One is a four-hour online course about shared responsibility. The other is a five-day hands-on licence for directing crane loads. Both can save lives—and both can save your business from ruinous penalties.
The Legal Web: Chain of Responsibility
Imagine a semi-trailer travelling down the Hume Highway toward Sydney. The driver is tired. The load is slightly overweight. The schedule is tight. If that truck is involved in a crash, who goes to court?
Fifteen years ago, the answer was simple: the driver.
Today, under the Heavy Vehicle National Law (HVNL), the answer is: almost everyone involved. The scheduler who set the unrealistic timeline. The loader who stacked the pallets incorrectly. The manager who ignored fatigue reports. The company director who prioritised delivery speed over safety checks.
This is the Chain of Responsibility (CoR) —and ignorance is not a defence.
The TLIF0009 Chain of Responsibility Online Course delivers the nationally accredited unit TLIF0009 – Ensure the safety of transport activities. It is 100% online, takes approximately four hours, and costs $140 GST-free per person.
But do not let the low price fool you. This course carries serious weight.
The curriculum covers:
- Identifying transport activities and key parties in the CoR framework
- Shared legal obligations and the primary duty of each party
- What “reasonable steps” and “so far as is reasonably practicable” mean in practice
- Common CoR breaches and the penalties for non-compliance (which can include jail time)
- How workplaces manage speed, fatigue, vehicle mass/dimensions, load restraint, and heavy vehicle safety standards
- Identifying transport hazards, implementing controls, and completing required CoR documentation
“The Chain of Responsibility concept ensures that every party involved in the transport supply chain — from drivers and schedulers to operators and managers — has a shared legal responsibility to maintain safety and compliance.”
Who needs this course? Drivers, schedulers, dispatch teams, transport managers, supervisors, safety officers, compliance staff, and business owners. If your decisions can influence transport safety, CoR obligations apply to you.
The stakes? Failure to comply can result in heavy penalties, legal action, and serious safety risks. The course does not just teach theory—it teaches participants how to apply CoR principles to real workplace scenarios, using actual policies, procedures, and documents.
The Hands-On Art: Dogging (DG Licence)
Now shift scenes entirely.
You are standing on a construction site in Sydney or Melbourne. Above you, a tower crane swings a steel beam weighing several tonnes toward a half-finished floor. On the ground, a rigger attaches slings to the load. In the crane cab, the operator waits for signals. And standing in the load path, watching every movement with absolute concentration, is the dogger (or dogman).
This person holds a High Risk Work Licence (Class DG) . They are legally authorised to direct the crane operator, select and inspect lifting gear, and ensure that every lift happens safely.
The Licence to Perform Dogging course delivers the unit CPCCLDG3001 – Licence to perform dogging. This is not an online course. It requires five days of face-to-face training, combining theory with rigorous practical assessment.
The course covers:
- Planning operations – hazard identification, risk assessment, and pre-start consultation
- Selecting equipment – choosing and inspecting chains, slings, shackles, lifting beams, and other gear
- Preparing for operations – setting up the worksite and equipment to manufacturer and site standards
- Transferring loads – slinging techniques and guiding crane or hoist movements
- Concluding operations – shutdown and pack-up procedures
“Participants will learn to collaborate with the crane operator when moving loads, focusing on safety and communication. You will practice using lifting tools like chains, slings, shackles, and lifting beams.”
The outcome: Upon successful completion, participants receive a nationally recognised Statement of Attainment and become eligible to apply for a High Risk Work Licence (DG Class) through the relevant state authority (SafeWork or WorkSafe). The licence is valid for five years.
Prerequisites: Applicants must be at least 18 years old, have basic English proficiency, and be physically fit for demanding work. There is no formal prerequisite unit, but the course assumes a level of construction site awareness.
Cost: Typically ranges from $1,200 to $2,000 depending on location and provider. This reflects the five-day duration, practical equipment use, and the high-stakes nature of the qualification.
Two Approaches to Safety: Compare and Contrast
| Feature | TLIF0009 Chain of Responsibility | CPCCLDG3001 Dogging Licence |
| Format | 100% online | 5 days face-to-face practical |
| Duration | ~4 hours | 5 days |
| Cost | $140 GST-free | $1,200–$2,000 |
| Outcome | Statement of Attainment | Statement + High Risk Work Licence (DG Class) |
| Who needs it | Transport managers, schedulers, drivers, safety officers | Construction riggers, crane operators, site workers directing lifts |
| Legal risk | Penalties for CoR breaches (fatigue, mass, load restraint) | Invalid lifts, dropped loads, injury, licence suspension |
| Renewal | No expiry (knowledge refresher recommended) | 5 years (renew via state authority) |
The Common Thread: Shared Accountability
At first glance, a transport compliance course and a dogging licence could not be more different. One is online, cheap, and takes half a day. The other is in-person, expensive, and takes a full week.
But look closer.
Both courses exist because Australian industry learned hard lessons. The Chain of Responsibility laws were strengthened after horrific truck crashes that killed innocent motorists—crashes caused by fatigue, overloaded trucks, and pressure from up the supply chain. The Dogging licence exists because unqualified load directing has dropped steel beams onto workers and pedestrians.
Both courses shift the legal burden from “the worker on the ground” to everyone with influence.
- CoR says: The transport manager who schedules unrealistic delivery windows is as responsible as the driver who falls asleep at the wheel.
- Dogging says: The person who selects the wrong shackle or signals the crane incorrectly is responsible for every kilogram swinging overhead.
Who Should Take Which Course?
Take TLIF0009 Chain of Responsibility if:
- You work in transport, logistics, dispatch, or scheduling
- You manage drivers or set delivery timelines
- You load trucks or sign off on freight weights
- You are a business owner with vehicles on the road
- You need to understand “reasonable steps” as a legal defence
Take the Dogging Licence (DG) if:
- You work on construction sites with cranes or hoists
- You want to move from labouring into a specialist rigging role
- You are pursuing a career path toward Basic, Intermediate, or Advanced Rigging
- Your employer requires a High Risk Work Licence for load directing
- You are comfortable with five days of intensive practical training
Final Word: Two Tickets, One Safer Industry
Neither course is a “nice to have.” The Heavy Vehicle National Law makes CoR training essential for anyone influencing transport activities. State WHS regulations make a Dogging licence mandatory for directing crane lifts.
