Australian Capital Territory Bills Explanatory Statements
[Index]
[Search]
[Download]
[Bill]
[Help]
STATUTE LAW AMENDMENT BILL 2006 (NO 2)
2006
THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY
FOR
THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
STATUTE LAW AMENDMENT BILL 2006 (No
2)
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Circulated by the
authority
of
Simon Corbell
MLA
Attorney
General
Background
The
object of this bill is to further enhance the ACT’s statute book to ensure
that it is of the highest standard. The bill does so by amending Acts and
regulations for statute law revision purposes
only.
This bill forms part of the technical
amendments program for ACT legislation. Under guidelines for the technical
amendments program approved by the Government, the essential criteria for the
inclusion of amendments in the bill are that the amendments are minor or
technical and non-controversial.
The
development of a technical amendments program for ACT legislation was in
response to the need for greater flexibility in the drafting of amendments for
statute law revision purposes and to minimise costs associated with keeping ACT
legislation up to date. Statute law amendment bills are an important part of
maintaining and enhancing the standard of ACT law. They provide an opportunity
to make amendments and repeals that, taken alone, would generally be
insufficiently important to justify separate legislation and are inappropriate
to make as editorial amendments under the Legislation Act 2001, chapter
11 (which provides for the republication of Acts and statutory instruments).
However, the cumulative effect of the amendments and repeals made through a
technical amendments program and statute law amendment bills can have a
substantial impact on the ACT statute book and the overall quality of ACT
law.
The ACT statute book is all ACT
legislation taken as a body of law. A statute book that is well maintained
significantly enhances access to legislation by making it easier to find in an
up-to-date form and easier to read and understand. Statute law amendments
under the technical amendments program can greatly assist the process of
modernisation of the statute book. Laws need to be kept up to date to reflect
ongoing technological and societal change.
The
bill contains three schedules and has been structured to assist the transparency
of the amendments made by it.
When enacted,
this bill will help to improve the quality of the ACT’s statute book by
making it simpler, more consistent and more coherent, and will help to keep it
up to date.
Clause 1 — Name of
Act
This clause provides for the bill’s
name.
Clause 2 —
Commencement
This clause provides for the
bill’s commencement 21 days after the day it is notified under the
Legislation Act 2001. This will enable the Parliamentary Counsel’s
Office to have up-to-date republications of the affected legislation ready for
the legislation register on the day the amendments commence. However, some of
the amendments require a different commencement time and these are indicated by
the inclusion of special commencement provisions at the end of the relevant
amendments. Clause 2 contains an example of a special commencement
provision.
Clause 3 —
Purpose
This clause states the bill’s
purpose.
Clause 4 —
Notes
This clause confirms that an explanatory
note in the bill does not form part of the Act when it is
enacted.
Clause 5 — Legislation
amended—schs 1-3
This clause gives effect
to the amendments made by schedules 1 to
3.
Schedule 1 — Minor
amendments
Schedule 1 provides for minor,
non-controversial amendments initiated by government departments and agencies.
Schedule 1 contains amendments of the Public Sector Management Act
1994. Each amendment is explained in an explanatory note to the
amendment.
The definition of ‘industrial
award’ for the Public Sector Management Act 1994 is amended to
include a workplace agreement under the Workplace Relations Act 1996
(Cwlth)
Existing provisions within the Act
limit the circumstances in which certain people who are members of a
superannuation scheme under the Superannuation Act 1976 (Cwlth) or
Superannuation Act 1990 (Cwlth) may be retired on the grounds of
invalidity. The amendments bring the structure of these provisions into line
with current drafting practice and include provision for people who are members
of the Public Sector Superannuation Accumulation Plan (or PSSAP)
established under the Superannuation Act 2005
(Cwlth).
Schedule 2 — Structural
amendments of Legislation Act
Schedule 2, part
2.1 provides for non-controversial structural amendments of the Legislation
Act 2001 initiated by the Parliamentary Counsel’s Office. Each
amendment is explained in an explanatory note in the schedule.
Structural issues are particularly concerned
with making the statute book more coherent and concise, and therefore more
accessible. Strategies to achieve these objectives include avoiding unnecessary
duplication and achieving the maximum degree of standardisation of legislative
provisions consistent with policy requirements and operational
needs.
Shortening legislation results in less
clutter and increased simplicity. Reliance on the standard provisions achieves
simplification by eliminating the need to repeat standard technical definitions
and other provisions in every Act. Awareness of standard provisions,
particularly in the Legislation Act, is being promoted by the inclusion of notes
in Acts and regulations drawing attention to
them.
The amendments in the schedule also
reflect the process of continuous review and improvement of the operation of the
Legislation Act and the enhancement of access to ACT
legislation.
The amendments in schedule 2
include an amendment of section 227 which deals with the application of division
19.3.3. The division is about consultation with Legislative Assembly committees
on appointments made by Ministers to statutory positions.
Section 227 (2) provides 3 exceptions to the
application of the division. First, the appointment of a public servant to a
statutory position. Second, short-term acting appointments. Third, an
appointment the only function of which is to advise the Minister. The amendment
is concerned with the 2nd exception.
Existing
section 227 (2) (b) excludes the appointment of a person to act in a statutory
position for not longer than 6 months, unless the appointment is of the person
to act in the position for a 2nd or subsequent consecutive period. The
amendment extends the exception to short-term, one-off substantive appointments.
The effect of the amendment is to remove the anomalous different treatment of
substantive appointments. This is in keeping with the approach taken elsewhere
in part 19.3 of treating substantive and acting appointments in the same way as
far as possible.
Schedule 3 —
Technical amendments
Schedule 3 contains minor
or technical amendments of legislation initiated by the Parliamentary
Counsel’s Office. Each amendment is explained in an explanatory note in
the schedule.
The amendments include the
correction of minor errors, updating language, improving syntax and other minor
changes to update or improve the form of legislation. A particular focus of
this bill is the creation of dictionaries in a range of Acts including the
Clinical Waste Act 1990, the Environment Protection Act 1997, the
Freedom of Information Act 1989, the Land Titles Act 1925 and the
Machinery Act 1949. This review is part of an ongoing program of
updating and improving the language and form of legislation.
[Index]
[Search]
[Download]
[Bill]
[[Help]]