How a Simple Process Drives Safety Compliance

Safety management systems have come a long way in the last 250 years. Just think back to workplace conditions during the Industrial Revolution – almost no pay, child labour, very long hours, and extremely dangerous work conditions with exposure to chemicals, accident-prone machinery, and no WHS requirements whatsoever.

But this has changed over the years. Legal reforms and acts were introduced – the Factory Act, the Employer’s Liability Act, and finally, the 1974 Health and Safety at Work Act. This legal document became the foundation for workplace health and safety processes in the UK and the rest of the world. And it led to the increasingly more complex safety processes we have today.

The core purpose of WHS is to keep people safe.  Simple. With the increasing complexity of requirements and standards, Business owners, project managers and safety officers alike have to be careful of falling into the trap of using compliance to document requirements like the SWMS as their main measure of WHS compliance. This article looks at why adhering to document requirements is a poor standalone indicator of compliance. We also suggest how a simple safety process drives the success of your WHS compliance.

Documents are Symbols of a Process

Safety isn’t symbolic. It is real and should be treated in the real world, not on a document. Safety management systems do involve documents, but they symbolise a process. For example, a SWMS is a safety planning tool that identifies the risks of high risk construction work and the actions taken to manage those risks. It symbolises the process you are going to take when dealing with the risks and making sure your workplace and its workers are safe from those risks. When it’s under the (judges) hammer, the process symbolised (documented) matters most – not the symbol or the document itself.

Downloading a generic template for your SWMS, JSA, or any other safety document is like taking the symbol without taking the process it represents. And that defeats the whole point of your safety management system and its documents. To comply with WHS requirements, you should be focusing on the processes required to keep your workplace and its workers safe – not just on the documents themselves.

WHS audits look at whether you have followed an effective process that actively reduces the risks in your workplace. They care about if you have actually provided a safe work environment. Not simply whether you have ticked the box of completing a piece of paperwork.

In 2013, The Supreme Court Qld  in a case against a QLD construction company for the death of two workers cited:

“work practices focused too much on the work performed onsite and did not pay adequate attention to the dangers presented by the conditions of the site itself”

In other words, not considering risks on the ground, in the real world can have significant impacts when taken to the extremes. Focussing too hard on the details of the tasks to be completed can lead to ignoring all the risks that are actively present

What you focus on matters. And if you want to pass your WHS audit and actually keep your workers safe, then it’s time to focus on the safety management process behind the symbols and documents.

But I still go through a process when filling in a template?

Safety management systems aren’t just about the symbols. They’re about the processes behind them. But you may be wondering – isn’t downloading a generic template still technically a process? Sure. But think about this. What process is more effective at satisfying the Work Health and Safety Act requirement to provide a safe work environment? Is it:

  1. Find a generic SWMS template on Google, Officeworks or other source
  2. Complete the boxes provided by the template as best as you can
  3. Gather up or seek out workers individually and gather signatures
  4. Store it onsite until the work is done
  5. Transferring the document to a folder in your office when you are done with the site

Or:

  1. Identify a the risks onsite, in person
  2. Build a new SWMS or modify the existing version to cover all task & site-specific risks that are present. Pushed to everyone to sign.
  3. Monitor how measures are being implemented while work is being completed with real time automated risk rating notifications
  4. Review by anyone relevant once the work has been completed
  5. Automatic document storage once complete for any future audits, follow-ups, or learning

From a legal standpoint, the second option is better,

The very purpose of developing a SWMS is to ensure that employers and workers have taken the time to identify the high-risk tasks to be done on site. And then, it is to develop measures to manage these risks and tasks in the context of the work being done. The very nature of a SWMS is that it is specific. It is created specifically in response to a specific site, specific tasks, and specific risks. A generic templated SWMS will not meet the intention behind WHS requirements. Instead, it will defeat the real power of the SWMS and even take away from your safety management.

As WorkSafe Victoria explains, “our concern is not what is written but what actually happens”. A generic SWMS is a symbol of safety that only provides guidance. To focus on the process and comply with WHS requirements, your SWMS and other safety documents need to be customised. It is the second process that is more likely to pass a WHS audit because it demonstrates an active approach to creating a safe work environment. And it is the first process that will get a much more severe punishment when a safety incident does happen, even though both processes are represented by the same type of document.

How to Prioritize the Process

The simplest way to boost the effectiveness of your safety process is to use a digital safety platform like SafeWorkPro. While you can do your safety management physically or digitally, doing it digitally is what will make the difference. Why?

Safety management software simplifies your safety management. Turning a complex process into a simple, easy to understand workflow that allows for an easier way to assess, mitigate, monitor and review workplace risks of all nature. It makes sure that your safety management system is customised, comprehensive, and lets you focus on the process. Leave the document creation, distribution and storage to the software. With safety management software, you can seamlessly customise, prioritise, and ensure your safety management system and its processes exceed WHS regulations.

SafeWorkPro is the Australian safety management software that can make sure your workplace prioritises the process over the symbols.

  • Customise your SWMS, JSA, or other safety documents specifically to your worksite using our flexible document builder
  • Make sure your specific workplace risks are managed and your workers are safe
  • Ensure your company truly complies with WHS requirements

Do all of this seamlessly and in one place with the SafeWorkPro platform. Click the button below to find out more.

Simplify Your Safety Process Today

More From The SafeWorkPro Blog

Construction Safety Software: avoid the sting of regulation

High risk construction work is a never-ending list of potential dangers and could be hazards that eventually result in tedious paperwork. Some workers just ignore risk assessment for construction and instead hope the painful sting of regulation doesn’t find them. With all the paperwork that’s involved, risk assessments take too much time and when you’re on the job, time is money. So who can even afford doing a totally compliant risk assessment in construction anyway?

But let’s think about construction risk assessments differently for a moment. In Queensland, if you are a worker with a noncompliant construction risk assessment form, you could face a fine of $50 000 and that’s just if your worksite is not up to the standards of OHS legislation Australia. If an injury or death were to occur, then you’d be looking at $300 000 and a five-year jail term.

Now let’s ask a different question: who can afford not doing a totally compliant risk assessment in construction?

The answer is no one.

A dozen national and sub-national regulators monitor compliance with the construction risk management process. But the required paperwork including risk assessment forms, safe work method statements and the numerous types of the OHS risk assessment matrix, take up too much of your time and drain productivity. There is an alternative however and it comes in the form of construction risk assessment software. This takes the paperwork out of the risk assessment process without compromising your safety. Find out more about the software solution right here.

Risk Assessment Documents

Here at SafeWorkPro we recognise the limited time business owners have. At times it can feel like risk assessment forms get either lost in the filling cabinet and are just unavailable. There is a solution to this problem through risk assessment software, but just in case you are not looking for that, we though a simple risk assessment form would also be helpful.

Blank risk assessment forms are hard to come by but for your convenience we’re offering free risk assessment forms. That’s right – a standard risk assessment form free of charge with no catch or hidden commitment. Check out SafeWorkPro’s Resources for your free safe work methods statements or our Blog for more free risk assessment forms.

Asbestos Risk Assessment

Asbestos disposal is a type of high risk construction work that comes with its own OHS risk assessment form. Like most examples of risk assessment forms, there is no standardised safe work method statement template applicable for every condition. But there are many basic steps that serve as the starting block for any SWMS asbestos removal job.

Firstly the proper documentation must be prepared. This step obviously involves the completion of a SWMS by the person conducting a business or undertaking (PCBU). The SWMS must be available onsite and kept by the PCBU until all high risk work is complete. A licensed asbestos removalist is responsible for the asbestos removal control plan, which should also be available for everyone on the worksite. Lastly, any person who undertakes work in this area, including asbestos testing, must have adequate training through the specified VET course for assessors, or through a tertiary education in OHS, science, building, construction or environmental health.

The next step is the asbestos register. Each state and territory has its own regulatory standards for the registration of asbestos removal or any asbestos related work. For asbestos removal Brisbane, for example, the WHSQ must be informed and PCBU’s must:

  • Know how to identify asbestos or any asbestos-containing materials (ACM) on site including friable asbestos
  • Keep and update a dated register of the location of any ACM, risk assessments, control measures and the details of the competent person who undertakes the assessment
  • Review the asbestos register at least once every five years

Although each state has different regulatory authorities surrounding asbestos OHS issues in the workplace, they are all based on the same framework detailed by Safe Work Australia. SafeWorkPro has provided a free SWMS example for asbestos removal to help your worksite get quick, safe and compliant today.

Get your FREE SWMS Template in Microsoft Word format (.docx) download link: