Introductory Info
Date introduced: 4 July 2019
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs
Commencement: Sections 1 to 3 commence on Royal Assent. Schedule 1 commences on a day to be fixed by Proclamation or six months after Royal Assent, whichever occurs first.
History of
the Bill
The Migration Amendment (Streamlining Visa Processing)
Bill 2018 (2018 Bill) was introduced into the House of Representatives on
29 November 2018. The Bill was not debated, and lapsed at the
dissolution of the 45th Parliament on 11 April 2019.[1]
The present Bill was introduced into the House of
Representatives on 4 July 2019, and is in identical terms to the 2018
Bill.
A Bills
digest was prepared in respect of the 2018 Bill.[2]
Much of the material in the present Digest has been sourced from that earlier
one.
Purpose of the Bill
The purpose of the Migration Amendment (Streamlining Visa
Processing) Bill 2019 (the Bill) is to amend the Migration Act 1958
(the Act) to allow the Minister to require certain classes of visa applicants
to provide their biometric data as a precondition to lodging a valid visa
application.
The Bill is aimed at streamlining the existing process in
which visa applicants can only be legally required to provide biometric data
once they have lodged their application.[3]
Background
Biometrics
collection under the Migration Act
Under the Act, biometrics are referred to as ‘personal
identifiers’, and can include fingerprints and handprints, height and weight
measurements, facial images, audio or video recordings, and an iris scan or
signature.[4]
The Explanatory Memorandum to the present Bill describes the importance of such
data as follows:
Once ‘anchored’ to a person’s biographic information, such as
a name, nationality and date of birth, a biometric adds significantly to
verifying that a person is who they claim to be, and to linking an individual
to security, law enforcement and immigration information.[5]
Section 257A was inserted into the Act by the Migration Amendment
(Strengthening Biometrics Integrity) Act 2015, and provides the
Minister and immigration officers with broad powers to require non-citizens—as
well as Australian citizens entering or leaving the country—to provide
biometric data for the purposes of the Act or Regulations.[6]
This may be done by ‘identification tests’ performed by Departmental officers,
through automated systems such as airport SmartGates, or in another way
specified by the Minister or officer.[7]
Despite the broad collection power, there is currently no
express statutory requirement that visa applicants provide personal identifiers
at the time of lodging their application. The power to collect biometrics under
section 257A is structured around requiring personal identifiers from ‘a
person’, rather than imposing a general obligation to provide biometrics in
specific circumstances, or on a specific class of non-citizens. This means that
a requirement to provide personal identifiers can only be made under section
257A once the application is lodged. Nonetheless, failure to provide personal
identifiers when required to do so in connection with a visa application
renders the application invalid, unless the Minister chooses to waive the
requirement.[8]
Current
biometrics program
Since 2010 the Department of Home Affairs (DOHA) has been
running a biometrics program for offshore visa applicants in designated
countries.[9]
This involves taking a digital photograph and fingerprint scan at the time the
person lodges their application.[10]
Applicants applying from a country and for a visa that are part of the program
must provide these identifiers at an Australian Visa Application Centre (AVAC)
or Australian Biometrics Collection Centre (ABCC) located in the relevant
country. These centres are operated by four companies with which the Department
has service delivery arrangements.[11]
The DOHA website lists 45 countries as currently part of
the biometrics program.[12]
The Department states that the current locations for biometrics collection have
been selected on the basis of national security and fraud risks, locations
where the Australian Government can share facilities with Five Country
Conference partners (Canada, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United
States), and for broad geographic coverage.[13]
Currently applicants provide their biometric data on an
ostensibly voluntary basis, with an officer able to invoke section 257A if a
person refuses to comply or has submitted an application other than in person.[14]
Use
and protection of biometric data
The Privacy Act 1988 and Australian Privacy
Principles (APPs) regulate the handling of personal information by Commonwealth
government agencies and certain private sector organisations.[15]
Under the Privacy Act, biometric information is considered ‘sensitive
information’ if it is used for the purpose of automated biometric verification
or identification, and therefore afforded a higher level of protection than
other types of personal information.[16]
Limitations include that sensitive information can only be collected with
consent (unless a specified exception applies) and can only be used or
disclosed for a secondary purpose to which it was collected if this is directly
related to the primary purpose of collection.[17]
However, it is an exception to these restrictions if the collection, use or
disclosure is required or authorised by an Australian law.[18]
The Migration Act authorises the use and disclosure
of identifying information for a range of purposes.[19]
This includes, for example, disclosures:
- for
the purpose of data-matching in order to authenticate the identity of a person,
identify persons who may be of ‘character concern’ or a security concern, or to
combat document and identity fraud[20]
- that
are reasonably necessary for the enforcement of federal, state or territory
criminal law[21]
- that
are required by or under an Australian law[22]
- to
federal, state and territory agencies to verify the person is an Australian
citizen or holds a particular class of visa[23]
and
- to
a foreign country or law enforcement or border control body in a foreign
country (if authorised by the Secretary or Australian Border Force
Commissioner).[24]
It is an offence to access or disclose identifying
information without authorisation.[25]
A key concern in connection with the 2015 legislation
which introduced section 257A was the privacy impact of the Bill’s
measures—particularly in light of the broad discretion conferred by section
257A—and the absence of a Privacy Impact Assessment (PIA) of the Bill.[26]
The Department produced a PIA for the Bill in August 2015, which found that
‘while the privacy of individuals may be affected by the Bill, the expansion of
the powers to collect personal identifiers is necessary and proportional to
achieve the purpose of the Bill’.[27]
The explanatory materials for the current Bill do not state that a PIA has been
conducted or is planned.
Committee consideration
Legal and Constitutional Affairs
inquiry—2018 Bill
The 2018 Bill was referred to the Senate Standing
Committee on Legal and Constitutional Affairs for inquiry and report. The
Committee issued its report on 25 February 2019, with the majority
recommending that the Bill be passed.[28]
The Committee stated that Bill’s proposed changes:
... are an important measure towards making Australia's visa
processing system more efficient, and will help officials to identify
criminals, terrorists and other applicants of concern faster than is currently
the case.[29]
The Australian Greens issued a dissenting report which
recommended that the Bill not be passed. The Greens pointed to concerns about
the Bill raised by the Law Council of Australia and the Parliamentary Joint
Committee on Human Rights, and questioned the capacity for all people subjected
to the legislation to provide fully informed consent to the collection of their
biometric data.[30]
The Greens also raised concerns that the Bill could operate to discriminate
against people based on protected attributes (such as race, sex, religion or
national origin), by permitting a
non-disallowable instrument to require collection for specified classes of
applicants.[31]
Selection of Bills Committee
On 4 July 2019, the Selection of Bills Committee
deferred consideration of the current Bill to its next meeting.[32]
Senate Standing Committee for
the Scrutiny of Bills
The Scrutiny of Bills Committee has not reported on the current
Bill at the time of writing. In the Committee’s report on the 2018 Bill, it
expressed concern that by enabling the Minister to determine by way of non-disallowable
legislative instrument, classes of visa applicants subject to biometric
collection requirements, the Bill leaves to delegated legislation ‘significant
elements of the visa processing framework—including matters that may have
significant impacts on individuals’ privacy’.[33]
It requested advice from the Minister on the necessity and appropriateness of
this. The Committee also sought advice as to the appropriateness of amending
the Bill to:
- require
that the Minister’s determinations be disallowable and
- include
specific consultation obligations prior to the making of a determination,
including a requirement to consult with and consider the views of the Privacy
Commissioner.[34]
The Minister’s response was included and considered in the
Committee’s first report of 2019.[35]
The Minister advised that the Bill will not expand or impact the nature or type
of personal identifiers that can be required, or the purposes for which they
can be collected. The Minister stated that exempting from disallowance
instruments made under Part 2 of the Act ‘ensures certainty in visa operational
matters for the Department, as well as certainty to visa applicants...’.[36]
The Minister further advised that no specific consultations were intended to be
undertaken prior to making an instrument, stating that the Privacy Commissioner
was consulted prior to section 5A (which defines ‘personal identifiers’ and
lists the purposes for which they can be collected) being inserted into the Migration
Act.[37]
The Committee noted the Minister’s advice, but reiterated
its concern about the appropriateness of leaving significant matters to non-disallowable
legislative instruments, and drew its concerns to the attention of Senators.[38]
Policy position of
non-government parties/independents
Non-government parties and independents do not appear to
have commented on the current Bill at the time of writing. However, Labor
Senators were part of the majority of the Legal and Constitutional Affairs
Committee which recommended the 2018 Bill be passed. As noted above, the
Australian Greens issued a dissenting report opposing that Bill.
Position of major interest
groups
There was little commentary on the 2018 Bill from interest
groups, with only four submissions (including one from the Department) made to
the Senate inquiry. The Legal Services Commission of South Australia expressed
its support for the Bill.[39]
The Law Council of Australia expressed a number of concerns with the Bill,
querying the practicality of and rationale for requiring biometrics to be
provided as a criterion for valid application lodgement, rather than as part of
the
post-lodgement assessment process.[40]
In its submission, the Law Council argued that the proposed changes:
- may
place onerous requirements on certain applicants, such as those living in
remote,
poverty-stricken conditions, by requiring them to travel to an Australian
Consulate post or similar agency
- in
relation to onshore applications, appear to be contrary to the Department’s
move towards online applications
- require
further clarity regarding the way personal identifiers are to be used in the
visa processing framework, and the extent to which applicants will be informed
of these processes and have an adequate opportunity to respond
- without
adequate parliamentary oversight and consultation requirements for the making
of determinations, ‘may cast doubt over the non-discriminatory nature of
Australia’s migration programme’.[41]
There does not appear to have been any recent commentary
regarding the proposed measures.
Financial implications
The Explanatory Memorandum states the Bill will have a low
financial impact.[42]
Statement
of Compatibility with Human Rights
As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011 (Cth), the Government has assessed the
Bill’s compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or declared
in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act. The
Government considers that the Bill is compatible.[43]
Parliamentary Joint Committee on
Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights has not
commented on the present Bill at the time of writing, but reported on the 2018
Bill on 12 February 2019. The Committee raised questions as to the
Bill’s compatibility with the:
- right
to privacy
- right
to equality and non-discrimination and
- rights
of the child.
The Committee sought advice from the Minister as to whether
the Bill’s measures are proportionate to its stated objective to ensure the
integrity of the visa system and protection of the Australian community.[44]
It queried whether the Minister’s power to determine classes of persons who
must provide personal identifiers is ‘sufficiently circumscribed and
accompanied by adequate safeguards’ and whether safeguards are in place for
individuals incapable of understanding and consenting to the collection.[45]
The Committee also sought advice as to whether there are safeguards in place to
ensure the determination of ‘classes of persons’ is based on reasonable and
objective criteria, noting the potential for this to lead to distinctions based
on protected attributes.[46]
In regards to the rights of the child, the Committee stated
that the:
... collection, use, disclosure and retention of biometric
information from children as young as 5 years is a serious intrusion into their
privacy. It raises specific concerns that it may not be the least rights
restrictive approach to achieving the stated objective.[47]
The Minister provided a response to the Committee on
8 March 2019. [48]
He emphasised that the Bill provides adequate safeguards in the collection,
use, disclosure and retention of personal identifiers, including through
existing statutory requirements that a person be informed in advance of matters
such as the reason the personal identifier is required, how the information
will be collected and used, and the person’s right to complain to the
Australian Information Commissioner about the handling of personal information.[49]
In regards to minors and individuals incapable of
understanding and consenting to the collection of biometric information, the
Minister stated:
In practice, individuals incapable of understanding and
consenting to the collection of personal identifiers are also incapable of
making a visa application themselves. Instead, these people have a visa
application made on their behalf by their legal guardian... Hence, it is the
legal guardian of a person incapable of understanding and consenting to the
collection of personal identifiers, who will understand the information
provided prior to collection of personal identifiers (including how personal
identifiers are obtained from minors and incapable persons), who gives consent
of the incapable person.[50]
On the issue of the Bill’s compatibility with the right to
equality and non-discrimination, the Minister noted that decisions on which
cohorts will be included in the Minister’s determination:
...will be determined on an objective basis, namely, in line
with operational priorities, intelligence, identifiable fraud risks and other
factors informed by objective information such as the Department’s collection
and analysis of statistics and intelligence information.[51]
In response, the Committee
acknowledged the importance of the safeguards identified by the Minister, but
nonetheless stated the Minister’s response ‘does not fully address the concern
raised in the initial analysis that the power under proposed section 46(2B)
may be overly broad with respect to its stated objective’.[52]
In concluding its examination, the Committee found that the broad scope of the
proposed power raises the potential for it to be used in such ways that may
risk being incompatible with the right to privacy, right to equality and
non-discrimination, and the rights of the child. However, it also noted that
‘setting out criteria for the exercise of this power by legislative instrument
may be capable of addressing some of these concerns’.[53]
Key issues and provisions
In his second reading speech for the Bill, Minister for
Immigration, Citizenship, Migrant Services and Multicultural Affairs, David
Coleman stated the Bill is aimed at ‘streamlining ... the process by which
personal identifiers are required and provided at the time of a person applying
for a visa’ and argued:
It's important that identity checks are able to be done
against personal identifier data to detect individuals of concern as soon as
they make a visa application. Personal identifiers are far superior to checks
undertaken using biographic details such as name and date of birth that are
contained in identity documents.[54]
The Explanatory Memorandum states that obtaining personal
identifiers up front in the application process ‘promotes early detection and
assessment of critical information’.[55]
Minister’s
determination
Existing section 46 of the Act sets out the requirements
for making a valid visa application. Subsection 46(2A) currently provides an
application will be invalid if the applicant has been required to provide
personal identifiers under section 257A and has not complied with the
requirement, unless the Minister has waived the operation of this provision. If
a visa application is invalid, it cannot be considered.[56]
Item 1 of the Bill repeals this existing subsection
and substitutes proposed subsections 46(2A) to (2D). Proposed subsection 46(2B) provides
that the Minister may determine, by way of a
non-disallowable legislative instrument,[57]
that visa applicants in a specified class must provide one or more specified
types of personal identifiers in one or more specified ways. The Explanatory
Memorandum states that the way in which groups of applicants will be specified
is ‘highly flexible’, and could include the circumstances of the applicants
(such as their country of residence) or the class of visa being applied for,
‘or a combination of different factors such as these’.[58]
It further notes:
The flexibility about what classes of applicants ... can be
required to provide a personal identifier will enable the Department to collect
personal identifiers from specific cohorts in response to emergent risks based
on specified circumstances, recent events, and detected or realised threats.[59]
Proposed subsection 46(2C) provides some indication
of the broad scope of proposed subsection 46(2B), by stating
non-exhaustively that the Minister’s determination may specify: a class of visa
applicants ‘in any way’; different types of personal identifiers to be provided
by different classes of applicants; or the way in which a personal identifier
must be provided, including by way of identification tests carried out by an
authorised officer or authorised system.
Under proposed subsection 46(2A), a visa
application will be invalid if the applicant falls in a class of applicants specified
by the Minister’s determination under proposed subsection 46(2B) but
does not comply with the requirement to provide personal identifiers as
specified in the determination.
Proposed subsection 46(2D) states that an
application will be taken to have complied with the requirement to provide
personal identifiers of a specified type if the applicant is in immigration
detention, and during the detention has provided a personal identifier of that
type as required under the Act.
Absence
of an exemption/waiver provision
There is scope under existing provisions in the Act for
exemptions to be granted to the requirement to provide personal identifiers
under section 257A—this is not the case in regards to the determination power
proposed by the Bill. Section 258 states that the Minister may determine, by
way of legislative instrument, a specified person or class of persons who must
not be required to provide personal identifiers under section 257A.[60]
Furthermore, existing subsection 46(2A)—repealed by the Bill—allows the
Minister to waive a requirement to provide biometric data in connection with a
person’s visa application. The Department’s current exemption policy captures
persons such as sovereigns, heads of State, Government Ministers, diplomats and
their families, as well as Special Purpose Visa (SPV) holders (such as members
of airline crew and transit passengers).[61]
The following persons are subject to a partial exemption and may not be
required to provide fingerprint scans:
- minors
under five
- ‘incapable
persons’, defined under the Act as persons incapable of understanding the
general nature and effect of, and purposes of, a requirement to provide a
personal identifier[62]
and
- physically
incapacitated persons who may not be able to provide some or all fingerprints.
- There is also a general discretion to exempt a person from
the requirement to provide biometrics in exceptional circumstances. The
Department’s policy guidance suggests this is limited to:
- emergency
or compassionate situations (including where the applicant needs to travel
urgently to visit a family member with a serious life threatening illness) or
- where
there is ‘compelling national interest’ (such as where Australia’s trade or
business opportunities, or relationship with a foreign government, would be
adversely affected if the person is not granted the visa).[63]
In contrast, the provisions in the current Bill do not provide
for similar exemptions or waivers—if a person is captured by a determination by
the Minister under proposed subsection 46(2B), there does not appear to
be a mechanism by which they can be exempted from complying. This has the
potential to operate harshly for certain applicants, such as those who, for
example, may need to travel to Australia urgently in compassionate
circumstances but who live a long way from a biometrics collection centre in
their country. However, in his second reading speech, Minister Coleman stated
that ‘it is not intended that the requirement to provide Personal Identifiers
as an application validity requirement apply to short stay visas used in
emergency situations’.[64]
The Statement of Compatibility states that the policy
intention is that the Minister’s determination will impose the following
requirements on children applying for a General Skilled Migration visa (as
dependants on the parents’ main application):
- children
aged up to four years will need to provide a photograph and
- children
aged at least five years will need to provide a photograph and fingerprints if
resident in a specified country where personal identifier collection is
available.[65]
This appears consistent with DOHA’s existing exemptions
policy. However, the Statement of Compatibility also indicates that
requirements for the collection of personal identifiers will extend to
‘incapable persons’, and states:
...these persons will have had an application made on their
behalf by their legal guardian. Their legal guardian will also need to make
arrangements to have the incapable person’s personal identifiers collected.[66]
Proposed subparagraph 46(2C)(c)(ii) provides that
the Minister’s determination may specify that a type of personal identifier be
provided in a way other than through an identification test or an authorised
system. The Explanatory Memorandum states that this recognises:
There are circumstances where it is not practical or
efficient for personal identifiers to be provided by way of an identification
test carried out by an authorised officer or authorised system.[67]
It is not clear whether this could be used to accommodate
applicants who, due to emergency or compassionate circumstances, may be unable
to attend an AVAC or ABCC. The Department’s policy guidance provides that
offshore visa applicants can currently be required to provide personal
identifiers:
Consequential
and application provisions
Items 2 to 7 make consequential amendments
to existing provisions of the Act which deal with the collection of personal
identifiers. The effect of this is that certain requirements that currently
apply to the collection of biometric data under section 257A, will also apply
to collection pursuant to proposed subsection 46(2B). This includes
requirements that:
- authorised
officers carrying out identification tests inform the person of any prescribed
matters[69]
- the
collection of personal identifiers be done in circumstances affording
reasonable privacy to the person and not involving the removal of more clothing
than necessary, or more visual inspection than necessary for carrying out the
test[70]
- a
person not be required to provide personal identifiers in a cruel, inhuman or
degrading way, or in way that fails to treat them with humanity and with
respect for human dignity.[71]
Item 8 is an application provision which states the
Bill’s amendments will apply in relation to visa applications made on or after
commencement.
Concluding comments
The Bill strengthens the legislative basis for collecting
personal identifiers from visa applicants at the time of application. Due to
the broad collection powers which already exist under the Act, it is unlikely
to significantly expand the circumstances in which such information can be
collected. As a matter of practice biometric data is already collected from
certain classes of offshore visa applicants at the time of lodging their
application.
However, the Bill does not appear to contain scope for
discretionary exemptions which exist in relation to the existing collection
powers. It is not clear from the explanatory materials why such an exemption
provision has not been included.