Psychosocial Hazard Laws Explained: What Business Owners Can (and Can’t) Do With Their Team | Tracey Mylecharane
Sun Feb 01 2026
Clearer laws. Calmer leadership. Fewer second-guesses.
Many business owners genuinely want to do right by their people.
And yet, when it comes to psychosocial hazard laws, there’s a quiet tension sitting underneath everyday leadership decisions.
Conversations get delayed. Performance issues get softened. Boundaries blur.
Not because business owners don’t care — but because they’re unsure where the legal line actually sits.
This episode speaks to that uncertainty directly, without fear, jargon, or overcorrection.
In this conversation, Paula is joined by business lawyer Tracey Mylecharane, founder of TM Legal Atelier, to unpack what psychosocial hazard laws are really about — and what they are not.
Rather than framing these laws as restrictive or risky, the discussion centres on clarity.
What good leadership already looks like in many growing businesses. Where structure and documentation matter. And why psychological safety does not mean low standards, silence, or avoiding hard conversations.
This is a grounded conversation for business owners carrying people responsibility and wanting to lead with both care and confidence — without tying themselves in knots.
In this episode, we explore:
What psychosocial hazard laws are actually designed to addressThe difference between psychological safety and lowered expectationsWhy avoiding performance conversations can create more risk, not lessThe false sense of security created by “wellness” initiatives aloneHow clarity, structure, and documentation protect everyone involvedWhy many business owners are already doing more than they realise
A note from Paula
This conversation matters because I see how often capable business owners hold back — not from lack of care, but from uncertainty.
If this episode helps you breathe out and re-anchor around what good leadership actually requires, that’s the point. Clarity creates steadiness. And steadiness changes how you lead.
If you’re wanting space to think more clearly about people decisions, leadership boundaries, or the weight you’re carrying, that’s the kind of work I support through private strategic sessions and in-person leadership days.
Connect with Tracey
TM Legal Atelier
Website: https://tmlegalatelier.com.au
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tmlegalatelier/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tracey-mylecharane/
Connect with Paula
Paula Maidens is a Hiring & Team Strategist who helps service-based businesses solve people chaos by connecting people decisions to profit outcomes.
Website: https://paulamaidens.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/paulamaidensconsulting/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paulamaidens/
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Clearer laws. Calmer leadership. Fewer second-guesses. Many business owners genuinely want to do right by their people. And yet, when it comes to psychosocial hazard laws, there’s a quiet tension sitting underneath everyday leadership decisions. Conversations get delayed. Performance issues get softened. Boundaries blur. Not because business owners don’t care — but because they’re unsure where the legal line actually sits. This episode speaks to that uncertainty directly, without fear, jargon, or overcorrection. In this conversation, Paula is joined by business lawyer Tracey Mylecharane, founder of TM Legal Atelier, to unpack what psychosocial hazard laws are really about — and what they are not. Rather than framing these laws as restrictive or risky, the discussion centres on clarity. What good leadership already looks like in many growing businesses. Where structure and documentation matter. And why psychological safety does not mean low standards, silence, or avoiding hard conversations. This is a grounded conversation for business owners carrying people responsibility and wanting to lead with both care and confidence — without tying themselves in knots. In this episode, we explore: What psychosocial hazard laws are actually designed to addressThe difference between psychological safety and lowered expectationsWhy avoiding performance conversations can create more risk, not lessThe false sense of security created by “wellness” initiatives aloneHow clarity, structure, and documentation protect everyone involvedWhy many business owners are already doing more than they realise A note from Paula This conversation matters because I see how often capable business owners hold back — not from lack of care, but from uncertainty. If this episode helps you breathe out and re-anchor around what good leadership actually requires, that’s the point. Clarity creates steadiness. And steadiness changes how you lead. If you’re wanting space to think more clearly about people decisions, leadership boundaries, or the weight you’re carrying, that’s the kind of work I support through private strategic sessions and in-person leadership days. Connect with Tracey TM Legal Atelier Website: https://tmlegalatelier.com.au Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tmlegalatelier/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tracey-mylecharane/ Connect with Paula Paula Maidens is a Hiring & Team Strategist who helps service-based businesses solve people chaos by connecting people decisions to profit outcomes. Website: https://paulamaidens.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/paulamaidensconsulting/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paulamaidens/