The Regulatory Framework
The requirement for airside pedestrian safety training is embedded in the aerodrome licensing and health and safety regulatory frameworks that govern aerodrome operations in the UK. Aerodrome operators bear primary responsibility for ensuring that all persons accessing the airside area are appropriately trained and aware of the hazards they will encounter.
| Regulatory Reference | Requirement |
| CAP 168 — Licensing of Aerodromes | Aerodrome operators must implement airside safety management arrangements that include control of access to the airside area, appropriate induction and safety awareness training for all airside personnel, and documented procedures for managing contractors and third-party organisations with airside access. |
| CAP 642 — Airside Safety Management | The primary UK CAA guidance document for airside safety management. CAP 642 sets out the standards for airside safety induction, pedestrian safety awareness, vehicle and pedestrian interface management, and the obligations of aerodrome operators and airside employers to ensure their personnel are competent to operate safely in the airside environment. |
| Health & Safety at Work Act 1974 | The aerodrome operator and each airside employer has a duty under HSWA 1974 to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the health, safety and welfare at work of all employees and others who may be affected by their activities. Adequate airside safety training is a core component of discharging this duty. |
| Management of Health & Safety at Work Regulations 1999 | Requires employers to carry out suitable and sufficient risk assessment of the hazards to which their employees are exposed — and to provide appropriate information, instruction and training based on that assessment. The airside environment risk assessment for any aerodrome employer must identify pedestrian hazards and the training controls required to manage them. |
| CDM Regulations 2015 | For construction and engineering contractors working airside, the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015 impose specific duties on principal contractors and contractors regarding worker safety information and induction. Airside pedestrian safety training is a required element of CDM compliance for construction workers operating in the airside area. |
| Aerodrome Manual Requirement | The aerodrome operator’s pedestrian safety and airside access induction framework must be documented in the Aerodrome Manual. The authority will assess the adequacy of pedestrian safety arrangements at aerodrome licence oversight. |
| ISO 45001:2018 | For aerodrome operators and airside employers that hold or are seeking ISO 45001 certification, airside pedestrian safety training is a key control within the OH&S management system hazard and risk assessment. The training must be documented as an OH&S operational control and its delivery recorded. |
AACS designs pedestrian safety courses that meet the CAP 642 content standard and align with the aerodrome operator’s specific Aerodrome Manual requirements. Where the aerodrome operator also holds or is seeking ISO 45001 certification, AACS ensures that the pedestrian safety training programme is designed to function as a documented operational control within the ISO 45001 framework.
Course Content
The Airside Pedestrian Safety course must give every participant a genuine, working understanding of the airside environment and the behaviours required to operate safely within it. The content must be specific to the aerodrome where the training applies — its layout, its traffic patterns, its specific hazard hotspots and its local procedures. Generic awareness content that could apply to any aerodrome, or any airport environment, does not equip participants to identify and manage the specific hazards they will actually encounter.
| Module | Content |
| Module 1 — The Airside Environment | Aerodrome layout and orientation: the difference between the landside and airside areas; movement area, manoeuvring area and apron definitions; runway and taxiway identification; the aerodrome’s specific layout, access gates, pedestrian routes and restricted zones; why the airside environment requires specific safety behaviour |
| Module 2 — Aircraft Hazards on Foot | Jet blast: the velocity, temperature and reach of jet exhaust from different engine types at different power settings; safe distances from running jet engines; prop wash and rotor downwash from turboprop and helicopter operations; engine intake hazard zones and the danger of standing forward of a running engine; wing tip clearances and the unpredictability of aircraft taxi paths; the significance of anti-collision lights and what they indicate about aircraft state |
| Module 3 — Vehicle Hazards on the Apron | The types of ground support equipment operating on the apron and their specific hazards for pedestrians: baggage tugs, pushback tractors, fuel bowsers, catering trucks, high-loaders and ground power units; blind spots in common GSE types; the noise environment that suppresses both the pedestrian’s ability to hear vehicles and the driver’s ability to hear a pedestrian; right of way: aircraft always have right of way, then vehicles, then pedestrians — what this means in practice |
| Module 4 — Airside Markings & Signs | Surface markings relevant to pedestrians: vehicle roadway markings, pedestrian crossing points, restricted area boundaries and stop bars; mandatory instruction signs (red background) and their meaning for pedestrians; information signs (yellow background); holding point markings and why pedestrians must never cross a runway or taxiway holding point without ATC clearance or escort; aerodrome-specific markings that differ from the generic standard |
| Module 5 — Personal Protective Equipment | Mandatory PPE in the airside environment: high-visibility clothing requirements — class, colour and reflective strip standards applicable at the aerodrome; hearing protection: when and where it is required; eye protection: when required near jet blast or in areas of elevated debris risk; footwear requirements; loose clothing and lanyard discipline — the engine intake and propeller ingestion risk from unsecured PPE and personal items; PPE inspection before entering the airside area |
| Module 6 — FOD Awareness | What constitutes Foreign Object Debris and why it matters for pedestrians: the role of the pedestrian in FOD prevention; carrying items airside securely; the obligation to pick up or report FOD encountered on the movement area; tools and personal items: never placing them on aircraft surfaces or in positions where they could fall into an engine intake; the FOD reporting procedure at the aerodrome; FOD walk participation |
| Module 7 — Access Control & Escort Procedures | Airside access control: gates, PIN systems, biometric entry and swipe card access; the obligation to challenge tailgating; never allowing an unknown person to follow through an access gate; escort procedures: who may escort unqualified personnel airside; the escort’s responsibilities; the pedestrian’s responsibilities when operating under escort; what to do if separated from an escort in the airside area |
| Module 8 — Communication Airside | Radio communication for pedestrians: when pedestrians may be required to monitor a radio frequency; understanding ATC transmission format without needing to respond; communicating with AVDP-permitted vehicle drivers; hand signals between pedestrian and vehicle operator; mobile phone and distraction policy: the prohibition on using mobile phones on the apron and the reasons for it |
| Module 9 — Emergency Procedures | The aerodrome emergency signal and crash alarm system: recognising the signals and understanding the required response; actions on hearing the crash alarm — clearing the movement area, taking cover away from the incident; evacuation assembly points; actions if caught in jet blast or blown to the ground; actions if an aircraft passes closer than expected; fire emergency procedures; what to do if a person is struck by a vehicle or aircraft |
| Module 10 — Human Factors & Airside Behaviour | Situational awareness on the apron: the need for continuous, active monitoring of the environment rather than task-focused attention; habituation and complacency — the specific risk for experienced ramp workers; distraction: the behaviours that narrow situational awareness and the specific distractors present in the apron environment; fatigue on shift work: recognising reduced alertness and the obligation not to work airside in an impaired state; the safety reporting system: what to report, how to report it, and why near miss reporting matters |
Assessment & Access Authorisation
Knowledge Assessment
The knowledge assessment tests participants’ understanding of the course content before airside access is authorised. The assessment is designed to verify genuine understanding of the airside hazards, the rules and the required behaviours — not simply recall of training material. AACS designs assessments calibrated to the specific aerodrome: its layout, its specific hazard locations, its local PPE requirements and its emergency procedures.
Assessment design features include:
- Question bank calibrated to the specific aerodrome — questions reference the aerodrome’s actual layout, access gates, vehicle types operating there and local procedures
- Scenario-based questions — not just knowledge recall; participants must demonstrate that they can apply what they have learned to realistic airside situations
- Pass standard set at a level reflecting genuine safety competence — not a minimum that can be achieved by partial understanding of the hazards
- Failed assessment protocol — mandatory re-instruction and re-assessment before any airside access is permitted; a person who does not understand the hazards is not permitted airside unescorted
- Reasonable adjustments for language and literacy — AACS designs assessment delivery options for workforces with varying English language proficiency, including verbal assessment and translated material where required
- Assessment record format — documenting the result, date, assessor identity and any remedial action taken, in a format suitable for the aerodrome’s access records
Practical Airside Familiarisation
For personnel who will be working regularly in the airside environment, a supervised practical familiarisation element following the classroom or online training consolidates the learning in the actual environment. Walking the aerodrome layout with a qualified escort, identifying the specific hazard locations, practice routes and emergency assembly points in person, and experiencing the noise and visual environment of an active apron produces retention and confidence that classroom content alone cannot achieve. AACS incorporates a structured supervised familiarisation element into the course design for aerodrome operators that want this level of competency assurance.
Practical familiarisation elements designed by AACS include:
- Escorted aerodrome orientation — walking the specific routes and access points the participant will use; identifying holding points, restricted zones and pedestrian crossing points on the ground
- Hazard identification exercise — the participant identifies and describes the hazards present at each location on the route, demonstrating active hazard recognition rather than passive reception of training content
- PPE inspection — the participant demonstrates correct PPE selection and wear for the specific locations they will access
- Emergency assembly point identification — the participant identifies the correct assembly point for their work area and describes the emergency response procedure
- Practical familiarisation record — a signed record of the familiarisation, completed by both the participant and the supervising escort
Access Records & Renewal
The aerodrome operator must maintain records that demonstrate, for every person permitted unescorted airside access, that they have completed appropriate pedestrian safety training and that their training is current. AACS designs the access record framework and renewal system that enables aerodrome operators to administer pedestrian access in compliance with CAP 168 requirements.
Access record and renewal framework design includes:
- Access record format — the information to be recorded for each permitted individual: training date, assessment result, aerodrome-specific familiarisation, access areas permitted and renewal due date
- Renewal interval policy — typically annual or when the aerodrome’s procedures, layout or hazard profile changes significantly; AACS advises on the appropriate interval for each aerodrome’s risk profile
- Renewal training content — a refresher programme that updates permit holders on any aerodrome changes, reviews safety performance data from the preceding period and reinforces the human factors content most prone to erosion through habituation
- Lapsed access management — procedures for suspending airside access when training has not been renewed and for reinstating access following renewal training
- Contractor and visitor short-term access — a managed briefing process for individuals requiring temporary airside access, with appropriate supervision requirements and a clear distinction from the full pedestrian safety training standard
- Training record audit trail — enabling the aerodrome operator to demonstrate to the UK CAA and to HSE that their pedestrian safety training records are complete and current
Specialist & Variant Course Programmes
Contractor & Third-Party Airside Induction
Contractors working airside — whether for a day’s inspection or a multi-month construction project — represent one of the highest pedestrian safety risk categories at any aerodrome. They are unfamiliar with the specific aerodrome environment. They may be working in areas of the airside that regular employees rarely access. Their work activities may take them into proximity with active runways, taxiways or aircraft stands that the aerodrome’s regular workforce knows to approach cautiously. And the pressure of contract completion timelines creates exactly the commercial pressure that drives unsafe shortcuts.
AACS designs contractor airside induction programmes that give contractors the aerodrome-specific pedestrian safety knowledge they need for the specific work location and duration — not a generic induction that covers the airport in principle but not the specific hazards of the construction zone, maintenance facility or apron area where they will actually work.
Contractor induction content additionally covers:
- Work permit and safe system of work requirements — the aerodrome operator’s permit to work system for high-risk activities near the movement area
- Site-specific hazard briefing — the specific hazards at the contractor’s work location, including any temporary changes to normal operations or access routes during the contract period
- Aerodrome operator contact points — who the contractor reports to, who to call in an emergency and who to contact if unexpected hazards are identified
- CDM compliance context — the contractor’s specific obligations under CDM 2015 for the work being undertaken
- Tool and material control airside — preventing construction materials, spoil and debris from becoming FOD in the movement area
New Starter Airside Induction
For organisations with regular airside working — ground handling companies, line maintenance providers, fuelling operators, catering companies — the airside pedestrian safety course is a standard element of the new starter induction. AACS designs new starter airside induction programmes that integrate the pedestrian safety course content with the organisation’s own site-specific induction requirements, giving new employees a coherent, single induction experience rather than a series of disconnected safety presentations.
New starter airside induction programmes designed by AACS include:
- Integration of aerodrome pedestrian safety content with the employer’s own site-specific induction — one coherent induction, not two separate events
- Role-specific hazard content — the specific hazard profile relevant to the new starter’s role: a baggage handler’s exposure to vehicle hazards is different from a line engineer’s exposure to jet blast and FOD risk
- Organisation-specific emergency procedures — the new starter’s employer’s specific emergency response obligations, assembly points and reporting lines
- Buddy system integration — pairing new starters with an experienced colleague for the first period of airside work, with the buddy’s safety responsibilities defined
- Probationary period monitoring — a structured check-in at the end of the new starter’s initial airside working period to confirm that the training is being applied in practice
Night & Low Visibility Operations — Pedestrian Safety
The pedestrian safety hazards of the airside environment are amplified at night and in low visibility conditions. Visibility of markings, signs and moving aircraft is reduced. The visual cues that pedestrians use to detect approaching vehicles and aircraft are degraded. The noise environment at night may be different — sometimes quieter, sometimes with concentrated high-power jet activity that makes detection of other sounds even more difficult. AACS designs specialist pedestrian safety content for personnel who work airside at night or during low visibility operations, addressing the specific hazard amplification that these conditions create.
Night and LVO pedestrian safety content covers:
- Visual hazard recognition at night — interpreting aircraft anti-collision and navigation lights; identifying vehicle positions and movement from lighting patterns in darkness
- Reflective and illuminated PPE — the specific high-visibility requirements for night airside working; headtorch and area lighting discipline near the movement area
- Enhanced vigilance requirements — the specific behavioural adjustments required in low visibility conditions: reduced walking speed near vehicle routes, more frequent stops to scan for hazards, increased spacing from aircraft stands
- LVO movement restrictions — which pedestrian routes may be restricted during CAT II/III operations and the procedures for navigating these restrictions
- Communication at night — radio protocol changes during LVO; ensuring vehicle drivers can identify and respond to pedestrians in low visibility
Refresher & Renewal Pedestrian Safety Training
Renewal training is the mechanism through which habituation and complacency — the primary human factors risks for experienced airside workers — are actively countered. A renewal programme that simply repeats the initial course content achieves nothing beyond another signature in the training record. AACS designs renewal programmes that specifically address the human factors dimensions of experienced-worker risk: the normalised deviation, the reduced vigilance and the assumption of safety that accumulate over years of incident-free airside work.
Renewal pedestrian safety training designed by AACS covers:
- Safety data review — pedestrian-related incidents, near misses and vehicle strike events at the aerodrome and from the wider UK airside safety record during the preceding permit period
- Aerodrome change briefing — any changes to the aerodrome’s layout, procedures, vehicle types or PPE requirements since the previous training
- Human Factors focus — dedicated time on complacency, habituation and normalised deviation: why experienced workers are at higher risk than new starters; the specific situations that most commonly generate pedestrian near misses at this aerodrome
- Scenario discussion — facilitated discussion of realistic near-miss scenarios drawn from the aerodrome’s own safety data, with structured analysis of causal factors and prevention
- Knowledge check — a targeted assessment of the content areas most prone to knowledge erosion, including LVO procedures, emergency signals and new or changed aerodrome procedures
Pedestrian Safety Scheme Design for Aerodrome Operators
The Airside Pedestrian Safety course is one component of the aerodrome operator’s broader pedestrian safety scheme. The scheme must define who is required to complete training and at what standard, how access is controlled and recorded, how the scheme applies to contractors and short-term visitors, how compliance is monitored, and how the scheme is reviewed and updated as the aerodrome’s operations evolve. AACS designs complete pedestrian safety scheme frameworks for aerodrome operators — giving them a CAP 168-compliant, operationally usable scheme rather than a training course they must build a scheme around.
Pedestrian safety scheme design services provided by AACS include:
- Scheme policy development — who requires training, what categories of access exist (full training, escorted access, short-term contractor briefing), scheme governance and accountability
- Training standard specification — course content requirements, delivery method, minimum duration and assessment standard for each access category
- Course material development — slides, participant handbooks, aerodrome-specific maps and diagrams, marking and sign recognition references, assessment question banks
- Facilitator guide development — enabling the aerodrome operator’s own safety team to deliver the course consistently and to the required standard
- Access record system design — record format, register structure and renewal tracking process
- Contractor management framework — the process for inducting, recording and managing airside access for contractors and third parties
- Renewal framework design — renewal intervals, renewal training content and lapsed-access procedures
- Aerodrome Manual documentation — the pedestrian safety scheme description for inclusion in the AM in the format required by CAP 168
- ISO 45001 alignment — where applicable, designing the scheme to function as a documented operational control within the aerodrome operator’s ISO 45001 OH&S management system
- CAA oversight preparation — ensuring the scheme and its records are structured to withstand scrutiny at aerodrome licence oversight and HSE inspection
AVDP and Pedestrian Safety — The Complete Airside Access Framework
For aerodrome operators, ground handling companies and on-aerodrome employers who need to manage both vehicle and pedestrian airside access, AACS designs integrated frameworks that address both the Airside Vehicle Driver’s Permit scheme and the Airside Pedestrian Safety scheme as a coherent whole — with consistent access records, aligned course standards, shared Human Factors content and a single management review framework covering both programmes.
The relationship between the two programmes is hierarchical for most personnel. Pedestrian safety training is the foundational requirement — every person accessing the airside area on foot must complete it. AVDP training is the additional qualification for those who also need to operate vehicles. Designing the two programmes together avoids duplication of content, ensures consistency in the safety culture messages delivered, and gives the aerodrome operator a single, integrated airside access management framework rather than two parallel schemes.
Integrated AVDP and pedestrian safety scheme services provided by AACS include:
- Combined scheme policy — a single access policy covering both pedestrian and vehicle access categories, with clear pathways for personnel who require one or both qualifications
- Modular course design — shared foundational content (aerodrome layout, markings, aircraft hazards, FOD, emergency procedures, human factors) delivered once, with vehicle-specific or pedestrian-specific modules added for each qualification
- Integrated access record system — a single record for each individual showing their pedestrian safety training status, their AVDP status (if applicable), the vehicle categories permitted and the renewal dates for each
- Unified renewal framework — aligned renewal dates and integrated renewal training where both qualifications are held
- Single Aerodrome Manual documentation — a coherent section covering the full airside access framework rather than separate sections for vehicle and pedestrian access
Why AACS for Airside Pedestrian Safety Training
Calibrated to the Specific Aerodrome
AACS does not deliver generic airside awareness content that could apply to any aerodrome. Every course we design is built around the specific aerodrome: its layout, its specific hazard hotspots, its vehicle traffic patterns, its PPE requirements, its access control systems and its emergency procedures. Participants leave with knowledge of the environment they will actually work in — not a general introduction to airports that they must then mentally translate to their specific situation.
Grounded in Operational Airside Experience
AACS training is designed by advisors with direct operational experience of working aerodromes — people who understand the hazards of the airside environment from operational practice, not from reading CAP 642. That operational grounding makes the training credible to the ramp agents, line engineers and contractors who receive it — because it reflects the environment they recognise, addresses the pressures they actually face, and treats them as the experienced professionals they are rather than delivering a generic safety lecture.
Human Factors Embedded Throughout
The human factors dimensions of airside pedestrian safety — complacency, habituation, distraction, time pressure and the social dynamics of experienced teams — are not an optional add-on to the course. They are integrated throughout every module, because they are the mechanisms through which most airside pedestrian incidents actually develop. Participants who understand why experienced workers are more at risk than new starters, and who have a framework for recognising and countering the specific human factors conditions that precede airside incidents, are genuinely safer than those who have simply been told the rules.
Full Scheme Design Capability
AACS provides not only the training course but the complete pedestrian safety scheme framework that aerodrome operators need to manage airside pedestrian access in compliance with CAP 168. Scheme policy, training standards, assessment criteria, access records, contractor management, renewal framework and Aerodrome Manual documentation — AACS delivers a complete, ready-to-implement scheme. Where the operator also needs a vehicle permit scheme, we design both as an integrated framework.
Aligned With CAP 168, CAP 642 & ISO 45001
Every AACS pedestrian safety course and scheme is designed against the current version of CAP 168, CAP 642 and, where applicable, ISO 45001:2018. We monitor CAA publication updates and revise course content and scheme documentation when regulatory guidance changes. For aerodrome operators with ISO 45001 certification obligations, AACS ensures the pedestrian safety scheme functions as a documented OH&S operational control that the certification auditor will recognise and accept.
Our Advisory Philosophy for Airside Pedestrian Safety
AACS approaches airside pedestrian safety training with the same conviction that runs through all of our aviation safety work: training that does not change behaviour does not improve safety. A person who has sat through an airside safety presentation and signed an attendance sheet is not demonstrably safer than someone who received no training at all, unless the training gave them an accurate model of the hazards they will face, equipped them with the behaviours to manage those hazards, and challenged the human factors conditions — complacency, distraction, habituation — that erode safe behaviour over time.
Every course is calibrated to the specific aerodrome — its layout, its hazards, its procedures and its local PPE requirements
Aircraft and vehicle hazard content is specific and technically accurate — jet blast distances, intake danger zones and prop wash characteristics, not generic warnings
Human Factors content is integrated throughout every module — complacency, habituation and distraction are addressed, not ignored
Assessment is rigorous and scenario-based — testing applied understanding of the airside environment, not recall of slide content
Contractor and visitor induction is treated as a serious safety obligation — not a five-minute briefing at the gate
Renewal training actively counters the complacency of experienced workers — it is not a repeat of the initial course
Scheme design gives aerodrome operators a complete, CAP 168-compliant framework — not just a course that leaves them to build the scheme around it
Our advice is independent — we have no commercial relationship with any aerodrome operator, ground handling company or access management software provider
We deliver airside pedestrian safety training and scheme design that is operationally grounded, regulatory compliant and built on direct experience of the airside environment. Whether you are designing a pedestrian safety scheme for a new aerodrome, revising an existing scheme to meet current CAP 168 and CAP 642 requirements, or delivering induction training to a new cohort of airside workers, AACS provides the expertise to produce training that genuinely protects your people.
Speak to an AACS Specialist
If you need an Airside Pedestrian Safety course designed or delivered, a pedestrian safety scheme framework developed for your aerodrome, an integrated AVDP and pedestrian safety scheme, or an independent review of your existing scheme against current CAP 168 and CAP 642 requirements, please contact us. We will be direct about what your scheme needs, what the regulatory framework requires, and how we can help you protect every person who works on foot in your airside environment.