Monday, April 20, 2026

SIRA NSW: The Regulator That Didn’t Regulate - November 2021

There comes a point where you stop asking politely…

And start demanding accountability.


For me, that point came in November 2021.


After years of trying to do everything “the right way” — reporting hazards, cooperating with treatment, complying with every requirement under workers compensation — I found myself doing something I never imagined:


Begging the regulator to do its job.


Not asking.


Begging.



“Do your job and get me back to mine.”


That’s what I wrote.


Because it really was that simple.


There was a legally agreed Injury Management Plan in place — a binding framework designed to support recovery and return to work.


It required:


coordination with my Nominated Treating Doctor

a safe return-to-work pathway

protection from further harm

Instead, none of it was implemented.

Not partially.

Not poorly.

Not at all.


And the body responsible for enforcing that compliance?


SIRA.



What I Expected vs What Happened


I didn’t ask for anything extraordinary.


I asked for the law to be followed.


I asked for:


enforcement of a legally binding plan

restoration of my withheld entitlements

a safe workplace free from ongoing harm

basic regulatory oversight

Instead, I received an automated reply.  

“We will contact you within two business days…”

That was the response to a report of ongoing harm, non-compliance, and what I believed to be serious misconduct.

Two business days.

No urgency.

No intervention.

No enforcement.

Just process.

This “process” was repeated the entire year of 2021, with no progress. 

What happens to the human being at the heart of…

Process Without Progress?  

Let’s revisit the backstory:

http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2026/01/sira-nsw-when-system-sends-you-in.html

http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2026/01/sira-nsw-when-system-is-silent-harm-is.html

http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2026/01/when-regulators-close-ranks-systemic.html

http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2026/01/when-regulators-close-ranks-systemic_02001716617.html

http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2026/02/please-dont-neglect-us-what-i-asked-of.html

http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2026/02/sira-nsw-closed-my-complaint-phone.html

http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2026/03/when-system-becomes-stressor-august-2021.html

http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2026/03/sira-nsw-and-illusion-of-regulation.html

http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2026/04/ceo-of-sira-nsw-when-system-breaks-you.html

http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2026/04/two-insurers-one-injury-only-one-did.html

http://mystory-myvoice.blogspot.com/2026/04/when-no-one-listens-system-that-turned.html


When the System Knows — And Does Nothing


By that point, everything was on record.


I had:

reported ongoing harm

provided medical evidence

supplied consent for proper coordination with my treating doctor

documented repeated failures to implement return-to-work obligations

And still — nothing moved.

I wrote again:

“You are going to enforce compliance… Asap!”  

Because that is the role of a regulator.

Not to observe.

Not to acknowledge.

To act.



The Reality of Regulatory Failure


What happens when the regulator doesn’t regulate?


The system doesn’t just fail.


It inverts.


The worker — who complied — becomes isolated.

The employer — who didn’t — faces no consequence.

The insurer — who withheld entitlements — continues unchecked.


And the regulator?


Becomes part of the harm.



“I kick and scream because no one is listening.”


At one point, I wrote something deeply human:


“When my life’s in danger… I kick and scream… to attract attention for someone to save me.”  

That was survival.

Because when every formal pathway fails —

when every authority deflects —

when every safeguard collapses —

What is left?


The Gap Between Policy and Reality


Around the same time, SIRA publicly announced its commitment to improving return-to-work outcomes.


It spoke about:


early intervention

compliance enforcement

supporting injured workers

holding insurers accountable

On paper, it sounded right.

But lived experience tells a different story.

None of those commitments meant anything if they weren’t enforced in real cases…

…Like mine.


This Was Never About One Complaint


This wasn’t just a complaint.


It was a test of the system.


A real worker.

A real injury.

A real, legally binding plan.


And a regulator with the power to enforce it.


That test failed.



What This Means — Beyond Me


If a worker can:


follow every process

provide every document

comply in good faith

and still be left without income, support, or safety

Then the issue isn’t the worker.

It’s the system.


The Question That Still Stands


What is the purpose of a regulator…


If it does not regulate?



Final Reflection


I didn’t walk away from my job.


I was kept from it.


Not by my capacity.


Not by my willingness.


But by a system that failed to enforce its own laws.


And when the law is not enforced —

what replaces it is not discretion.


It’s harm.


Source: contemporaneous record of events - Document 224. 



Legal Appendix: Statutory Obligations and Regulatory Failure (NSW Workers Compensation Framework)


This appendix sets out the legal framework that applied to my situation — and why what occurred was not simply poor handling, but a failure to enforce statutory obligations.



1. Injury Management Plans Are Not Optional


Under the Workplace Injury Management and Workers Compensation Act 1998 (NSW):


Section 41 requires insurers to establish and implement an injury management program


Section 42 requires the development of an Injury Management Plan for injured workers


The plan must be created in consultation with the worker and their Nominated Treating Doctor (NTD)

Once established, the plan is not a suggestion.

It is a structured, enforceable framework governing recovery and return to work.

What this means in practice:


The insurer must actively coordinate treatment and return to work

The employer must participate and provide suitable duties

Communication with treating practitioners is mandatory, not discretionary


Failure to implement the plan is a failure to comply with the Act.



2. Employer Return-to-Work Obligations


Under the Workplace Injury Management and Workers Compensation Act 1998 (NSW):


Section 49 imposes a duty on employers to provide suitable employment

This must be:

Safe

Appropriate to the worker’s capacity

Provided as soon as reasonably practicable


Legal principle:


Return to work is not contingent on employer preference.


It is a statutory obligation tied to recovery and rehabilitation.


Failure to provide suitable duties — or to engage in the process — constitutes non-compliance.



3. Weekly Payments and Entitlements


Under the Workers Compensation Act 1987 (NSW):


Section 36 provides for weekly payments for total or partial incapacity


Payments are not discretionary — they are statutory entitlements triggered by incapacity


Legal principle:


Where liability is established or not reasonably disputed:

Payments must be made

Delays or withholding may constitute a breach of statutory duty



4. SIRA’s Role: Regulator, Not Observer


The State Insurance Regulatory Authority (SIRA) is not a passive body.


It is the statutory regulator of the NSW workers compensation system.


Under the legislative framework and its own mandate, SIRA is responsible for:


Monitoring insurer and employer compliance

Enforcing legislative obligations

Ensuring proper injury management and return-to-work practices

Taking regulatory action where breaches occur

This includes:

Investigations

Directions

Compliance enforcement measures

System oversight


Legal principle:


Where non-compliance is identified, failure to act is itself a regulatory failure.



5. The Standard of Practice: Reinforcing Legal Duties


SIRA’s own regulatory materials emphasise:


Early intervention

Active injury management

Coordination with treating practitioners

Prevention of delayed return to work

As publicly stated by SIRA:

“The core role of the workers compensation scheme is to help people recover and return to work.”  

This reflects the purpose of the legislation itself.


6. What Non-Compliance Looks Like (Applied to This Case)


Based on the evidence:


No effective implementation of the Injury Management Plan

No meaningful coordination with the Nominated Treating Doctor

No provision of suitable duties

Withholding of statutory entitlements

Ongoing exposure to workplace harm

Repeated reports to the regulator without enforcement action


Legal characterisation:


This is consistent with:

Failure to comply with statutory obligations (insurer/employer)

Failure to enforce those obligations (regulator)



7. Why This Matters


Workers compensation is not a discretionary system.


It is a statutory safety net designed to:


Protect injured workers

Facilitate recovery

Enable return to work

Prevent further harm

When:

obligations are ignored, and

enforcement does not occur

the system does not merely underperform.

It fails in its legal purpose.


Closing Statement


This appendix reflects the gap between:


what the law requires, and

what was allowed to occur


The Injury Management Plan existed.

The obligations were clear.

The regulator was on notice.

And yet — enforcement did not follow.