Criminal manslaughter – how not to do it

1.00 pm — 5.00 pm AEST, 25 July 2024
Online

Overview

An Engineering Education Australia Virtual Workshop:

Industrial manslaughter is being written into workplace health and safety legislation. Serious consequences—including fines and gaol time—may arise when a senior decision-maker fails to put reasonable precautions in place and someone dies.

Delivered by experienced due diligence engineers, this course explains how the new provisions in WHS legislation require engineers and organisations to move from hazard-based risk management to a precautionary approach. 

Using practicable examples and relevant court decisions you’ll cover: 

  • how to demonstrate safety due diligence under the WHS/OHS legislation
  • how the SFAIRP (so far as is reasonably practicable) concept is built into legislation
  • the difference between statute and common law and how this benefits defensibility
  • the hierarchy of control as understood and used in court: elimination, precautions, mitigations
  • the legal loss-of-control point (aligning the laws of man and nature)
  • how to demonstrate the management of the laws of nature in a way that satisfies the laws of man.

The course is held as a four-hour interactive session. You'll have access to expert advisers, so you can bring your questions to the Q&A part of each session.

By the end of the course, you'll understand the critical importance of safety due diligence—not just compliance—to avoid criminal negligence. You'll also learn how to make defensible decisions using recognised legal terminology and processes.

Who should attend?

This suits engineer and design professionals, and is particularly valuable for:

  • board members
  • senior decision-makers
  • technical advisers
Pricing

Online

Member: $645* ex GST 
Non-Member: $758.82* ex GST

*1% credit card surcharge applies.

Key speaker
Gaye Francis and Richard Robinson
Host(s)
Engineering Education Australia
Registration close
25 July 2024
05.00 pm AEST