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JUSTICE AND COMMUNITY SAFETY LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2009 (NO 3)
2009
LEGISLATIVE
ASSEMBLY FOR THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
JUSTICE
AND COMMUNITY SAFETY LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2009 (No
3)
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Presented
by
Mr Simon Corbell
MLA
Attorney General
JUSTICE AND COMMUNITY SAFETY
LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2009 (No 3)
Overview of
Bill
The Justice and Community Safety Legislation
Amendment Bill 2009 (No 3) (the Bill) amends a number of laws administered by
the Department of Justice and Community Safety. The laws amended include
the:
• ACT Civil and Administrative
Tribunal Act 2008;
• ACT Civil and
Administrative Tribunal (Transitional Provisions) Regulation
2009;
• Agents Act
2003;
• Consumer Credit Act
1995;
• Consumer Credit Regulation
1996;
• Court Procedures Act
2004;
• Crimes (Sentencing) Act
2005;
• Door-to-Door Trading Act
1991;
• Fair Trading Act
1992;
• Firearms Act
1996;
• Firearms Regulation
2008;
• Guardianship and Management of
Property Act 1991;
• Independent
Competition and Regulatory Commission Act 1997;
• Residential Tenancies Act 1997;
and
• Supreme Court Act
1933.
The amendments are detailed below.
Additionally, one new regulation will be
created by this Bill, the Fair Trading Regulation 2009. The new
regulation is also detailed below.
ACT Civil and Administrative
Tribunal Act 2008
These amendments affect the appointment of tribunal
registrars, the referral of appeals to the Supreme Court, and the procedure for
joining new parties to a proceeding.
The
amendments will incorporate provisions from the ACT Civil and Administrative
Tribunal (Transitional Provisions) Regulation 2009. Section 67 of the
regulation contains a provision intended to be included in the Act. The
regulation allows for more than one person to be appointed as a tribunal
registrar under the Act. This amendment will incorporate that provision into
the Act itself and remove it from the
regulation.
The amendments dealing with
referrals to the Supreme Court will mean that, under section 85, if the appeal
president refuses to deal with an appeal, it will be the responsibility of the
applicants to seek review, if desired, in the Supreme Court under section 86.
The appeal president will no longer be responsible for referring the matters
that fall under section 85 to the Supreme
Court.
The amendment to section 29 will require
that, in order to be joined to an ongoing proceeding, a new party must have an
interest in the proceeding. If the proceeding is an appeal, the new party must
have been a party to the original proceeding. These criteria are inserted to
ensure that new parties are only joined to a proceeding in appropriate
circumstances.
ACT Civil and
Administrative Tribunal (Transitional Provisions) Regulation
2009
The amendment will remove from the
regulation those provisions that will be included in the ACT Civil and
Administrative Tribunal Act 2008 by this Bill.
Agents Act
2003
The amendment will allow the
commissioner for fair trading to exempt certain real estate agents from the
requirement to keep a trust account. The exemption will be used for agents who
do not hold or receive any money in trust. In order to maintain a licence,
these agents are currently required to hold an empty trust account. In those
circumstances, the trust account serves no consumer protection or other
function. The amendment allows for an exemption to the rule, to avoid the
unnecessary creation of trust accounts by licensed
agents.
Consumer Credit Act
1995
The amendment will preserve the
Territory’s cap on interest rates for consumer credit contracts at 48
percent per year. Consumer credit regulation is gradually being transferred
from States and Territories to the Commonwealth. This process will eventually
result in a repeal of existing ACT consumer credit legislation, to be replaced
by Commonwealth legislation. The Commonwealth has agreed that those States and
Territories which have interest rate caps may keep them until the Commonwealth
adopts its own position on the subject.
This
amendment will preserve the Territory’s cap on interest rates by
transferring relevant provisions from the Consumer Credit Act 1995 to the
ACT Fair Trading Act 1992.
Consumer Credit Regulation
1996
These amendments are consequential
to the Consumer Credit Act 1995 amendments. The parts of this regulation
dealing with interest rate caps will be removed. These provisions will be
recreated in the Fair Trading Regulation 1992 by this
Bill.
Court Procedures Act
2004
The amendment clarifies the power of security
officers to require everyone entering the court to undergo screening. The Act
already gives the courts this power. This amendment explicitly provides that
security screenings may be of general application, to avoid any doubt or
challenge. This amendment engages the right of privacy, but constitutes a
proportionate limitation on that right because of the heightened risks
associated with court premises. The changes introduced have been certified as
human rights compliant for this reason.
Crimes (Sentencing) Act
2005
An amendment to the Crimes
(Sentencing) Act 2005 is needed to ensure that victim impact statements can
still be tendered under part 4.3 following the commencement of the Crimes
Legislation Amendment Act 2008. This amendment will also ensure that any
further offences caught by the change in the summary threshold will not be
excluded from the application of part 4.3 of the Crimes (Sentencing) Act
2005.
Door-to-Door Trading Act
1991
The amendment will consolidate two identical rules
into one section to avoid confusion. The requirement for a dealer to provide a
copy of a contract made by telephone to a consumer had been present in two
different sections of the Act. This amendment will leave the requirement in
only one section, to avoid confusion.
Fair Trading Act
1992
These amendments recreate the
sections of the Consumer Credit Act 1995 that will be repealed by this
Bill. The purpose is to preserve the Territory’s cap on interest rates
for consumer credit contracts. No substantive changes to the legislation have
been made. This amendment is merely a transfer of provisions from one Act to
another.
Firearms Act
1996
This amendment will insert a
transitional provision from the Firearms Regulation 2008. Section 81 of the
Firearms Regulation 2008 was created with the intention that it would be
inserted into the Act. The provision authorises possession of certain firearms
with pistol grips for use in approved target shooting competitions. No change
to the effect of former section 81 of the regulation is intended by its
inclusion in the Act.
Firearms Regulation
2008
This amendment will remove the
transitional provision from the regulation that will be included by this Bill in
the Firearms Act 1996. The parts of the regulation removed will be
recreated in the text of the Act.
Guardianship and Management of Property Act
1991
The amendment will give the ACT
Civil and Administrative Tribunal (ACAT) a power that was previously exercised
by the Guardianship Tribunal. During the course of the ACAT consequential
amendments, the power to demand records and information was omitted on the basis
that the ACAT Act would provide the necessary power to the ACAT. This amendment
recreates a specific power to demand those records, in order to remove any doubt
that the ACAT retains all the powers of the Guardianship
Tribunal
Independent Competition and
Regulatory Commission Act 1997
The
amendment clarifies the structure of the commission. Current practice is to
appoint one commissioner. The legislation might be construed to require three
commissioners in order to have a valid commission. These amendments will avoid
any dispute as to the elements of a properly constituted commission under the
Act. The practice of appointing one commissioner will be explicitly permitted.
Additional commissioners could still be appointed as a discretionary matter.
Residential Tenancies Act
1997
This amendment updates a reference to another
provision within the Residential Tenancies Act 1997. The relevant
provision was moved to a different section of the Act in February 2009 by
consequential amendments following the implementation of the ACT Civil and
Administrative Tribunal. The reference has been updated
accordingly.
Supreme Court Act
1933
This amendment will omit section
36 of the Act. Section 36 gives the Supreme Court the power to make rules
of court. The Supreme Court now holds these powers under the Court
Procedures Act 2004. Section 36 is redundant and should be
removed.
Fair Trading Regulation
2009
This regulation recreates sections
of the Consumer Credit Regulation 1996 that will be repealed by this Bill. No
substantive changes to the regulation have been made other than to create it
anew under the Fair Trading Act 1992.
Clause Notes
Clause 1 – Name of Act – states
the title of the Act as the Justice and Community
Safety Legislation Amendment Act 2009 (No
3).
Clause 2 – Commencement
– sets out the commencement dates for the Act. The amendments to the
Crimes (Sentencing) Act 2005 will commence on the day after notification.
The Firearms Act 1996 and Firearms Regulation 2008 amendments commence on
either the day after notification, or 14 January 2010, whichever is
earlier.
All other amendments in the Act will
commence 28 days after notification.
Clause
3 – Legislation amended—sch 1 – provides that the
Act amends the legislation identified in schedule 1 of the
Act.
Clause 4 – Fair Trading
Regulation 2009—sch 2 – provides that the Fair Trading
Regulation created by schedule 2 of the Act commences when clause 4 of the Act
commences, and that it is a regulation that may be amended or repealed under
section 54 of the Fair Trading Act 1992.
Clause 5 – Legislation repealed
– repeals the Dangerous Substances (Explosives) Regulation
2004-Form-Consumer fireworks authorised receipt (AF2009-129). This repeal
follows the repeal of consumer fireworks sales provisions in the Dangerous
Substances (Explosives) Regulation 2004.
Schedule 1 – Legislation
amended
PART 1.1 – ACT
Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2008
Clause 1.1 – Section
10(1)(b) – substitutes “a
registrar” for “the registrar” to reflect the appointment of
multiple registrars.
Clause 1.2 – Section
22L(4)(a) – removes a reference to a
referral to the Supreme Court under section 85. This Act will end referrals to
the Supreme Court under section 85.
Clause 1.3 – Section 29(5)
– adds criteria that must be considered in
joining a person as a new party to an application. In order to join a new
person to an application, the person must either have an interest in the
application, or in the case of an appeal, the person must have been a party to
the original decision.
Clause 1.4 – Section 75(2),
except notes – substitutes “a
registrar” for “the registrar” to reflect the appointment of
multiple registrars.
Clause 1.5 – Section
81(1)(b)(ii) – inserts a reference to the
appeal president deciding not to deal with an appeal under section 85, to
reflect the amendments to section 85. Appeals will no longer be referred to the
Supreme Court under section 85.
Clause 1.6 – Section 83 (1)
and (2) – inserts criteria for referring an
application or appeal to the Supreme Court under section 83. The tribunal must
now first consider that it is appropriate for the application or appeal to be
dealt with by the Supreme Court.
Clause 1.7 – Section 85
– amends section 85 to remove the appeal
president’s function of referring appeals under section 79 to the Supreme
Court. With this amendment, where the appeal president decides not to deal with
an appeal, it will be up to the parties to seek review by the Supreme Court
under new section 86(1)(c). The appeal president will have no responsibility or
capacity under section 85 to refer appeals to the Supreme Court.
Clause 1.8 – New section
86(1)(c) – inserts a reference to an appeal
that the appeal president refuses to deal with under section 85. This will give
parties whose tribunal appeals have been refused under section 85 the ability to
appeal the matter to the Supreme Court.
Clause 1.9 – Section 87(2),
definition of Supreme Court proceeding,
paragraph (c) – omits a reference to a referred appeal under section
85, to reflect the fact that appeals will no longer be referred under that
section.
Clause 1.10 – Section
110(1) – substitutes a provision from the
ACT Civil and Administrative Tribunal (Transitional Provision) Regulation 2009,
to clarify that more than one public servant may be appointed as a tribunal
registrar.
Clause 1.11 – Further
amendments, mentions of the registrar
– substitutes “a registrar” for “the
registrar” to reflect the appointment of multiple registrars, in the
following
sections:
• section
13(1);
• section
25;
• section
37;
• section
53;
• section
74;
• section
76;
• section
110(2);
• sections
111
• section
112(1), note (1st
mention)
• sections
113 to 116.
PART
1.2 – ACT Civil and Administrative
Tribunal (Transitional Provisions) Regulation 2009
Clause 1.12 – Section
67(1), inserted section 301A – omits this
section, to reflect the inclusion of an identical provision in amended section
110(1) of the ACT Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2008.
PART 1.3 – Agents Act
2003
Clause 1.13 – New section
105(7) – inserts a new subsection (7), to
refer to exemptions from the trust account requirements under new section
105A.
Clause 1.14 – New section
105A – inserts a provision that allows the
commissioner to exempt licensed agents from the requirement to keep a trust
account. The exemption would only be available to agents who do not receive or
hold any trust money, as defined in section 102 of the Act. This provision is
intended to operate in a way similar to the existing section 71, which gives the
commissioner the power to exempt agents from the rules concerning licensed
agents being in charge of more than one place of business.
Clause 1.15 – Schedule 1,
new items 15A to 15C – inserts a decision
under new section 105A into the schedule of reviewable decisions under the Act.
This is to make the exemption for agents from the trust account retirement
similar to the exemptions concerning agents managing multiple business premises
in section 71 of the Act.
PART 1.4 – Consumer Credit
Act 1995
Clause 1.16 – Section 2,
notes 1 and 2 – substitutes new notes 1 and
2 to remove references to the examples of “annual percentage rate”,
since these definitions are to be removed with these amendments.
Clause 1.17 – Part 3A
– omits all of part 3A of the Act. The
provisions of part 3A will be recreated in the Fair Trading Act 1992, and
will provide identical interest rate cap protections. This amendment is
intended only to transfer identical legislation to another Act.
Clause 1.18 – Dictionary
– omits those definitions that were only
used for part 3A of the Act, which is now omitted.
PART 1.5 – Consumer Credit
Regulation 1996
Clause
1.19 – Sections 5 and 6 –
omits these sections from the regulation. Identical provisions will be
recreated in the Fair Trading Regulation 2009. As with the
Consumer Credit Act 1995 amendments, these amendments are only intended
to transfer identical legislation and regulations to another Act and
regulation.
PART 1.6 – Crimes
(Sentencing) Act 2005
Clause 1.20 – Section 48
– inserts a technical amendment that removes
the reference to an ‘indictable offence’ and inserts ‘an
offence punishable by imprisonment for longer than 1 year’. This
amendment is necessary because the Crimes Legislation Amendment Act 2008
altered the threshold for summary jurisdiction from a maximum penalty of one
year imprisonment to a maximum penalty of two years imprisonment. The purpose
of this amendment is to ensure that in crimes where the punishment may be a year
or longer in prison, part 4.3 of the Crimes (Sentencing) Act 2005 will
continue to apply.
PART 1.7 – Court Procedures
Act 2004
Clause 1.21 – Section 45(2)
– substitutes new requirements for security
screening and search requirements made under section 45. The new criteria are
intended to clarify that a requirement for security screening may be applied
generally, to everyone entering court premises, and not only on the basis of
individual suspicion.
PART 1.8 – Door-to-Door
Trading Act 1991
Clause 1.22 – Section
7(1)(d) – substitutes new language to
remove a duplicate requirement. Section 7(1)(d) previously duplicated the
requirement to give a contract to a consumer after making a contract by
telephone. That requirement now exists in section 7(1)(fa) of the Act.
PART 1.9 – Fair Trading Act
1992
Clause 1.23 – New part 4A
– inserts new sections 51C through 51E,
which recreate omitted part 3A of the Consumer Credit Act 1995. These
insertions merely transfer the provisions governing maximum annual percentage
rates and disclosure to the Fair Trading Act 1992 from the Consumer
Credit Act 1995. No substantive change to the legislation previously
contained in part 3A of the Consumer Credit Act 1995 has been made by
this amendment.
Clause 1.24 – Dictionary,
note 2 – inserts a reference to the Consumer
Credit (Australian Capital Territory) Code, to reflect the inclusion of the
consumer credit provisions in the Act.
Clause 1.25 – Dictionary,
new definitions – inserts the definitions
that were removed from the Consumer Credit Act 1995 by these amendments.
These insertions recreate the definitions previously contained in the
Consumer Credit Act 1995 without any substantive change.
PART 1.10 – Firearms Act
1996
Clause 1.26 – New section
275 – This clause inserts into the
Firearms Act 1996 a new section 275 to authorise the possession and use
of certain firearms. The Firearms Amendment Act 2008 inserted into the
Firearms Act, schedule 1, item 12, the term ‘fitted with a pistol
grip’. The effect of this amendment was to make certain firearms
prohibited that were not previously prohibited.
In amending the Firearms Act to
extend the coverage of item 12, it had always been the Government’s
intention to allow licensees to possess and use these firearms in limited
circumstances. The circumstances in which such a firearm can be authorised
under the new provision are where the use of the firearms is to be used for an
approved competition or approved competitions.
A provision allowing the registrar
of firearms to issue such an authorisation was overlooked at the time of
drafting the amending Bill. In response, this provision was inserted into the
Firearms Regulation 2008 as a transitional provision in order to allow licensees
to seek an authorisation from the registrar of firearms. As the transitional
provisions in part 17 of the Firearms Regulation, it is now necessary to amend
the Firearms Act in this way.
PART 1.11 – Firearms
Regulation 2008
Clause 1.27 – Section 81
– This clause omits section 81 of the
regulation. This transitional provision has been included in the Firearms
Act 1996 by this Act.
PART 1.12 – Guardianship
and Management of Property Act 1991
Clause 1.28 – New Section
72C– this clause inserts new section 72C,
which remakes former section 41 of the Act. This provision will give the ACT
Civil and Administrative Tribunal (ACAT) a power, previously exercised by the
Guardianship Tribunal, to request information and documents by written notice.
This power does not derogate from or limit any other powers of the ACAT, either
under this Act, the ACT Civil and Administrative Tribunal Act 2008, or
any other applicable legislation.
PART 1.13 – Independent
Competition and Regulatory Commission Act 1997
Clause 1.29 – Section 6(1)
– amends section 6(1) to clarify that the
commission is constituted by only one commissioner, but that other commissioners
may be appointed to the commission. This amendment is intended to resolve any
doubt as to the current law, which was meant to provide that the commission is
validly constituted by only one commissioner.
Clause 1.30 – Schedule 2,
section 2.1 – amends section 2.1 of schedule
2 to clarify that the executive may appoint only one commissioner, or more than
one commissioner. The classification of “assistant commissioner”
has been removed, so that there are only standing commissioners, one of whom
must be a senior commissioner. It is not necessary to maintain the distinction
for assistant commissioners, as that class of commissioner refers only to
standing commissioners who are not senior commissioners.
This clause
also inserts a new section 2.1AA to clarify the
arrangements for appointing more than one standing commissioner. The Act now
clearly provides that if more than one commissioner is appointed, one
commissioner must be appointed as a senior commissioner. If only one
commissioner is appointed, that commissioner is taken to be the senior
commissioner by definition.
Clause 1.31 – Dictionary,
definition of assistant commissioner
– omits this definition, as assistant commissioners are no longer
included in the Act.
Clause 1.32 – Dictionary,
definition of senior commissioner
– substitutes a new definition to reflect the removal of references to
assistant commissioners and the clarification that only one commissioner need be
appointed. With the new definition, a senior commissioner is either the only
standing commissioner, or in the case of multiple standing commissioners, the
commissioner who is appointed or nominated as the senior
commissioner.
Clause 1.33 – Dictionary,
definition of standing commissioner
– amends the definition of “standing commissioner” to
clarify that a standing commissioner is any commissioner appointed under
schedule 2, section 2.1 of the Act. This amendment removes from the definition
all references to senior and assistant commissioners to avoid confusion.
PART 1.14 – Residential
Tenancies Act 1997
Clause 1.34 – Section
48(1)(b)(i) – Amends section 48(1)(b)(i) to
update a reference to a renumbered provision. Section 48 previously referred to
former section 104. When the ACT Civil and Administrative Tribunal became
operational, consequential amendments remade former section 104 into section
83(b). This amendment updates the reference to former section 104
accordingly.
PART 1.15 – Supreme Court
Act 1933
Clause 1.35 – Section 36
– omits section 36 from the Act. Section 36
gave the Supreme Court the power to make rules. That power is now contained in
the Court Procedures Act 2004. Section 36 has been omitted to remove the
unnecessary duplication of the rule making power.
Clause 1.36 – Dictionary,
definition of rules – omits
section 36 from the Act. Section 36 gave the Supreme Court the power to make
rules. That power is now contained in the Court Procedures Act 2004.
Section 36 has been omitted to remove the unnecessary duplication of the rule
making power.
Schedule 2 – Fair Trading
Regulation 2009
This
part creates the new Fair Trading Regulation
2009.
This
regulation recreates former sections 5 and 6 of the Consumer Credit
Regulation 1996. Those sections are intended to be transferred from the
Consumer Credit Regulation to this regulation by these amendments, with no
changes to the substantive regulations.
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