Hazard Identification, Risk Assessment, Incident Notification and Control Procedure HPRM Reference D2021-47835 Document Version Number 2.0 Policy Owner Chief Operating Officer, Chief of Corporate Division Responsible Official Manager, HR Policy and Operations Superseded Procedures Date Effective 19 July 2021 Next Review Date 19 July 2024
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Hazard Identification Risk Assessment Control Procedure
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Hazard Identification, Risk Assessment, Incident Notification and Control
Procedure
HPRM Reference D2021-47835
Document Version Number 2.0
Policy Owner Chief Operating Officer, Chief of Corporate Division
Responsible Official Manager, HR Policy and Operations
Superseded Procedures
Date Effective 19 July 2021
Next Review Date 19 July 2024
Hazard Identification, Risk Assessment, Incident Notification and Control Page 2 of 14
2.8. Risk control .................................................................................................................................... 8
2.9. Risk acceptance and proceeding with the activity ......................................................................... 9
2.16. Training ...................................................................................................................................... 12
3. Supporting Information ...................................................................................................................... 13
Hazard Identification, Risk Assessment, Incident Notification and Control Page 3 of 14
1. Introduction
1.1. Purpose
Geoscience Australia (the organisation) is committed to providing a safe and healthy workplace so far as
reasonably practicable. This will be achieved by management and workplace participants working together
and following a program of health and safety activities and procedures which are monitored, reviewed and
audited.
The Work Health and Safety Act 2011 (Cth) (WHS Act) imposes obligations on the organisation in relation to
the health and safety of its workers and other persons including visitors whose health and safety could be
affected by work carried out as part of the organisation’s business.
The processes outlined in this document form part of the WHS management system (WHSMS) and sets out
the organisation’s hazard identification, risk assessment, incident notification and control procedures.
1.2. Scope
This procedure facilitates the management, promotion and improvement of the health and safety of workers as
defined by the WHS Act, which includes employees, labour hire workers, contractors, visitors, volunteers and
others who perform work in support of the business and undertakings of the organisation.
This procedure is to be implemented consistently in all areas of the business and it is a requirement that all
workplace participants comply with this procedure. The WHS objectives are:
to provide a safe and healthy work environment for all workers and workplace participants
to comply with all relevant legislation and codes of practice
to consult with workers on WHS matters
to identify and eliminate or reduce hazards and risks to health and safety so far as is reasonably practicable
to identify and respond to early warning signs and reports of incidents and hazards
to ensure all workers and workplace participants know their roles and responsibilities under the WHS Act
to provide ongoing education and training resources.
The organisation will seek to meet its objectives by adhering to the WHSMS.
1.3. Principles
This procedure is underpinned by the following principles:
We support and provide information, resources and procedures to our workers to support a healthy and safe workplace.
The wellbeing and safety of our workers is paramount.
Hazard Identification, Risk Assessment, Incident Notification and Control Page 4 of 14
Workers actively participate in identifying, rectifying and evaluating safety issues.
We appropriately manage workplace risks.
2. Procedures
2.1. Risk management process
Aim: To ensure the organisation manages risks effectively and consistently.
Policy:
All officials are responsible for managing risks within their area of responsibility.
Workers will manage risks across all aspects of the entity, including operational risks (for example, security, WHS and financial), project and program management, work planning and strategic planning.
Risks will be reported and communicated to internal and external stakeholders
Procedures:
1. Risk management helps decision makers make informed choices, prioritise actions and distinguish
among alternative course of action.
2. These procedures are to be used in conjunction with the risk register pro-forma
3. Risk management involves six steps summarised below. Key to this process is consultation and
management commitment during all steps as illustrated:
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2.2. Consultation, cooperation and coordination
4. Consultation, cooperation and coordination on risks and communication of risk status, changes and
controls is an integral part of managing risk, to ensure that affected parties are able to provide their
input to better understand the risks being considered and the application of controls.
5. Managers must consult with workers throughout the risk management process in identifying hazards,
assessing risks and establishing risk controls. For further information on WHS consultation,
cooperation and coordination, see the procedure. There must also be consultation between duty
holders when they have a concurrent responsibility for managing a Risk.
2.3. Establishing the context
6. Establishing the context allows the person managing the risk to understand the conditions and
constraints under which the risk was originally or previously considered and to establish the scope for
the rest of the risk management process.
7. For existing risk registers, the person managing the risk reviews the content for applicability within the
context and scope of operations and updates it accordingly.
8. For new risk registers, the risk register owner ensures the context and scope of operations is
determined, defined and recorded – describing safety requirements, assumptions, dependencies and
caveats.
9. In the ‘Context’ worksheet of the risk register pro-forma list the:
a. name of the activity being assessed
b. document version number
c. HPRM reference of the Risk Register.
d. name of the official responsible for the activity (if the activity is shared with an external third party, you should also include the name of the external person/s responsible)
e. name of the official/s undertaking the risk assessment
f. date of the assessment
g. mandate or reason for undertaking the activity (for example, legislation, agreement, policy, instruction)
h. key requirements or restrictions influencing the activity (for example, major decisions or support needed, such as approvals, funding, resourcing, cooperation from other entities, infrastructure; legislative, policy, standards or contractual requirements; cultural factors)
i. the key internal and external stakeholders, especially any that share responsibility for delivering the activity and/or managing associated risks
j. the stakeholders who have been consulted in the development of the risk assessment.
k. the WHS objective/s for the activity, for example maintain health and safety of workers and visitors.’ (the risk register pro-forma is set up so that this will then carry over to the risk register on the second tab)
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2.4. Hazard identification
10. Hazard identification is an ongoing and continual process across the organisation and occurs at a
frequency and level appropriate to the general needs of the business and relevant to the specific
hazard and risk being managed.
11. Sources of information to assist in preparing and identifying hazards include:
safe work method statements (SWMS)
job safety analysis
risk assessments
incident and hazard reporting
safety tool box meetings
consultation
bi-annual workplace inspections and safety audits of the work premises
use of Acts, Regulations, Codes of Practices and Australian / New Zealand Standards
Provisional Improvement Notice (PIN)
12. Consider all potential hazard sources in relation to workers' health and safety, including but not limited
to:
manual tasks, over-exertion or repetitive movement can cause muscular strain
gravity falling objects, falls, slips and trips of people can cause fractures, bruises, lacerations, dislocations, concussion, permanent injuries or death
electricity is a potential ignition source which can cause burns from fires
exposure to live electrical wires can cause shock, burns or death from electrocution
machinery and equipment
being hit by moving vehicles, or being caught by moving parts of machinery can cause
fractures, bruises, lacerations, dislocations, permanent injuries or death
hazardous chemicals (such as acids, hydrocarbons, heavy metals) and dusts (such as asbestos and silica) can cause respiratory illnesses, cancers or dermatitis
extreme temperatures, including environmental hazards
noise exposure to loud noise can cause permanent hearing damage
psychosocial hazards (such as bullying, violence, work-related fatigue or ongoing physical injury or illness which also cause a psychosocial hazard).
13. All identified hazards that are not immediately and permanently eliminated must:
be recorded in the risk register pro-forma
have an assessment of its associated risks as soon as possible
have an owner assigned to be responsible for managing the hazard (the risk owner).
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14. Depending on the complexity of the hazards and the availability of resources, a risk owner may be
responsible for one hazard or a number of hazards.
2.5. Provisional Improvement Notice (PIN)
15. A PIN is a formal notice to the organisation advising the employer that there is a health and safety
problem in the workplace.
16. A Health and Safety Representative (HSR) can issue a PIN to the organisation if they believe there is
or has been a contravention of the WHS Act.
17. If received, a PIN will be displayed on the intranet and will be visible on all digital screens around the
workplace.
18. Further information can be found in the Corrective Actions Procedure.
2.6. Risk assessment
19. A risk assessment provides a higher-level or broader view of all operational risks across an entire project or activity. A risk assessment must be done when:
a work activity changes or a new process is used
there is uncertainty about how a hazard may result in injury or illness
the work activity involves a number of different hazards and there is a lack of understanding about how the hazards may interact with each other to produce new or greater risk
changes at the workplace occur that may impact on the effectiveness of control measures
there is uncertainty about whether workplace conditions could present a psychosocial hazard (such as workplace fatigue).
20. A risk assessment involves considering what could happen if someone is exposed to a hazard and the
likelihood of it happening. A risk assessment can help determine:
how severe a risk is
whether any existing control measures are effective
what action should be taken to control the risk
how urgently the action needs to be taken.
21. When a risk assessment has recurring activities and where the hazards are substantially the same, the official/s responsible for the activities may seek periodic acceptance of common risks by an official at the required level and the following must apply:
Acceptance of the risks must be for a specified period not exceeding one year.
Prior to undertaking activities that fall within the pre-established risk acceptance, officials must confirm the risk context has not changed materially and the present understanding of risks, as documented in the risk assessment, is correct and comprehensive.
Any material change to the risk context that will result in exposure to greater, additional or different risks will require the official responsible for the activity to conduct a new risk assessment and seek acceptance of the risks at the required level.
Any pre-established risk acceptance will cease in the event of an incident, near miss or a failure in controls.
Hazard Identification, Risk Assessment, Incident Notification and Control Page 8 of 14
22. A risk assessment can be undertaken with varying degrees of detail depending on the type of hazards
and the information, data and resources that are available. It can be as simple as a discussion with
workers or involve specific risk analysis tools and techniques.
2.7. Risk evaluation
23. When conducting a risk assessment:
the worker must use the risk register pro-forma. A rating of the consequence, likelihood will prepopulate for each identified hazard both before and after the control measure has been implemented. The rating should be reduced once the control measure are in place. The risk assessment can be discussed with Human Resources before seeking authorisation if required
control measures must be explained thoroughly and written in a clear and professional manner
the risk tolerance will auto populate as ‘Yes’ or ‘No’ once the likelihood, consequence and consequence category have been entered. Geoscience Australia’s tolerances for each risk category are determined by the Chief Executive Officer
if the risk is within tolerance the activity may proceed without any extra controls to reduce the likelihood or consequence, but extra treatments may be implemented as per step 2.7.
If the activity has a risk/s not within tolerance do not proceed with the activity unless treatments can be applied to bring the risk rating within tolerance. If the risk cannot be brought within tolerance but should proceed, refer to step 2.8.
2.8. Risk control
24. Where possible, elimination of hazards is to be considered and actioned immediately. Where
elimination is not reasonably practicable, the risk must be controlled in accordance with the
Work Health and Safety Regulations 2011 (Cth) (WHS Regs) which requires workers to utilise the
hierarchy of hazard controls as illustrated in figure 2:
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Figure 2: Hierarchy of Controls - a combination of the above methods may be needed to reduce the Risk to
the lowest level.
2.9. Risk acceptance and proceeding with the activity
25. If all the activity’s risks are within tolerance, present the risk register to and have the risks accepted by an official with oversight for the activity.
26. The ‘level of official accepting the risk’ column will also auto populate to inform you of the level of official required to accept the risk.
27. Prior to accepting a risk with controls and treatments, the official must be satisfied that the treatment owner will implement and monitor the treatment satisfactorily, and the proposed treatment will be effective in reducing the likelihood and/or consequence of the risk to the level indicated.
28. If the activity still has a risk that exceeds the tolerance after controls and treatment, do not proceed with the activity, unless:
the activity is strategically critical
the relevant chief’s approval (Chief Scientist, Chief Operating Officer, Chief Scientific Information Officer or Chief of Division) if the risk level is high or below.
extreme risks can only be accepted by the CEO.
29. In the ‘official accepting the risk’ column, write name of the official accepting the risk.
2.10. Reporting
30. As regularly as required, you must report on the risks to the relevant internal and external stakeholders
identified through the process, these may include:
line managers, delegates, and/or executives
ministers
committees/boards
activity partners (for example, industry, other government entities, service providers)
other Commonwealth entities, where an identified risks could potentially impact on their business.
2.11. Record keeping
31. As required by the Information and Records Management Policy, you must create and maintain in
HPRM records of:
the risk assessment register
acceptance of risk by the relevant official
agreement by a treatment owner to implement and maintain a new risk treatment.
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2.12. Monitor and review
32. Throughout the life of the activity, regularly monitor and review the context, risk sources, controls and
treatments.
33. Control measures must be reviewed and if necessary revised if:
there has been a change to objectives
there have been material changes in the internal or external environment, such as new or emerging risk sources
a control measure is identified as not being effective in controlling the risk, so far as is reasonably practicable
a incident, near miss, new hazard or risk is identified
assurance is needed that the present understanding of risks is correct, comprehensive and within the risk criteria
the results of consultation by the organisation under the WHS Act indicate a review of the control measures is necessary
a Health and Safety Representative (HSR) requests a review.
2.13. Incident Reporting
34. It is every worker’s responsibility to report incidents. Incident reporting provides information to allow for
the appropriate response to the incident. This may include providing first aid to the worker (subject to
the worker's training and capacity to provide first aid) and others involved or contacting emergency
services.
35. Reporting incidents allows the organisation to identify key areas, risk and trends to target, with a focus
on prevention and early intervention. Reporting also provides an opportunity to understand the incident
reported so that they may be controlled, in turn preventing similar incidents from occurring in the future.
36. Incidents will be reported on the WHS Incident Reporting Tool which is managed by Human
Resources.
37. Incidents relating to inappropriate behaviour, bullying, harassment or discrimination, workers should in
the first instance report this to their manager to action. Refer to the Review, Respect and Conduct
Policy for more information.
2.14. Notifiable Incident Notification
38. A Notifiable Incident requires urgent action, it is defined in the WHS Act as a:
death of a person
a serious injury or illness of a person requiring treatment as an in-patient at a hospital or
a dangerous incident or near miss.
39. A Notifiable Incident must immediately be reported to a worker's manager or another manager in the
work area and also immediately notify:
Chief Human Resources Officer – (02) 6249 9534 or 0422 274 031
Manager, HR Policy and Operations – (02) 6249 9006
40. Human Resources, using the Notifiable Incident Flowchart, will assess the incident to determine whether it is notifiable to Comcare (the Regulator) and the State and/or Territory WHS Regulator if applicable under the WHS Act.
41. Notification will be provided to Comcare by Human Resources immediately after becoming aware that
a notifiable incident arising out of the conduct of the business or undertaking has occurred via the
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2.16. Training
50. The organisation will facilitate and support workers to complete WHS training relevant to their function
in the workplace.
51. WHS training is a fundamental requirement for any workplace to achieve a safe workplace. WHS training is categorised into three categories:
Generic WHS training - skills and knowledge which is commonly required, for example:
a. WHS Induction training through Learn@GA
b. Mental Health Capability Foundation skills training
c. Evacuation procedures.
Risk specific WHS training – training required for those persons conducting activities with a specific risk to health and safety or a verification activity, for example:
a. First aid training
b. Radiation safety training
c. Hazardous substances training
d. First Aid Officer training
e. Mental Health First Aid or Mental Health Capability Extension skills training
f. Harassment and Diversity Contact Officer training
g. Health and Safety Representative training
Task specific WHS training – required skills dependant on the specific hazards and risk (for example, local process, operating equipment and plant).
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3. Supporting Information
This section is informative.
Roles and Responsibilities
Officers A person who makes or participates in making decisions that affect the whole or substantial part of the organisation
Managers Managers include any person who has the responsibility, management or control of a Geoscience Australia workplace, team or business unit.
Workers
Workers include anyone who carries out work in any capacity for the organisation. This includes contractors, sub contactors, employees of contractors, labour hire workers, apprentices, trainees, work experience students and volunteers.
Related Procedures
Work Health and Safety Procedures
Geoscience Australia’s commitment and agreed procedures to comply with the WHS legislation.
Risk Management Procedures
Define how the Risk Management Procedures will be implemented in practice and to ensure Geoscience Australia manages risks effectively and consistently.
Related Policies
Work Health Safety Policy Policy related to the application of Work Health and Safety Act within Geoscience Australia.
Risk Management Policy Outline the specific processes we use to manage risk, including information on how to conduct risk assessments