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AAC v Director-General, Department of Human Services, Community Services [2010] NSWADT 319 (16 December 2010)
Last Updated: 16 May 2011
NEW SOUTH WALES ADMINISTRATIVE DECISIONS TRIBUNAL
CITATION:
AAC v
Director-General, Department of Human Services, Community Services [2010] NSWADT
319
DIVISION:
COMMUNITY SERVICES DIVISION
PARTIES:
APPLICANT
AAC
RESPONDENT
Director-General, Department of Human
Services, Community Services
FILE NUMBERS:
104034
HEARING DATES:
16 December 2010
EX
TEMPORE DATE:
16 December 2010
BEFORE:
Higgins S - Deputy
President
LEGISLATION CITED:
Administrative Decisions
Tribunal Act 1997
Children and Young Persons (Care and Protection) Act
1998
CASES CITED:
Australian (NDT) Services Pty Ltd and Civil
Aviation Safety Authority [1999] AATA 79
Re Repatriation Commission and
Delkou [1985] AATA 297; (1985) 8 ALD 454
Sydney Pistol Club v Commissioner of
Police, NSW Police Force [2010] NSWADT 285
Williamson v Director General,
Department of Transport [2000] NSWADT 165
TEXTS CITED:
APPLICATION:
MATTER FOR DECISION:
REPRESENTATION:
APPLICANT
In person
RESPONDENT
D
Wells, solicitor
PUBLICATION RESTRICTION:
s126 of the Administrative
Decisions Tribunal Act applies
ORDERS:
1.The applicant’s stay
application is refused.
2.The applicant’s application for review is set
down for directions/dismissal on 21 February 2011 at 9.30am.
Reasons
for Decision:
Reasons for decision
- On
8 December 2010, the applicant, AAC lodged an application seeking review of the
decision of the respondent, the Director-General
of the Department of Human
Services Community Services, to remove a 9 year old child from her day to day
care. In addition to this
the applicant made an application for the decision of
the respondent to be stayed pending the determination of her review application.
I heard the applicant’s stay application on 16 December 2010 and at the
conclusion of the hearing I made an order refusing
the application. The
applicant has sought, as she is entitled to do, reasons for decisions in regard
to the stay application. These
are my reasons for decision.
- The
Tribunal's powers to grant a stay are set out in subsection 60(2) of the
Administrative Decisions Tribunal Act 1997 (ADT Act) in the following
terms:
‘(2) On the application of any party to proceedings for
an application for a review of a reviewable decision, the Tribunal may
make such
orders staying or otherwise affecting the operation of the decision under review
as it considers appropriate to secure
the effectiveness of a determination of
the application.
(3) The Tribunal may make an order under this section only if it considers
that it is desirable to do so after taking into account:
(a) the interest of any person who may be affected by the determination of
the application, and
(b) any submission made by or on behalf of the administrator who made the
decision to which the application relates, and
(c) the public interest.’
- It
is well accepted that the purpose of a stay is to ‘preserve the status
quo’ pending the hearing and determination of
the application for review
where the 'effectiveness' of the review may be ‘jeopardized’ if the
decision, in the meantime,
is carried into operation, or is allowed to continue
to operate: see Re Repatriation Commission and Delkou [1985] AATA 297;
(1985) 8 ALD 454 at [8] and as followed in Australian (NDT) Services Pty Ltd
and Civil Aviation Safety Authority [1999] AATA 79 at [13], Williamson v
Director General, Department of Transport [2000] NSWADT 165 at [12], and
Sydney Pistol Club v Commissioner of Police, NSW Police Force [2010]
NSWADT 285 at [6]-[7]. However, the Tribunal is only able to grant a stay where
‘it is appropriate to do so’ in the relevant sense, after
considering
the matters prescribed in paragraphs 60(3)(a) to (c). In child
protection matters, such as this application, this would include
having regard
to the principles set out section 9 of the Children and Young People (Care and
Protection) Act 1998.
Circumstances of the child’s removal
- On
the material before the Tribunal, the child has been in the day to day care of
the applicant since she was 3 months old (i.e. since
4 October 2001). At 2
months of age she sustained a non accidental brain injury, which has affected
her development.
- On
6 December 2002, the Children’s Court made orders allocating joint
parental responsibility of the child, for a period of
5 years, between the
Minister and the child’s birth mother. The child, however, remained in
the day to day care of the applicant.
On 13 December 2007, the Children’s
Court allocated parental responsibility of the child to the applicant, with
major medical
and contact jointly allocated to the Minister and the applicant
until the child attained the age of 18 years.
- On
9 August 2010, a delegate of the Director-General removed the child from the
applicant’s premises pursuant to subsection
43(1) of the Children and
Young People (Care and Protection) Act 1998 and placed her into the care and
protection of the Director-General.
The reasons for removal were stated to be
that the child had allegedly been exposed to harmful chemicals and lab equipment
pertaining
to the manufacture of prohibited drugs and drug paraphernalia. These
allegations were made following a police raid on the applicant’s
property,
on 6 August 2010, where police found evidence of the manufacturing of prohibited
drugs in premises (occupied by the applicant’s
son) located on the
property.
- The
applicant’s son was charged and arrested in regard to what had been found
by police during their raid and he remains in
custody as of today. The
applicant has however, not had any charges laid against her.
- As
a result of having removed the child, the Director-General, as she was required
to do under section 45 of the Children and Young
People (Care and Protection)
Act 1998, commenced proceedings before the Children’s Court. On 23 August
2010, the Children’s
Court made an interim order placing the child under
the parental responsibility of the Minister, pending further
order.
- It
is the understanding of the Tribunal that the Department is seeking an order
placing the child under the parental responsibility
of the Minister until she
reaches 18 years of age. These proceedings are ongoing and the applicant is a
party to those proceedings.
The applicant’s case in regard to her stay application
- The
applicant explained that she has at no time been charged in regard to what was
found by police on the day they raided her property.
She said that the premises
on which her son resided was completely separate to the premises in which she
resides with the child.
She said she had no knowledge of what had been found by
police when they raided her property. Her son lived separately from her
and she
has never exposed the child to any drugs. She went on to explain that her son
was now in custody.
- The
applicant explained that, other than this incident, there has never been any
complaint about the manner in which she cared for
the child. And as far as she
was aware the police have no intention of charging her in regard to what they
found in her son’s
premises.
- The
applicant explained that the child was very traumatised by her removal and was
not happy in the care of her current carers, who
the applicant believed were not
able to meet the child’s special needs. Through her regular telephone and
other contact with
the child since her removal, the child has said on a number
of occasions that she wanted to come home.
The respondent’s case in regard to the stay application
- Mr
Wells for the respondent contended that the Tribunal did not have jurisdiction
to hear and determine the applicant’s application
for a stay or otherwise
as (a) the removal of the child was pursuant to paragraph 43(1)(a) of the
Children and Young Persons (Care and Protection) Act 1998, and (b) the applicant
was not the authorised carer of the child.
- The
removal of the child, Mr Wells explained was pursuant to the power vested in the
Director-General to remove a child from immediate
risk of harm. An exercise of
that power he explained invokes the jurisdiction of the Children’s Court
and not the Tribunal.
- Mr
Wells also explained that the applicant, although an authorised carer, was not
at the time of the child’s removal, the child’s
authorised carer:
see paragraph 245(1)(c) of the Children and Young Persons (Care and Protection)
Act 1998. At the time of the child’s removal she was the person who had
parental responsibility for the child.
- In
any event, Mr Wells submitted that his instructions were that the child had
settled in well with the new carers and as indicated
by the applicant there was
ongoing contact between the child and the applicant.
Consideration
- Leaving
aside the issue of jurisdiction, I formed the view that it was not appropriate
to make a stay order on the basis of the material
before the Tribunal. In this
regard I note that the child has now been in the care of new carers for just
over 4 months, the applicant
continues to have ongoing contact with the child,
and the ongoing care of the child is currently before the Children’s
Court,
in which the applicant is a party.
- Accordingly,
the appropriate order in regard to the applicant’s application for a stay
is an order refusing the stay application.
- In
regard to the jurisdiction of the Tribunal, I propose to adjourn this issue
until the next directions date so that the applicant
can obtain some legal
advice in regard thereto.
Orders
1. The applicant’s stay application is refused.
2. The applicant’s application for review is set down for
directions/dismissal on 21 February 2011 at 9.30am.
**********
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