OH Consultant
← All SWMS Documents
🧠

Workplace Bullying Prevention & Response SWMS

Workplace bullying prevention, early intervention, and response β€” policy, risk assessment, reporting pathways, investigation procedures, and support mechanisms.

βš–οΈWHS Regulation 2025 & Codes of Practice β€” legally binding from 1 July 2026 (s26A)
πŸ‘·Reviewed by certified occupational health and safety professionals
πŸ—ΊοΈState-specific variants for all 8 Australian jurisdictions
$99 AUDβœ“ Instant Download Available

SWMS variants reference your state’s WHS legislation. Instant download after payment.

Workplace bullying is repeated unreasonable behaviour directed at a worker or group that creates a risk to health and safety. Under WHS Act 2011 s.19, PCBUs owe a primary duty of care to eliminate or minimise psychosocial hazards so far as is reasonably practicable, and bullying is explicitly captured as a psychosocial risk under the model WHS Regulations psychosocial amendments and the Safe Work Australia Preventing Workplace Bullying Code of Practice 2016. This SWMS documents how organisations identify bullying precursors, conduct psychosocial risk assessments, operate confidential reporting pathways, run procedurally fair investigations, and provide return-to-work support. It applies to all worker categories including employees, contractors, labour-hire and volunteers, and intersects with Fair Work Act 2009 s.789FD stop-bullying orders. A documented SWMS is mandatory because bullying is a foreseeable workplace hazard with established psychological injury outcomes, and regulators require evidence of systematic prevention, consultation under WHS Act s.47-49, and demonstrable control measures rather than reactive complaint handling.

Hazards identified

7 hazards covered, sorted by priority.

Repeated unreasonable behaviour by a manager toward a direct report (downward bullying)HIGH

Psychological injury including adjustment disorder, depression and PTSD; workers compensation claim and potential Fair Work stop-bullying order

Lateral bullying between peers including exclusion, undermining and rumour-spreadingHIGH

Team psychological harm, elevated turnover and accepted workers compensation claims for cumulative psychological injury

Upward bullying β€” coordinated undermining of a supervisor by subordinatesMEDIUM

Supervisor psychological injury, breakdown of safety leadership and increased downstream incident rates

Cyberbullying via email, Teams, Slack or social media outside work hoursHIGH

Continuous psychological harm without respite, evidentiary complexity and breach of the right to disconnect under Fair Work Act amendments

Customer or client-initiated bullying (occupational violence-adjacent)HIGH

Acute stress reactions, vicarious trauma in colleagues and PCBU liability for failing to control third-party psychosocial exposure

Reasonable management action conducted unreasonably (performance management as bullying)MEDIUM

Conflated complaints, procedural fairness failures and adverse Fair Work Commission findings against the PCBU

Retaliation against complainants or witnesses after a report is lodgedHIGH

Breach of WHS Act s.104 discriminatory conduct provisions, criminal penalties and aggravated psychological injury to the worker

Control measures

Hierarchy-of-controls order: elimination β†’ substitution β†’ isolation β†’ engineering β†’ administrative β†’ PPE.

  1. 1Elimination β€” Remove identified bullying perpetrators from the work group via disciplinary action, role redesign or termination where investigation substantiates conduct under the Code of Practice 2016 definition.
  2. 2Elimination β€” Redesign work systems that generate bullying precursors including unrealistic workloads, role ambiguity and unclear authority lines documented through psychosocial risk assessment under ISO 45003:2021.
  3. 3Substitution β€” Replace adversarial performance management processes with structured coaching frameworks and replace anonymous 360 reviews with facilitated feedback to remove channels routinely weaponised for bullying.
  4. 4Engineering β€” Implement confidential digital reporting platform with case-management workflow, audit trail and triage routing to ensure reports cannot be intercepted or suppressed by the alleged perpetrator's line.
  5. 5Engineering β€” Configure communication platforms with right-to-disconnect settings, after-hours message scheduling and group chat moderation tools to engineer out cyberbullying vectors.
  6. 6Administrative β€” Publish and consult on a Workplace Behaviour Policy aligned to the Preventing Workplace Bullying Code of Practice 2016, with annual worker consultation under WHS Act s.47-49.
  7. 7Administrative β€” Deliver mandatory bystander, manager and contact-officer training with documented competency assessment and biennial refresher cycles tracked in the LMS.
  8. 8Administrative β€” Operate a procedurally fair investigation procedure aligned with Briginshaw standard, including separate interviewer and decision-maker roles and written findings within 30 business days.
  9. 9Administrative β€” Provide Employee Assistance Program access, return-to-work planning and trauma-informed support for complainants, respondents and witnesses throughout and after the process.
  10. 10PPE β€” Not applicable as conventional PPE; psychological PPE substitutes include peer support officers, contact officer networks and on-call EAP clinicians available during high-risk investigation phases.

Applicable Codes of Practice

Safe Work Australia Preventing Workplace Bullying Code of Practice 2016βš– Legally binding Β· 1 Jul 2026

Defines repeated unreasonable behaviour, sets the risk management framework and prescribes prevention, early intervention and response duties for PCBUs.

Model WHS Regulations β€” Psychosocial Hazards amendments (Reg 55A-55D equivalent in state variants)βš– Legally binding Β· 1 Jul 2026

Requires identification, assessment, control and review of psychosocial hazards including bullying with documented controls so far as reasonably practicable.

AS/NZS ISO 45003:2021 Psychological health and safety at work β€” Guidelines for managing psychosocial risks

Provides the recognised methodology for psychosocial risk assessment, organisational controls and worker consultation underpinning the SWMS approach.

Fair Work Act 2009 Part 6-4B β€” Stop-bullying orders (s.789FA-789FL)

Establishes the worker right to apply to Fair Work Commission for stop-bullying orders, triggering PCBU obligations to evidence prevention systems.

High-Risk Construction Work triggered

Legal consequence

Not classified as High Risk Construction Work; however s.19 primary duty breaches attract Category 1-3 penalties β€” substantial and indexed; current maximum follows the prevailing WHS schedule β€” plus worker consultation duties under s.47-49 and 5-year record retention.

Who this is for

  • β†’HR managers and people-and-culture leads across all sectors
  • β†’WHS managers handling psychosocial risk in mid-to-large enterprises
  • β†’Contact officers and harassment response officers in regulated industries
  • β†’Executives and PCBU officers discharging due diligence under WHS Act s.27

What you receive

  • βœ“Editable DOCX template β€” Microsoft Word compatible
  • βœ“State-specific WHS legislation schedule (NSW/VIC/QLD/SA/WA/TAS/NT/ACT)
  • βœ“Hazard register with risk ratings + hierarchy-of-control mapping
  • βœ“Worker sign-on register, pre-start checklist, and incident escalation flow

Worked example

At a regional logistics distribution centre, the Shift Operations Manager runs the Monday pre-start brief covering 22 warehouse workers and two team leaders. She tables the Workplace Bullying Prevention & Response SWMS alongside the standard manual-handling SWMS because two informal concerns about exclusionary behaviour on night shift were raised the previous fortnight. Working through the hazard register, the team identifies lateral bullying and cyberbullying via the shift WhatsApp group as the live risks for this crew. Controls selected for the week include moving roster-related communications off WhatsApp onto the official scheduling app (engineering control), nominating a contact officer for night shift (administrative), and confirming EAP details are visible on the crib-room noticeboard. Each worker signs on, acknowledging the reporting pathway and confirming they understand that retaliation breaches WHS Act s.104. Mid-week, a worker discreetly raises a concern with the contact officer about a team leader's repeated public criticism. The contact officer applies the SWMS triage matrix, escalates to HR within 24 hours, and the SWMS is amended at Thursday's pre-start to add a temporary control: the team leader is paired with a peer coach pending preliminary assessment. The amendment is signed off, demonstrating dynamic risk management and procedural fairness in real time.

Related legislation

  • WHS Act 2011 (model)
  • WHS Regulation 2025
  • Managing Psychosocial Hazards at Work CoP
What's in this SWMS

Document details

Regulation
WHS Regulations β€” state variants incl. Comcare; Safe Work Australia Preventing Workplace Bullying COP 2016; Fair Work Act 2009
HRCW Category
Not HRCW β€” psychosocial risk under WHS Act s.19
Hazards Identified
10 hazards with controls
Format
Editable DOCX (Microsoft Word)
Author
Certified Industrial Hygienist (CIH)
Delivery
Instant download after payment