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About Chain of Responsibility (or CoR)

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Chain of Responsibility isn't just a good idea - It's the LAW!

Chain of Responsibility (or CoR) Summary

On the 1st October 2018, the HVNL morphed significantly to align itself closely with Work Place Health and Safety Legislation.

This was by no mistake, as the legislation was written to ensure that the listed ‘Parties’ written within the heavy vehicle national law would ensure so far as reasonably practicable, that safety within an organisation was managed by those who influence a transport task.

The ‘Parties’ are Consignees, Consignors, Loading Managers and Loaders or Unloaders of goods, Schedulers, Operators and Packers.

By virtue of what you do within your workplace, irrespective of what your role is called, if your role encompasses any of the ‘Party’ duties, then you are within the heavy vehicle national law reach.

If you influence the safety of a transport task, it is now a prime duty to ensure so far as reasonably practicable that you are ensuring safety within that transport task.

The term ‘Reasonable’ in the courts, is tested to a measure of what someone could similarly expect or expect of you within your role, by ensuring safety standards.

In other words, if a standard can be proven to be capable in normal everyday circumstances, then it will be assumed that it is capable by any and all.

Importantly, within the ‘Parties’, there is no provision for drivers.

That is purposeful and is because drivers of heavy vehicles are encompassed by other legislation and drivers have other duties and responsibilities to ensure on road safety.

Furthermore, the heavy vehicle national law is designed to address and ensure that businesses and the employees of those businesses who employ a transport task are now responsible for their actions or inactions which can cause harm.

In correlation with the heavy vehicle, national law is the Executive Liability Provision.

This legislation which is independent is aimed at re-enforcing the heavy vehicle national law, by making Executives, Directors and Senior Executives with the power to change or enforce budgets or spend within an organisation, solely responsible for enforcing the heavy vehicle national law within their organisations.

Executives, CEOs and Directors have a responsibility to;

  1. Ensure compliance at the coal face;
  2. Ensure middle management are performing their duties required of the HVNL; and
  3. Ensuring that agreements with 3rd parties do not involve prohibitive requests.

The Executive Liability Provision is independent, and it does not require an incident to instigate a discussion with or investigation by the regulator or other State Enforcement agencies.

The executive liability provision gives the heavy vehicle national law its teeth and is also why it is imperative that your safety system is always ‘active’ within your organisation.

The meaning of an ‘active’ safety system when it comes to safety systems, means a safety system that does not hang off a wall in business premises, such as policies or nice looking safety posters, to make the business look nice and pretty for visitors.

If you have a safety system that only lives on your wall and something goes wrong, it may be too little too late and the conversation will be centred on how to mitigate your costs, which could be millions.

My mission

Leaders have a duty in life to protect those who may not be able to do so themselves; humanity has a responsibility to work together & to help one another. Matthew Wragg - Founder

Chain of Responsibility (or CoR)

Chain of Responsibility (or CoR) in Australia, also known more formally as Chain of Responsibility (or CoR) is driven by the HVNL, also known as the Heavy Vehicle National Law.

The HVNL is the backbone of all the hype and sensation around CoR, your role in Transport Safety is critical for everyone, especially you. CoR compliant, as such is not a phrase we often use at MAEZ, a meaning we believe is a full stop to continual improvement.

The Future of Transport Safety

Chain of Responsibility (or CoR) demands innovation and continual improvement as a result. Your future in the supply chain depends on your ability to ensure that any possible risk is removed from causing danger or harm to anyone else, whether they work for your business or not. That is now your prime duty within the chain, legislated by law, in effect to ensure your CoR compliance.

How you ensure Chain of Responsibility (or CoR) compliance is essentially the same as Work Place Health and Safety Law. However, don’t fall into the trap of making up your own rules, test and assure that the processes you implement and manage actually work. If they are not deemed sufficient by someone else, which may be the regulator or the Police, that is when you can get into serious trouble, and the Chain of Responsibility (or CoR) legislation can be used against you and your business, concurrently if you are a managing director.

 

Chain of Responsibility (or CoR) Miss-Guidance

 

Many people believe that because the truck does not belong to them or that they do not directly employ the driver driving a truck with their goods on board, that they are not liable under Chain of Responsibility (or CoR) legislation. People also think that because they don’t know or didn’t know, it removes them from being a guilty party. That is completely false and worse, it potentially increases your liability more so in the eyes of the courts, especially if your role in the chain could have prevented an incident from taking place, but you completely neglected the idea, due to ignorance.

Even worse though, another piece of legislation called the Executive Liability Provision makes it possible to prosecute particular individuals in business for putting at risk someone else in the chain, or innocent bystanders, which may be the public. Within the Chain of Responsibility (or CoR) legislation, you do not have to have a breach anymore to be prosecuted, so it is vital that you ensure your Chain of Responsibility (or CoR) compliance today.

 

Critical Actions You Must Take

 

Whether it be Chain of Responsibility (or CoR) safety systems, training, management or advice, it is essential you seek out someone who can help you find any potential risk, especially if you are not sure how to look or what to look for. The easiest way and most cost-effective way to reach a thorough understanding of your Chain of Responsibility (or CoR) risk is to conduct a business audit and desktop audits of your providers. When it comes to the HVNL, it requires you to ensure due diligence with your vendors, so understanding how strong their Chain of Responsibility (or CoR) compliance strength is vital in your business.