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Session 2 – Dealing with the legal risk . 21 January 2010. Risk Management. There is a risk of legal consequences due to our actions… So, manage the risk. Something that fire fighters and the emergency services are familiar with. Look at this diagram….
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Session 2 – Dealing with the legal risk 21 January 2010
Risk Management • There is a risk of legal consequences due to our actions… • So, manage the risk. • Something that fire fighters and the emergency services are familiar with. • Look at this diagram…
Emergency Management Australia, Emergency Management in Australia; Concepts and Principles (Australian Emergency Manual Series, Manual Number 1, 2004) p 8.
Establish the context. Relevantly the law: • Makes a statement about fundamental principles; • Empowers agencies and people such as the fire commander at the fire scene; • Holds people accountable; • Sets the parameters within which negotiation occurs. • In our context the fire/police service are statutory, government agencies. They are insured by the Tasmanian Risk Management Fund. • Is the risk to individuals or the service?
Identify, analyse and evaluate the risks • The outcome will depend on whether we are looking at the question from the point of view of the organisation, or a member. • Outcomes can be much worse for individuals. • Consider • Criminal law; • Tort law (ie damages); • Coronial law.
Consequence or impact No adverse media attention – Financial cost under $2,000 Adverse local media coverage only – Cost $2,000 - $50,000 Adverse capital city media coverage – Cost $50,000 - $250,000 Adverse & extended national media coverage – Cost $250,000 - $1m Government intervention – Financial. Response subject to detailed coronial or Royal Commission inquiry?
Criminal prosecution • The Fire Service could be prosecuted (Criminal Code Act s ) but what for? Breach of OHS Act (egWorkCover v NSWFB)? Manslaughter? • Individuals can be prosecuted – assault, dangerous driving causing death, negligent driving? • In any event criminal prosecution will be rare that is “The event may occur only in exceptional circumstances”.
Civil litigation • Will the organisation be sued? Perhaps • Will a member? Never!
Fire Service Act 1979 (Tas) Section 121 • … the Commission is liable in tort but no brigade, officer, fire-fighter, employee, or agent shall be liable unless they acted in ‘bad faith’. • Even the Commission is not liable if the alleged act or failure occurred in good faith and in the course of, or was directly connected with fire fighting operations. • Similar provisions to those contained in the Emergency Management Act 2006 (Tas).
An authority is not liable … • For exercising a statutory power. • Where that would be inconsistent with the Act – which has included consideration of statutory compensation schemes (for example Fire Service Act 1979 (Tas) s 111; Emergency Management Act 2006 (Tas) ss 54 and 59). • Where it exercises power for community not individual benefit.
Who do you want to sue? • An individual member? • The fire service/State of Tasmania? • Who’s going to be able to pay?
The Coroner and the Royal Commissioner • The Coroners, and Royal Commissions, are scary! • They investigate the ‘bread and butter’ of the ESO’s. • When they inquire into fire response they are looking into things that, by definition, have gone catastrophically badly! • They can be set up to deflect criticism from government and they can be personal for the service and/or its Commissioner/Chief Officer.
Consequences • Bad press? • Recommendations for change? • They can’t order damages, they can’t find anyone guilty of anything. • Whether members named remain in their jobs is a matter for the Government and/or the Fire Service, not the inquiry (consider the Coroners inquest into the 2003 Canberra fires; 2009 Victorian Bushfires Royal Commission; 2009 WA Boorabin fires inquest).
Elimination • Amend the Fire Service Act 1979 (Tas) and Emergency Management Act 2006 (Tas) to say:“No cause of action or criminal prosecution shall lie against a member of the emergency services. A member of the emergency services is not a compellable witness in any proceedings.”? • Probably not. • The risk can’t be eliminated, the ESOs can’t be outside the law.
Substitution • Substitute the organisation for the member - Fire Service Act 1979 (Tas) and Emergency Management Act 2006 (Tas) • Substitute the Tasmanian Risk Management Fund for the organisation.
Isolation and Engineering • Not really feasible.
Administration • ‘Using policies and standard procedures eg training’. • Insurance – pass the risk to someone else. In this case the Victorian Managed Insurance Authority.
The residual risk It is true that: • You can get before a court even if you did the right thing, so being sued/questioned doesn’t mean you did the wrong thing. • The law can’t be set up so ‘they can’t complain if we do this or that’People can complain/take legal action, but that doesn’t make them right. • Liability is ‘all or nothing’. • In civil litigation, no one is really on your side.
We think the law looks like this… Defendant wins Plaintiff wins
But really it’s more like this… Defendant wins Plaintiff wins X X X X
What’s the solution? • Change the world?
Communicate and consult • The risk is low – don’t dwell on it in your communications. • You WILL stand by your team, even if mistakes are made (you don’t really have a choice). • Introduce critical incident management. • Be prepared to take the flack. • Train your members well. • Remember criminal prosecution aside, it’s not your money. • For a firefighter, the biggest risk is criminal prosecution!
Monitor the outcome… • Are there legal proceedings? • What really are the outcomes? • Do you still have staff and volunteers? • What’s morale like?
Conclusion • Thank you for your attention. • Any questions or comments?