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Safe Work Australia comprises 15 Members who work with agency staff to deliver the objectives of the strategic and operational plans. These members include an independent Chair, nine members representing the Commonwealth and each state and territory, two members representing the interests of workers, two representing the interests of employers and the Chief Executive Officer.
Queensland: 1 January 2012 New South Wales: 1 January 2012 Tasmania: 1 January 2013 Northern Territory: 1 January 2012 Australian Capital Territory: 1 January 2012 South Australia: 1 January 2013 Victoria: Not Implemented Western Australia: 31 March 2022
Queensland's five-year average of electrical fatalities per million of population has declined from 3.6 in 2001 to just 1.24 as at 30 June 2005 – well below Australia's national average. In the period July 1996 to June 2002, 65 fatalities were reported.
The Australian Institute of Health and Safety (AIHS; previously known as the Safety Institute of Australia, SIA) is Australia's peak body for the occupational health and safety profession. Established more than 75 years ago, the Institute has a membership of over 4,000 individuals and more than 50 corporate members.
1912 Brisbane general strike, general strike in Brisbane, Queensland, following the firing of workers for wearing union badges at work. [1] 1917 Australian general strike; Broken Hill mining strike, from 1919 to 1920 by miners in Broken Hill, New South Wales, over safety conditions. 1919 Fremantle Wharf riot
The National Safety Council of Australia is a nonprofit organisation in Australia promoting safety awareness and offering consulting, auditing and training services. For much of its life, NSCA was a volunteer organisation concerned largely with accident prevention.
Blue Card Services administers the blue card system—Queensland’s Working with Children Check. The blue card system is used in Queensland, Australia as a prevention and monitoring system for people working with children and young people. [1] Other states in Australia have a similar working with children check, but are not called a "blue card".
The Centre for Accident Research and Road Safety – Queensland (CARRS-Q) is a research centre established in 1996.. It is based at the Kelvin Grove campus of Queensland University of Technology (QUT) in Queensland, Australia and is part of the Faculty of Health.