Discrimination for OHS reasons

Section 76 of the OHS Act prohibits an employer from dismissing an employee, discriminating against an employee or treating an employee less favourably because that employee is or has been an elected Health and Safety Representative (HSR).

An employer or prospective employer is guilty of an indictable offence if the dominant reason for:

  • dismissing an employee, injuring an employee or altering the employee's position to the detriment of the employee;
  • threatening to do any of the above things to an employee;
  • refusing or failing to offer employment to a prospective employee or discriminating between prospective employees in offering terms of employment;
is because the employee or prospective employee:
  • is or has been an HSR or a member of a Health and Safety Committee (HSC);
  • exercises or has exercised power as an HSR or as a member of an HSC;
  • assists or has assisted or gives or has given any information to an inspector, an HSR, a member of an HSC, or has assisted, given information to or raised safety issues or concerns with authorised representatives of registered employee organisations (ARREOs); or
  • raises or has raised an issue or concern about health and safety to the employer, an inspector, an HSR, a member of an HSC or another employee.

This includes deputy HSRs.

Under Section 77 an employer bears the onus of proving that the reason for the alleged discriminatory act(s) was not the dominant reason for the employer's conduct.  

What is meant by 'injuring an employee in the employment of the employer' or 'altering the position of an employee to the employee's detriment' or threatening to do such things?
WorkSafe has developed a 'S12 guideline' to explain and explore these sections of the Act: How WorkSafe Applies The Law In Relation To Discrimination On Health And Safety Grounds. The guideline explains that 'an objective assessment of all the facts is required' in attempting to answer these questions. Note this guide is now archived but provides useful information and forms part of the 'state of knowledge'.

'Injuring an employee in the employment of the employer' usually relates to the loss or alteration of a legal right in employment, while 'altering the position of an employee to the employee's detriment' may include any adverse effect on or deterioration in the employee's conditions.

The publication provides a long list of possible examples of injuring or altering the conditions of employment to the employee's detriment or threatening to do so:
  • demotion
  • allocation of work below skill/classification level (leading to a reduction in classification or employability)
  • less flexible work hours, less congenial shifts or rosters, less overtime or less prospect of overtime earnings
  • repeated changes to shifts, rosters or working hours
  • lower salary, increments or bonuses
  • reduction in allowances
  • restrictions in maintaining competency levels
  • fewer training opportunities
  • refusing promotion or advancement
  • job transfer
  • standing down on full pay and being singled out for this purpose
  • denial of wage increase and being singled out for this purpose
  • reneging on an agreement to pay a wage increase
  • withdrawing a promise of secure employment in a position for an agreed term or an offer of promotion or advancement
  • denying access to existing resources such as information technology
  • verbal abuse, humiliation, denigration or ridicule
  • isolation or exclusion from organisational activities
  • denying access to a fair process before taking disciplinary action
  • taking disciplinary action
  • counselling and issuing a warning letter where the effect is to make the job less secure, or
  • making redundancies on the basis of discriminatory reasons.
Useful Resources