Test and Tag Regulations Western
Australia
Regulation 4.37 of the Occupational Safety and Health Regulations 1996
places an obligation on a person who is an employer, a main contractor,
a self employed person, a person having control of a workplace or a
person having control of access to a workplace, to ‘ensure that plant
at the workplace is subject to appropriate checks, tests and
inspections necessary to reduce the risk of injury or harm occurring to
a person at the workplace.
A electrical testing and tagging regime for electrical equipment is the
way to demonstrate compliance with the above regulation.
The
following licensing requirements apply when testing electrical
appliances and equipment in workplaces other than construction sites:
Electrical
Testing using a plug-in tester:
When
testing is carried out by plugging equipment into a commercially
available ‘plug-in’ PAT testing device, the person conducting the
testing need not hold any electrical licence and may fix the
appropriate tag. Note that if the equipment is found to be defective,
it can only be repaired by an appropriately licensed electrician.
Electrical Testing using electrical test instruments:
Where testing is carried out using an instrument with hand-held probes
or clip-on leads, such as an insulation resistance meter and the
equipment needs to be partly dismantled, then the person performing the
testing must hold an ‘A’ grade electrical mechanic’s or electrical
fitter’s licence or a restricted electrical licence endorsed with the
‘scope of work’ relevant to the type of equipment being tested.
Construction sites
Regulation 3.61 of the Occupational Safety and Health Regulations 1996
specifies that electrical installations, appliances and equipment on
construction sites must comply with Australian New Zealand Standard AS/NZS
3012 “Electrical Installations – Construction and demolition sites”.
Clause 3.6 of AS/NZS 3012:2003 specifies that electrical equipment
shall be inspected and tested in accordance with
AS/NZS 3760 “In-service safety inspection and testing of electrical
equipment”. Regulation 3.62 of the Occupational Safety and Health
Regulations 1996 requires that persons who test and place their licence
number on the tag must be electrical workers as defined in the
Electricity (Licensing) Regulations 1991. The electrical worker must be
the holder of either an ‘A’ grade electrical mechanic’s or electrical
fitter’s licence or a restricted electrical licence endorsed with the
‘scope of work’ relevant to the type of equipment being tested.
Mine
sites
Regulation 5.27 of the Mines Safety and Inspection Regulations 1995
specifies that portable apparatus normally used in heavy operating
environments must be examined, tested and tagged quarterly. The
electrical licensing requirements for persons who carry out the testing
at mine sites are the same as for “workplaces other than construction
sites” above. In all cases, if the equipment or appliance
requires dismantling or repair, only the holder of an electrical
mechanic’s or electrical fitter’s licence or a restricted electrical
licence endorsed with the ‘scope of work’ relevant to the type of
equipment being dismantled or repaired, may carry out the necessary
electrical work.
Advice
to Employees
Electrical testing and tagging of all portable appliances as per AS3760
should now be the norm in all workplaces. If this is not the case in
your workplace, you as an employee should approach your employer and
request that this be done as soon as possible. If it is not done, then
the employer is breaching his/her duty under
Regulation 4.37 of the Occupational Safety