted by a Cabin Safety Inspector
in this case, as will be seen below.
B.
Verbal Approval of November 27, 2013
[65]
In this case, Transport Canada’s verbal decision
to grant the requested FAM amendment was reasonable. I appreciate the need in
this case to make changes in a timely way, when an efficiency and safety issue
is identified. The preliminary and “comprehensive
reviews” were compressed while the aircraft was on the ground pending
completion of the four tests. The verbal amendment decision was reasonable in
that it efficiently facilitated the test process, which resulted in reasonable
confirmation of the inefficiencies identified in giving the oral shouted
blocking signal command in all cases. The verbal approval was not unreasonable
in the circumstances; it was done on a short term basis only and was directly
connected with and strictly limited to the ongoing tests being carried out. It
was not intended to be and was not implemented on aircraft actually carrying
passengers. It was a reasonable decision and the request to set it aside is
dismissed.
C.
Written Decision of November 29, 2013
No “Comprehensive Review” Per CSIM
[66]
However, I am unable to conclude that what took
place after the fourth test and leading to the written decision of November 29,
2013, constituted a “comprehensive review” required
by Transport Canada’s CSIM. In this connection, I note that Sunwing officials
met and drew up a Risk Assessment on November 28, 2013, the day after passing
their fourth partial demonstration evacuation test. Further, Transport Canada
knew the Risk Assessment had been completed: Transport Canada itself had requested
the Risk Assessment. Moreover, the Risk Assessment is referred to in the draft
Cabin Safety Bulletin which Sunwing submitted:
The clarification of the use of this oral
command was subject to an internal Risk Assessment and has been deemed to
provide an equivalent level of safety.
[67]
I cannot agree Transport Canada’s Cabin Safety
Inspector, to whom the CSIM’s requirement to conduct a “comprehensive
review” was directed, reasonably discharged his obligations under CSIM
in part because Transport Canada granted the FAM amendment without reviewing
the very Risk Assessment Sunwing prepared at Transport Canada’s request.
[68]
In answer, it is said that (as it happened) the
Risk Assessment concluded there was no change in risk before and after the
amendment. I do not see that as an answer on judicial review. It is for
Transport Canada not this Court to complete the “comprehensive
review” required. That means it is for Transport Canada and not the
Court to assess Sunwing’s Risk Assessment: see Komolafe v Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2013 FC 431 at paras 10-11. Here, Transport Canada’s
Cabin Safety Inspector should have considered the Risk Assessment as part of
the required “comprehensive review” but
unreasonably did not.
[69]
It is also argued there is no legal requirement
on Sunwing to forward the Risk Assessment to Transport Canada’s Cabin Safety
Inspector. While no one could point to such an obligation, in my respectful
view, this objection is without merit because the duty to conduct a “comprehensive review” lies on Transport Canada not
Sunwing. Having asked Sunwing to conduct a Risk Assessment, and knowing that
such Risk Assessment had been conducted, Transport Canada acting reasonably and
with passenger safety in mind, should have asked Sunwing to provide it. Transport
Canada should then have reviewed it before approving Sunwing’s FAM amendment. I
would add that Transport Canada may have other matters to consider as part of a
“comprehensive review”. Those other matters are also
for Transport Canada to determine.
[70]
It is suggested that the Minister (Transport
Canada) has only a minimal role in approving FAM amendments; he or she need
only see that, as provided by subsection 705.139(3) of the CAR, the Flight
Attendant Manual Standard is “met”. This
provision states:
705.139(3) The Minister shall, where the Flight Attendant Manual
Standard is met, approve those parts of a flight attendant manual, and
any amendments to those parts, that relate to the safety and emergency
information contained in Part A of the Flight Attendant Manual Standard.
[emphasis added]
|
705.139(3) Lorsque la Norme relative au manuel des agents de bord est
satisfaite, le ministre approuve les parties du manuel de l’agent de bord
portant sur les renseignements visant les procédures de sécurité et les procédures
d’urgence contenues dans la partie A de cette norme et toutes les
modifications qui sont apportées au manuel.
[soulignement ajouté]
|
[71]
I agree the word “shall” is generally mandatory.
And I also agree, as noted already, that the FAMS is simply a list of topics
every FAM amendment must address. And I agree that the FAMS does not specify
what any particular aircraft operator should or should not put into a FAM on
any point.
[72]
That said, I do not accept that the Minister has
only a minimal role in approving FAM amendments under subsection 705.139(3) of
the CAR beyond ensuring some commentary addresses each FAMS topic. Transport
Canada’s role is not simply to check and see if each topic is covered,
indifferent as to what a particular aircraft operator actually says under each
point. That would be an unsafe and therefore unreasonable approach for the
regulator of aircraft safety to take.
[73]
In my view, subsection 705.139(3) of the CAR
obliges the Minister and or his or her delegates to review the substance of a
proposed FAM amendment. To my mind, the Minister and his or her officials acting
reasonable should be looking for language that intelligently and reasonably deals
with safe emergency passenger evacuation. It is in this context that in my viewTransport
Canada acted unreasonably in failing to review Sunwing’s Risk Assessment. In
particular, the Cabin Safety Inspector should have conducted a “comprehensive review” as required by the CSIM. In my
view, the FAMS, FAM and CSIM dovetail and harmonize with subsection 705.139(3)
of the CAR; in combination they obliged Transport Canada to conduct a safety-related
“comprehensive review” of Sunwing’s proposed FAM
amendment.
[74]
Also, as noted, the CSIM sets out the “job description” of Cabin Safety Inspectors, in
accordance with policies and procedures for Transport Canada. These officers
are authorized to approve or reject proposed FAM amendments. In my view, it was
the job of the Cabin Safety Inspector seized of the FAM amendment to apply both
subsection 705.139(3) of the CAR and the CSIM, and therefore to conduct the
required safety-related “comprehensive review”.
[75]
In this case, a step was missing in the
decision-making process because there was no “comprehensive
review”. In my respectful view a “comprehensive
review” is reasonably required for good reason: however salutary this
proposed FAM amendment was when verbally approved for the purposes of the
fourth test, the written FAM amendment would deal with the actual safety
of both passengers and crew in an actual emergency aircraft evacuation.
The failure to conduct the required “comprehensive
review” casts doubt on the integrity of the ultimate decision and has
the potential to undermine confidence in the application of Transport Canada’s
air passenger safety mandate. Specifically, this failure could jeopardize
passenger and crew safety in an emergency evacuation, as outlined below.
Therefore in my view the failure to conduct a “comprehensive
review” was in this case unreasonable, in particular because the Risk
Assessment Transport Canada requested was neither reviewed nor considered by
Transport Canada itself.
D.
Other Issues with the Reasonableness of the Decision
[76]
In addition to unreasonableness based on failure
to conduct a “comprehensive review” just
discussed, CUPE had other issues with Transport Canada’s decision to approve
the amended FAM.
The Anecdote
[77]
First, whether he was speaking for the Transport
Canada team or for himself, Cabin Safety Inspector Mayne said that making the
shouted blocking signal command non-mandatory would shorten the time to
complete the partial demonstration. This suggestion followed his anecdote; he
told Sunwing about when an aircraft he was working on underwent an emergency
landing, he was able to get from the back of the plane to the front door before
any passenger had gotten out of their seats, without having given a shouted
blocking command signal. In my respectful view, for Transport Canada to rely on
this anecdote in approving the FAM amendment was problematic by reason of the
fact that nothing is known of the size or type of aircraft Inspector Mayne was
working on at the time. It is not known if that aircraft was large or small,
whether it had many exits or only a few, whether the exits were a long way from
the most distant passenger or closer, and whether his experience was recent or
not. It would be unreasonable to rely on the anecdote without assessing these
variables because the issue was not how fast an attendant could get to a door
and open it in general, but how fast that could be done on one of the Boeing
737-800 class passenger jets at issue in this case. On the other hand I
appreciate these variables would have been known to Cabin Inspector Mayne who
told the anecdote to Sunwing, and who granted the verbal FAM amendment. On
balance I am not inclined to hold this aspect of the decision to be
unreasonable per se even though the record is less that fully
transparent on this point because of the deference owed to this specialized
decision maker.
Time Savings “Discovery”
[78]
Secondly, CUPE disputes the passage in the draft
Cabin Safety Bulletin referring to the time required to open cabin doors where
Sunwing says it “discovered” less time was
required if there were no shouted blocking signal commands:
We discovered cabin crews are able to open
an armed door in less time than it would take for a passenger to remove their
seatbelt and make their way to an exit. The response time for opening the exits
will be improved by assessing the conditions outside your door and opening it
immediately.
[79]
I agree that to the extent this assertion
suggests the discovery arose as a result of the four tests, it is problematic
because the shouted blocking signal commands had little if anything to do with
Sunwing’s failing to pass the first three demonstrations. However, the fourth partial
demonstration did proceed faster than the others and it did not utilize shouted
blocking signal commands. On balance, this finding by the safety officials of
Sunwing and Transport Canada is reasonable.
Time Exercise Test – Time for Flight Attendant Versus Time
for Passenger
[80]
Third, CUPE disputes the relevance of Sunwing’s test
exercise to see how long a flight attendant would take to go from a jump
seat to a door. In my view, reliance on this test is very problematic
because the test was not timed with a stopwatch, and moreover the time
estimates (three to four seconds or more) appear to be guesswork. In addition,
that test is of little to no relevance because it did not actually address the
point in issue, namely how long it would take a passenger to undo his or
her seatbelt, leave his or her seat and get to a door. That might have
been quite different from the time taken by a flight attendant to move
from a jump seat to a door. Reliance on this exercise also casts doubt
on the reasonableness of Transport Canada relying upon this aspect of the
claimed discovery of time saved.
No Additional Documentation was Supplied
[81]
CUPE takes issue with the fact that more
generally, Sunwing provided Transport Canada with no additional documentation
to supplement its letter of request and the draft Cabin Safety Bulletin. I
agree there was no measurable or verifiable data to support the requested FAM
amendment. The submissions filed by Sunwing were almost entirely based on the
experience of the Sunwing test participants supplemented with the input from
Transport Canada over the two days testing that took place. That said, I do not
find these concerns unreasonable on their own because of the experience of the
decision makers and the fact-based nature of the safety-related inquiry.
However this issue underscores difficulties arising because there was no “comprehensive review”, which I have already found unreasonable
in this case.
Risk to Crew not Assessed
[82]
Fifth, CUPE suggests the absence of the shouted blocking
signal command could result in a flight attendant being trampled or perhaps
pushed out a door during an evacuation, and that there was a possibility that
in certain circumstances passengers might die in the absence of a mandatory
command. In this connection, CUPE attacks the actual Risk Assessment produced
by Sunwing, even though it was neither shared with nor reviewed by Transport
Canada. Transport Canada agreed that multiple deaths were possible in certain
circumstances without the shouted blocking signal command. However, Sunwing’s
Risk Assessment makes no mention of multiple deaths; the most severe risk
described is “serious injuries”. I agree with
CUPE that the Risk Assessment may be flawed by its failure to recognize
multiple deaths as a risk reasonably requiring assessment. However, I agree
with the Respondents that multiple deaths may occur with or without mandatory
shouted commands. Once again, the resolution of this conflict emphasizes what I
have already found, namely the unreasonableness of Transport Canada making a
decision related to passenger and crew safety without considering as part of
the required “comprehensive review”, the very the
Risk Assessment it had requested. Indeed it is far from apparent to me that any
“comprehensive review” was conducted at all.
[83]
That said, it is not for this Court on judicial
review to decide whether or not the details of Sunwing’s Risk Assessment
supports Sunwing’s request for a FAM amendment. That assessment is for a Transport
Canada Cabin Safety Inspector to make. He or she has the necessary expertise to
determine if the Risk Assessment adequately recognized and assessed the risk of
multiple deaths in addition to serious injuries. No such assessment took place
in this case.
VII.
Conclusion
[84]
The reviewing court must consider the decision
as an organic whole; judicial review is not a line by line treasure hunt for
errors. There are many components and considerations in Transport Canada’s decision
to approve the FAM amendment. The assessment of the overall reasonableness of
the decision does not simply involve adding up the positives and subtracting
the negatives of individual components and considerations as I have outlined them
above.
[85]
Standing back and looking at the two decisions
as a whole, I have come to the conclusion that the decision to grant written
approval to Sunwing’s request to amend its FAM was unreasonable. The failure to
conduct a “comprehensive review” that considered
the Risk Assessment, together with the other shortcomings noted, deprived the
decision of its necessary justification. These also place this decision outside
the range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of
the facts and law, as required by the Supreme Court of Canada in Dunsmuir.
Therefore, judicial review is granted and the written decision of November 29,
2013 is set aside.
[86]
Taken as an organic whole, I am unable to find
that the verbal decision was unreasonable. It was a temporary and preliminary decision.
Transport Canada gave verbal approval to enable the fourth test to be
conducted. After the fourth test was completed, in my view that verbal decision
was spent; Sunwing could not make a formal change to its FAM based on the
verbal approval. At that point, Sunwing was in the position where if it wanted
to amend its FAM going forward, it was required to make a formal request for a
FAM amendment; Sunwing could no longer rely on the verbal approval decision. Therefore
the request to set aside the verbal approval decision to amend the FAM is
dismissed.
VIII.
Stay
[87]
It is apparent from the above and I understand that
the FAM amendment Sunwing sought and received cannot be repealed, or repealed
and replaced overnight given the FAM must be physically amended and staff
retrained and other contingencies which may not have been addressed. It is
apparent to me that setting aside the written FAM amendment decision should be
stayed for some reasonable but short period of time within which Sunwing may
revert to its previous FAM wording on an orderly basis or perhaps undertake a
fresh FAM amendment process with Transport Canada.
[88]
Therefore, I will stay setting aside the written
decision of November 29, 2013, for a period of 30 days from the date of this Judgment.
[89]
In the event any party disagrees with this stay
or its duration, it may make submissions on how long this stay should last or
whether it should be lifted.
Issue 3: Is the Applicant’s
application for judicial review vexatious?
[90]
While Sunwing’s two applications might have been
heard together with some greater efficiency, I cannot find the Applicant was
vexatious. Therefore, I reject this argument.
IX.
Costs
[91]
I requested submissions on an award of
all-inclusive costs. The parties agreed that, in the event the Applicant is
successful, the Applicant is to be paid $8,000 in costs, with each Respondent
paying $4,000 to the Applicant, and, in the event the Respondents are
successful, the Applicant will pay each of the Respondents $5,000 in costs. In
either event, the reference to “costs” means a single, all-inclusive payment,
inclusive of fees, disbursements and tax.
[92]
Because the Applicant was successful, and
because its cost submissions are reasonable, I award costs to the Applicant in
the amount of $8,000, with each Respondent paying $4,000 to the Applicant. The
reference to “costs” means a single, all-inclusive payment, inclusive of fees,
disbursements and tax. Had I held for the Respondents, I would have accepted
their proposal as reasonable and made an award accordingly.