Fencing Emergency
Timber, metal, and glass fencing, post hole boring, and pool fencing
Fencing Complete Pack
6 documents — everything you need for fencing compliance.
Fencing work involves hazards from post hole boring near underground services, manual handling of heavy fence panels and posts, power tool use, and working near traffic on boundary fences.
Our fencing SWMS pack covers 6 activities including timber fencing, metal fencing (Colorbond, aluminium), glass panel fencing, post hole boring, pool fencing (compliance with AS 1926.1), and temporary fencing installation. Documents address hazards such as underground service strikes during post hole boring, manual handling of heavy panels, power tool injuries, glass handling lacerations, and working near traffic on road-boundary fencing.
Key Hazards Covered
- Underground service strikes during post hole boring
- Manual handling of heavy fence panels and posts
- Power tool injuries (grinders, saws, drills)
- Glass panel handling and laceration risk
- Working near traffic on boundary fencing
- Auger entanglement and kickback
Relevant Australian Standards
- AS 1926.1 Swimming pool safety — Fencing
- AS/NZS 1170.2 Wind actions
- AS 1288 Glass in buildings
- AS/NZS 3000 Electrical installations (underground services)
Individual Documents — $42.46 each
Fencing Emergency — Common Questions
Are emergency procedures a legal requirement?
Yes. Under WHS Regulation 43, PCBUs must prepare, maintain, and implement an emergency plan for the workplace. Workers must be trained in emergency procedures.
What emergencies do your procedures cover?
Our procedures cover trade-specific emergencies including injuries, chemical exposure, fire, electrical incidents, structural collapse, severe weather, and medical emergencies.
Do emergency procedures include notification requirements?
Yes. Each procedure includes who to notify (emergency services, regulators, site managers), when to notify them, and what information to provide.
Last updated: March 2026