Why Annual Recertification Is a Legal Requirement
Under AS/NZS 1891.4 and AS 5532, all permanently installed height safety systems — including roof anchor points, static lines and fall arrest systems — must be inspected and recertified every 12 months by a competent person. This isn't a guideline. It's a requirement of the Australian Standards that Victorian schools are obligated to comply with under OHS legislation.
Under the Occupational Health and Safety Act 2004, schools as employers have a duty to ensure the health and safety of workers — including contractors who access the roof for maintenance, solar panel servicing, HVAC work or gutter cleaning. If a contractor accesses your roof using an anchor point that isn't current certified and an incident occurs, the school's principal and governing body face serious exposure.
Important
An anchor point that has not been inspected and tagged as compliant within the last 12 months must not be used. If your certifications are expired, contractors should not be accessing your roof until the systems are recertified or temporary controls are in place.
What Happens During an Annual Recertification
A proper annual recertification involves a physical inspection of every anchor point, static line and associated component on your buildings. A competent inspector checks:
- The structural integrity of each anchor point and its fixings
- Corrosion, wear, damage or deterioration to any component
- That the system was installed correctly and in accordance with the relevant Australian Standard
- That signage and tagging is in place and current
- Load test records and installation history
Where systems are compliant, a compliance certificate is issued for each one. Where defects are found, they must be documented in a corrective action report and the system tagged out of service until repaired.
What Documentation You Should Receive
After every recertification visit, your school should receive a complete compliance package. If your current contractor is only handing you a single certificate, that's not enough. You should receive:
- Individual compliance certificates for each anchor point or system inspected
- A written inspection report covering all systems on site
- Photographic evidence of each system and any defects identified
- A corrective action report if any non-compliant systems were found
- Confirmation of your next inspection due date
This documentation needs to be retained in your school's OHS records. In the event of a WorkSafe audit or incident investigation, it's the evidence that your school has met its obligations.
Which School Frameworks Apply
Victorian schools operate under different frameworks depending on their sector, but the underlying Australian Standards obligations are the same across all of them.
- Government schools operate under DET's Education Safety Management (ESM) framework and VSBA asset management obligations. Annual recertification of height safety systems is explicitly required.
- Catholic schools under MACS and DOSCEL are subject to the same OHS Act requirements as all Victorian employers, with their own sector-specific procurement and compliance processes.
- Independent schools manage their own procurement but are equally bound by the OHS Act and relevant Australian Standards.
How to Know If Your Certifications Are Current
Each anchor point should have a physical tag showing the date of the last inspection and the next due date. If you can't find tags, if tags show a date more than 12 months ago, or if you don't have documented records of a recent inspection — your certifications have likely lapsed.
The simplest first step is to contact a certified height safety inspector to conduct a compliance audit of your site. This will give you a clear picture of what you have, whether it's compliant, and what needs to be done.
Need a recertification for your school?
O'Brien Height Safety Solutions services 200+ Victorian schools across government, Catholic and independent sectors. We provide full compliance documentation after every visit. Contact us to book an inspection →