Today’s question is about the NSW SES and the ‘heavy vehicle chain of responsibility’.

My correspondent says:
I understand that drivers within the service are responsible for their actions however the service now seems to be trying to instil that the national heavy vehicle chain of responsibility applies to all employees (including volunteers) across the organisation.
This seems like an overreach of that part of legislation, am I right or are they correct?
The Heavy Vehicle National Law is like other cooperative legislative schemes where each state and territory has passed similar laws to create a national scheme. The Heavy Vehicle National Law as set out in the schedule to the Heavy Vehicle National Law Act 2012 (Qld) is adopted as part of the law of New South Wales by the Heavy Vehicle (Adoption of National Law) Act 2013 (NSW) s 4. The national law says that the term
party in the chain of responsibility, for a heavy vehicle, means each of the following persons—
(a) if the vehicle’s driver is an employed driver—an employer of the driver;
(b) if the vehicle’s driver is a self-employed driver—a prime contractor for the driver;
(c) an operator of the vehicle;
(d) a scheduler for the vehicle;
(e) a consignor of any goods in the vehicle;
(f) a consignee of any goods in the vehicle;
(g) a packer of any goods in the vehicle;
(h) a loading manager for any goods in the vehicle;
(i) a loader of any goods in the vehicle;
(j) an unloader of any goods in the vehicle.
The heavy vehicle regulator says:
You are a CoR [Chain of Responsibility] party because of a function you perform, not because of a title or job description, or the words of a contract. If you engage in any of the above activities, you or your business are accountable for heavy vehicle safety according to your primary duty.
It may noted that the list, above, does not include the driver. The Heavy Vehicle regulator says:
Driving is not one of the CoR functions. An employed driver is not a party in the CoR because they drive. Drivers have other duties and HVNL obligations.
Note: When a driver is performing another CoR function – such as loading a heavy vehicle – then the driver (and their employer) are ‘loaders’ and are parties in the CoR.
The primary duty of a ‘party in the chain of responsibility’ is (s 26C) to
(1) … ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the safety of the party’s transport activities relating to the vehicle.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), each party must, so far as is reasonably practicable—
(a) eliminate public risks and, to the extent it is not reasonably practicable to eliminate public risks, minimise the public risks; and
(b) ensure the party’s conduct does not directly or indirectly cause or encourage—
(i) the driver of the heavy vehicle to contravene this Law; or
(ii) the driver of the heavy vehicle to exceed a speed limit applying to the driver; or
(iii) another person, including another party in the chain of responsibility, to contravene this Law.
There are exemptions for the emergency services including an exemption from work and rest time requirements (s 265) and an exemption from work diary requirements (s 356).
I don’t really see the issue. The chain of responsibility obligations apply to all people who perform the tasks listed in (a) to (j) above. If they are volunteers within the SES it still applies to them. It doesn’t apply to ‘to all employees (including volunteers)’, only those that are performing the tasks set out above. Exactly what the implications are for the SES I don’t know but presumably that is why the SES is rolling out training packages, so people can know what is expected of them.
Conclusion
In the list of participants in the CoR only paragraphs (a) and (b) refer to a person who is an employer or who is employed. There is nothing to suggest the other eight paragraphs wouldn’t apply to volunteers. As the regulator says, it’s not the title or the contract that is important, it is whether you are performing the tasks described.

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Hi Michael,
Thanks for the appraisal of the CoR relative to SES.
I am not sure why the question has come up, but while it is out there â¦
There has been a significant, and ongoing, rollout of High Clearance Vehicles (HCVs), which I assume equate to being a heavy vehicle. In an emergency where task requests for HCVâs are filtered through an Emergency Operation Centre, who is in the Chain of Responsibility? What task or action falls into being â(d) a scheduler for the vehicle;â?
Ultimately, I am wondering to what extent should personnel within an EOC be aware of, and/or consider, the CoR for HCV tasking?
Thanks for considering,
Mat Johnson
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I’m not sure who in the EOC is in the chain of responsibility, that would depend on the details of each job description, and I assume is why the SES is developing training, so everyone can see where the different roles fit.
But, regardless of where one fits, if a person is responsible for tasking a crew to a job he or she should consider ‘If I tell them to go from point A to point B and that normally takes half-an-hour driving but I tell them they have to be at B in 10 minutes, then I’m in effect directing them to drive too fast, and I shouldn’t do that’. And if a person allocating tasks thinks ‘If I task the crew in that HCV to the next job then they’ll have been on the go, without a break, for 8 hours so I probably shouldn’t do that’.
Hi Michael,
What is an operator of a vehicle above compared to a driver?
According to the Heavy Vehicle National Law:
“A person operates a vehicle or combination, and is an operator of the vehicle or combination, if the person is responsible for controlling or directing the use of—
(a) for a vehicle (including a vehicle in a combination)—the vehicle; or
(b) for a combination—the towing vehicle in the combination.”
Thank you