Introduction
Procedure design does not live in isolation. Every significant procedure change has publication implications and often safety implications as well. Yet many authorities still manage PANS-OPS review, aeronautical publication, and safety governance in separate tooling stacks with manual coordination between them.
Why that model no longer works
- PANS-OPS outputs affect published procedure content.
- Obstacle or design concerns can generate operational risk mitigations.
- Temporary operational measures may be needed before permanent publication.
- Authorities need one audit trail, not three disconnected narratives.
What a unified workflow looks like
A unified workflow does not erase functional boundaries. It preserves them while linking evidence. Procedure teams retain design responsibility. AIS retains publication authority. Safety retains risk governance. The system simply stops forcing those teams to re-create context across separate tools.
Conclusion
The case for a unified workflow is not convenience. It is control. When PANS-OPS, eAIP, and SMS remain disconnected, the organization spends too much effort rebuilding certainty after the fact. A governed chain keeps that certainty intact from the beginning.

