Disability Support Worker Checks
Check solution for disability support workers
Check solution for disability support workers
Worker Checks is the leading provider of police checks for disability support worker checks. In addition to providing police checks, The Worker Checks solution for disability support workers allows you to present all your checks in one place and share these with your employers or those individuals who engage your services as a disability support worker.
The Disability sector, by nature, involves staff working with individuals who are extremely vulnerable. It is an industry that touches most members of our community in some way and it is little wonder that it is under constant scrutiny when it comes to the integrity of the individuals placed in positions of trust in aged care environments.
In 2007, the Department of Health implemented police check requirements for Commonwealth funded aged care organisations (“Approved Providers”). Police Certificate Guidelines were developed to assist organisations and were updated in July 2019. These guidelines are “intended to complement robust recruitment practices and are part of an approved provider’s responsibility to ensure all staff and volunteers are suitable to provide care to the aged”.
This article looks at what these requirements are and options for aged care providers to ensure full and ongoing compliance.
Requirements are detailed in the Commonwealth Government’s Aged Care Act 1997 (“the Act”) which is supported by 22 Aged Care Principles that outline what is required by the Act. Several of these principles cover aspects such as police checks, record-keeping, ensuring compliance and community visitors.
Approved Providers must ensure that a Nationally Coordinated Criminal History Check has been undertaken for relevant individuals. Results of the police check must be obtained in the format of a certificate or report and detail:
The Police Check Guidelines specify that it is “best practice” to have a Nationally Coordinated Criminal History Check undertaken for the purpose of working in aged care.
Checks must be undertaken for individuals who are:
Individuals contracted through agencies that provide staff may be considered staff members by the Act. The agency and the Approved Provider should have a contract in place that states that all individuals put forward under this arrangement have current police certificates that do not preclude them from working in aged care.
The Nationally Coordinated Criminal History Check should ideally be undertaken prior to an individual commencing work, although there are allowances made for exceptional circumstances. In these cases, the circumstance must relate to essential care being provided, an application for the police check needs to be made prior to the date of commencement and the individual is required to be supervised during this time.
In these instances where a police check has been applied for (but not yet completed) for a new staff member or volunteer, a statutory declaration is required stating that the individual has not been convicted of a precluding offence. A template for such a statutory declaration is provided in the Police Check Guidelines.
Police checks are required to be renewed every year for all relevant individuals. Approved Providers must also put in place “reasonable measures” to ensure that individuals notify them if they are convicted of a precluding offence within that period.
Yes, a Nationally Coordinated Criminal History Check will only cover offences where the candidate has been convicted in Australian states and territories.
All staff or volunteers who have been a citizen or permanent resident of a country other than Australia when over the age of 16 are required to sign a statutory declaration stating that they have not been convicted of a precluding offence.
Best practice is to have all staff or volunteers who have resided outside of Australia in the previous 10 years have an International Police Check conducted for:
Approved providers must ensure their records demonstrate that they hold:
Where police check certificates or reports are held by the individuals themselves or agencies, the Approved Provider needs to sight the original or true certified copy and the information and associated reference number should be kept on record. Worker Checks free business solution is the best solution to assist with your workforce compliance.
All records must be kept in accordance with the Privacy Act 1988 (Commonwealth) and should include a register of staff and volunteer police check information, including police certificate reference numbers and expiry dates.
The Act specifies that an individual is unable to be employed or to volunteer in an aged care if they have:
All individuals with such offences should not be employed or accepted as an unsupervised volunteer. If a current staff member or volunteer is convicted of a precluding offence, it is the responsibility of the Approved Provider to ensure the individual does not continue in this role.
The Police Check Guidelines recommend that any convictions highlighted by police checks that do not specifically preclude the individual from aged care should be assessed on a case-by-case basis. An approved provider’s decision regarding the employment of a person with any recorded convictions must be rigorous, defensible and transparent. Aspects to consider are listed as including:
The Police Check Guidelines provide further information regarding discrimination on the basis of criminal record.
Convictions can become considered “spent” under state, territory and Commonwealth legislation. Although the specifics vary from state to state, a conviction generally becomes a “spent conviction” if a person has had a ten-year crime-free period from the date of the conviction. This means that if a general police check is undertaken for a candidate with a spent conviction, the conviction will not be disclosed by this check.
However, police checks are able to be undertaken that reference the individual’s exposure to “vulnerable persons”, which covers children, the aged and the disabled. If a police check is undertaken specifically for working with vulnerable persons, a partial exclusion to the Spent Conviction Scheme is applied to the check for relevant offences. This means that any offences that fall into this category will be disclosed, regardless of when the offence was committed in the individual’s background.
A vulnerable persons police check will disclose serious offences, sexual offences and offences against the person for employment/engagement in positions/occupations involving the care, instruction or supervision of vulnerable persons. This is the specific type of police check that should be undertaken for working in aged care.
Compliance with police check requirements is monitored by the Aged Care Standards and Accreditation Agency and Approved Providers need to have procedures in place to demonstrate that they are meeting these requirements by recording and monitoring their individual requirements.
Aged care organisations have two options for having required police checks completed to ensure compliance:
Worker Checks undertakes many police checks for Approved Providers to assist organisations to comply with the Aged Care Act 1997.
Worker Checks offer the following:
Checks can be prepaid or worker paid
Business portal with instant click through to your workforce individual check records. Click here for more information.