Scaffolding & Access Emergency
Scaffold erection and dismantling, working platforms, and edge protection
Scaffolding & Access Complete Pack
8 documents — everything you need for scaffolding & access compliance.
Scaffolding work is inherently high-risk construction work under WHS Regulations s.291 due to the constant risk of falls from height. Licensed scaffolders require SWMS for every scaffolding operation.
Our scaffolding SWMS pack covers 8 activities including scaffold erection and dismantling, working platform installation, edge protection systems, scaffold inspection, and mobile scaffold operations. Documents address critical hazards such as scaffold collapse, falls during erection, falling tools and materials, and electrocution from overhead power lines.
Key Hazards Covered
- Falls during scaffold erection and dismantling
- Scaffold collapse from improper assembly
- Falling tools and materials onto workers below
- Electrocution from contact with overhead power lines
- Manual handling of heavy scaffold components
- Inadequate edge protection
Relevant Australian Standards
- AS/NZS 1576 Scaffolding (Parts 1-4)
- AS/NZS 4576 Guidelines for scaffolding safety
- AS/NZS 4994.1 Temporary edge protection
- AS/NZS 1891.1 Fall-arrest systems
Individual Documents — $42.46 each
Scaffolding & Access 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