(1) This Procedure defines how Victoria University (VU) governs, assigns accountability for, and assures the performance of its Workplace Health and Safety Management System (WHSMS). It sets out roles and responsibilities, monitoring and audit mechanisms, and performance evaluation processes to drive continuous improvement. (2) This Procedure applies to all activities under the management and control of Victoria University and applies to all University staff, students, contractors and visitors. (4) See Part B ‘Roles and Responsibilities’ below. (5) Accountability requires accepting responsibilities and owning outcomes. Leaders at all levels must demonstrate due diligence, resource the WHSMS appropriately, and verify that controls and processes are operating as intended. (6) VU measures and holds people to account through: (7) VU monitors worker health to ensure risks are effectively managed through: (8) VU monitors workplace safety across all areas through: (9) VU ensures that risk controls and corrective actions are in place and effective by: (10) VU ensures that all persons performing work are trained and competent by: (11) VU ensures compliance with legal and other requirements by: (12) VU ensures safety monitoring equipment remains effective by: (13) VU monitors WHSMS compliance by conducting internal audits in accordance with HSW-1.6-GL-5-1.0 WHSMS Internal Compliance Audit Guideline (Tier 2). (14) VU maintains assurance over WHS performance through three levels of monitoring and review: (15) The HSW Team reviews WHS policies, procedures, plans and registers for accuracy, relevance and currency; local committees and managers maintain up-to-date risk registers, procedures and safe work instructions for their areas. (16) HSW leaders conduct regular management reviews of the WHSMS to assess: (17) Findings and required actions arising from these reviews must be implemented to drive continuous improvement of the WHSMS. (18) VU assesses WHS performance using both leading and lagging indicators (see HSW-1.6-F-14-1.0 HSW KPIs). Local WHS Committees review results and record improvement opportunities in the WHSMS Management Review. (19) University-level targets and objectives are reviewed periodically to support continuous improvement and accountability. (20) WHS issues that cannot be resolved locally are escalated in accordance with the Health and Safety - Issue Resolution Procedure and the relevant governance pathway. (21) WHS actions are assigned and tracked in Elumina Quicksafe; audit and inspection records, training/competency records and calibration/maintenance records are retained per University records requirements. (22) HESF: Standard 2.3 Wellbeing and Safety; 7.3 Information Management. (23) Compliance Standards for NVR Registered Training Organisations and FPP Requirements 2025: Standard 20 Compliance with Laws. (24) This Procedure also aligns with ISO 45001:2018 Clause 9. (25) Performance indicators: Measures (rates, ratios, or trends) used to assess whether objectives are being achieved. (26) WHS Monitoring: A systematic process of checking whether work is carried out safely and in compliance with standards and laws. (27) WHS Performance: Effectiveness in preventing injury and illness and providing a safe workplace.Health and Safety - Governance, Accountability and Assurance Procedure
Section 1 - Summary
Section 2 - Scope
Section 3 - Policy/Regulation
Top of PageSection 4 - Procedures
Part A - Summary of Roles and Responsibilities
Part B - Governance, Accountability and Roles
Principles
Roles and Responsibilities
Roles
Responsibilities
Vice-Chancellor's Group
Managers and Supervisors (of staff, student cohort, contractors or volunteers)
HSW Team
WHS Committee Chairs
Staff (including employees, contractors, HDR students, Students undertaking research work during their honours year, WIL participants, and volunteers)
Coursework Students and Visitors
Part C - Monitoring Workplace Health and Safety (WHS)
Monitoring Worker’s Health
Monitoring Workplace safety
Monitoring WHS risk controls and actions
Monitoring WHS induction, Training, Competency and Worker WHS Performance
Legal & Other Requirements
Safety Monitoring Equipment
Part D - Monitoring WHS Management System (Assurance)
Auditing the WHSMS
Three Levels of WHS Assurance
Review of WHS Documents
Management Review
Part E - Performance Evaluation and Reporting
Part F - Escalation and Issue Resolution
Part G - Records and Systems
Section 5 - HESF/ASQA/ESOS Alignment
Section 6 - Definitions
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Understand their Duty of Care obligations as defined in the Occupational Health and Safety Act 2004 (Vic).
Provide visible safety leadership within their sphere of influence;
Demonstrate due diligence (remain informed of WHS legislation and the WHSMS; monitor risks, resources, and performance; verify use of WHS processes);
Ensure a systematic approach to safety is established, resourced, and monitored;
Chair portfolio OHS consultative committees and seek regular WHS reports from leaders of organisational units.
Understand their Duty of Care obligations as defined in the Occupational Health and Safety Act 2004 (Vic) and within this Procedure.
Provide day-to-day safety leadership;
Identify hazards and WHS risks with the activities under their direction, apply controls per WHS procedures, and verify effectiveness;
Provide information, training and instruction; investigate incidents; close corrective actions;
Coordinate inspection schedules; participate in inspections; address issues promptly and escalate unresolved matters.
Oversee WHS monitoring and performance processes; provide expert advice;
Analyse trends; identify improvement opportunities;
Conduct Tier 2 internal audits in line with the audit schedule and approved tools.
Regularly review WHS performance indicators and workforce feedback;
Track actions to completion.
Take reasonable care for their own safety and that of others;
Follow reasonable instructions, safe work procedures and use required PPE;
Familiarise themselves with relevant policies, procedures and University safety standards relating to their area of work;
Complete mandatory training; report hazards, injuries and incidents;
Cooperate with inspections, audits and investigations; respond appropriately to emergencies.
Take reasonable care for their own safety and that of others;
Comply with instructions and signage;
Cooperate with emergency procedures; report hazards or incidents to the relevant supervisor/contact.