TL;DR. Most operational staff with CoR touchpoints — drivers, schedulers, loaders, consignor and receiver staff, executives — need awareness-level training (a 1-hour online course, $69 per person). One person in your organisation — the named CoR officer or fleet compliance manager — should hold the accredited AQF unit TLIF0009 — Ensure the safety of transport activities. Refresh awareness every 2–3 years; maintain TLIF0009 through continuous professional practice. Volume pricing kicks in for teams of 5+.
The practical role-by-role matrix
| Role | Training level | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Heavy vehicle driver | Awareness (online, ~1hr) | Named party in the chain; needs to understand personal obligations |
| Scheduler / dispatcher / allocator | Awareness | Named party; NHVR prosecutes directly |
| Loading manager / yard supervisor | Awareness | Named party; loading-manager duty |
| Loader / forklift operator doing loading | Awareness | Named loader category |
| Consignor / shipper booking freight | Awareness | Named consignor duty; extends to commercial terms and delivery windows |
| Receiver / consignee staff | Awareness | Named consignee duty; queuing, slot discipline |
| Executive / director / officer | Awareness + documented due diligence | Executive officer duty, personal liability |
| Fleet compliance manager / CoR officer | Accredited — TLIF0009 | Owns the CoR management system |
| National HSE manager (transport-exposed) | TLIF0009 + Cert IV WHS (or Diploma) | Dual-portfolio expectation |
Coverage questions to ask
“Do our admin staff really need CoR training?”
If they book, schedule, pack, or receive freight — yes, even if they don’t think of themselves as “transport people.” The chain is function-based.
“What about our sales team committing to delivery windows?”
Yes. Commercial commitments that drive unsafe transport expose the consignor to CoR liability. Sales and customer service staff in consignor businesses should have awareness training.
“What about contractors and subcontractors?”
Your chain-of-responsibility obligation flows through to contractors. Contract terms should require evidence of CoR training, and your risk controls should verify it.
“Do we need to train every single driver?”
Practically, yes. CoR awareness is typically embedded in driver induction for fleet operators.
Refresh cadence
- Awareness (short course) — refresh every 2–3 years, or sooner after major HVNL changes
- TLIF0009 — AQF Statement of Attainment doesn’t expire, but maintain currency through continuous professional practice, periodic refreshers, and staying across NHVR guidance
- Executive briefings — annual board-level CoR briefing is common for major consignors and operators
What a typical program looks like
For a mid-sized transport operator (say, 80 drivers, 15 schedulers, 6 yard/loading staff, 10 commercial/ops, 4 execs):
- 111 × awareness online course — new staff on induction, all existing staff refreshed every 2–3 years
- 1 × TLIF0009 — the named fleet compliance manager
- Annual board CoR briefing
- Records maintained in HRIS against each employee
For a major consignor (say, a food manufacturer with 5 receiving sites, 20 transport bookers, 30 site receivers, 8 execs):
- 58 × awareness online course
- 1 × TLIF0009 — the supply-chain compliance lead
- Contract-terms review and slot-booking policy work running alongside training
Volume pricing and enterprise invoicing
FMS offers volume pricing for CoR awareness for teams of 5+, centralised employer-of-record invoicing, and enterprise-grade LMS management for national rollouts. TLIF0009 enrolments are priced per learner; quotes available on request.
Will AI shift this buying calculus?
Only at the margin. AI telematics and compliance dashboards improve the evidence base and reduce manual audit load — but the named duties under the HVNL still attach to people, and the training records the NHVR looks for are still attached to people. AI makes documented training more important, not less. See: AI-proof careers in Australia.
Get your team covered
Volume pricing on awareness training ($69 standard). TLIF0009 quotes available. RTO 45189.
Frequently asked questions
Can we run our own internal CoR training?
Yes, but AQF-accredited evidence (TLIF0009) and documented nationally recognised awareness courses carry more weight in NHVR investigations than internal-only programs.
What’s the minimum training we legally need?
The HVNL doesn’t prescribe a specific course — it requires reasonably practicable steps to ensure safety. Documented training for parties in the chain is one of the most common reasonably practicable steps.
Is the $69 course enough for drivers?
For CoR awareness, yes. It’s complementary to their licence, fatigue training, and any dangerous-goods or vehicle-specific training.
How quickly can we deploy across 100 staff?
Days. Online LMS access means a cohort of 100 can complete within 2–3 weeks without any diary pressure.
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