Overview: Topic 1
What is RSA?
Refers to selling sieving supplying alcohol in a responsible manner in accordance
with the law
Helps to address government and community concerns with alcohol misuse and
abuse
Why was RSA introduced?
Others e.g., individuals, friends
Local community e.g., crime, violence
Government e.g., police
Health conditions, premature death
Injuries e.g., car accidents
Night-time economy and local councils e.g., conditions
Benefits of RSA
Licensed Premises Good reputation in the local community
Lower security, compliance and legal costs
Reduced staff turnover
More likely to attract staff with higher skills and greater experience
A more sustainable and profitable business model
Reduced regulatory costs
Staff A safer and more enjoyable working environment
Training, support and knowledge to deal with customers
Better rapport with customers
Local community and Better engagement with the local community
neighbourhood Fewer complaints by the local community
Local community more inclined to visit venue
Customers Safer and more enjoyable venues
Enhanced reputation
Better rapport with staff and other customers
Government agencies Fewer interventions, including compliance actions
Reduced regulatory costs
RSA practices
By practicing RSA, you will be.
Minimising RSA alcohol related problems: including crime, violence, property
damage and anti-social behaviour
Encouraging responsible attitudes towards the sale and consumption of alcohol
Ensuring the sale and consumption of alcohol contributes to, and does not detract
from, the amenity of community life
Premise must provide.
Light snacks prepared – in order to minimise Alcohol (make it affordable)
Range of non-alcoholic drinks; mocktails
Dance floors: no drinks -> leave your drink
Entertainment; tv, pool
Free tap water (available always) water station
Time slots; no shots after 11pm etc
Turn aircon off -> to make people drink
Harm minimisation
In 1996, the term minimization was introduced into the laws following community
and government concern about alcohol-related crime and violence, particularly
around licenced premises
NSW Liquor Laws
Each state and territory Government in Australia regulates and control the sale,
supply and service of liquor
In NSW this is undertaken via the LIQUOR ACT 2007 and the Liquor Regulation 2018
As a frontline staff member, it is important you are aware of your obligations under
these laws
Liquor Act 2007 – Three primary objectives
To regulate and control the sale, supply and consumption of alcohol in a way that is
consistent with the expectations, needs and aspirations of the community
To facilitate the balanced development of the liquor industry, in a way that is in the
public interest, through a flexible and practical regulatory system with minimal
formality and technicality
To contribute to the responsible development of related industries such as the live
music, entertainment, tourism and hospitality industries
Liquor Regulations 2018
This supports the Liquor Act 2007 and provides more detail such as:
Training and record keeping requirements
Issuing of competency cards
Harm minimization measures e.g., Making drinking water free of charge, mandatory
messages required in liquor promotion
Cannot serve under midnight, past midnight alcohol distribution is usually common in
nightclubs –
Liquor Licencing in NSW
A liquor licence is required to sell or supply alcohol
Licences have conditions that help the business minimise harm. Conditions or
restrictions may apply to a licence following a serious incident or complaint
Different licence types apply depending on the primary purpose of the business, or
activity being conducted
Note: Pubs are historically established
Producer Licence; for producing alcohol/ packaged liquor licence
NSW Regulatory Authorities
There are three governing bodies involved in regulating the liquor industry in NSW:
Liquor and Gaming NSW
o Administer RSA
o Managing the issue and renewal of competency cards
Independent Liquor and Gaming Authority – issuing cards, organising law and
legislation
Police - Fines, persecution, penalties
Intoxication: Topic 2
The NSW Liquor Laws say that licensees and staff must ensure that customers do not
become intoxicated on licenced premises
An intoxicated person cannot be
Admitted to licenced premises
Allowed to remain in licenced premises
Served or supplied alcohol on licenced premises
(No limit of serving alcohol – only serve when there is no sign of intoxication)
A person is intoxicated if:
the person’s speech, balance, coordination or behaviour is noticeably affected; and
it is reasonable, in the circumstances, to believe that the affected speech, balance,
coordination or behaviour is the result of consumption of alcohol
NOTE: Some medical conditions, disabilities or the use of drugs may cause similar
behaviours so you will need to be sure that alcohol consumption is the cause of the
behaviour. It is likely that the person or their friends will be able to tell you if this is the case.
Be sensitive to an individual’s right for privacy and ask a supervisor or co-worker if you are
unsure.
Forming reasonable belief
Monitoring the amount and type of alcohol a person or group have consumed
Blood alcohol concentration – BAC
When you drink alcohol, it is absorbed into the blood stream. This is known as BAC
A person’s BAC level will appear as soon as they start drinking reach its highest level
about 30-60 minute after they stop drinking
National legal limit for driving a motor vehicle is 0.05 (one standard drink per hour)
0.02 for vehicles drivers/taxi/bus drivers
What does alcohol consumption do?
Brain, coordination, speech, cognition, and senses are affected
Loss of inhibition and fine moto skills
Other effects include, health (nausea/illness), heightened emotions (becoming upset
or angry) and decrease in physical alertness
Response to alcohol
Gender/Age/Size (male process drinks faster)
Food consumption
Medication use (pain killers/antidepressants)
General health
Illicit drug use
Rate of consumption
Intoxication: what do you do?
You have a legal responsibility to assess and prevent intoxication while working in a
licenced premises in NSW
Serving alcohol to an intoxicated person can cause harm and result in you, your
manager and/or the licenced premises being penalised or charged unless you can
prove you have acted
The action you must take is: Refuse to serve, ask them to leave and contact Police for
assistance to remove them if required
Assessing intoxication
Intoxication Guidelines assists you to determine whether a person is intoxicated
To help you decide if someone is intoxicated ask yourself
o Does the person smell like alcohol?
o How long and how much have they been drinking?
o Has the person been eating?
o What type of alcohol have they been drinking?
o Is there another reason they are showing signs of intoxication?
Customers at risk
Minors – they are young, usually smaller in size and less experienced in consuming
alcohol safely
Pregnant women – alcohol may cause harm to the unborn baby
Customers with existing physical and mental health issues
Customers affected by the consumption of illicit and other drugs
Prevention and Intoxication Guidelines
The Prevention of Intoxication on Licenced premises Guidelines contain practical steps to
manage and reduce the risk of intoxication on licenced premises
Standard drink and alcohol %
A standard drink contains approx. 10 grams of pure alcohol
1 standard drink; sprits, sparkling wine 13%, light beer 425ml
Encourage responsible drinking
Providing information about low or non-alcoholic beverages, standard drinks, the
liquor laws
Communicating with team members/security if you refuse service or are concerned
about anyone
Know your customers – professional and respectful communication is important
Knowing customers and early intervention
Early intervention is a proactive strategy you take to prevent customers from becoming
intoxicated.
Conversation Starters
What are you celebrating?
Are you having a meal tonight?
Have you been somewhere before here?
Topic 3: Refusal of service
Who must be refused service?
You must refuser service when alcohol appears to be purchased from minors or by
minors
Troublesome and disorderly customers
Options to refuse service
Refuse entry or removing a person at the time of an incident
Barring the person from the venue for an extended period (24hrs)
Seeking a formal banning order against the person (550$ fine)
What does the law say?
Steps to refuse service
Follow your workplace policy – it’s the law
Give a clear statement that by law they cannot be served another drink and point
out signage
Advice other staff and security that service has been refused
Give clear instruction that they must leave the premises
Communication skills for refusing service
Be polite clear confident voice – not aggressive
Be respectful
Avoid using physical touch
Be calm, but firm
Focus on the behaviour not the person
- I would love to give you another drink but I hate to be the person but it is the law
Ensure customer’s safety
When you refuse entry or remove a customer, you must ensure the customer is safe
Safe transport options – courtesy buses, calling taxi or uber, connect with their
designated driver, offering to call friends/family to pick up
Promoting transport options – displaying signage with timetables, free phone to call
taxi, taxi voucher schemes
Refused customers – their responsibilities
Leave the premises and vicinity immediately and stay at least 50 metres away
Not re-enter for 6 hours
Fail to quit
Fail to quit occurs when a person refuses to leave a licenced premises, stays within 50m of
the premises or attempts to re-enter the venue
Notes
no touch policy
introducing name when approaching a customer / engage in a conversation
someone falling asleep/ regardless of sober drunk must leave the venue
excuse me sir, you are falling asleep in the bar, we must ask you to leave
no drinking games in the bar, you don’t have to ask them to leave
If they are passing out/not responding call ambulance
Employer of this establishment – always with another person (not covered by CCTV)
Verbal Abuse – against the law in the bar, call security
If there is a fight – call security immediately
Topic 4: Minors
Minors – what does the law say?
It is a serious offence to sell or supply alcohol to a minor (person under the age of
18) on licenced premises
It is also against the law for anyone to obtain alcohol on behalf of a minor: this is
called secondary supply or second party sales
You have a legal responsibility to prevent minors from being sold or served alcohol
on licenced premises
Fines of up to $11000, 12 months’ imprisonment and suspension or cancellation of a
liquor licence may apply
Bar/Gaming (never be allowed)
Authorised/non authorised areas (Bistro/Pub)
Responsible adult – 18+, must live in the same address
Secondary Sales/Supply
Be aware of people at a bar or liquor store who might be purchasing for others
Watch for minors hanging around outside licenced premises, especially liquor stores
Have security or floor staff monitor areas out of sight of service points
Monitoring and preventing underage drinking
You must prevent unauthorised minors from entering licenced premises.
It is up to you to ensure a customer is genuinely over the age of 18. The only way to
be sure is to conduct an inspection of proof of age identification
Even if ID was checked by security on entry, if you have suspicions someone is under
18, then ask to check the ID yourself
When Checking ID
Ask the customer to remove the ID from the wallet.
Check the photo matches the person.
Check the birthdate to confirm the person is 18 years or over.
Check for any alterations, particularly last digit for the year of birth.
Check the hologram for the NSW Drivers Licence and photo ID card.
Be respectful and calm – explain, “it’s the law”; “it’s your job”.
Proof of age
Your workplace will have a strategy for checking proof of age documents
o Requiring any person appearing under 25 years of age to produce proof of
age ID
o Checking the authenticity of ID
Proof of age documentation
Drivers or riders licence issued by Australian State or Territory
Australian passport/ foreign passport
NSW Photo Card by RMS/Service NSW
Proof of age card by public authority of the Commonwealth or of another Australian
state or territory for the purpose of attesting to a person’s identity and age
Keypass (over 18) identity card issued by Australia Post
No Birth Certificates
Air bubbles, wrinkles, bumps (Check for tampering out of phone wallet)
Secondary ID cards (school card, credit card)
Conducting through ID Checks
Take your time examining the ID
Ask the person to remove ID from window face of a wallet
Look for the Hologram
False ID procedure
It is against the law for a person to represent themselves as being 18 years old with
false ID and try to enter a licenced premises or to be supplied with alcohol
You may not confiscate an ID – only NSW Police and certain government agency
employees can confiscate ID
Topic 5: Harm Minimization
Opening and Closing time
The standard trading period for most clubs, hotels, standard bars, restaurants, cafes,
nightclubs, producer/wholesalers and licenced caters is;
Monday – Saturday 5am – midnight
Sunday; 10am-10pm
Never make exceptions and do not serve customers after your closing time, as you
would be breaking the law
Note: Signs should be always displayed whenever alcohol is sold on the premises
Remote sales
Remote sales refer to purchases done online or by phone. These sales, particularly online,
are a potential source of supply for minors so extra controls are need. Licensees must
Ask for full name/birth date – must be over 18
Provide specific instructions to the person delivering the order
Topic 6: Compliance and Enforcement
Workplace practices to minimise harm
Plan of management
Other policies and procedures
House policy
o Expected standards of customer behaviour
o Drink Limits
o Approach to dealing with problem customers
o Types of customers who are not to be served alcohol such as minors and
intoxicated people
Incident registers
Incidents involving violence and anti-social behaviour
Details of people removed from the premises (fight/intoxication)
Date/Time/Location/What happened/Witness/Description of person
RSA Marshals and Liquor accords
An RSA marshals is someone whose role is to make sure venues comply with RSA
obligations
There are certain circumstances where it is mandatory for venues to employ an RSA
marshal
A liquor accord is a group of local stakeholders who are committed to minimising the
harms associated with alcohol. They include representatives of licenced premises,
local councils, NSW Police, government departments and community organisations
Self-exclusion
Is when a customer excludes themselves from a licenced venue by entering into a
formal agreement with a licensee or licenced venue. These agreements are a crucial
strategy in harm minimisation
Customers may self-exclude because of liquor or gambling issues. Many people enter
into self-exclusion agreement when they are undertaking a rehabilitation program
Ask your manager about the location of the self-exclusion register and familiarise
yourself with the names and faces of customers who have self-excluded
No gang colours
A person or member wearing any form of clothing, jewellery, tattoos or any other accessory
associated with a gang may be refused entry or removed from the premise
Identifying non-compliance and investigation
Liquor and Gaming NSW promotes compliance and identifies breaches of liquor laws
Possible penalties and fines
11000$ for individuals
27000$ for corporations
Up to 12 month imprisonment
Impact on RSA worker
Difficulty in getting another job
Impact on travel to some countries
Difficulty pursing some careers
Inability to obtain a liquor licence
Inability to work in the liquor or gaming industry in the future
CRIMINAL RECORDS
Violent Venues Scheme
Receive a grade 1-3 depending on the number of alcohol-related violence incidents that
have occurred.
Three Strikes Scheme
Licensees or managers who continually breach the liquor laws have conditions or penalties
to urge them to improve their responsible alcohol service
Minors Sanctions Scheme
Licence suspended or cancelled if they are convicted of selling liquor to a minor on a
licenced premises. There are three levels of penalties, and the scheme is designed to
enforce that