Accident costs and / or degree of injury.
The class of an army accident is determined by the cost and amount of injury. Check out this link to find out more about the army's classes of accident: http://www.wainwright.army.mil/safety/CDSO%20Documents/AGAR%20PACKET/accident%20classification.pdf
The class of an army accident is determined by the cost and amount of injury. Check out this link to find out more about the army's classes of accident: http://www.wainwright.army.mil/safety/CDSO%20Documents/AGAR%20PACKET/accident%20classification.pdf
The class of an army accident is determined by the cost and amount of injury. Check out this link to find out more about the army's classes of accident: http://www.wainwright.army.mil/safety/CDSO%20Documents/AGAR%20PACKET/accident%20classification.pdf
Certain classes of on-duty accidents that always require a Centralized Accident Investigation are classes A and B. This rule applies to accidents that occur in the army.
DA PAM 385-40 -- Army Accident Investigations and Reporting
DA PAM 385-40 -- Army Accident Investigations and Reporting
Army Regulation 385-10, chapter 3 provides policy on Army accident investigation and reporting. Additionally, Department of the Army Pamphlet 385-40, Army accident investigations and reporting, is used along with Army Regulation 385-10.
according to the army systems mdel of accident causation, wich of the now component of the syste,
one that misses work after the accident
Class A accident. An Army accident in which the resulting total cost of property damage is $1,000,000 or more; an Army aircraft or missile is destroyed, missing, or abandoned; or an injury and/or occupational illness results in a fatality or permanent total disability. Note that unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) accidents are classified based on the cost to repair or replace the UAS. A destroyed, missing, or abandoned UAS will not constitute a Class A accident unless replacement or repair cost exceeds $1,000,000 or more. Source: safety.army.mil
any of the above