Chapter 2 Improving responses to petitions
2.1
Petitions have been described as ineffective because few are acted upon
or responded to. As noted in chapter 1, a petition that is compliant with the
standing orders is referred to the Minister responsible where, according to
anecdotal evidence, it remains without acknowledgement or other response.[1]
Also, while the House can refer a petition to a committee [standing order
213(c)], this is not currently the practice of the House. In summary, under the
current standing orders, the House has no way of responding to petitions or of encouraging
Ministers to respond. Unfortunately, this has encouraged a view that petitions
are largely a ‛waste of time and paper’[2] or, perhaps more
worryingly, that Parliament and the Executive have little regard and respect
for this process.[3]
2.2
The committee does not accept that the House has no role to play in responding
to petitions. Petitions are addressed to the House and its Members and,
therefore, the House should have the capacity to address the concerns raised
within them. It is not good enough to fall back on the argument that the issues
raised are mostly in the constitutional province of the Executive and not that
of the legislature. The House’s role is not confined to making laws. It has
many avenues available to it to consider issues raised by citizens.
2.3
This chapter outlines the committee’s views on how responses to
petitions can be improved. In particular, the committee considers that this can
be achieved by establishing a petitions committee with the capacity to process,
review and respond to petitions, and inquire into and report on the subject
matter raised within them. The committee expects that the petitions committee
would also have the ability to refer the terms of petitions to other bodies (particularly
to the specialist subject matter committees of the House) for consideration and
possible inquiry.
Current forms of action in the House
2.4
Chapter 1 referred briefly to current practices regarding the processing
of petitions. Further details are provided below.
2.5
Standing order 212 allows petitions to be referred by the Clerk to the
Minister responsible ‛for the administration of the matter raised in the
petition’. A Minister may respond in writing (and the response read to the
House by the Clerk) but is not obliged to do so.
2.6
Ministerial responses to petitions are rare. As shown in table 2.1,
since 1999 a total of 2589 petitions have been received while only three
ministerial responses have been lodged with the Clerk.
Table 2.1 Ministerial responses to
petitions since 1999
Year
|
Petitions Presented
|
Ministerial
Responses
|
1999
|
232
|
|
2000
|
289
|
|
2001
|
250
|
|
2002
|
319
|
|
2003
|
369
|
Senator Kemp (24 November)
|
2004
|
471
|
|
2005
|
235
|
Senator Coonan (5 September)
|
2006
|
276
|
|
2007
|
148
|
Mr Ruddock (26 February)
|
Total
|
2589
|
3
|
Source Chamber
Research Office, Statistics, 21 June 2007
2.7
A Minister may choose to use less formal methods of responding to a
petition such as writing personally to the petitioners or order administrative
action to be taken in response to a particular grievance.[4]
However these methods are not presented to the House and therefore cannot be
formally recorded. Moreover, while there is no practical means by which Members
of the House can know if a Minister has taken any action on the issue raised in
a petition, it appears to be widely accepted that such actions are very rare.
2.8
As noted above, discussion on the subject matter of a petition can take
place at certain periods of House proceedings, usually during Members’ statements
when the Member lodging the petition can explain and discuss the matters raised.[5]
Even so, discussion on petitions in the House is rare. Provisions to enable
Members to table a petition during Members’ statements were adopted in 2001.
Since then, only 68 of the 2068 petitions presented (3.3%) have been presented
and discussed during Members’ statements either in the Chamber or the Main Committee.[6]
2.9
A petition may be referred by the House or a Minister to a general
purpose standing committee[7] and once referred the
committee may inquire into and report on that petition.[8]
No general purpose standing committee has produced a report generated from a
referred petition.
2.10
Two presented petitions however, have resulted in the establishment of
select committees to examine issues raised in petitions. These select
committees were established as a result of a motion to the House by the Member
presenting the petition. The first committee was established in 1963, following
the Yirrkala people’s lodgement of a petition praying that the House appoint a
committee to hear their views before permitting excision of any land from the
Aboriginal Reserve in Arnhem Land. The Member moved that the petition be
printed and the motion was agreed to.[9] The second instance in
1970 followed the presentation of a petition praying that the export of
kangaroo products be banned.[10] Both these examples
preceded the establishment in 1987 of a comprehensive House committee system.
2.11
All petitions, as documents, are referred to the Publications Committee
after they have been presented to the House. That Committee may recommend that
a petition be made a parliamentary paper although such action is unlikely in
practice.[11] In fact, the only
instance of this occurring was in 1909, when the House agreed to a motion, by
leave, that a petition be printed as a parliamentary paper even though the
Publications Committee had considered but not recommended its printing.[12]
Overseas models for action
2.12
A number of parliaments overseas have established more innovative
methods of pursuing petitions once presented. Table 2.2 (below) summarises
some of these key methods.
2.13
It would appear that petitions are considered in greater depth in for
example, the parliaments of Canada, Germany, New Zealand, Scotland, the United Kingdom and Wales than they are in the Australian House of
Representatives. The basic difference is that most of these countries refer
petitions to a committee, be it a dedicated petitions committee or a subject
matter committee.
2.14
In New Zealand and the United Kingdom, petitions are referred to subject
matter committees. The committees to which petitions are referred in New Zealand are able to take action as required, including receiving written submissions
from petitioners, government departments and other sources relevant to the
matter raised in the petition.[13]
2.15
In the United Kingdom’s House of Commons where petitions are referred to
both the relevant government department and a select committee of the House,
approximately 80 per cent of petitions receive a response.[14]
While the quality of responses is variable (some amount to no more than a
page), this is clearly a much more frequent response rate than that of Ministers
in Australia. The House of Commons Procedure Committee’s report has recently
recommended that the Government be required to respond to all public petitions
within two months of their presentation, and that a more regular opportunity be
provided for Members to initiate debate on a specific petition.[15]
Table 2.2 Action taken in comparable parliaments
Country
|
Presented petition referred to:
|
Obligatory response time
|
Responses printed/ acknowledged
|
Canada (House of Commons)
|
A committee designated by the presenting Member if there
has been no response from Government
|
Within 45 days
|
Each petition receives an
individual response
After being tabled in the House, a government response to
a petition is recorded in the Journals
|
Germany (Bundestag)
|
Petitions committee; the committee requests that the
Executive respond to the terms of the petition; the committee then considers
the statement and acts accordingly
|
None
|
All petitions are numbered and responded to
|
New Zealand
|
Relevant standing committee; reports to the House if/when
appropriate
|
Within 90 days, if committee makes a recommendation
|
The
clerk of the committee notifies petitioners of the committee’s deliberations,
following its report to the House
|
Scotland
|
Public Petitions Committee which then considers any
further action to be taken
|
None
The Committee meets every sitting fortnight
|
All petitions receive a written acknowledgment upon
lodgement; where follow up is not pursued, a response explains why
|
UK (House of Commons)
|
Relevant government department and relevant select
committee of the House
|
None
If no observations are to be made however, the presenting
Member is so advised
|
Any observations made by a Minister are printed and
circulated as a supplement to the Votes and Proceedings and sent to the
presenting Member
|
Wales
|
The relevant Assembly Minister or, if appropriate, the
relevant subject committee
|
None
|
The Minister responds to main petitioner; copy sent to
Petitions Clerk, receiving Member and the Members’ Library
|
Source Clerk of the
House of Representatives, Submission no. 1, pp. 9-10.
2.16
A key innovation in Scotland, Germany and India has been the development
of a dedicated petitions committee. These committees are considered a
constructive means by which a parliament is able to examine petitions and
thereby enhance its own role in the petitioning process.
2.17
The committee had the privilege of studying the processing of petitions
by the Scottish Parliament’s Public Petitions Committee (PPC) during a study
tour in 2006 and Members were impressed by the role petitioning played in the
democratic process. The PPC meets fortnightly when the Parliament is sitting
and holds both public and private meetings.[16] The nine members of the
committee are nominated in proportion to the representation of the various
political groupings in the Scottish Parliament. The committee considers new and
current petitions at each meeting and makes decisions about any further action.
In so doing, the committee builds an expertise in the range of measures that
can be taken on petitions, if not necessarily the broad areas of grievance
raised.
2.18
The PPC can refer a petition to a subject committee, and where this
occurs, the committee expects to be kept informed of that committee’s
consideration and actions in respect of the petition. The PPC may also
investigate the petition itself, providing some principal petitioners the
opportunity to speak to their petition and explain their grievance. The PPC,
for example, has:
n heard evidence from
petitioners and sought written evidence from organisations involved in the
issue raised by a petition; and
n consulted with the
Scottish Executive or invited its members to appear before the committee.
2.19
The PPC has also made recommendations about the resubmission of
petitions which address a similar grievance to a petition previously presented.
2.20
The PPC is not bound to undertake any action and may choose not to
investigate a petition. Where the PPC takes this course however, it advises the
petitioner and presents its reasons. Petitioners are thus kept informed of the
progress, or lack thereof, on their petitions.
2.21
In India, the Lok Sabha’s Petitions Committee consists of 15 members nominated
by the Speaker.[17] A Minister may not be nominated
to this committee. As in Scotland, the committee examines the merits of
petitions, holds public hearings, calls for formal comments from Members and,
where necessary, officials from the relevant government department before
making recommendations to the House.[18] Petitioners may also be
called before the committee. The committee has produced 28 reports since 2004, which
are available from the committee’s website. Each report deals with a maximum of
six petitions, outlining the initial terms of the petition, the committee’s
recommendations and any action to be taken by the government.
Concern with the current process
2.22
Petitioners are clearly dissatisfied with the level of response to
petitions. In many cases, petitioners are simply asking that their petitions,
and the concerns expressed within them, be acknowledged. The Catholic Women’s League
Australia (CWLA), for example, submitted that:
It is simply impossible to reply to every individual, but a
message acknowledging receipt of the petition should be made to the person who
presented it accompanied by a comment indicating that the Minister has sighted
it.[19]
2.23
Miss Margaret Clinch stated that in her extensive experience of
petitioning, she and her fellow petitioners have received ‛no meaningful
written feedback.’[20] She wrote that all
petitions deserved a ‛mature’ response and that they should not be ‛ignored’.
Ms Rosalind Berry similarly remarked that petitions ‛seem to disappear
into the bowels of Parliament House and … there is little or no feedback.’[21]
GetUp was strongly of the view that it be incumbent upon Ministers to demonstrate
an awareness of the concern raised and address this in a response.[22]
GetUp recommended that the response be provided within 14 days.
2.24
Submissions to this inquiry supported a number of processes which would
enhance the role of the House in pursuing action on petitions. Miss Clinch, for example, stated that ‛petitions should all be received and examined by
the Parliament, not just sent directly to the relevant Minister.’[23]
2.25
The opportunity for petitioners to present their petition personally to
the House was also a common suggestion.[24] GetUp, for example,
considered that time should ‛be allocated each fortnight or month for
petitioners to present their petition publicly to Parliament and to address the
issues if required…’[25]
2.26
The petitions committee model established in the Scottish, German and
Indian parliaments was supported in the submissions. Ms Berry, for example,
commented:
The idea of a special committee with responsibility to look
at all petitions seems to me to be an excellent one … I would personally feel
that my input had been valued if the petitions were sent directly to a
Petitions Committee to be discussed, investigated and recommendations made.[26]
2.27
A petitions committee would also satisfy the CWLA’s suggestion that
petitions be made available ‛to interested members for study and comment’
and that ‛other Members of the House be able to respond to a petition’.[27]
2.28
GetUp was especially supportive of the Scottish PPC holding public
meetings, arguing that transparency is increased in the process, further
discouraging frivolous and vexatious petitions.[28]
Moreover, GetUp expected the government would be reassured by the ‛filtering
process’ of the petitions committee.[29]
2.29
Ms Berry also expected that any recommendations made by the petitions
committee would be sent to the relevant Minister:
There would also need to be a time limit for a response to these
recommendations and finally the person, organisation or community group
involved would be notified of the reaction to their petition. I am sure that this
would satisfy Australian petitioners.[30]
House action
2.30
The committee notes that under the existing standing orders, there is nothing
that obliges the House to respond to petitions. This needs to be changed if
petitioning is to be considered as an effective means of communicating with the
House.
2.31
In the past, the committee has considered House action only in terms of
referring petitions to general purpose standing committees and has made
repeated recommendations to that effect.[31] The Government did not
support the committee’s latest recommendation,[32] stating that:
The time and resources available for committees to undertake
inquiries into matters is limited. Requiring specific references ensures that
committee activities are not directed to matters which are not relevant to the
priorities of the House or the Government, and which have little prospect of
being acted on.[33]
A petitions committee
2.32
The committee remains of the view that in some cases it may be
appropriate for the House to ask the relevant general purpose standing
committee to consider the issues raised in a petition. However, the committee
also considers that a more effective means of ensuring the House is able to act
on petitions would be through the establishment of a petitions committee.
2.33
The committee envisages that the petitions committee would be another of
the House’s domestic committees established under chapter 16 of the standing
orders. Like other such committees, it would consist of Members from both
sides of the House, would be chaired by a Government Member and would be
supported by senior parliamentary staff.
Role of proposed petitions committee
2.34
The committee would manage all aspects of the processing of petitions
including:
n maintain a petitions
website (accessible from a button on the House of Representatives home page);[34]
n publish and
disseminate a (redesigned) petitions proforma and ensure all Members had hard
copies in their offices to facilitate public access to petitioning;
n receive all petitions
and acknowledge receipt to the principal petitioner;
n ensure petitions are
consistent with the standing orders and negotiate with the principal petitioner
(where necessary) to address any problems;
n exercise a discretion
to disallow petitions which are unlawful or otherwise offensive or
inappropriate and notify the principal petitioner in such cases;
n liaise with the principal
petitioner regarding all stages of his/her petition;
n arrange
administrative processing including counting the signatories and arranging for
presentation of petitions to the House and putting terms of petitions on the
website; and
n monitor the standing
orders relating to petitions and advise the House where improvements can be
made.
2.35
There would continue to be a range of options for the presentation of
petitions. To enhance the status of petitions the committee believes they
should be formally presented to the House by the Speaker (or possibly the Chair
of the petitions committee). Members could however, still choose to present a
petition with which they have been associated, during periods of Private
Members’ business.[35]
Committee role in improving the processing of petitions
2.36
The petitions committee would hold regular meetings to discuss petitions
and decide what should be done with each one. Options could include:
n forwarding the
petition to the relevant Minister with a request that he/she consider the terms
and respond appropriately;
n recommending the
House refer the terms of the petition to the relevant subject matter committee;
n holding an informal briefing on the terms of the petition through discussions with the principal petitioner
and those who could address the issues raised (Ministers, departmental
officers, others as appropriate);
n holding formal public
hearings on the terms of the petition; and
n other actions as
determined by the petitions committee.
2.37
The introduction of a ‛principal petitioner’ is an important
factor in making responses to petitions more effective. This concept is in use
in other parliaments (including the Scottish Parliament) and essentially
requires, on the first page of the petition (if there are multiple pages), an
individual petitioner to provide full contact details. All communication
between the petitions committee and petitioners would be through this ‛principal
petitioner’.
2.38
Once the committee had received, considered or inquired into the terms
of a petition, it would report to the House. The committee could have a regular
time to report on petitions received and any action taken, following, for
example, the Clerk’s announcement of petitions on sitting Mondays. The
petitions committee would separately report to the House where the committee
decides to hold a formal inquiry and produce a specific report.
Issues regarding a petitions committee
2.39
In reaching the conclusion that a petitions committee should be established,
the committee considered two potential difficulties, namely the cost of
resourcing an additional parliamentary committee, and the concern of raising
petitioners’ expectations of further action.
Resourcing a new committee
2.40
The committee is aware of concerns that parliamentary committees are
currently under-resourced and that Members are often asked to sit on too many
committees. This in turn has an effect on the ability of Members to contribute
as well as they would like to each of the committees they serve on. It could therefore
be argued that increasing the number of committees would simply stretch Members
further.
2.41
The committee accepts that the establishment of a petitions committee
would require additional resources or the re-allocation of resources within the
House department. It remains of the view that the benefit of a dedicated
petitions committee is worthy of the support of the House. The committee
discussed some of the objections to this view which might arise. For example,
it might be considered that a compromise could be proposed in the form of a sub-committee
of the Standing Committee on Procedure to be responsible for petitions.
2.42
The committee strongly cautions against any proposal to merge the
existing procedure committee with the proposed petitions committee for two
reasons. Establishing a dedicated petitions committee should represent a
conscious decision by the House and Government to give petitioning a much more
prominent role and acknowledge that petitions can in fact make a difference to
our democracy. To merge the proposed petitions committee with the existing procedure
committee would reduce the effectiveness of both committees and their capacity
to thoroughly investigate their quite separate subjects—House procedure on the
one hand; individual petitions on the other. Moreover, in no parliament
reviewed in this report, has a petitions committee been a subcommittee of the
procedure committee.
Raising community expectations
2.43
A second concern is that a petitions committee might raise petitioners’ expectations
that each petition would be actioned by the committee—in the petitioners’
favour. Having analysed the terms of petitions presented to the House so far
this year, it is clear that in a number of cases, the petitions committee would
only be able to acknowledge the petition and refer its terms to the relevant Minister
as is currently the case. At the very least, the principal petitioner would get
an acknowledgement from the committee advising him/her that the petition had
been presented to the House, considered by the committee and referred to the
relevant Minister for information and possible response.
2.44
While any response issued by a petitions committee is a far better
outcome than the current system provides, it is likely that the petitions committee
would present two types of reports—regular reports recommending the referral of
petitions to either a Minister or the relevant subject committee, and reports
of its own inquiries into a small number of petitions. In relation to the first
type of report, the petitions committee would still be able to monitor the
progress of its recommended referrals, as the Scottish PPC does, and present
this on the committee’s website.
2.45
On the basis that a petitions committee would provide a demonstrable
sign that petitions continue to be a respected form of democratic participation
and ought to be taken seriously by a modern House, and that a petitions
committee would be able to distinguish between petitions that can be actioned
by the House and those that would require further government action, the
committee recommends that a petitions committee be established in the House of
Representatives.
Recommendation 1 |
|
The committee recommends that a petitions committee be
established to receive and process petitions and to inquire into and report
on any possible action to be taken in response to them. |
Government action
2.46
The committee acknowledges the effectiveness of dispute resolution
processes in ombudsman offices at both Commonwealth and State level.[36]
Since the early 1970s Australia has seen the proliferation of independent bodies
charged with the responsibility of investigating and resolving disputes between
citizens and government as an essential mechanism of accountability.
2.47
This notwithstanding, the committee notes the serious concerns expressed
in submissions about the lack of Government action on petitions and remains
disappointed that one individual will have a much greater chance of receiving a
written response to his or her letter than a group of petitioners who have
collectively expressed a grievance. Moreover, citizens have a historical right
to directly address their representatives and this should continue to be
respected.
2.48
The committee’s previous reports have consistently sought both more
timely responses and obligatory responses from Government. The committee
reiterates its view that Ministers should respond to the requests contained in
petitions referred to them within 90 days of their presentation to the House.
Recommendation 2 |
|
The committee recommends that where a petition has been
referred to a Minister for response, the Minister be expected to table a
response in the House within 90 days of its presentation. |
Member involvement
2.49
Under the current standing orders, Member involvement in petitioning is
essentially limited to administrative processing. An exception is the
presentation of petitions during Members’ statements or when a petition refers
to a motion or order of the day called on for the first time.[37]
Given that petitioning is the only direct communication between individuals and
the House, the committee sees four areas for improvement in Member involvement:
n enhancing
opportunities for Members to represent the issues raised by petitioners (see
Recommendation 3);
n ensuring that Members
need only be associated with issues they choose to support;
n ensuring that the
public appreciate the difference between a Member supporting the views
expressed in a petition and the Member initiating a petition; and
n freeing Members of
their current administrative role in the petitioning process (see
Recommendation 4).
Streamlining petition administration
2.50
Under standing order 207, only Members may lodge a petition. This
involves Members writing their name and electorate at the beginning of the
petition and counting and writing the number of signatories at the beginning of
the petition.[38]
2.51
Members who wish to present the petition in person during Members’ statements
in the House or Main Committee,[39] or during a relevant
motion or order of the day,[40] must obtain
certification by the Clerk or Deputy Clerk that it complies with the standing
orders before presentation.[41]
2.52
Members who would prefer to have the petition presented via the Clerk’s
announcement on Monday (the vast majority) must ensure that the petition is
lodged with the Clerk by 12 noon on the Friday before.[42]
2.53
When a petition is sent directly to the House of Representatives, the
Clerk must find a Member willing to lodge the petition on behalf of the petitioners.
The submission from the Clerk of the House suggests an amendment to the
standing orders:
…to allow petitions that had not been lodged by Members to be
presented by means of the Clerk’s announcement without formal lodgement by
Members.[43]
2.54
The proposal received support from other submissions. The CWLA submitted
that ‛it is entirely appropriate for a Member to present a petition but
there ought to be an alternative route for the presentation of a petition to
the House.’[44] It was similarly
suggested that allowing petitions to be accepted without formal submission by
Members would make it less daunting for petitioners to assemble a petition, and
would make lodging a petition easier by de-bureaucratising the process.[45]
The proposal would also circumvent the problem of petitioners facing a ‛hostile
local Member’ who refused to lodge a given petition.[46]
It would also address the problem of Members feeling obliged to lodge a
petition from citizens in their electorates even though they might find the
sentiments in the petition objectionable.
2.55
Establishing a petitions committee would eliminate the need for Members
to continue their administrative responsibilities in relation to petitions. As
previously outlined, the petitions committee would assume responsibility for:
n counting signatures
and noting the number on the front page of the petition;
n ensuring the petition
complied with the standing orders and helping to amend any problems in this
respect by contacting the principal petitioner;
n acknowledging receipt;
and
n arranging for
presentation.
2.56
The committee also acknowledges that in lodging a petition, Members can
sometimes be associated with a grievance that they do not personally support.
As representatives however, Members may still feel obliged to present the
petition in spite of their concerns. By allowing petitions to be received by a
petitions committee, for eventual presentation by either the Speaker or the
Chair of the committee, Members could be spared this particular ‛conflict’.
Enhancing a Member’s representational role
2.57
Although the majority of petitions presented are announced by the Clerk
of the House on sitting Mondays, Members are able to use other opportunities to
present petitions to raise awareness of issues affecting their constituents and
their local area. Standing orders 209(b) and (c) allow Members to present a petition
during Members’ statements in the House and Main Committee (see table 2.3
below), and during a relevant motion or order of the day.
Table 2.3 Presentation of petitions during Members’
statements
|
2001
|
2002
|
2003
|
2004
|
2005
|
2006
|
2007*
|
All petitions received by
House
|
250
|
319
|
369
|
471
|
235
|
276
|
148
|
Presented during statements
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In House
|
5
|
4
|
11
|
5
|
6
|
3
|
3
|
In Main Committee
|
1
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
1
|
8
|
0
|
Total presented during statements
|
6
|
10
|
18
|
13
|
7
|
11
|
3
|
Percentage presented during statements
|
2.4%
|
3.1%
|
4.9%
|
2.8%
|
3.0%
|
4.0%
|
2.0%
|
Source Chamber Research Office
Note * to 21 June 2007
2.58
The submission from the Clerk of the House notes the potential for
confusion that exists for Members in identifying when they are able to present
petitions.[47] There have been
instances where Members have attempted to present petitions during other
opportunities for Private Members such as the adjournment debates in the House[48]
and Main Committee.[49]
2.59
The Clerk therefore suggests that the House extend opportunities for
Members to present petitions at these times. The Clerk saw a key advantage for
Members in having the opportunity to make longer speeches on a given issue.[50]
2.60
Noting that the proportion of petitions presented by Members is
relatively small, the committee agrees that Members should be able to present
petitions from their constituents during periods of Private Members’ business,
including during adjournment debates in the House and Main Committee, and in
the grievance debate.
Recommendation 3 |
|
The committee recommends that Members be permitted to
present petitions during the adjournment debates in the House and Main
Committee and during the grievance debate on Mondays. |
Members’ sponsorship of petitions
2.61
On the understanding that petitions should remain in the hands of the
public, the committee is concerned that Members may play a far greater role in
the preparation and sponsorship of petitions than the spirit of the standing
orders imply.
2.62
Currently a petition must not contain any indication that it has been
sponsored or distributed by a Member of the House.[51]
However, under the same standing order, a petition may show the name and
address of a Member as an address to which the petition may be sent for
presentation to the House.
2.63
This rule followed a recommendation of the Procedure Committee in its
1986 report, Days and Hours. At that time the committee remarked on the
significant proportion of all petitions generated by Members: in line with the
old rules, the terms of one particular petition had been presented on 94
separate occasions in 1985—four Members had presented that petition 70 times.[52]
The committee therefore recommended that petitions no longer be sponsored or
distributed by Members and the recommendation was adopted by the House on 15 September 1987.
2.64
The submission from the Clerk of the House notes that petitions continue
to be generated and circulated by Members, with the sponsorship details removed
from the petition before it is submitted to the House.[53]
2.65
While it is apparent that some Members are not entirely familiar with
the rule—a number have advised the House of their involvement in collating a
petition[54]—it is also clear that
the standing order itself is inconsistent. On the one hand it expects that
Members will not sponsor a petition, but it allows Members to provide their
contact details so that petitioners can return a petition to his or her office
for lodgement purposes. The distinction between ‛sponsorship’ and ‛distribution’
may be one not entirely understood by the public.
2.66
The committee therefore proposes that standing order 205(g) be deleted. The
establishment of a petitions committee would remove any need for Members to add
their contact details on a petition because petitions could be sent directly to
the petitions committee. Members may also choose to bring a petition to the
petitions committee personally on behalf of their constituents.
Recommendation 4 |
|
The committee recommends that standing order 205(g) concerning
Members’ sponsorship and distribution of petitions be deleted.
The committee also recommends that all petitions be sent to
the Department of the House of Representatives for administrative processing
and certification, either directly or via a Member of the House. |