The specific duties for businesses or persons conducting a business or undertaking (PCBUs) to manage the risks associated with the generation of respirable crystalline silica (RCS) from processing CSS are mentioned in the Working with crystalline silica substances: guide.

PCBUs who carries out high risk processing of CSS, need to undertake air monitoring for RCS. If the monitoring results show the airborne concentration of RCS has exceeded the workplace exposure standard of 0.05 mg/m3 , the PCBU must report the results to the WorkSafe Commissioner using the notification form.

Notify the WorkSafe Commissioner

The Statement of Regulatory Intent: Implementation of work health and safety regulations outlines the regulatory approach that WorkSafe will use for the laws relating to working with CSS under WHS General Regulations. These regulations do not apply to mine sites.

Silica is a common naturally occurring mineral. Inhaling RCS dust can lead to serious lung conditions such as silicosis.

Work health and safety duties

Workers and management must work together to reduce risks. A safe place of work benefits everyone.

Learn more about your legal obligations under the work health and safety legislation. 

Managing the risk

Workers and management can work together to reduce exposure to crystalline silica dust. Businesses must manage risks to workers’ health and safety and workers must also take steps to protect themselves. A safe place of work benefits everyone.

To meet the workplace exposure standard, you should follow a risk management process to identify risks and the measures you can use in your workplace to minimise the amount of dust workers are exposed to.

The Working with crystalline silica substances: Guide will help the industry to understand the additional work health and safety requirements in relation to the processing of a CSS and ways to protect workers and others at the workplace from RCS.

If you are working in the stone benchtop industry, you must comply with the Managing the risks of respirable crystalline silica from engineered stone in the workplace: Code of practice. The code provides detailed, practical guidance on how to manage the risks associated with respirable crystalline silica.

For benchtop industry

Dry cutting, trimming, drilling, sanding, grinding or polishing engineered stone without effective controls generates very high levels of silica dust. A PCBU must not direct or allow workers to undertake uncontrolled dry cutting or processing of engineered stone. This will expose workers and others to levels of silica dust that would be expected to exceed the workplace exposure standard and is a serious risk to health.

Resources and guidance

WorkSafe, Department of Energy, Mines, Industry Regulation and Safety

Work health and safety legislation

Codes of practice and guidance materials

Reports and safety alerts

Safe Work Australia

SafeWork New South Wales

Australian Institute of Occupational Hygienists

Standards Australia

  • Copies of the Australian Standards for WHS Regulations are available to purchase from Standards Australia or can be viewed at the WorkSafe library.

International