StJudas
Aerospace
- Apr 2, 2013
- 9
I'll start by saying I'm a young engineer and have only been with my current company for 1.5 years or so full time. Almost a year of that time we have been without a full time Engineering Manager. The interim manager is a fellow engineer and he sent me to a meeting quite a while back that in effect put me on a committee that oversees mistakes that happen throughout the manufacturing process and tries to ensure we are AS9100 compliant.
Through this I realized that there were ways that our department was not compliant and that we'd been written up for it in audits for a number of years running. With the interim manager's consent I updated some documentation to a more user friendly format that would bring us to compliance and went through the necessary channels and approvals to ensure it met all the requirements. The other engineers were asked to participate in the development and told that they would have to comply with the end product, but after release a number of them do not and claim it's unnecessary paper work when asked about it.
Since then there have been a number of issues in our department relating to communications with the manufacturing facility and engineering errors that have come up through the committee and observation. From there I developed possible solutions, presented to the interim manager who thought they were good solutions but when it comes to implementation there is never much in the way of enforcement. When these issues continue to surface I am then subjected to pressure from this committee to correct them. I know that the interim manager has a lot on his plate, which is why I have done my best to assist in any way I can but am I wrong to feel a little annoyed and discouraged that approved solutions aren't followed through with?
As the youngest engineer in the company I'm hesitant to push harder, but I also know that these issues cast a negative light on our department and I really would rather not throw my fellow engineers under the bus during these meetings.
Through this I realized that there were ways that our department was not compliant and that we'd been written up for it in audits for a number of years running. With the interim manager's consent I updated some documentation to a more user friendly format that would bring us to compliance and went through the necessary channels and approvals to ensure it met all the requirements. The other engineers were asked to participate in the development and told that they would have to comply with the end product, but after release a number of them do not and claim it's unnecessary paper work when asked about it.
Since then there have been a number of issues in our department relating to communications with the manufacturing facility and engineering errors that have come up through the committee and observation. From there I developed possible solutions, presented to the interim manager who thought they were good solutions but when it comes to implementation there is never much in the way of enforcement. When these issues continue to surface I am then subjected to pressure from this committee to correct them. I know that the interim manager has a lot on his plate, which is why I have done my best to assist in any way I can but am I wrong to feel a little annoyed and discouraged that approved solutions aren't followed through with?
As the youngest engineer in the company I'm hesitant to push harder, but I also know that these issues cast a negative light on our department and I really would rather not throw my fellow engineers under the bus during these meetings.