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ÖAMTC ANNUAL REPORT 2015 Austria Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 3 4 09 Contents | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC 08Preface 09 Breakdown Assistance 17 Assistance Booklet 25 Air Rescue Service 31Infrastructure 33 Service Station 25 17 Facts and Figures 33 41 Preface | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Preface Dear Members, Business Partners, and Friends of the ÖAMTC, Since July 2015 we now have over two million members relying on our emergency assistance services and the cover we provide. And while we’re very proud of this show of confidence, we also see it as a mandate to continue being a reliable partner and helper in the future, too. The past financial year has paved the way for the grand anniversary year 2016. Indeed, it is now 120 years since ÖAMTC staff first began providing exceptional services, assisting Club members in emergency situations and advising them on all mobility-related matters. The following pages are therefore devoted to the success stories of our breakdown assistance, air rescue service, Assistance Booklet, and our technical service and assistance centres. Those are the four mainstays on which the ÖAMTC has made history in Austria since 1896. But this year we also want to look ahead; after all, the issue of mobility is subject to constant change. Technical progress, changes in society and political outline conditions all go to shape the environment in which we operate. Our pledge to you is that, in the years ahead, we will continue to do our very utmost to assist you with your personal mobility. As always you will also find all the key data, facts and figures from our Club’s activities over the past year. Page 41 of the Report features a compact summary. All that remains is for us to wish you happy reading and lots of interesting insights! KR Dkfm. Werner Kraus ÖAMTC President 7 DI Oliver Schmerold ÖAMTC CEO Breakdown assistance | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Breakdown assistance A common motto links the past and the future of the ÖAMTC’s breakdown assistance service, and its legendary Yellow Angels: keeping people mobile and assisting them in emergency situations. And of course, in 2016, the means with which that service is provided to people have changed enormously in the 120 years the Club has been around. Where spanners and contact spray were once essential parts of the toolkit, 21st century patrolmen have now also become highly specialised computer technicians. 9 10 Breakdown assistance | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Breakdown assistance Assistance over time But apart from the name ‘Yellow Angels’ (a popular reference to the distinctive patrol cars and a grateful acknowledgement of the services they provided) and the unconditional promise to offer help and assistance, there is very little similarity today between those first hesitant attempts made in the 1950s and the assistance now provided in the second decade of the 21st century. As the Club’s 120th anniversary nears in 2016, the ÖAMTC and its patrolmen are gearing themselves up for the challenges posed by a changing technical and social environment. And let’s just set the record straight: there is simply no truth whatsoever in the rumour often circulated that the Club is now no longer able to provide roadside assistance because of the faults in the electronics systems of modern cars and the unsolvable mysteries they pose. Of course, maintaining this unique form of emergency assistance requires enormous expertise and a huge commitment. Unlike other service providers, the ÖAMTC still relies on technical competence right there by the roadside. For this each of our patrolmen needs high-tech tools, high training qualifications, and a wealth of data supplied directly at the scene, i.e. wherever he is needed in order to put the breakdown right. For this system to work, the ÖAMTC needs a vast amount of data and information on the electronic systems that are now built in to cars by manufacturers. But of course less and less of that data is made freely available by car manufacturers as a matter of course. That’s why the Club has set up comprehensive information systems based on the on-site experiences of its individual patrolmen. Traditional aids are still important, of course. In many cases it’s still a matter of getting a car started again simply because the battery is flat or of repairing a puncture. And often it’s a question of unlocking a vehicle simply because the keys are locked away inside. The Yellow Angels now have breakdown assistance laptops on board to deal with the growing number of electronic faults. They connect the laptops to the vehicle to read off error codes and then put the errors rights, i.e. reset the computerised control units. The Club member is then able to continue their journey. Being equipped with cutting-edge technology ensures that the ÖAMTC is able to put right 80% of breakdowns, there and then, at the roadside. MOBILE BREAKDOWN ASSISTANCE How breakdown assistance emerged The fishmonger was duly assisted, and his motorcycle was soon up and running again. Thus the ÖAMTC had provided its first breakdown assistance. Millions and millions of others would follow. In 1955, the year the Austrian State Treaty was signed and the year Austria declared her neutrality, Technical Services and breakdown assistance went into operation in the federal provinces too. By July 1958 the now legendary Steyr-Puch 500 patrol cars were out and about. Subsequent milestones include the introduction of 24-hour breakdown assistance throughout Austria, the nationwide emergency number 120 (without area code), and the comprehensive emergency service with the promise of ‘100% mobility’, which the ÖAMTC today delivers to its two million and more members. The Club’s members expect, rightly so, that the ÖAMTC’s breakdown assistance service is always there, by their side, as quickly as possible, wherever they are. And also that, more often than not, it is able there and then to help them continue their journey without further measures or repairs needed. That, in a nutshell, is the idea in all its simplicity. But the first time the ÖAMTC’s breakdown assistance service was dispatched in Vienna using sidecar motor cycles on 18 October 1954, even the most daring visionaries could not have imagined that the service would have such a future. The invention of breakdown assistance was in itself innovative enough. Its creator, Club technician Gerhard Seidel, first began after the Second World War by giving good tips and advice in the Club magazine. At the request of Club members he would now and again agree to take a look at a member’s vehicle parked in the side road running alongside the Club’s headquarters on Vienna’s Schubertring. This soon gave rise to the need to lease an inspection bay in Vienna’s 5th district so this type of work could be carried out more conveniently. Did you know that… … in 2015 the Club had more than 2 million members for the first time in its history? … emergency assistance can also be summoned using the ÖAMTC app, with GPS locating and real-time tracking by the Club member? … ÖAMTC patrolmen are able to get vehicles up and running again in more than 80% of cases? … Club members are eligible to use one of 350 ÖAMTC Clubmobil courtesy cars nationwide for up to four days, free of charge? The first ever instance of breakdown assistance in Austria occurred here on a summer’s day in the early 1950s and it has since become the stuff of legend. A fishmonger who had been transporting his wares in the sidecar of an old motorcycle turned up on foot at the inspection pit. His motorcycle had broken down and the goods – quite a valuable consignment in those days – were threatening to rot in the sweltering summer heat. And so Gerhard Seidel, together with another member of staff, set off in his own car to assist. … a separate Corporate Membership is available for businesses? 11 12 Breakdown assistance | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Breakdown assistance 100% mobility Some Yellow Angels work partly on the roads and partly at the Technical Help Desk, where they link up online with the systems operated by car manufacturers and search for solutions, passing on valuable tips and tricks to their colleagues at the roadside. What’s more the ÖAMTC and its partner clubs abroad keep extensive documentation packages that provide access to a wealth of shared experience – a constant process of learning and perfecting aimed at keeping abreast of innovations in the car industry. It means that even trickier cases can now be solved, cases where in the past it may not have been possible to provide immediate assistance. ÖAMTC will continue to make sure it is able to communicate directly with members and that it is not excluded to the member’s detriment, for example whenever a vehicle exchanges data directly with the manufacturer’s server. The Club will give members the opportunity to transmit data from their vehicles to the ÖAMTC voluntarily, data which patrolmen can then use to assist motorists at the roadside more quickly and more often. No other ÖAMTC service is as closely associated with the Club as breakdown assistance. In fact, the ÖAMTC is synonymous with breakdown assistance. And breakdown assistance is synonymous with the ÖAMTC. And to make sure that remains true for the next 120 years too, the ÖAMTC has been timely in setting the right course for the information age. And while the conditions and the circumstances may change, the promise of 100% mobility will not. But in each and every case the ÖAMTC will keep its members mobile. In eight out of ten cases the ÖAMTC is now able to help at the roadside, and it will continue to do so in the future. And in those cases where that really is impossible, there is always the towing service. And even then the ÖAMTC continues to look after its members, with a Clubmobil courtesy car for example or by helping members to continue their journey by other means. In other words, keeping members mobile is always the priority; it’s how the ÖAMTC fulfils its core promise of ‘100% mobility’. But remedying electronic faults remains a challenge for the future. On the one hand the ÖAMTC has to secure its access to the data, as that is the basis on which it is able to help. On the other, it must also ensure that its members’ cars only provide manufacturers with the data which members are happy to divulge. This is done mostly on an international basis. Together with its partner clubs the ÖAMTC acts as a representative and enforces these consumer rights within the European Union. The Club Card Member IDs were around even in 1896, although they were of course made of paper and all the entries had to be made by hand. The Club Card has been available in its practical laminated credit card format since 1981. It allows Club Card holders to avail themselves not only of the ÖAMTC’s breakdown assistance Indeed, the ÖAMTC’s sole interest lies in enabling members to remain mobile. The Club has no interest in carrying out repairs and towing a car to a garage. This would not bring the ÖAMTC any sort of financial advantage; the Club is after all solely on the side of its members. So in future the 13 services, but also a multitude of other services exclusive to members. Plus it offers great savings with more than 160,000 Preferred Partners worldwide. 14 Breakdown assistance | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Breakdown assistance Die gelbe Flotte Mobile breakdown assistance 668,202 Stationary breakdown assistance 672,711 Towing assignments 214,564 Technicians, patrolmen and towing staff Total, emergency vehicles 15 16 1,252 527 Assistance Booklet | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Assistance Booklet The ÖAMTC Assistance Booklet has evolved tremendously over the past 56 years. During that time the scope of services provided has increased more than ten-fold, and today just under 70% of all ÖAMTC members are also Assistance Booklet holders. 17 18 Assistance Booklet | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Assistance Booklet How it all began More and more services The international assistance booklet was launched at the start of the 1959 holiday season in response to the growing urge for travel among many Austrians during the post-war period and to assist Austrian motorists in emergencies at a time when foreign exchange controls were in place. By all accounts it was a sparse booklet: it did not yet comprise any domestic services, any spare parts procurement, and certainly no free repatriation by ambulance jet of accident victims or of the critically ill. It was valid throughout central and western Europe and contained letters of recommendation from the ÖAMTC designed to guarantee assistance from affiliated clubs. In the years that followed, the range of services provided under the Assistance Booklet was continually expanded: 1962 saw the introduction of the towing service abroad and 1965 the launch of the first domestic service, i.e. pilotage. If a motorist became unable to drive his own car due to illness or injury, an ÖAMTC driver would bring the vehicle back safely on his behalf. It’s a service that’s still frequently used to this day, if for example a motorist breaks their hand on a skiing holiday and is unable to drive as a result. The AT Super-Assistance Booklet was introduced in 1969, offering an assistance package for the whole family, valid both in Austria and abroad. By then, legal aid and health cover abroad were an integral part of the Assistance Booklet. Six years later, injured persons could be repatriated on board a Lear Jet equipped as an airborne intensive care unit. Since then the ambulance jet regularly repatriates some 90 patients a year, mainly from Spain, Greece, Turkey and Egypt. Already then the most important part of the Assistance Booklet was the letter of credit. It meant that bills issued by hospitals, doctors and/or garages could be settled without foreign currency. In 1959, the 20,000 or so international assistance booklet holders were therefore able to pay a garage in Italy for example with a letter of credit rather than cash; the garage would then present the letter of credit to the Italian Touring Club, which would in turn reclaim the money directly from the ÖAMTC. These early adopters of the Assistance Booklet also had access to two other services, i.e. the assumption of the customs risk in the event of vehicle loss and vehicle recovery. Thus 60% of the recovery costs for a vehicle that had become unusable abroad could be refunded by the ÖAMTC. Calls for assistance received 19 20 years after the launch By 1979 the AT Super-Assistance Booklet was already providing 22 different services, including breakdown assistance, patient repatriation, and legal aid in civil cases. Today Assistance Booklet holders are able to avail themselves of 37 different Assistance Booklet services, including breakdown assistance, helicopter rescue, vehicle recovery, ÖAMTC emergency letters of credit, emergency psychological counselling, and organisation and cost cover following an accident or illness. And not just throughout Europe, but also in Russia, the countries outside Europe that border on the Mediterranean, and on all the Mediterranean islands, the Canaries, the Azores, and Madeira. For all those drawn to more exotic destinations, the Assistance Booklet can be complemented with global travel & health insurance cover, under which the ÖAMTC provides emergency medical assistance worldwide. Touring Members who do not have a car, motorcycle or moped themselves can now also have security and peace of mind with the Assistance Booklet. And even members’ relatives are able to rely on assistance in the event of accident, injury and/or illness, even if they’re travelling alone – regardless of the mode of transport with which they happen to be travelling. Today’s Assistance Booklet may no longer cost 30 Austrian Schillings as it did in 1959, but for just EUR 42.60 motorists in 2016 are able to benefit from a package that comprises just under 40 different services. And, in 2016, the ÖAMTC Assistance Booklet for Touring Members is available for EUR 25. A hot summer Summer 2015 was certainly a hot one not just in terms of temperatures, but also for the staff working at the ÖAMTC Assistance Booklet emergency services. Between June 1 and August 31 they fielded an average of 795 calls a day. More than 20,000 assistance services were provided, and 873 people were repatriated home. The ambulance jet was scrambled in 37 of those cases. Services provided by the Assistance Booklet… include patient repatriation (also by ambulance jet), vehicle recovery, damage caused by game/wildlife, return and onward journeys, and much more besides. Cover is valid not just for Assistance Booklet holders, but also for their partner and children up to the age of 19 – even if they’re all travelling separately. And it doesn’t matter whether they’re travelling with their own vehicle, by rail, bus, bicycle, ship or by air. The ÖAMTC Assistance Booklet is valid in Austria and throughout Europe as well as in Russia, the European countries that border on the Mediterranean, the Canaries, the Azores, and Madeira. 20 Assistance Booklet | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Assistance Booklet then and now Did you know that… Initially, ÖAMTC Assistance Booklet holders would not always call the ÖAMTC in an emergency as a matter of course. It took ÖAMTC advertising and an internet presence to make members more aware of the Club’s Assistance Booklet services. Two other factors that have contributed greatly towards facilitating the work of ÖAMTC staff are the internet and smartphones. Thanks to the internet, Assistance Booklet staff are now able to locate a particular hospital treating a patient much more quickly and easily. Likewise, the logging of data and the subsequent conversations with doctors in the case of patient transfers within Austria or conversations with emergency doctors in the case of transfers from abroad (who also take charge of communicating with doctors attending on site) are also much simpler than they used to be. Keeping in constant touch with the patient and their relatives has also been simplified, along with providing information on the next stages in the procedure. Previously, the hospital telephone was often the only way of reaching a patient, and it was not unusual for coin-operated phones to be out of order. And, in the past, organising a patient’s repatriation on board a scheduled flight could often take up to ten days; today, it takes a maximum of 48 hours for the patient to be back home again. patient repatriation in 1970 patient repatriation in 1980 On one occasion in the late 1970s, an Assistance Booklet holder had had an accident in Belgrade, and the ÖAMTC did not know what hospital he had been taken to. The ÖAMTC had to phone all the hospitals in the vicinity before the injured person could be located and then transported home to Austria by ambulance jet. That same decade, staff had to engage in detective work of a similar nature, this time for a vehicle recovery, after they were informed that two young men had had to abandon their broken-down vehicle ‘somewhere between Padua and Vicenza’. Two motorcyclists were once involved in a serious accident in Greece. As their relatives had no further information, they called the ÖAMTC Assistance Booklet Department. Within a day the ÖAMTC emergency doctor had got in touch with the doctor attending, and the emergency call station had arranged for the patients to be repatriated by ambulance jet and for the damaged motorcycles to be recovered. 21 … 9 emergency call stations throughout Europe work together with the ÖAMTC Assistance Booklet emergency services? … the ÖAMTC has 230 partner clubs abroad? … an increasing number of motorcycle accidents involving patient repatriation by the ÖAMTC occur on Corsica and Sardinia? … the most common reason for calling the Assistance Booklet emergency services in the countries neighbouring Austria are car breakdowns? … repatriation by ambulance jet within Europe costs around EUR 11,000? … the furthest and most expensive repatriation made under the ÖAMTC global travel & health insurance policy was from Cordoba, Argentina, in 2006? patient repatriation today On a Monday in the summer of 2015 three school-leavers were enjoying a ride on a banana boat near Split when they fell into the sea and were run over by another boat. One of the girls sustained severe injuries and was taken to hospital. Her father was an ÖAMTC Assistance Booklet holder and called the Club the same day. The Assistance Booklet emergency headquarters in Vienna organised the entire procedure that followed. A medical officer in Innsbruck clarified the emergency with the doctor attending in Split and a rapid repatriation mission by air ambulance was organised. The emergency assistance department in Vienna sent out enquiries to five ambulance jet partner companies, one of which confirmed and went about obtaining the flight and landing permits. In the meantime the emergency assistance team arranged cover for the hospital costs in Croatia, the transfer to the airport, the existence of the patient’s medical e-Card, and other administrative details. In the Meanwhile, the Assistance Booklet staff regularly contacted the injured girl’s father by mobile phone and kept him informed of the latest developments. Within 25 hours of the accident his daughter was on a ward at the emergency hospital in Linz. The repatriation costs of almost EUR 10,000 were covered by the ÖAMTC. 22 Assistance Booklet | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Assistance Booklet Die gelbe Flotte Assistance Booklets sold Calls for assistance received Medical services Breakdown assistance and towing abroad Vehicle recoveries 1,373,245 181,364 4,610 19,820 7,330 23 24 Air Rescue Service | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Air Rescue Service ‘Calling Christophorus, over’ – That call for an ÖAMTC emergency helicopter in July 1983 marked the start of what has been a remarkable success story lasting more than 32 years. No-one at the time could have imagined that these modest beginnings would one day evolve into a nationwide network of air rescue bases covering the whole of Austria 25 26 Air Rescue Service | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Air Rescue Service A miniature ICU Having the right helicopter is crucial And so, over the past decades, the original remit of saving lives and rescuing people from life-threatening situations has gradually evolved into a profess ional service. Today, the swift action of ÖAMTC emergency rescue helicopters means that top-quality medical care can be made available in the shortest possible time almost anywhere in Austria. All of which has been enabled by the many medical and technical innovations that have lastingly shaped modern emergency rescue operations. The monitoring and therapy equipment used in air rescue not only has to offer the full functionality of all the very latest clinical devices and be just as reliable, it also has to be significantly more compact and lightweight. So a logical consequence of these requirements was to develop combined multifunctional equipment. These devices allow precise diagnosis and treatment while reducing the overall weight of the equipment for the benefit of air safety. Advances in the type of helicopters used are in turn based on the changes in medical requirements as well as the statutory conditions stipulated at the European level. So the latest generation of rescue helicopters focuses not just on enhanced flight performance, but also on increasing the space available inside for transporting patients. That way the emergency medical staff on board has sufficient space to attend to the patient in the best possible way during the flight. The performance increase allows greater ranges, but also a safer handling of the helicopters in everyday missions. The entire Christophorus fleet has been comprised of EC 135 Eurocopters exclusively since mid-1999. As a result the ÖAMTC is able to operate what is currently the most successful and modern rescue helicopter in its class, an aircraft characterised not just by low maintenance and operating costs, reliability, and a long service life, but also by a wide range of applications. Inside its generously sized interior all the equipment, drugs and materials are neatly stowed within easy reach of the emergency doctor or air rescue personnel. Quick-release fasteners also mean that the helicopter’s configuration can be adapted to special assignments at any time, e.g. for transporting incubators, for transfer flights or for multiple evacuations. The medical equipment of ÖAMTC emergency rescue helicopters now covers the whole spectrum of emergency medical assistance and offers air rescue doctors everything they need to attend to and treat injured or sick persons. Monitoring is used to keep a constant watchful eye on all vital data such as cardiac rhythm, blood pressure, pulse and body temperature. Defibrillators, respirators and infusion pumps also ensure a high standard of quality provided by first responders. Did you know that… … the Air Rescue Service flew 18,270 assignments in 2015, more than ever before? … with HeliAir, the ÖAMTC Air Rescue Service has its very own maintenance facility? … an ÖAMTC emergency rescue helicopter reaches a patient within 15 minutes at the latest? … the Christophorus crew is comprised of a pilot, an emergency doctor and an air rescue paramedic? The Yellow Angels have wings A brief excursion into the history of the ÖAMTC Air Rescue Service shows that the airborne rapid response familiar to us all today was not always a matter of course, not even for the ÖAMTC. The idea of a structured air rescue service had been mooted by Prof. Dr Gerhard Flora for some time. Prof. Flora, who passed away in 2015, was an Innsbruck surgeon and mountain rescue doctor. All that was lacking was a suitable partner to help realise the idea. Initially, it took a certain amount of persistence on the part of Prof. Flora to convince the ÖAMTC of the idea. But ultimately the Club’s management were won over by it. The ÖAMTC was therefore instrumental in getting the idea off the ground, as it were, thanks first and foremost to Kurt Noé-Nordberg († 2010). Within a matter of days the vision began to take shape and, within a few weeks, it became reality. With their pioneering spirit and lots of innovations the first crews laid the cornerstone for rapid progress in emergency medicine, a medical specialty still very much in its infancy in those days. Nothing about the original credo has changed since. Indeed, it has never been a matter of getting the patient to the nearest hospital at ‘breakneck’ speed, but of getting the doctor to the patient as swiftly as possible. Assignments 27 28 Air Rescue Service | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Air Rescue Service Die gelbe Flotte Pilots Doctors 315 Air rescue paramedics and personnel 145 Technical personnel 44 Administration, accounting, ground operations 42 Assignments All preparations are geared towards the assignment Along with faultless maintenance, flight preparations remain one of the core elements of operating an emergency rescue helicopter assignment. Communications and information transmission in particular have seen a quantum leap in the recent past, vastly simplifying optimum preparations for any assignment. Numerous online platforms are now available, replacing the chunky handbooks that were familiar to pilots now retired, who also had to make enquiries by fax and rely on telephone calls. It means that all the latest key data on weather patterns, flight obstacles and potential landing sites is instantly available at all times, making accurate flight preparations a relatively straightforward process. Likewise the data from the checks of the technical and mechanical systems made by each pilot on a daily basis is now recorded electronically and digitally signed. It can then be viewed at any time by the flight operations director or the relevant authority. since 1995, but updating the index with new (temporary) obstacles was a long-winded process. So when helicopter navigation systems were upgraded in 2012, it seemed the ideal opportunity to incorporate obstacle data into the new system there and then. The development work took around one year. The ÖAMTC Air Rescue Service now has at its disposal a pioneering system that is unique anywhere in Europe, automatically updated daily via radio link. The latest ÖAMTC in-house development is used for electronic obstacle acquisition. An index of obstacles to aviation for Austria has existed mediation and innovative projects the Air Rescue College has established and ONLY THE BEST Operating a high-quality air rescue service means that pilots, emergency doctors and air rescue personnel must be up to the task whatever the operational situation. And that in turn requires a high level of social skills and expert qualifications. With its selection processes, training events, information promoted the requirements necessary to achieve those goals. 29 50 18,270 Locations 16 Helicopters 20 Teamwork is crucial to air rescue Given the special circumstances that air rescue teams have to face, with complex, time-critical and often dangerous situations, the ‘human factor’ is of the utmost importance in any air rescue mission. It concerns first and foremost ‘non-technical skills’ such as communication, the ability to work within a team, leadership, situation-specific alertness, and decisionmaking. Casting a critical eye back at the beginnings of air rescue in Austria, it is not difficult to see that due to the lack of nationwide legislation or, indeed, given the differences in legislation specific to each federal province, each air base had to act more or less autonomously, not to mention such important parameters as infrastructure and helicopters. Standardised basic and advanced training seemed a long way off. Everywhere different yardsticks were used and separate training concepts drawn up. It was only in the late 1990s that air rescue regulations standardised across Europe were first introduced. The Joint Aviation Requirements Operation 3 (JAR-OPS 3) precisely regulated both the way in which helicopters were to be equipped and the training levels with which the crews had to comply. Implementing these European regulations also in terms of qualifications initially required a rethink within the ÖAMTC Air Rescue Service, too. A curriculum to be used in future in training courses across Austria was drawn up through concerted action. Measures had also been taken years before to broaden the training horizon and adapt existing and successful advanced training measures from other areas to the specific requirements of an air rescue organisation. For example the medical training on CPR simulation mannequins that has been common practice in clinics for some time is now also implemented in helicopters. A look ahead at what the future holds in store shows that the significance of air rescue in emergency rescue and patient transportation will continue to grow in Austria too, through infrastructure changes. We need to be prepared for those changes, for the benefit and the well-being of each individual patient. 30 Infrastructure | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Infrastructure LEGEnd Technical service and assistance centre 111 Driving centre 10 Emergency rescue helicopter base 16 8 Border station 31 32 Service Station | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Service Station 111 ÖAMTC technical service and assistance centres are available to more than two million Club members as mobility centres. 33 34 Service Station | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Service Station Always state-of-the-art In those days the first cars had at best three electric motors: the starter, the windscreen wiper drive motor, and the dynamo. Today’s cars have well over 100 interconnected control units. The steering and the brakes, which used to be purely mechanical, are now controlled electronically. And, on new cars, intelligent systems such as ABS, TCS (traction control system) and ESP (electronic stability program) now come as standard. To be able to provide assistance, the Club’s technicians have to go beyond their area of expertise and combine knowledge from several other fields. Nowadays technical systems can no longer be treated in terms of individual components, and a more holistic approach has to be adopted. When the ÖAMTC’s Technical Services first began, sporadic training sessions every two to three years, i.e. whenever something new came onto the market, were enough to keep the Club’s technicians up to speed. But today, the Club’s ‘Yellow Angels’, more than 1,000 in number, spend many hours at their workplace every day poring over all the latest data fed into our data systems, not to mention at least three special full-day training sessions a year to keep abreast of the latest developments. The current trend has moved away from explanations of new vehicle models towards training sessions on the new systems built into the cars, systems which although almost identical in constructional design are marketed under different names. Special emphasis is placed on using diagnostics computers to locate faults, evaluating frequent types of faults, and applying the ÖAMTC’s own in-house information systems. Assistance always nearby IN THE BEST OF HANDS It all began at No. 12 Einsiedlergasse in Vienna’s 5th municipal district. Indeed, the first ever ‘checks of operational reliability and roadworthiness on motor vehicles and motorcycles by qualified personnel’ were carried out in April 1951. Then, as now, the Club’s Technical Services did not carry out any actual repairs. These initial checks merely served to expose any existing defects that might affect a vehicle’s operational reliability. At that time 60,000 cars and 152,000 motorcycles were registered in Austria, and the ÖAMTC had 50,000 members. In 2015 there were more than 4.7 million cars registered in Austria and around 500,000 motorcycles. And more than two million Austrians are now ÖAMTC members. Within weeks of that first inspection line opening in 1951, the waiting times to obtain a date for a vehicle check had become longer and longer. The Club had to take action. And so, on 19 May 1954, another technical service and assistance centre was opened on Bachgasse. By then the vehicle check also comprised the chassis, the engine and the power transmission. The new centre was designed to handle 1,800 vehicle checks and 2,400 consultations a year. In 2015 those figures were the equivalent to a month’s traffic passing through just one technical service and assistance centre. Back then, a spanner, a pair of pliers and a hammer were enough, but today’s ÖAMTC technicians also have to be electronics specialists if they are to give a car a thorough check. That’s why the natural instincts of the Club’s technicians are now backed up by ultra-modern diagnostics equipment that communicates with the vehicle’s control units as well as the Club’s in-house technical information system. Competent. Modern. Objective. As a non-profit association the ÖAMTC is not profit-driven; instead, it’s dedicated entirely and exclusively to its members. The Club is interested in nothing other than the safety of all its members and the benefits it provides to them. By specifically pointing out repairs that are genuinely necessary, the ÖAMTC helps its members to save money and irritations. A multitude of inspection services are available at the 111 technical service and assistance centres throughout Austria. Alongside the checks under Section 57a (MOT sticker), there are purchase, safety, chassis, holiday and winter health checks, engine and control unit diagnostics, and many other services. 35 The early 1960s saw the emergence of the concept of a technical service and assistance centre. Every Austrian federal capital was to have its own work centre, and every district administration its own technical service and assistance centre. The first work centre opened on Schanzstrasse in Vienna in 1965; it was the largest facility of its kind anywhere in Europe. By then the Club’s membership had risen to 302,000. In the lowlands of Austria, the inspection services at that time were provided out of a marquee tent and a vehicle. Key locations were also served by a mobile test centre. Then things quickly gathered pace. The main technical service and assistance centres were fitted out not only with inspection lines equipped with the day’s very latest brake and performance test benches, but also with office premises retailing Club articles, Assistance Booklets, and insurance policies. The smaller unit used as a technical service and assistance centre, known as a Korneuburger Häuserl, was a type of Nissen hut and had only one inspection line. By 1970 there were more than 70 ÖAMTC technical service and assistance centres across Austria. The capacity of the ÖAMTC’s Technical Services had to be expanded once again in 1973, the year the ‘MOT sticker’ was introduced. In October 1981 the ÖAMTC became the first automobile club in Europe to commission the first computer-based engine tester. What was then the digital ‘guiding beacon’ within the inspection workshop is now just one of many computerbased diagnostics equipment. In the early 1980s the Club expanded its technical inspection services by offering a more extensive vehicle purchase check. Since their introduction thirty years ago, the Club’s Technical Services have intervened some five million times at both the stationary and the mobile technical service and assistance centres. In 1984 Federal President Dr Rudolf Kirchschläger officially inaugurated the ÖAMTC’s 100th technical service and assistance centre, in Vienna. 36 Service Station | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Service Station A shop with quality products Today, the 111 ÖAMTC technical service and assistance centres have a lot more to offer besides conventional technical services. Indeed, each year the Club’s technicians carry out more than 1.5 million checks, from ‘MOT sticker’ inspections to chassis and air conditioning system checks, not to mention the thorough vehicle purchase checks and the stationary breakdown assistance assignments at the centre itself. They also act as mobility centres for tourist information and, on the adjoining shop premises, retail a whole range of practical products for travel and everyday life, all in compliance with the Club’s stringent and objective quality checks. It means that Club members are able to shop there with complete peace of mind – and the guarantee of lasting satisfaction. Summer and winter items, car accessories, sat-navs and hands-free devices, car light bulbs and batteries, and children’s toys are all part of the offer, together with comprehensive advice on child seats, featuring top quality products. Turnover at the technical service and assistance centres in 2015 totalled EUR 20.3 m. Services tailored specifically for electric vehicles The ÖAMTC has responded to the spread of fully or partly electrically powered vehicles (with just under 20,000 hybrid and electric cars now registered in Austria) with more and more new inspection and advice services. The technical service and assistance centres in Linz, Baden and St. Pölten have already been converted into e-competence centres. There, owners of hybrid and electric vehicles can not only avail themselves of the ÖAMTC’s traditional services such as MOT, chassis or air conditioning system checks, but also have the electrical components put through their paces. Thanks to the state-of-the-art diagnostics technology acquired specifically for e-vehicles, faults can quickly be located and remedied. Anyone interested in cars equipped with alternative means of propulsion can also obtain comprehensive help and advice. A team of technicians trained specifically on all conventional electric and hybrid vehicles is on hand to answer questions on the topic of electromobility. The future begins today Energy self-sufficient centres Future requirements are already being taken into account at the new technical service and assistance centres that are now being built. The workstation concept developed by ÖAMTC Upper Austria is being implemented at most of the new centres. All the technical aids for vehicle checks are accommodated in a central ‘supply island’ located between the inspection lines. For ergonomic reasons the Club is relying more and more on vehicle lifts, which allow ÖAMTC technicians to identify more elements than they would do by working out of one of the conventional pits. Besides technical competence, complete transparency in the way in which services are provided plays an important role. Members have the possibility of being present, there and then, while the work is carried out; at all the newly built centres large bay windows provide an opportunity to watch and monitor the services provided. Environmental compatibility is a key issue when it comes to the technical building services. Heating at the newly built centres is provided through heat pumps and ground source heat. At some locations photovoltaic systems are used to generate the bulk of the electricity requirements directly at the centre itself. And thanks to ‘free-cooling systems’ the technical service and assistance centres no longer require conventional air conditioning. With this eco-friendly process, water is used to cool the building in summer. By 2030 the ÖAMTC technical service and assistance centres will be designed and built using alternative building materials; they will be energy self-sufficient and equipped across the board with electric charging stations and, potentially, hydrogen pumps. As far as inspection line facilities are concerned, most of the emphasis will be on electronics. The testing equipment at the specially equipped workstations will all be interconnected. By then exhaust emission testers will presumably have become irrelevant, with most of the attention shifting towards testing and diagnostics equipment for assistance systems. Did you know that… … an automatic MOT check reminder service is available, notifying members by email one month before their MOT is due? … free Travel Info sets are available for members at every service station? … ÖAMTC staff are on hand to offer the best objective advice available for purchases of child seats? Section 57a inspections (MOT sticker) … the Buyer’s Check helps clarify a vehicle’s condition prior to any purchase? 38 Service Station | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Service Station Die gelbe Flotte Section 57a inspections (MOT sticker) 670,554 Stationary breakdown assistance 672,711 Other checks 287,293 Allocated Country-Infos 136,478 Travel bookings 28,844 39 40 Membership TREND* 2,049,027 2015 1,999,521 2014 1,946,633 Membership by category 2013 1,894,005 90.12 % | AUTO 2012 1,846,509 1,838,114 5.14 % | CORPORATE 2011 105,332 1,785,151 3.90 % | TOURING 2010 79,858 incl. bicycles 0.84 % | MOTOrcycle 17,328 incl. mopeds Free membership for children and adolescents** 689,545 1,000,000 66.5 % 66.1 % 65.1 % 1,500,000 64.6 % 2,000,000 67.0 % MEMBERSHIP/ASSISTANCE BOOKLET 63.9 % FACTs And Figures ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Facts and Figures ® SOFORTHILFE IN ÖSTERREICH UND GANZ EUROPA 500,000 Ein gutes Gefühl, beim Club zu sein. 2010 Members 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Proportion of members with Assistance Booklets ASSISTANCE BOOKLET Assistance Booklets sold Proportion of members with Assistance Booklets Calls for assistance received Assistance provided 41.68 % Breakdown assistance and towing 1,373,245 (abroad) 67.0 % 15.41 % 181,364 Vehicle recoveries (in Austria and abroad) 47,553 18.80 % (excl. towing in Austria) Return & onward journey/overnight stay 14.41 % Miscellaneous (e.g. damage caused by game/ wildlife, garage parking) 9.70 % *without free membership for children and adolescents ** not included in member pool Medical services 42 Facts and Figures | Annual Report 2015 | ÖAMTC ÖAMTC | Annual Report 2015 | Facts and Figures Legal advice (in person, by phone, in writing) approx. 195.000 Doctors 315 Club’s legal experts 35 Air rescue paramedics and personnel 145 Counsels of choice approx. 100 ADVOCACY & LOBBYING 88 Statements 11 1,428 Christophorus 4 (Reith/ Kitzbühel, Tyrol) 963 Total bookings Christophorus 5 (Zams, Tyrol) 811 Employees Christophorus 6 (City of Salzburg, Salzburg) 1,271 Christophorus 7 (Lienz, East Tyrol) 720 Christophorus 8 (Nenzing/ Vbg.) 821 Christophorus 9 (Vienna) 2,023 Christophorus 10 (Linz, Upper Austria) 1,193 Christophorus 11 (Klagenfurt, Carinthia) 1,212 Christophorus 12 (Graz, Styria) 1,415 32.04 % Car accessories 11.41 % E 39.17 m 19 Travel agency branches 283,763 Number of existing insurance policies 53,829 Policies concluded in 2015 Maps and leisure goods E 48.50 m E 20,30 m Turnover Service Stations 8 Monthly page impressions 933 DRIVING SKILLS 32.67 % Car business 31.33 % Legal expenses 120 emergency calls 1,209,209 Clubmobil allocations 24,740 Clubmobil vehicles 350 Dispatch centre staff 349 Technicians, patrolmen and towing staff Total, emergency vehicles 120,000 TRAVEL INFORMATION SERVICE Touring sets issued TECHNICAL INSPECTIONs User Route Planner 672,711 Other checks 287,293 125,000 Property business Routes calculated with the Route Planner Stationary breakdown assistance 130,000 1.87 % 527 670,554 approx. 220 110,000 3.90 m 105,000 15,095 Monthly visits 74,813 1.40 m Partners in Austria (incl. all outlets) 2,000 Partners worldwide (incl. all outlets) 160,000 User City Guide, web and app 196,570 User Country Info 733,566 User Travel Checklist 64,576 2012 2013 2014 USER FIGURES 700,0000 2015 600,0000 Road user education 550,0000 22,957 Blick und Klick 21,679 350,0000 Hallo Auto 56,791 300,0000 Club PS Total 2015 400,0000 250,0000 8,456 200,0000 1,096 110,979 2014 450,0000 Das kleine Straßen 1 x 1 124,620 Club Cards with credit card facility 800,0000 2011 1m Card transactions by ÖAMTC members 1,000,0000 2010 5,415,782 PREFERRED PARTNERS 900,0000 Top Rider 43 Unique clients, monthly 115,000 136,478 1,458,929 Monthly page impressions TREND IN PARTICIPANTS Travel insurance 1,252 Section 57a inspections (MOT sticker) Instructors 120,500 18.99 % 114 119,000 214,564 15.14 % Employees 54,742 ÖaMTC Driving licence App 19 RELATIVE SHARES OF OVERALL BUSINESS Towing assignments 14,002,117 167,467 Monthly visits Christophorus 16 (Oberwart / Bgld.) Personal insurance 1,957,702 5 Travel agency branches 672,711 Monthly visits Mobile inspection stations 902 Stationary breakdown assistance 1,082,549 Unique clients, monthly 111 Christophorus 15 (Ybbsitz, Lower Austria) 668,202 Unique clients, monthly ÖaMTC App Service stations Border stations Mobile breakdown assistance monthly Coverage 111 Branches 902 BREAKDOWN ASSISTANCE 1,822,000 Monthly page impressions Insurance Services 1,763 Readership according to 2013/2014 media analysis ÖAMTC Online 8.01 % Christophorus 14 (Niederöblam, Styria) Europa 3 (Suben, Upper Austria) 1,679,558 Published Child seats 83 Circulation* *Source: ÖAK 2015 average for the year 12.09 % 28,844 160,000 Auto Touring Oils Turnover Total premium volume Traffic reports handled Car & motorcycle batteries Travel 10,702 ÖAMTC reports in print and online media 36.45 % 12,220 1,656 ÖAMTC TV and radio reports 1m Christophorus 3 (Wiener Neustadt, Lower Austria) 46 SHOP 8 Am.Puls participants 816 1,081 33 990 Am.Puls surveys Christophorus 2 (Krems, Lower Austria) Campaigns / surveys / test series / joint ventures 169 *) incl. auxiliary staff Assessments Documented media contacts assignment statistics Christophorus 1 (Innsbruck, Tyrol) 20 1m 20 Press conferences / conferences / symposia 850,000 Helicopters 3,470 Subsidiaries*) 996 720,000 18,270 16 of whom: Technical services*) and Club services Apprentices 42 Locations Press releases 117,600 Assignments 3,586 115,200 Administration, accounting and ground operations personnel 44 Total 123,600 Technical personnel COMMUNICATIONS 600,000 50 121,200 Pilots Employees LEGAL AID 550,000 ÖAMTC Air rescue 2010 44 2011 2012 2013 Printing information: Media ownership/publisher: Österreichischer Automobil-, Motorrad- und Touring Club (ÖAMTC) | 1010 Wien | Schuberting 1–3 | ZVR: 730335108 Responsible for contents: Oliver Schmerold | Projektleitung: Stefan Lorbeer |Graphic design: Franz Xaver Scharler Translations: Stephen B. Grynwasser, London Editorial team: Roland Fibich, Manfred Pfnier, Ralph Schüller, Victoria Hofbauer Photos: ÖAMTC Archiv | iStock, Getty Images Printed by: gugler* print, 3390 Melk/Donau Situation as at (unless otherwise specified): January 2016 | G 0011_16 Typesetting and printing errors excepted. 45