11272NAT Course in

Landholder Liaison Officer Services   

A first for Australia, this course provides formally recognised, nationally accredited training for Landholder Liaison Officers.

Tailored Delivery: Available for group bookings

Study Mode: In person

Duration: 4 days  

Time: 9 am – 4 pm each day

Course Intakes

Location: Melbourne - Dates: 24th - 25th - 26th - 27th February 2025

Fees: AUD$ 2300 per person plus GST (introductory price) 

Landholder Liaison Officers act as intermediaries between a company, such as a mining, construction or energy firm, and the owners or occupiers of the land near or on where the company might be seeking access to land. Landholder Liaison Officers manage relationships, address concerns and ensure that landholders are informed and properly consulted. TDC Services, the Australian Renewables Academy and Workforce Plus (TOID 3652) are partnering to ensure Landholder Liaison Officers are provided with accredited, industry endorsed, and practical skills to underpin the critical role they play in major developments across Australia.

What you will learn

The units will provide you with the necessary knowledge to undertake effective Landholder Liaison assignments. They include an introduction to the challenges and opportunities in the sector, projects and staging, land access and tenure, effective landholder engagement, working in teams, legislative frameworks, principles of compensation and other key topics.

 

Unit Code Unit Name
NAT11272001 Plan and negotiate a land access strategy
NAT11272002 Demonstrate leadership in the workplace
NAT11272003 Engage with landholders for land access and tenure negotiation purposes
NAT11272004 Develop landholder liaison records and administrative processes

Learning outcome

A formal qualification – 11272NAT Course in Landholder Liaison Officer Services

More information about this qualification

There is a shortage of experienced landholder liaison staff because of a quickly growing number of renewable energy and linear infrastructure projects around the country, with workforce demand expected to increase in the future.

The first of its kind for Australia, this nationally accredited 4-day short course covers the key knowledge requirements and expectations of a typical Landholder Liaison Officer’s role to engage and negotiate with landholders for infrastructure projects. The course is supported by and comes from consulting industry stakeholders such as: landholders affected by projects, farming associations, legal firms representing both landholders and projects, experienced landholder liaison personnel, various Ministers and government bodies, the Clean Energy Council as well as a huge number of Australian energy companies and developers.

This course brings the following benefits to the industry:

  • Competency-assessed and accredited Landholder Liaison Officers so landholders, regulators and employers can rely on properly qualified Liaison Officers to undertake this important work

  • Better landholder relationships with projects, in-turn leading to stronger social licence and ultimately more approvals

  • Addressing the shortage of experienced personnel needed for this work as their demand continues to increase

  • Huge opportunities to create jobs and retrain people working in regional and remote areas who upon completing this course would be qualified to join the quickly growing number of energy and linear infrastructure projects around the country.

This is a four-day course which over four units covers the key knowledge requirements and role expectations when working as a Landholder Liaison Officer, such as (but not limited to):

  • Introduction to the role, its history and current expectations

  • Typical challenges faced and mitigations

  • Project stages and differing types of Landholder Liaison

  • Types of land access and tenure typically used by projects and how it is secured

  • Planning for landholder engagement

  • Working within a broader project team, approvals and timelines

  • Relevant state and federal legislation in the role

  • Compensation offers and other payments

  • Initial and ongoing contact

  • Effective landholder engagement

  • Issue mitigation

  • Privacy

  • Proper record keeping

  • Progress reporting

  • Industry software and IT

  • Accessing land under statutory rights

  • Safe operations and risk management

Each unit involves appropriate assessments and upon successful completion, attendees receive a national accreditation.

Trainer - Tom Everitt

Tom Everitt (course developer and owner) is the Director of TDC Services
and is an experienced land access practitioner who has led and delivered
complex landholder and community engagement programs on major linear
infrastructure projects.

Tom has extensive experience in landholder engagement, compulsory and
voluntary land acquisition, statutory land access, compensation negotiation,
stakeholder engagement, program development and team management.

With an open and honest approach to landholders and stakeholders,
Tom has overseen and negotiated hundreds of land access agreements
for clients for various types of infrastructure.

 

Prerequisites

No pre-requisite requirements for this qualification.

Assessment

Students will be issued with a Learner Workbook and required to complete either a workplace observation/simulation, written or oral questions, and other assessment tasks as outlined in accordance with the unit requirements. Your Trainer will guide you through the assessment process.