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Officer Due Diligence: The Part Where the Boss Can't Just Point at the Safety Manager
Officer due diligence is one of the more misunderstood parts of Australian WHS law, which is impressive given safety legislation already contains enough plain English avoidance to power a small Canberra department. At its core, due diligence means an officer must take reasonable, active and informed steps to ensure the organisation complies with its health and safety duties. It is not the same as doing every safety task personally, and it is not satisfied by hiring a safety m

Safety Jon
4 days ago8 min read


Desbo Industries Fined Over Fall Risk: The Problem Was Visible Before Anyone Hit the Ground
A Victorian residential builder has been convicted and fined after WorkSafe found contractors working more than three metres above ground level without fall protection. Desbo Industries Pty Ltd was sentenced in the Geelong Magistrates’ Court on 05 Mar 26 after pleading guilty to failing to ensure a workplace under its management and control was safe and without risks to health. The company was fined $40,000 and ordered to pay $4,422 in costs. The facts are not complex, which

Safety Jon
6 days ago6 min read


Misunderstanding above the Fireground: ATSB Report Highlights Airspace Coordination Risks
On 18 Jan 26, two aerial firefighting aircraft operating west of Mount Hotham, Victoria came significantly closer than intended during active fire suppression operations. The Australian Transport Safety Bureau has now released its findings into the occurrence involving Bell 212 helicopter Helitak 368 and fixed wing fire bomber Bomber 359, identifying breakdowns in communication, situational awareness and supervisory coordination as central contributing factors. The incident d

Safety Jon
6 days ago3 min read


Deliberately Venting Gas, When Shortcutting Becomes Criminal
Deliberately venting gas to atmosphere as a work method is not a grey area, not a clever workaround, and not a risk trade off. It is a conscious decision to defeat controls, and regulators will treat it as exactly that, deliberate exposure to serious risk. This is a sharp reminder that safety prosecutions are no longer confined to what systems failed, they are increasingly focused on who chose to ignore them, and why. What happened In this matter, a company and an individual

Safety Jon
Jan 283 min read


Ride-On Mowers and the Comfort of Familiar Risk
On 23 Jan 26, the Victorian Coroner handed down findings into the death of an older man who was fatally trapped when a ride-on mower rolled down an embankment at Glenmaggie. It was not a freak event. It was not a mechanical failure. It was the predictable outcome of a task carried out near a slope, on a machine without roll-over protection, in circumstances that many people would describe as routine. This is the uncomfortable truth about plant risk. Familiarity dulls judg

Safety Jon
Jan 253 min read


Top 50 Safety Books (Just in case life was getting too exciting!)
NOTE ON LINKS All links below point to Australian retailers or publishers. They are not affiliate links. No commissions, no kickbacks....

Safety Jon
Sep 27, 20255 min read


Fatal Fall at Sydney Climbing Gym: A Case Study in Missed Controls
On 13 October 2021, tragedy struck at the Sydney Indoor Climbing Gym when a recreational climber fell approximately 12 metres after an...

Safety Jon
Sep 1, 20252 min read
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Straight-talking safety, risk, and leadership from the frontline.​
Analysis of incidents, prosecutions, and the decisions that shape real safety outcomes.
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