"(The two reviews) will both be completed by the end of this year and will be tabled in Parliament."
A meeting to improve safety was called earlier on Monday between key stakeholders after the death,the second in a fortnight and the sixth in a horror year for the the state's mines.
The mining safety advisory committee had not sat for months because the Queensland government was unable to meet gender requirements of its make-up.
Queensland Resources Council chief executive Ian Macfarlane said the QRC nominated two women for the committee six months ago.
“I’m not sure why that committee hasn’t been operating,” he said.
CFMEU District president Stephen Smyth said the two women nominated did not have the “competency” to sit on the board.
“The issue has been with the make-up of the board,because of the requirement to have a certain number of females on the board,"Mr Smyth said.
“The CFMEU doesn’t have anyone in that role that can carry out the statutory functions to be able to take up that role,if that makes sense.
“But I’ll be clear,the sitting of the advisory board is not going to fix the issues that are happening at the coalface.”
Dr Lynham said the re-established advisory committee would now meet within days and gender representation had to be respected.
“Because of the significance of the appointments,that has been difficult,"he said.
It is Palaszczuk government policy to havegender equity on all government boards by 2020.
Dr Lynham vowed to leave"no stone unturned"as safety was re-evaluated.
"We have the toughest mine,health and safety legislation in the nation ... I expect full compliance[with unions and the industry],"he said.
Mr Smyth said the union believed underlying factors,including increasing use of casual workers and an overall relaxing of safety standards,had led to the sudden series of deaths,after over 20 years without a similar number in one year.
He also raised concerns about the fact it took more than 12 hours for the mining company to contact the union safety representative.
“We’d be calling on the minister to call a board of inquiry into all the fatalities that have occurred,"he said.
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“Something needs to happen to get to the bottom of why workers are being killed on the job.”
Mr Macfarlane said the industry was working on a"safety reset"and the meeting would help establish what happened,the programs being run and how they could be improved.
"No death on a mine site is acceptable,"Mr Macfarlane said.
"Every miner who goes to work does a safety induction course before they start.
"We will need to see if that process is sufficient[and] we need to establish what more can be done."
The toll is in stark contrast to the previous financial year,when one Queensland mine worker was killed.
Dr Lynham said there were 84 inspectors throughout Queensland,more than the previous year.
Last monththe death of Mackay father David Routledge - killed when when a mining wall collapsed onto his machine - sent shockwaves within the industry.