Chain of responsibility
Chain of Responsibility is a legal framework in Australian transport legislation that imposes shared safety obligations on all parties who can influence heavy vehicle operations. Originally developed for the heavy vehicle industry and now applied across multiple transport sectors, CoR represents a fundamental shift from driver-only liability to supply chain-wide accountability for public safety.
Overview
The Chain of Responsibility framework operates under the Heavy Vehicle National Law, administered by the National Heavy Vehicle Regulator for vehicles over 4.5 tonnes gross vehicle mass. The concept holds that safety is not solely the driver's responsibility, but rather a shared obligation among all parties who perform functions that influence transport activities—from employers and schedulers to consignors, loaders, and receivers of goods.Legislative Framework
Heavy Vehicle National Law
The HVNL commenced on 10 February 2014 and applies in all Australian states and territories except Western Australia and the Northern Territory. Major amendments passed by Queensland Parliament in 2025 are scheduled to commence mid-2026, representing the most significant overhaul of the framework since its inception.Primary Duty
Every party in the Chain of Responsibility shares the same Primary Duty under HVNL Section 26C: to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, the safety of their transport activities. This obligation requires parties to:- Eliminate public risks associated with heavy vehicle operations, or where elimination is not reasonably practicable, minimise those risks
- Avoid directly or indirectly causing or encouraging drivers or other CoR parties to breach the HVNL, including speeding, fatigue management violations, or mass limit breaches
- Maintain systems that prevent business practices from creating situations where law violations become necessary
Parties in the Chain
The HVNL identifies ten CoR parties based on their functions rather than job titles:- Employer – employs a heavy vehicle driver
- Prime Contractor – engages a self-employed driver under contract for services
- Operator – directs the control and use of a heavy vehicle
- Scheduler – schedules transport of goods/passengers or driver work/rest hours
- Consignor – consigns, engages, and coordinates heavy vehicle transport of goods
- Consignee – receives goods delivered by heavy vehicle
- Packer – packs or assembles goods for transport
- Loading Manager – manages premises where 5+ heavy vehicles are loaded/unloaded daily
- Loader – loads a heavy vehicle
- Unloader – unloads a heavy vehicle
Executive Duty
Under HVNL Section 26D, executives of entities that are CoR parties have a distinct obligation to exercise due diligence to ensure their business complies with its Primary Duty. This requires executives to:- Acquire and maintain current knowledge of safety matters
- Understand hazards and risks in their transport activities
- Ensure adequate resources are allocated to eliminate or minimise risks
- Establish processes for receiving and responding to safety information
- Verify that resources and processes are actually implemented and used
Reasonably Practicable
- Likelihood and potential severity of harm
- What the party knows or ought to know about hazards
- Available methods to eliminate or reduce risk
- Availability and suitability of control measures
- Cost of implementation relative to risk
Application to Other Transport Sectors
While originally developed for heavy vehicles, the Chain of Responsibility concept has been extended to other transport sectors, particularly in Victoria where it applies to rail, bus, marine, and taxi industries through various transport safety acts.2026 Reforms
The HVNL amendments scheduled for mid-2026 transition the framework from prescriptive compliance to risk-based safety management, including:- Mandatory Safety Management Systems across the supply chain
- Enforceable "fit to drive" duties extending beyond fatigue management
- Streamlined accreditation frameworks aligned with SMS requirements
- Modernised mass management rules balancing safety and productivity
Industry Development and Thought Leadership
- Function-based identification of CoR parties rather than reliance on job titles
- Shared responsibility without diminishment across multiple parties
- Integration of Primary Duty obligations into business processes and systems
- Risk-based approaches to meeting "reasonably practicable" standards
- The critical distinction between driver duties and CoR party obligations
See Also
- Vicarious liability
- Transport Legislation Review
- Rail Safety Act
- Bus Safety Act
- Transport Integration Act
- Heavy Vehicle National Law
- National Heavy Vehicle Regulator
External Links
Category:Tort law
Category:Vehicle law
Category:Transport in Australia
Category:Road safety
Category:Transport safety