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Road Profiling Milling and Plant Operations Risk Assessment

Road Profiling Milling and Plant Operations Risk Assessment

  • 100% Compliant with Australian WHS Acts & Regulations
  • Fully Editable MS Word & PDF Formats Included
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  • Includes 2 Years of Free Compliance Updates

Road Profiling Milling and Plant Operations Risk Assessment

Product Overview

Identify and control organisational risks associated with Road Profiling, Milling and Plant Operations at a management and systems level using this comprehensive Risk Assessment. This document supports executive Due Diligence, aligns with the WHS Act, and helps protect your business from operational liability and compliance breaches.

Risk Categories & Hazards Covered

This document assesses risks and outlines management controls for:

  • WHS Governance, Leadership and Legal Compliance: Assessment of board and senior management responsibilities, safety leadership, consultation arrangements and alignment with statutory WHS duties.
  • Contract, Client and Interface Management: Management of contractual WHS obligations, client requirements, interface risks with principal contractors and shared duty holder arrangements.
  • Planning, Design and Engineering of Works: Evaluation of design reviews, constructability, engineering controls and pre-start planning for road profiling, milling and associated plant operations.
  • Plant Procurement, Selection and Fleet Management: Systems for selecting fit-for-purpose plant, guarding and safety features, hire arrangements and lifecycle management of profiling and milling equipment.
  • Plant Inspection, Maintenance and Reliability Systems: Preventive maintenance programs, pre-start checks, defect reporting, isolation procedures and reliability controls to minimise plant failure risk.
  • Competency, Licensing, Training and Supervision: Verification of high-risk work licences, VOC processes, task-specific training, supervision levels and ongoing competency management.
  • Traffic Management and Public Interface Systems: Development of traffic guidance schemes, interaction controls between mobile plant and vehicles, pedestrian separation and public protection measures.
  • Worker Health, Fatigue and Welfare Management: Fatigue risk management, heat and environmental exposure, welfare facilities, fitness for work and psychosocial risk considerations.
  • Hazardous Substances, Dust, Silica, Fumes and Noise Management: Controls for airborne contaminants from milling operations, hazardous chemicals, diesel exhaust, noise exposure and health surveillance requirements.
  • Site Establishment, Access, Housekeeping and Services Management: Safe site layout, access/egress, underground/overhead services management, exclusion zones and housekeeping standards.
  • Communications, Coordination and Change Management: Protocols for pre-start briefings, toolbox talks, shift handovers, change management, and coordination between multiple work groups and contractors.
  • Emergency Preparedness and Incident Management: Planning for plant-related incidents, traffic crashes, fire, medical emergencies, spill response and post-incident investigation processes.
  • Contractor, Labour Hire and Subcontractor Management: Prequalification, onboarding, supervision, performance monitoring and integration of third parties into the principal WHS management system.
  • Documentation, Records, Monitoring and Continuous Improvement: Control of WHS documentation, record-keeping, audits, inspections, KPI monitoring and continuous improvement of road profiling and milling safety systems.

Who is this for?

This Risk Assessment is designed for Business Owners, General Managers, Operations Managers and Safety Professionals overseeing road profiling, milling and mobile plant operations within civil and road construction environments.

Hazards & Risks Covered

Hazard Risk Description
1. WHS Governance, Leadership and Legal Compliance
  • • Lack of clear WHS roles, responsibilities and authority for milling and plant operations
  • • Failure to comply with WHS Act 2011 and WHS Regulation (e.g. plant, traffic, noise, silica, asbestos, fatigue)
  • • Insufficient PCBU oversight of contractors, sub‑contractors and labour hire personnel
  • • Inadequate WHS objectives, targets and performance indicators for road profiling operations
  • • Failure to consult, cooperate and coordinate with other duty holders on shared worksites (clients, principal contractors, councils, utilities)
  • • Poor safety culture that tolerates shortcuts, production pressure and non‑reporting of incidents
  • • Inadequate consideration of industrial manslaughter and due diligence obligations by officers
2. Contract, Client and Interface Management
  • • Contracts that prioritise production, time and cost over safety outcomes
  • • Unclear delineation of WHS responsibilities between principal contractor, client, subcontractors and plant hire providers
  • • Inadequate integration of WHS requirements into tendering and contract award processes
  • • Conflicting work methods between multiple contractors on the same roadway or intersection
  • • Late design or program changes creating unassessed risks for traffic management, staging and plant interaction
  • • Failure to obtain or comply with road authority permits, traffic guidance schemes and curfew conditions
  • • Poor communication of underground services, heritage constraints and environmental restrictions to crews
3. Planning, Design and Engineering of Works
  • • Poor planning of staging leading to plant congestion and increased collision or run‑over risks
  • • Inadequate planning of milling depths and profiles causing unplanned contact with underground services or structural elements
  • • Insufficient design consideration for access/egress of large profiling and milling machines in confined streets or intersections
  • • Lack of engineering input into selection of milling heads, cutting drums and tooling for specific pavements and structures
  • • Inadequate planning for dust, silica and fumes management when removing existing asphalt or concrete road surfaces
  • • Failure to consider vibration impacts on nearby structures, utilities or sensitive receptors
  • • No allowance for safe set‑up and maintenance zones for sweepers, rollers and support plant
4. Plant Procurement, Selection and Fleet Management
  • • Procurement of milling, profiling and sweeping plant that does not meet Australian standards or WHS requirements
  • • Lack of consistency in safety features across the fleet (e.g. some machines without reversing cameras, proximity sensors or guarding)
  • • Inadequate evaluation of plant suitability for task, ground conditions or gradient
  • • Use of older unguarded equipment with poor dust and noise controls
  • • Hiring short‑term plant without proper WHS specifications or verification of maintenance history
  • • Failure to standardise controls and layouts, increasing human error risk between different machine types
5. Plant Inspection, Maintenance and Reliability Systems
  • • Inadequate preventative maintenance leading to plant failure, loss of control or unplanned movement
  • • Failure of critical safety systems (e.g. brakes, steering, emergency stops, interlocks, ROPS) due to poor inspection regimes
  • • Uncontrolled leaks of fuel, oil or hydraulic fluid causing fires, slips or environmental harm
  • • Missing or ineffective dust suppression systems on milling, routing and sweeping plant
  • • Use of damaged cutting drums, teeth or router bits leading to projectiles or excessive vibration
  • • Reliance on verbal or informal pre‑start checks without documentation or supervision
6. Competency, Licensing, Training and Supervision
  • • Untrained or inexperienced operators controlling high‑risk milling, profiling and sweeping plant
  • • Inadequate verification of high risk work licences, tickets and VOCs for plant operators and traffic controllers
  • • Lack of training on specific models or configurations of road profilers, asphalt milling machines, road rollers and sweepers
  • • Insufficient supervision of new or young workers in dynamic road environments
  • • No ongoing competency assessment leading to skill fade or unsafe habits
  • • Poor understanding of communication protocols, hand signals and exclusion zones
7. Traffic Management and Public Interface Systems
  • • Plant and vehicle collisions with workers or members of the public due to ineffective traffic management
  • • Inadequate separation between live traffic, milling machines, road rollers, sweepers and ground crews
  • • Poorly designed or implemented traffic guidance schemes leading to confusion for road users
  • • Insufficient protection at entry/exit points for trucks receiving milled material from conveyors
  • • Inadequate management of vulnerable road users (pedestrians, cyclists, mobility scooters) around work zones
  • • Night‑time and low‑visibility operations increasing risk of run‑overs and vehicle impacts
8. Worker Health, Fatigue and Welfare Management
  • • Fatigue from extended shifts, night work and rotating rosters on road projects
  • • Heat stress for workers operating or working around hot asphalt, plant engines and in high ambient temperatures
  • • Exposure to whole‑body vibration and hand‑arm vibration from prolonged plant operation and router use
  • • Inadequate management of drugs and alcohol leading to impaired judgement and slower reactions
  • • Psychosocial hazards from high production demands, night shifts, remote work and conflict with road users
  • • Poor access to amenities, drinking water and hygiene facilities on mobile road profiling sites
9. Hazardous Substances, Dust, Silica, Fumes and Noise Management
  • • Respirable crystalline silica exposure from milling, routing and breaking concrete or asphalt road surfaces
  • • Exposure to asphalt fumes, diesel exhaust and bituminous vapours during removal and re‑laying
  • • Inhalation of nuisance and respirable dust from road profiling and sweeping operations
  • • Potential disturbance of asbestos‑containing materials or tar‑bound roadbase during milling works
  • • Excessive occupational noise from milling drums, engines, breakers and sweepers
  • • Lack of systematic hazardous chemicals management (SDS, labelling, storage, spill response)
10. Site Establishment, Access, Housekeeping and Services Management
  • • Uncontrolled interaction between plant, pedestrians and light vehicles in laydown and staging areas
  • • Poor housekeeping creating trip hazards, obstructions and fire risks around milling, sweeping and rolling operations
  • • Inadequate identification and protection of underground and overhead services prior to milling or breaking road surfaces
  • • Unplanned access by unauthorised persons into work zones (members of public, other contractors, utility providers)
  • • Ineffective management of stockpiles, waste and milled material leading to instability or environmental harm
  • • Congested work areas reducing escape paths and emergency access
11. Communications, Coordination and Change Management
  • • Miscommunication between plant operators, spotters, traffic controllers and ground workers leading to collisions or entrapment
  • • Lack of clear instructions when multiple plant items (milling machine, roller, sweeper, trucks) operate in a confined work zone
  • • Failure to communicate changes in scope, staging, traffic management or plant allocation to all affected personnel
  • • Inadequate management of language, literacy and cultural barriers in diverse workforces
  • • Poor shift handovers resulting in loss of critical safety information
  • • Ineffective escalation pathways for reporting of emerging hazards or near misses
12. Emergency Preparedness and Incident Management
  • • Inadequate planning for serious incidents involving mobile plant, such as rollovers, entrapments or collisions with road users
  • • Delayed emergency response due to unclear site location, access constraints or communication failures
  • • Lack of spill response capability for fuel, oil and hydraulic leaks from milling and sweeping plant
  • • Insufficient training and equipment for managing fire in plant or in milled material stockpiles
  • • Poorly investigated incidents and near misses leading to repeat events
  • • Absence of site‑specific rescue and recovery plans for working adjacent to deep excavations, culverts or water bodies
13. Contractor, Labour Hire and Subcontractor Management
  • • Inconsistent WHS standards between direct employees and subcontractor crews operating milling, sweeping and rolling plant
  • • Use of labour hire workers without adequate induction, training or verification of plant competencies
  • • Commercial pressure on subcontractors leading to corner‑cutting on safety controls (e.g. dust suppression, traffic management)
  • • Lack of clarity about who controls and supervises subcontractor personnel on mixed‑crew sites
  • • Inadequate monitoring and performance review of subcontractor WHS performance
14. Documentation, Records, Monitoring and Continuous Improvement
  • • Inadequate documentation of risk assessments, plant risk controls and SWMS for milling and plant operations
  • • Out‑of‑date procedures, forms and checklists that do not reflect current plant, legislation or work methods
  • • Poor record‑keeping for training, maintenance, inspections and incidents, limiting ability to demonstrate compliance
  • • Failure to monitor WHS performance data and identify trends in plant‑related incidents or exposures
  • • Lack of systematic review and update of WHS controls following incidents, technology changes or regulatory updates

Need to add specific hazards for your workplace?

Don't worry if a specific hazard isn't listed above. Once you purchase, simply log in to your Client Portal and add your own custom hazards at no extra cost. We take care of the hard work—creating the risk ratings and control measures for free—to ensure your document is compliant within minutes.

Legislation & References

This document was researched and developed to align with:

  • Work Health and Safety Act 2011
  • Work Health and Safety Regulations 2017
  • AS/NZS ISO 31000:2018: Risk management — Guidelines
  • Safe Work Australia – Code of Practice: How to Manage Work Health and Safety Risks: Guidance on systematic risk management processes.
  • Safe Work Australia – Code of Practice: Managing Risks of Plant in the Workplace: Requirements for the safe lifecycle management of plant and equipment.
  • Safe Work Australia – Code of Practice: Managing the Risk of Falls at Workplaces: Controls for working on and around mobile plant and road surfaces.
  • Safe Work Australia – Code of Practice: Managing Noise and Preventing Hearing Loss at Work: Noise risk controls for milling and road construction activities.
  • Safe Work Australia – Code of Practice: Managing Risks of Hazardous Chemicals in the Workplace: Management of fuels, lubricants, solvents and other hazardous substances.
  • Safe Work Australia – Code of Practice: Excavation Work: Guidance for managing underground services and adjacent excavation interfaces.
  • AS 4801 / ISO 45001: Occupational health and safety management systems — Requirements for systematic WHS management.
  • AS 1742 – Manual of Uniform Traffic Control Devices (series): Requirements for traffic management and roadwork signage around profiling and milling operations.

Standard Risk Assessment Features (Click to Expand)
  • Comprehensive hazard identification for all activities
  • Risk rating matrix with likelihood and consequence analysis
  • Existing control measures evaluation
  • Residual risk assessment after controls
  • Hierarchy of controls recommendations
  • Action priority rankings
  • Review and monitoring requirements
  • Consultation and communication records
  • Legal compliance references
  • Sign-off and approval sections

$79.5

Safe Work Australia Aligned