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UTILITIES AMENDMENT BILL 2004
2004
THE
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY FOR THE
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
UTILTIIES
AMENDMENT BILL
2004
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Circulated
by the authority of the Treasurer
Ted Quinlan
MLA
Utilities Amendment Bill
2004
Overview of Bill
The Utilities Amendment Bill 2004 is a Bill
to ensure that the Independent Competition and Regulatory Commission (ICRC) may
recover costs relating to all of its functions. This may include pieces of
legislation such as the Independent Competition and Regulatory Commission Act
1999 and national codes such as the National Third Party Access Code for
National Gas Pipeline Systems.
The Bill
achieves these objectives by:
(a) amending the
Utilities Act 2000 to ensure that the ICRC can include reasonable costs
incurred by it in carrying out its functions under national codes and other
pieces of legislation in its licence fee structure;
and
(b) ensuring that these amendments are
effective by making associated amendments and transitionary arrangements so that
these sections can be used in the 2004-05 financial year.
Compliance with Human Rights Act
2004
The Utilities Amendment Bill
2004 will not adversely impact upon the rights of Canberrans and as such has
been awarded a compliance certificate under the Human Rights Act 2004.
Details of the Utilities Amendment Bill
2004
Outline
The object of this Act to amend the
Utilities Act 2000.
Formal
Sections
Section 1 – Name
of Act – states the name of the Act which is the Utilities
Amendment Act 2004.
Section 2
– Commencement – states that the Act commences on the day
after its notification.
Section 3
– Legislation amended – states that the piece of legislation
that this Act will amend is the Utilities Act
2000.
Section 4 – Section
44(1) – states that the word ‘year’ will be replaced with
the word ‘financial year’.
Section
5 – Section 45(2) – This section ensures that the ICRC
can include reasonable contributions towards costs incurred by it in the
exercise of its functions in the determination of its licence fees. The
examples included in the section are to illustrate the fact that the functions
included by the ICRC in the fee structure may go beyond the Utilities Act
2000 provided that there is an adequate nexus to utility
services.
Section 6 – New
section 45(7) – This section ensures that the ICRC cannot include
activities that are already covered by cost recovery or reasonable contribution
provisions in the calculation of its licence fees.
Section 7 – New section
235 – Application of Utilities Amendment Act 2004 – This
section clarifies that section 44 and 45 apply in relation to the 2004-2005
financial year.
Section 8 –
Dictionary, definition of annual licence fee – This section
substitutes the word ‘financial year’ for ‘year’ to
reflect changes contained in section 4.
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