WHS Committees
Bringing Workers and Management Together
A WHS committee brings together workers and management to assist in development and review of health and safety policies and procedures for the workplace.
[!important] Committee Membership At least half of committee members must be workers not nominated by management.
When WHS Committee Required
WHS Act does NOT require WHS committee unless requested.
PCBU must establish committee within 2 months after request by:
- Five or more workers at the workplace, OR
- One HSR for those workers
PCBU may also:
- Establish committee on own initiative
- Establish committee for workplace or part of workplace
Reference: WHS Act Part 5 Division 4, s.71-77
Benefits of WHS Committee
Regular, planned, structured discussions about WHS matters
Encourages:
- Cooperative approach to health and safety
- Bringing together worker and business representatives from across business
- Collaborative discussion and development of WHS systems
- Development and retention of corporate knowledge on WHS
Particularly effective when:
- Workers reluctant to take on HSR role but willing to participate on committee
- Business needs to consult on matters same across multiple work groups or workplaces
- Formal structure suits business size and complexity
Establishing a Committee
Negotiation of Membership and Operation
Membership determined by agreement between PCBU and workers.
If agreement cannot be reached: Anyone involved can ask regulator to appoint inspector to assist. Inspector's decision is taken to be decision of PCBU and workers.
Committee may include workers across:
- Multiple businesses
- Multiple workplaces (If parties agree)
Committee Composition
Membership Requirements
At least half members must be workers not nominated by management.
May include:
- Health and Safety Representatives (entitled to be members, but not obliged)
- Worker representatives from different work groups
- Management representatives
- Supervisors
- Officers (e.g., directors, managers)
Typical structure:
- 6-12 members
- Equal or majority worker representation
- Representation from different areas of business
[!example] Construction Site Committee Large construction project establishes WHS committee:
- Worker members (6): 4 HSRs (carpentry, concrete, services, plant), 2 worker representatives (apprentices, FIFO workers)
- Management members (5): Project manager, site manager, WHS coordinator, 2 supervisors
- Chair: Elected by committee (alternates between worker rep and management rep every 6 months)
Committee Functions
Committee assists with:
-
Development of WHS policies and procedures
- Site-specific policies
- Consultation procedures
- Issue resolution procedures
- Emergency procedures
-
Review of WHS policies and procedures
- Effectiveness
- Currency
- Continuous improvement
-
Monitoring WHS performance
- Incident trends
- Hazard reports
- Inspection findings
- Audit results
-
Facilitating cooperation between PCBU and workers
-
Assisting in resolution of WHS issues at workplace
-
Any other functions agreed by PCBU and committee
Committee does NOT:
- Replace management's WHS responsibilities
- Remove PCBU's duty to consult
- Replace HSR functions for specific work group issues
Committee vs. HSR Roles
If workplace has both committee and HSRs:
Health and Safety Representatives:
- Involved with specific WHS issues relevant to their work group
- Represent work group members
- Can be committee members (but not obliged)
WHS Committee:
- Forum for consultation on management of WHS across whole workforce
- Considers development, implementation, review of policies and procedures for organisation's WHS system
- Strategic and system-level focus
Clear distinction between roles.
If no HSRs: Committee may agree to consider issues HSR would be consulted on.
Committee Meetings
Meeting Frequency
Committee must meet:
- At least once every three months, AND
- At any reasonable time at request of at least half of committee members
Practical approach: Many committees meet monthly or bi-monthly (more frequent than minimum).
Meeting Procedures
Effective meetings have:
-
Agreed agenda circulated ahead of meeting
- Standing items (incident review, hazard reports, inspection findings, training)
- Specific items raised by members
-
Meeting minutes recording:
- Key points of discussion
- Decisions made
- Action items (who, what, when)
- Circulated soon after meeting
-
Action tracking:
- Follow-up on previous actions
- Status updates
- Completion verification
-
Paid time:
- Meetings during work hours
- Members paid for attendance
Committee Constitution
Important details documented in committee constitution:
Constitution developed and agreed by PCBU and committee.
Typical contents:
-
Committee role and functions
- What committee will do
- What committee will not do (clarify limits)
-
Membership:
- Number of members
- Worker/management balance
- How members selected/elected
- Term of membership
-
Chair:
- How chair decided (election, rotation, appointed)
- Chair's responsibilities
-
Meetings:
- Frequency
- How meetings scheduled
- Quorum requirements
- How decisions made (consensus, majority vote)
-
Administration:
- Who provides secretarial support
- Agenda process
- Minutes distribution
- Record keeping
-
Review:
- When constitution reviewed
- How changes made
Practical Construction Examples
Example 1: Medium Steel Fabrication Business
Background:
- Already has 1 HSR and deputy HSR
- Owner wants more formal arrangements as business grows
- Particularly wants worker input on procedures
Establishment:
- Owner suggests committee to HSR and workers
- Owner and HSR meet with workers to discuss membership and operation
- All workers invited to express interest
- Committee members: HSR, deputy HSR, team leaders (worker reps), owner, manager, assistant manager
- At least half are workers not nominated by PCBU
Constitution developed and agreed:
- Role, membership, chair election, meeting frequency (monthly during paid time)
- Manager provides secretarial support
Meeting process:
- Manager sends email calling for agenda items (2 weeks before)
- Agenda circulated (1 week before)
- Manager takes notes and circulates action items list after meeting
- Meeting dates displayed on tearoom notice board
Outcomes:
- Improved consultation on procedures
- Worker engagement in WHS decisions
- Systematic approach to WHS management
Example 2: Large Construction Site
Background:
- Principal contractor, multiple subcontractors
- 150+ workers on site
- 5 work groups with elected HSRs
Establishment:
- Principal contractor establishes committee (own initiative)
- Consultation arrangements documented in WHS Management Plan
Committee membership:
- Worker reps (7): 5 HSRs, 2 elected worker reps (apprentice, FIFO representative)
- Management reps (6): Project manager, site manager, WHS coordinator, 3 subcontractor representatives
Meetings:
- Monthly (first Monday, 1pm, paid time)
- Agenda includes:
- Incident and hazard review
- Inspection findings
- Training needs
- SWMS reviews
- Specific issues raised
Functions:
- Develop site-specific procedures
- Review incident trends
- Coordinate multi-contractor WHS issues
- Monitor SWMS compliance
- Plan toolbox talk topics
- Review emergency procedures
Outcomes:
- Effective coordination between principal contractor and subcontractors
- Worker input into site-level policies
- Trend identification and proactive improvements
- Strong WHS culture
Example 3: Manufacturing Facility
Background:
- 80 workers across 3 shifts
- Complex hazards (machinery, chemicals, noise)
- Previous poor WHS record
Committee established: Request by 12 workers for committee.
Membership:
- Worker reps (6): 2 per shift (day, afternoon, night), including HSRs
- Management reps (5): Operations manager, production supervisor, WHS officer, maintenance supervisor, HR manager
Chair: Elected by committee, rotates every 6 months between worker rep and management rep.
Meeting approach:
- Bi-monthly meetings
- Rotating meeting time to accommodate all shifts (alternates day/afternoon times)
- Video link for night shift representative
- Detailed minutes emailed to all workers and posted on noticeboards
Focus areas:
- Machine guarding improvements
- Chemical risk management
- Noise control
- Training programs
- Incident investigations
Outcomes:
- Lost time injury rate decreased 60% in 2 years
- Worker engagement in WHS increased
- Systematic hazard identification and control
- Improved relationship between workers and management
Issue Resolution Through Committee
Committee can assist in resolving WHS issues at workplace.
Approach:
- Issues raised in meetings
- Discussion between workers and management
- Options considered
- Agreement sought
- Actions implemented
If unresolved: Default issue resolution procedures apply (WHS Act s.80-82).
Sharing Consultation Arrangements
If multiple PCBUs at workplace: WHS committee may be effective way of consulting:
- With workers
- Between duty holders
Example: Multi-tenanted office building. Building owner, tenants, cleaning contractor form joint WHS committee to address building-wide issues (fire safety, maintenance, access, amenities).
Reviewing Committee Effectiveness
Monitor and review committee:
- Is it functioning effectively?
- Are meetings productive?
- Are actions completed?
- Is worker engagement high?
- Are WHS outcomes improving?
When to review:
- Annually
- After significant workplace changes
- If committee not achieving objectives
Adjustments may include:
- Changing meeting frequency
- Revising constitution
- Improving meeting process
- Training for members