1. Policy statement
The Department of Education (the Department) will, as far as reasonably practicable, provide and maintain a safe and healthy working and learning environment for all workers and students in its schools and workplaces.
Version:
4.2
Effective date:
17 May 2022
The Department of Education (the Department) will, as far as reasonably practicable, provide and maintain a safe and healthy working and learning environment for all workers and students in its schools and workplaces.
Workplace managers will:
install an automated external defibrillator at their school or workplace (Appendix B).
Employees will:
The Department is the Person Conducting a Business or Undertaking (PCBU) under the work health and safety legislation.
Corporate Executive are Officers under the work health and safety legislation. They oversee the Department’s statutory obligations in work health and safety and have duty of care to exercise due diligence, as defined in Part 2, Division 4, Section 27 of the Work Health and Safety Act 2020 (WHS Act).
The function of a school principal are defined in Part 3, Division 2, Section 63 of the School Education Act 1999. Specifically, they are to:
Workers are are defined in the WHS Act as employees, contractors, and subcontractors (and their employees), outworkers, apprentices, work experience students, volunteers and trainees.
Health and Safety Representatives carry out the following functions:
WorkSafe WA is responsible for the regulation of workplace safety and health in accordance with the WHS Act.
Workplace Managers are responsible for implementation of the policy.
Executive Directors and Directors are responsible for compliance monitoring of the policy.
This policy applies to all employees.
A person who is currently employed under the School Education Act 1999 or the Public Sector Management Act 1994.
Health and Safety Representatives are a workers of a work group elected in accordance with the WHS Act by the determined work group.
An officer is defined as ‘a person who makes, or participates in making, decisions that affect the whole, or a substantial part, of a business or undertaking of the Crown’. In this case, the corporate executive are considered officers.
A PCBU is the employer, as defined in the Work Health and Safety Act 2020 (WHS Act), in this instance the Department of Education Western Australia.
That which is, or was at a particular time reasonably able to be done to ensure health and safety, taking into account all relevant matters including likelihood, degree of harm, what is known, availability and suitability of ways to eliminate or minimise risks and associated costs.
A safety management system is a set of policies, plans, actions, and procedures that provide a systematic approach to managing health and safety and underpin continuous safety improvement.
Workers are defined in the WHS Act as employees, contractors, and subcontractors (and their employees), outworkers, apprentices, work experience students, volunteers and trainees.
Any place where workers are, or are likely to be, during the course of their work.
Workplace managers include principals, directors and line managers, who have responsibility for management and control of any Department of Education workplace.
Policy manager:
Director, Employee Relations
Policy contact officer:
Principal Consultant, Health and Safety
T: (08) 9264 4921
Effective date | Last update date | Policy version no. | |
---|---|---|---|
17 September 2010 | 3 August 2011 | 2.1 | |
Reporting requirements for Workplace Improvement Notices have been included in section 4.2.3 and requirements altered in section 4.2.4. D12/0321184. Contact information also updated | |||
17 September 2012 | 5 July 2012 | 2.2 | |
Updated reference to School Education Act Employees’ (Teachers and Administrators) General Agreement. | |||
5 April 2013 | 2.3 | ||
Amendment at section 4.2 to require principals and line managers to complete training within six months of appointment. Endorsed by Corporate Executive 15 March 2013. | |||
5 April 2013 | 20 January 2014 | 2.4 | |
Updated contact details added to policy. D13/0581606 | |||
20 June 2017 | 3.0 | ||
Major review of policy. Endorsed by the Director General at Corporate Executive on 5 May 2017 | |||
16 April 2019 | 3.1 | ||
Major changes have been made to the policy and procedures. Endorsed by the Director General at Corporate Executive on 20 March 2019. | |||
16 April 2019 | 30 August 2019 | 3.2 | |
Minor changes to related documents D19/0405033 | |||
16 April 2019 | 4 December 2019 | 3.3 | |
Minor changes to related documents D19/0554972 | |||
17 May 2022 | 4.0 | ||
The Work Health and Safety policy is a major review of and replaces the Occupational Health and Safety policy. Endorsed by the Director General on 29 April 2022 D22/0324412 Summary of changes to the Work Health and Safety policy and procedures on Ikon (staff only). | |||
17 May 2022 | 17 March 2023 | 4.1 | |
Minor changes to related documents - D23/0094675 | |||
17 May 2022 | 29 February 2024 | 4.2 | |
Minor change to include installation of automated external defibrillators D24/0130401 |
Appendix A: Statement of Intent and Commitment to Work Health and Safety (PDF file - 78.4kB)
Appendix B: Automated External Defibrillator (PDF file - 48.6kB)
Appendices
Appendix A: Statement of Intent and Commitment to Work Health and Safety
Appendix B: Automated External Defibrillator
Procedure
This policy:
Work Health and Safety Policy v4.2
Supporting procedures:
Work Health and Safety Procedures
Policy and all supporting documents:
Work Health and Safety Policy Bundle
17 May 2025
29 February 2024