WHEREAS the Employer is legally obligated to ensure a workplace that is safe and without risk to health; WHEREAS the Employer cannot personally perform all required duties; WHEREAS the Appointee has demonstrated competence as defined by [Regulation/Standard, e.g., OHS Regulation 5.1];
a) Approve budget expenditures for safety equipment. b) Hire or fire employees for safety violations (may only recommend). c) Assume responsibility for engineering controls or structural building safety.
Disclaimer: This post is for informational purposes and does not constitute legal advice. OHS Acts vary by country and state (e.g., South Africa’s OHSA, Canada’s COHS, UK’s HSWA). You must consult a qualified OHS attorney to adapt this template to your specific jurisdiction and industry. ohs act 16.1 appointment letter template
Here is the template. Below it, we dissect each clause. [Company Letterhead]
The Appointee is authorized to:
a) Conducting formal documented inspections of [specific equipment/area] at least [frequency, e.g., weekly]. b) Stopping any work activity that presents a danger that cannot be immediately corrected, and reporting such stop-work order to [Named Supervisor] within 1 hour. c) Investigating minor incidents (first aid only) and submitting a written report to the Safety Manager within 48 hours. d) Enforcing the use of [specific PPE, e.g., full-face respirators] in Zone A.
Signature: ____________________ Name: ____________________ Date: ____________________ WHEREAS the Employer is legally obligated to ensure
If you are a CEO, Managing Director, or sole proprietor, you cannot personally sign off on every risk assessment, every confined space entry, or every lockout/tagout procedure. You have to delegate. But under the Occupational Health and Safety Act (specifically Section 16.1), when you delegate a duty, you do not delegate the liability.
In terms of Section 16.1 of the Occupational Health and Safety Act [Insert Applicable Act & Year, e.g., Act 85 of 1993] Disclaimer: This post is for informational purposes and
Why a vague appointment letter can land you in criminal court—and how to draft one that builds a fortress of compliance. Introduction: The Pen is Mightier Than the Prosecution In occupational health and safety (OHS) law, paper is not bureaucracy. Paper is liability.