Introductory Info
Date introduced: 18 September 2019
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Employment, Skills, Small and Family Business
Commencement: 1 January 2020, except Schedule 3 of the Education Legislation Amendment (Tuition Protection and Other Measures) Bill 2019, which commences the day the Act receives Royal Assent.
The Bills Digest at a glance
What the Bills do
- The
Bills address the question of how best to protect domestic vocational education
and training and higher education students in cases of provider or course
closure.
- They
propose to replace sector-managed tuition assurance arrangements with two new
tuition protection schemes (one for each sector), modelled on the existing Australian
Government Tuition Protection Service (TPS), which has been in place for
overseas students since 2012.
- Each
new scheme will be responsible for managing the process of determining if there
are replacement courses for affected students, and, in cases where there are
not, making recommendations about re-crediting the student’s VET Student Loan
or Higher Education Loan Program (HELP) borrowings related to the course.
- Arrangements
for the administration of the new schemes will be taken from the existing TPS.
The Director of the TPS will be the Director of each new scheme and the
Advisory Board for the TPS will be the Advisory Board for each new scheme.
Appointments will be on the same terms.
- Each
new scheme will be managed through a special account which will be
sector-funded by a levy made up of three components: an administrative fee
component; a risk rated premium component and a tuition protection component.
- The
administrative fee component will be as determined in a legislative instrument made
by the Minister. The risk rated premium component and tuition protection
component will be calculated using inputs determined in a legislative
instrument made by the Director, with prior approval by the Treasurer.
- TAFE
providers and providers that are owned by the Commonwealth or a state or a territory
will not be subject to the risk rated premium and special tuition protection
components of the levy, while Australian public universities (‘Table A’) will
be exempt from the new arrangements entirely. Further exemptions will be
possible through legislative instruments. Also, new providers each year will
only need to pay an administrative fee as per the relevant instrument, but not
the risk rated premium component or tuition protection component.
- The
Minister would be required to commence a review of the operation of each new
scheme, and the existing TPS (to be conducted at the same time), before 1 July
2021.
How the Bills work
- The
Bills repeal all tuition assurance provisions from the VET Student Loans
Act 2016 (VSL Act) and Higher Education
Support Act 2003 (HESA).
- They
impose participation in tuition protection arrangements and payment of the
associated levy on non-exempt providers as a condition of continuing approval
as a provider of either VET Student Loans or HELP. Civil and criminal penalties
have been included to ensure compliance.
- The
Bills create two new Acts imposing, and detailing arrangements for calculating,
each levy.
Why the Bills have been introduced
- One
impact of a stronger provider compliance approach to student loans since 2015
has been increased pressure on existing tuition assurance arrangements.
- Since
1 January 2018, interim tuition assurance arrangements have been in place,
administered by the then Department of Education and Training, now Department
of Employment, Skills, Small and Family Business, and Department of Education.
- The
Bills give effect to a Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO) 2018–19
announcement that long-term arrangements for tuition assurance would be
introduced.
Purpose of the Bills
The purpose of the Education
Legislation Amendment (Tuition Protection and Other Measures) Bill 2019
(the Main Bill), VET
Student Loans (VSL Tuition Protection Levy) Bill 2019 (the VSL Levy Bill),
and Higher
Education Support (HELP Tuition Protection Levy) Bill 2019 (the HELP Levy
Bill) is to give effect to a Mid-Year
Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO) 2018–19 commitment to:
... deliver long term tuition assurance services to support
students with VET Student Loans (VSL) and non-university higher education
FEE-HELP loans. This measure will ensure students are protected from provider
or course closures by identifying alternative providers to allow students to
continue their study, or offering a refund of tuition fees if there are no replacement
providers.[1]
The approach proposed in the Bills is closely based on the
Australian Government Tuition Protection Service
(TPS)[2],
as set out in the Education
Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 (ESOS Act). The TPS assists
overseas students if an Australian higher education or vocational education and
training (VET) provider is unable to fully deliver a course of study they are
enrolled in due to either course or provider closure.
Structure of the Bills
The Main Bill is structured according to three schedules:
- Schedule
1 proposes to amend the VET Student Loans
Act 2016 (VSL Act) to replace current tuition assurance
arrangements with a new VET Student Loans
(VSL) tuition protection scheme,[3]
and make minor consequential amendments to the ESOS Act
- Schedule
2 proposes to amend the Higher Education
Support Act 2003 (HESA) to replace current tuition assurance
arrangements with a new Higher
Education Loan Program (HELP) tuition protection
scheme[4]
- Schedule 3 does not relate specifically to tuition
protection. It proposes minor amendments to the VSL Act provisions that
require the Secretary to revoke approval as a VSL provider at the request of
that provider.
The other two Bills are
in near identical terms and relate to the calculation
and administration of levies to fund the two new tuition protection schemes:
- the
VSL Levy Bill proposes to create the VET Student Loans (VSL Tuition
Protection Levy) Act 2019 (the VSL Levy Act) to impose a VSL tuition protection levy
- the HELP Levy Bill proposes to create the Higher
Education Support (HELP Tuition Protection Levy) Act 2019 (the HELP Levy
Act) to impose a HELP tuition protection levy.
Background
Ongoing efforts to address the impact of VET FEE-HELP
This package of Bills is part of ongoing efforts to
address the impact of the program that preceded VSL, VET FEE-HELP, which ran
from 2008 to 2016 as part of HELP. VET FEE-HELP has ultimately become known for
enabling increases in course fees and unrecoverable student debt.[5]
The program was described in the 2017 Review of the
National Vocational Education and Training Regulator Act 2011 as ‘an
unusually dramatic case of how a policy with poor design and implementation can
impact adversely on students and their families, employers, peak bodies,
government, and the Australian community.’[6]
Since 2015, the Parliament has taken a number of steps to
address the unintended consequences of the program, including reforms to VET
FEE-HELP, such as banning inducements for students to enrol in VET courses,
clarifying student rights and obligations, and introducing a stricter
compliance regime to address unacceptable and unscrupulous provider conduct.[7]
In December 2016, the VSL Act was passed by the
Parliament.[8]
The VSL Act replaced VET FEE-HELP with VSL from 1 January 2017 (with the
exception of some students remaining in the old scheme under grandfathering
arrangements until 31 December 2018) and introduced tighter provider
eligibility requirements and lending controls for the replacement program.[9]
A VET Student Loans Ombudsman (VSLO) was then established within
the Office of the Commonwealth Ombudsman from 1 July 2017, to investigate
complaints about the VET Student Loans and VET FEE-HELP schemes.[10]
Tuition assurance arrangements
Since the introduction of VSL, the question of how best to
support students through course and provider closures has remained open, as the
stronger compliance approach from 2015 has intensified pressure on existing
arrangements:
Cracking down on abuses of the [VET FEE-HELP] scheme and then
shutting down the scheme itself led to bankruptcy among some providers who had
built a business model around these loan payments. Genuine students part way
through their course were stranded, without recommendation to an alternative
RTO [registered training organisation] that would continue their training.
... tuition assurance operators have been overwhelmed by the
scale of the problem and by the numbers of ‘displaced’ students whom they have
found difficult to place with alternate RTOs.[11]
Tuition assurance is currently available under the VSL
Act and HESA to domestic students who defer their course fees
through VSL and HELP, in the event that their provider closes, or ceases to
provide their course as intended before the student completes.[12]
It provides students with a means to either undertake a replacement course, or
have their course fees refunded.[13]
These arrangements are discussed in more detail below, under key issues and
provisions.
When VSL first commenced, two sector bodies, the Australian
Council for Private Education and Training (ACPET, now the Independent Tertiary
Education Council Australia (ITECA)) and TAFE Directors Australia (TDA) were
provisionally approved as tuition assurance providers until 31 December 2017.[14]
In December 2017, as part of MYEFO 2017–18, the Government
announced the ACPET and TDA tuition assurance schemes would cease, and the then
Department of Education and Training would administer interim arrangements from
1 January 2018 while longer term arrangements were developed for 2019 onwards.[15]
Those interim arrangements remain in place at the time of writing, administered
by the Department of Education (for higher education students) and Department
of Employment, Skills, Small and Family Business (for VET students).[16]
The Department of Employment, Skills, Small and Family Business lists seven
provider closures that have been addressed during this time.[17]
In January 2018, the Review of the
National Vocational Education and Training Regulator Act 2011 cited a
range of concerns from students about the sector-led tuition assurance
arrangements, based on the VSLO submission to the review. These were:
- the complexity of the tuition assurance arrangement process
- the lack of
clear, consistent and accurate information regarding tuition assurance
- delays in
receiving information from tuition assurance operators
- the record
keeping practices of RTOs
- the assessment practices of RTOs,
particularly unmarked assessment items and the failure to record assessment
outcomes
- delays in
obtaining student records from ASQA
- delays in
receiving offers from tuition assurance operators
- the lack of
transparency around tuition assurance placements
- the apparent
lack of oversight of tuition assurance operators
- an apparent
lack of recourse for students who are dissatisfied with their tuition assurance
offer.[18]
The review recommended the Government assume responsibility
for the operation of all tuition assurance and protection arrangements,
reflecting:
Given the magnitude of the problems experienced recently and
given the churn in the VET system reported by ASQA as RTOs open and close
operations, and the ensuing impact on ASQA’s time and resources, there is merit
in the Government maintaining control of tuition assurance, though some
operational aspects may be undertaken by non-government operators. A levy paid
by providers for a new scheme would create the fund for a government-managed
scheme. Such a fund could emulate the Overseas Students Tuition Fund which
provides the money for refunds or placement in another course to international
students.[19]
In August 2018, then Assistant Minister for Vocational
Education and Skills, Karen Andrews, announced the TPS would be expanded to VET
Student Loans (VETSL), and non-university higher education providers’ (NUHEP)
FEE-HELP students.[20]
The latest available published figures show:
- in
2018, there were 182 approved course providers under the VETSL program— 23 TAFE
providers, 13 other public organisations (including Australian public
universities), and 146 private providers and
- there
are 139 higher education providers registered to provide Commonwealth
assistance, including 38 Table A providers (Australian public universities),
four Table B providers (Australian private universities), two table C providers
(Australian branches of overseas universities), and around 95 NUHEPs approved
to provide FEE-HELP.[21]
The Tuition Protection Service
The TPS has been operating across Australia’s
international education sector since 1 July 2012. Under Part 5 of the ESOS
Act, students of discontinued courses either complete their studies in
another course with their original provider, move to complete a course with
another provider, or receive a refund of the unused portion of any pre-paid
tuition fees. Where the provider cannot fulfil its obligations to the student
directly, the TPS acts as a single point of contact for students to manage the
transfer or refund process.
The TPS Director and Advisory Board
The TPS is governed by a TPS Director appointed by the
Minister and an Advisory Board comprising a representative from each of the
Department of Education, Department of Finance, Department of Home Affairs,
Australian Government Actuary, Australian Prudential Regulation Authority and
up to seven other members appointed by the Minister on the basis of skills and
experience.[22]
The TPS Advisory Board is responsible for advising the TPS Director on the
annual TPS levy.[23]
The primary functions of the TPS Director under the ESOS
Act are to:
- place
and/or provide refunds to international students in accordance with the ESOS
Act requirements
- report
to the Minister on the operations of the TPS and the Overseas Student Tuition
Fund (OSTF)
- manage
the TPS to ensure it meets its liabilities and
- make
the TPS levy legislative instrument each year.[24]
The TPS levy
TPS operations are funded by education providers through
the TPS levy, which is charged as a condition of registration on the Commonwealth Register of Institutions and Courses for Overseas Students
(CRICOS), the record of all Australian education providers approved to
offer courses to people studying in Australia on student visas.[25]
Levy revenue is paid into the OSTF, which is a special
account for the purposes of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (the PGPA Act), and is established under section 52A of
the ESOS Act.[26]
Under section 80 of the PGPA Act, if an Act establishes a special
account and identifies the purposes of the account, then the
Consolidated Revenue Fund[27]
is appropriated for expenditure for those purposes, up to the balance of the
special account at the time.
Under section 5 of the Education Services
for Overseas Students (TPS Levies) Act 2012 (TPS Levies Act),
the amount of the TPS levy for a registered provider is the sum of four
components: the administrative fee, base fee, risk rated premium and special
tuition protection fee for the year. The administrative and base fees components
are responsive to fluctuations in student numbers, and are set by legislative
instrument by the Minister.[28]
The risk rated premium and special tuition protection components are calculated
based on factors set each year by legislative instrument by the TPS Director,
in response to provider risk factors and other relevant considerations.[29]
Exemptions
Under section 12 of the TPS Levies Act, the
Minister may exempt classes of providers from paying the base fee and/or risk
rated premium component of the levy. The Education Services for
Overseas Students (TPS Levies) Act 2012 (Levy exemptions) Determination 2012
(No. 1) specifies that Table A providers, government schools, and state or
territory VET institutions are exempt from the risk-rated premium component of
the levy.[30]
Additionally, the specified percentage, which determines
how much special tuition protection component providers must pay, has been set
at zero every year since the TPS was introduced in 2012.[31]
This means Australian public universities, government
schools, and state or territory VET institutions are only paying the
administrative fee and base fee parts of the TPS levy each year, while other
providers are also paying a risk-rated premium component.
TPS operations
As shown in Table 1 below, from its first year of
operation in 2012–13 to 2018–19 (the most recent reporting year), the TPS has
responded to 62 provider closures affecting 8,352 students. In 37 cases, the
TPS was required to provide active assistance to students with 3,229 calls on
the OSTF finalised at a total cost of $8.5 million.[32]
Table
1: provider closures and resulting financial impact on the OSTF (2012–13 to 2018–19)
Year |
Provider
closures |
Closures
requiring
TPS
assistance |
Number
of
students
displaced/
assisted |
Number of
calls on the
OSTF
finalised |
Cost of calls
on the
OSTF
(‘000) |
OSTF closing
balance
(‘000) |
2012–13 |
9 |
6 |
907 |
172 |
$358 |
$5,982 |
2013–14 |
1 |
1 |
161 |
94 |
$187 |
$11,989 |
2014–15 |
2 |
1 |
548 |
23 |
$121 |
$19,869 |
2015–16 |
12 |
6 |
1,534 |
187 |
$1,059 |
$28,168 |
2016–17 |
9 |
9 |
2,694 |
1,415 |
$2,061 |
$34,579 |
2017–18 |
13 |
6 |
1,495 |
448 |
$2,707 |
$36,433 |
2018–19 |
16 |
8 |
1,013 |
890 |
$2,007 |
$40,635 |
Total |
62 |
37 |
8,352 |
3,229 |
$8,500 |
- |
Source: TPS Annual report 2012–13; Annual report
2013–14; Annual report 2014–15; Annual report 2015–16; Annual
report 2016–17; Annual report 2017–18; Annual report 2018–19.[33]
TPS financial viability
As shown in Table 1 above, TPS levy revenue has
consistently outstripped OSTF expenditure.
In 2017, the Education Services
for Overseas Students (TPS Levies) Amendment Act 2017 was passed by the
Parliament with the aim of providing the Minister flexibility to address over‑funding
of the OSTF, by moving components of the levy that were at that time set in the
TPS Levies Act into legislative instruments.[34]
The ability to shift levy charges in response to changing
circumstances is a key component to the TPS design, with calls on the precursor
fund (the ESOS Assurance Fund) from 2008 to 2011 having been much larger than
has so far been experienced by the TPS ($27.5 million as compared with the $6.5
million so far paid out from the OSTF).[35]
Stakeholder
views of the TPS
International education providers have reported that there
are significant benefits from the TPS system both in terms of safeguarding
students and the reputation of Australia’s international education sector.[36]
However, some public providers have expressed concern
about the calculation of the levy, arguing that their costs exceed their risk
of default. Universities Australia stated in its submission to the 2014 Review
of the ESOS Framework Discussion Paper that ‘high quality, low risk providers ...
continue to offset risk posed by other parts of the industry’.[37]
Committee consideration
Senate Standing Committee for the Selection of Bills
At its meeting on 18 September 2019, the Senate Standing
Committee for the Selection of Bills deferred consideration of whether to refer
the Bills to a committee for inquiry.[38]
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
At the time of writing, the Senate Standing Committee for
the Scrutiny of Bills had not considered the Bills.[39]
Policy position of non-government parties/independents
At the time of writing, no non-government parties or
independents had publicly commented on the Bills.
Position of major interest groups
ACPET, now ITECA, has been broadly supportive of the
changes, stating in 2018 that ‘[m]odelling the scheme on the highly successful
international TPS makes sense and will ensure appropriate governance and a
focus on both students and the interests of the industry.’[40]
Financial implications
According to the Explanatory Memorandum to the Main Bill,
the measure is expected to raise $3 million over the forward estimates, as
a result of the revenue collected through the levy system.[41]
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
Bills’ 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 Bills are compatible.[42]
Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights
At the time of writing, the Parliamentary Joint Committee
on Human Rights had not considered the Bills.[43]
Key issues and provisions
Schedule 1 of the Main Bill—changes relating to VSL
Current tuition assurance arrangements
Currently, to be an approved course provider to offer VSL
under the VSL Act, a body must be party to an approved tuition assurance
arrangement.[44]
The Secretary can exempt a provider from this requirement.[45]
An approved tuition assurance arrangement:
- meets
any requirements set out in the VET Student Loans
Rules 2016 (the rules)
- provides
for students whose tuition fees are covered by VSL to be able to finish their
course or an equivalent course and
- repays
a student’s tuition fees that were paid using VSL if it is impractical for a
student to finish the course or equivalent course.[46]
Assistance from the tuition assurance operator will take
one of two forms:
- the
student is provided with a way to finish the course, or an equivalent course or
- if
it is impractical for the student to finish the course or equivalent course,
the operator repays the student’s tuition fees.[47]
If the second of these occurs, the course provider is
required to re-credit a student’s FEE‑HELP balance for the amount used to
pay tuition fees for the course.[48]
The FEE-HELP balance is the amount the student has available as possible
borrowings, up to the FEE-HELP limit. For 2019, the FEE-HELP limit is $104,440.[49]
Re-crediting means the VSL debt is reduced by the relevant amount.[50]
As VSL debt decreases, the FEE-HELP balance (the amount the student is able to
borrow) increases.
If the course provider re-credits a student’s FEE-HELP balance,
they must notify the student and the tuition assurance scheme operator as soon
as possible.[51]
They must also repay the Commonwealth for the re-credited amount.[52]
While not absolving the provider of their
responsibilities, the tuition assurance scheme operator can also be required to
repay the re-credited FEE-HELP balance to the Commonwealth.[53]
A large proportion of the detailed requirements for
tuition assurance arrangements are contained in the rules, including
requirements for tuition assurance providers, information that must be provided
to students and the Secretary, notice periods, and rights to review.
Items 3, 5, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 15, 21 and 31 repeal
all of the tuition assurance provisions of the VSL Act, with, where
relevant, replacement references to tuition protection, with the effect that
there would no longer be any legal basis to require providers seeking approval to
offer VSL to be party to an approved tuition assurance arrangement.
However, under the application and transitional provisions
at item 42, the repeal of tuition assurance requirements related to
becoming an approved course provider will not apply to providers that are
already approved at the time the changes come into effect. Courses that were
not provided to completion prior to the commencement of the proposed changes
are to be dealt with under the tuition assurance arrangements as if these
repeals had not happened. The effect of this is to ensure providers are not
relieved of their responsibilities to students who may have experienced course
or provider closure prior to the introduction of the new arrangements. This
does not exempt existing approved course providers from participation in the
new tuition protection scheme.
New
definitions
Items 2, 4, 6 and 10 propose a number of new
definitions be inserted into section 6 (definitions) of the VSL Act as
outlined in Table 2 below, to support the administration of the proposed new
VSL tuition protection scheme.
Table 2: new
definitions inserted into the VSL Act by Schedule 1
Item
reference |
Term |
Definition |
2 |
affected part |
A part of the course that a
student was enrolled in when an approved course provider defaulted in
relation to the student. |
4 |
default |
See section 66B
(discussed below). |
4 |
Education Minister |
The Minister who
administers the Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000. |
4 |
eligible student |
See section 9. |
4 |
listed course
provider |
See subsection 27(2). |
6 |
original course |
An approved course in
relation to which an approved course provider has defaulted. |
6 |
replacement component
|
A part of a replacement
course that replaces an affected part of an original course. |
6 |
replacement course
|
An approved course that
enables a student to finish:
(a) an original
course; or
(b) a course that is equivalent to an original course.
|
10 |
VSL Tuition
Protection Director |
The person referred to in
section 66M. |
10 |
VSL Tuition
Protection Fund |
The VSL Tuition Protection
Fund established by section 66J. |
10 |
VSL Tuition
Protection Fund Advisory Board |
The VSL Tuition Protection
Fund Advisory Board established by section 66Q. |
10 |
VSL tuition
protection levy |
The levy imposed by the VET
Student Loans (VSL Tuition Protection Levy) Act 2019. |
Source: Explanatory
Memorandum to the Main Bill.
Establishing
VET Student Loans Tuition Protection
Item 1 proposes to insert into the outline of the VSL
Act at section 5, a description of:
- proposed
part 5A, which sets out arrangements relating to tuition protection and
- proposed
part 5B, which establishes the VSL Tuition Protection Fund, the office of the
VSL Tuition Protection Director and the VSL Tuition Protection Fund Advisory
Board.
Item 20 inserts part 5A and part 5B. The details of
the proposed parts are set out below.
Proposed Part 5A—tuition protection
Proposed section 66A, at the beginning of Part 5A,
specifies that the tuition protection arrangements are to apply to providers
other than Table A providers and providers prescribed by the rules.[54]
Like the existing TPS then, particular providers, or classes of providers, can
be exempt from the tuition protection arrangements.
Proposed section 66B sets out a new definition of
provider default in relation to a student, covering circumstances
where:
- the
course the student is enrolled in does not start as scheduled, providing the
student has not withdrawn from the course before that day or
- the
course, or part of the course, the student is enrolled in, ceases after
starting but before completion or
- in
circumstances prescribed by the rules.
In both the two former cases, either VSL must have been approved
on or before the relevant day, or on that day the student must have been
eligible to have VSL approved in relation to the course. Section 9 of the VSL
Act includes having applied for VSL among the requirements to be considered
an eligible student, so this provision does not apply to a
student who could have used VSL to pay their course fees but chose instead to
pay up-front.
Proposed section 66C introduces requirements for
the approved provider to notify the VSL Tuition Protection Director (the VSL
Director) of a default. The course provider:
- must
provide written notice to the VSL Director, within 24 hours, of the
circumstances of the default
- must
provide written notice, within three business days, to the VSL Director,
specifying, in relation to each student impacted by the default:
- the
student’s full name and contact details
- the
course, or part or parts of the course, that the student was enrolled in at the
time of the default
- the
amount of the tuition fees for each course, or part of the course, that student
was enrolled in at the time of the default
- details
about the payment of those tuition fees
- any
other matter prescribed by the rules.
- if
requested in writing by the VSL Director, give the VSL Director either of the
following for a student in relation to whom the default has occurred:
- a
copy of a statement of attainment or other Australian Qualifications Framework
(AQF) certification document issued by the course provider or an authorised
issuing organisation for the parts of the course the student has completed or
- a
copy of an authenticated VET transcript prepared by the Registrar for the parts
of the course the student has completed.[55]
Proposed subsection 66C(5) allows other
requirements for the purposes of notices given under this section to be prescribed
by the rules.
Proposed section 66D would also require approved
course providers to give notice of default to affected students (that is, the
students in relation to whom the provider has defaulted) within 24 hours of the
default occurring. This notice must comply with any requirements prescribed by
the rules.
Proposed section 66E requires the VSL Director to
decide, if an approved course provider defaults in relation to a student,
whether or not they are satisfied there are one or more suitable replacement
courses for the student.
In making this decision, the VSL Director must have regard
to:
- whether
the replacement course leads to the same or a comparable qualification as the
original course
- whether
the mode of delivery of the replacement course is the same as that of the
original course
- the
location where the replacement course for a student will be primarily
delivered
- whether
a student who enrols in the replacement course:
- will
incur additional fees that are unreasonable and
- will
be able to attend the course without unreasonable impacts on the student’s
prior commitments and
- any
other matters prescribed by the rules.
Proposed section 66F requires providers to provide
information about replacement courses, to enable the VSL Director to make a
decision under proposed section 66E about whether or not there are one
or more suitable replacement courses for a student, if advised in writing that
they must do so by the VSL Director. The information must be provided in a form
(if any) approved by the VSL Director for the information, and in accordance
with any other requirements the VSL Director makes.
If the VSL Director decides there are one or more
suitable replacement courses for the student, under proposed subsection
66E(3) they must give written notice to the student that includes:
- a
description of each suitable replacement course, including the qualification
that the course leads to
- the
contact details of the provider of each suitable replacement course
- an
explanation that, if tuition fees have been paid for the affected part of the
original course, tuition fees would not be payable for the replacement
component of the replacement course
- an
explanation that, if the student chooses to enrol in another course, there is
no obligation on the provider of the other course to offer a replacement
component without charge to the student
- an
explanation of the matters the VSL Director must have regard to in making the
decision about the availability of one or more suitable replacement courses, as
mentioned above
- an
explanation of the student’s right to request reconsideration of the VSL
Director’s decision within 28 days, or longer if the VSL Director allows
- an
explanation that if, upon reconsideration, it is determined there is no
suitable replacement course for the student, an amount equal to the student’s
loan amount that has been used to pay tuition fees for the student for the
affected part will be re-credited to the student’s HELP balance and
- any
other matters prescribed in the rules.
The Bills refer to HELP balance, rather than FEE-HELP
balance throughout. Under Schedule 3 of the Higher Education
Support Legislation Amendment (Student Loan Sustainability) Act 2018 (Student
Loan Sustainability Act) from 1 January 2020, the lifetime FEE-HELP limit will
be replaced by a HELP limit, and it will be possible for borrowers to replenish
their HELP balance through repayments on the loan (that is, it will no longer
be a ‘lifetime limit’).
Proposed section 66G applies to replacement
providers if a student accepts an offer of a place in a replacement course. The
approved course provider who provides the replacement course must
give written notice of the acceptance to the VSL Director within 14 days. The
replacement provider must also ensure that the student:
- is
granted course credits for parts of the original course successfully completed
by the student, as evidenced by:
- a
statement of attainment or other AQF certification documentation issued in
accordance with the AQF
- an
authenticated VET transcript prepared by the Registrar
- is
not charged tuition fees for the replacement component of the replacement
course, if tuition fees have been paid for the affected part of the original
course and
- is
enrolled in the replacement course as soon as practicable.
If the VSL Director decides there are not one or
more suitable replacement courses for the student, under proposed subsection
66E(4) they must give written notice to the student that includes:
- an
explanation of the matters the VSL Director must have regard to in making the
decision about the availability of one or more suitable replacement courses, as
mentioned above
- an
explanation of the student’s right to request reconsideration of the VSL
Director’s decision within 28 days, or longer if the VSL Director allows
- a
statement that, to facilitate early re-crediting, the student may, at any time
during the 28 days, give the VSL Director notice in writing that the student
will not seek reconsideration of the decision
- a
statement that, if the decision is not reconsidered or is confirmed, an amount
equal to the student’s loan amount that has been used to pay tuition fees for
the student for the affected part will be re-credited to the student’s HELP
balance.
Proposed section 66H sets out obligations where the
VSL Director has decided there is no suitable replacement course for a student
who has been subject to provider default. It requires the VSL Director to give
the Secretary written notice of the decision. Written notice must also be given
to the provider:
- stating
an amount equal to the loan amount that has been used to pay tuition fees for
the student for the affected part will be re-credited to the student’s HELP
balance, and will be required to be paid by the provider to the Commonwealth
and
- inviting
the provider to make written submission to the VSL Director about the amount of
the re-credit within 28 days.
A note to this section clarifies that the Secretary must
consider submissions before re-crediting the student’s HELP balance.
Proposed Part 5B—the VSL Tuition Protection Fund, VSL
Tuition Protection Director, and VSL Tuition Protection Advisory Board
The VSL Tuition Protection Fund
Proposed section 66J establishes the VSL Tuition
Protection Fund (VSL Fund) as a special account for the purposes of the PGPA
Act.
Proposed section 66K provides that the following
credits must be made to the VSL Fund:
- each
amount of VSL tuition protection levy received from an approved course provider
- each
amount paid by a course provider to the Commonwealth that relates to a
re-credited amount if the balance of the VSL Fund had previously been reduced
as part of the Secretary re-crediting a student’s HELP balance as part of VSL
tuition protection arrangements
- any
money appropriated by the Parliament for the purposes of the VSL Fund
- any
penalties for late payment of the VSL levy and
- each
amount received by the Commonwealth for the purposes of the VSL Fund.
The section does not specify any specific amount to be
credited to the VSL Fund on its creation or on a regular basis thereafter.
Proposed section 66L specifies the purposes of the
VSL Fund:
- making
payments in connection with tuition protection
- paying
or discharging costs, expenses and other obligations incurred by the
Commonwealth in the performance of the VSL Director’s functions, including
managing the VSL Fund
- paying
any remuneration and allowances payable to the VSL Director
- paying
any remuneration and allowances payable to the members of the VSL Tuition
Protection Fund Advisory Board
- paying
any amount that is required or permitted to be repaid and
- reducing
the balance of the VSL Fund (and therefore the available appropriation for the
Fund) without making any real or notional payment.
It also provides that the rules may, for the purposes of
making payments in connection with tuition protection, make provision in
relation to such payments, including in relation to:
- the
circumstances in which payments may be made
- amounts
of different kinds of payments
- methods
for calculating different kinds of payments.
It also disallows using the VSL Fund to pay expenses or
other obligations associated with services provided to the VSL Director by an
employee or officer of a Commonwealth entity. This means, for example, that staffing
costs for an Office of the VSL Director would not be covered. However, the
remuneration and allowances payable to the VSL Director and VSL Tuition
Protection Fund Advisory Board would be covered by the VSL Fund, as would costs
associated with assisting in the performance of these functions. The Explanatory
Memorandum cites examples of anticipated allowable costs:
... a service
provider to provide case management and student placement services for students
affected by a provider default... paying premiums for insurance coverage for the
tuition protection arrangements where the VSL Tuition Protection Fund is below
its target size [and] paying for actuarial advice to inform the setting of levy
components.[56]
The VSL Tuition Protection Director
Proposed section 66M establishes that there is to
be a VSL Director, and that the office is to be held by the person who holds
the office of TPS Director under section 54A of the ESOS Act, including
an acting appointment under section 54K of the ESOS Act. That is, the
office of the VSL Director will function as an additional responsibility for
the existing TPS Director.
Proposed section 66N sets out the functions of the
VSL Director:
- facilitating
and monitoring the placement of the students in relation to whom an approved
course provider has defaulted
- paying
amounts out of, or reducing the balance of, the VSL Fund
- reporting
to the Minister on:
- the
operation of tuition protection
- the
financial status of the VSL Fund
- managing
the VSL Fund in a way that ensures it is able to meet all its liabilities,
including entering into a loan agreement for the benefit of the VSL Fund
- making
the legislative instrument each year for the purposes of the proposed VSL
Tuition Protection Levy Act 2019
- recommending
that the Secretary take action against an approved course provider that has
defaulted in relation to a student or has otherwise not complied with the VSL
Act
- any
other function conferred by the VSL Act or any other Commonwealth law
and
- any
function that is incidental or conducive to the performance of the other
functions outlined above.
Proposed section 66P sets out the administrative
provisions relating to the VSL Director, partly by reference to the ESOS Act.
It specifies that the following provisions from the ESOS Act apply in
relation to the VSL Director:
- the
TPS Director is to be paid the remuneration as determined by the Remuneration
Tribunal, or in the absence of such a determination, the remuneration is to be
as prescribed by the Regulations, which will also prescribe any allowances
payable to the TPS Director (section 54C of the ESOS Act)
- the
TPS Director has the recreation leave entitlements that are determined by the
Remuneration Tribunal, and the Minister may grant the TPS Director leave of absence,
other than recreation leave, on the terms and conditions as to remuneration or
otherwise that the Minister determines (section 54D of the ESOS Act)
- the
TPS Director must not engage in paid employment outside the duties of his or
her office without the Minister’s approval (section 54E of the ESOS Act)
- the
TPS Director must give written notice to the Minister of all interests,
pecuniary or otherwise, that the TPS Director has or acquires that could
conflict with the proper performance of the TPS Director’s functions (section
54F of the ESOS Act) and
- the
TPS Director holds office on the terms and conditions (if any) in relation to
matters not covered by this Division that are determined by the Minister
(section 54J of the ESOS Act).
It also specifies that:
- for
the purposes of the ESOS Act, the Education Minister is taken to have
given approval to the TPS Director to engage in paid employment as the VSL
Director and
- the
Education Minister may terminate the appointment of the VSL Director if they
engage, except with the Education Minister’s approval, in paid employment
outside the duties of their office, or fail, without reasonable excuse, to
comply with the disclosure of interests requirements set out in section 54F of
the ESOS Act (specified above).
Items 28, 29 and 30 insert provisions to give the VSL
Director powers under the Regulatory Powers
(Standard Provisions) Act 2014 (the Regulatory Powers Act) which
are consistent with those already in place for the Secretary.[57]
Item 41 inserts proposed subsection 114(3),
which would allow the VSL Director to, in writing, delegate any or all of their
powers under the VSL Act (other than making the legislative instrument
related to the calculation of the Levy) to an APS 6 or above employee of the
Department, or the Department administered by the Education Minister.
The VSL Tuition Protection Fund Advisory Board
Proposed section 66Q establishes the VSL Tuition
Protection Fund Advisory Board (VSL Fund Advisory Board). Membership is to be
the same membership as the TPS Advisory Board appointed under section 55D of
the ESOS Act, which requires the Minister to appoint members by
legislative instrument, on a part-time basis, for a period not exceeding two
years (but eligible for reappointment).
Proposed section 66R specifies that the VSL
Advisory Board is to be responsible for, either on its own initiative or at the
request of the VSL Director, providing advice and making recommendations to the
VSL Director in relation to the levy under the proposed VSL Levy Act 2019.
Arrangements for the Board’s operations will also be drawn
by reference from the ESOS Act under this section and proposed
sections 66Q and 66S:
- the
Chair and members may undertake their roles in an acting capacity (see
subsections 55N(1) and 55N(2) of the ESOS Act)
- the
Chair and Deputy Chair are to be the Chair and Deputy Chair of the TPS Advisory
Board appointed in writing by the Minister (see subsection 55C(3) of the
ESOS Act)
- a
person is eligible for appointment if the Education Minister is satisfied the
person has qualifications or experience that the Education Minister considers
relevant to the performance of the VSL Advisory Board’s functions (see
subsection 55C(2) of the ESOS Act)
- remuneration
for Advisory Board members is to be determined by the Remuneration Tribunal, or
in the absence of that determination, as prescribed by the Regulations, while
allowances for Advisory Board members are to be as prescribed by the Regulations—these
provisions are subject to the Remuneration
Tribunal Act 1973 (see subsection 55E of the ESOS Act)
- a
Board member’s appointment can be terminated if they fail to disclose to the
Minister all interests, pecuniary or otherwise, that they have or acquire that
could conflict with their duties as an Advisory Board member, and/or fail to
disclose to the Advisory Board such interests if they relate to a matter being
considered by the Advisory Board (see paragraph 55L(2)(d) and sections 55H
and 55J of the ESOS Act) and
- if
an Advisory Board member discloses an interest to the Advisory Board relating
to a matter under consideration, unless the Advisory Board determines
otherwise, that member must not be present for deliberations on the matter, or
take part in any decision on the matter—if this occurs and the meeting goes
from having a quorum (six members) to not having a quorum as a consequence,
providing the Chair or Deputy Chair is still present, the remaining members are
considered to constitute a quorum for the purposes of any deliberation or
decision at the meeting with respect to that matter (see section 55J and subsection
56C(2) of the ESOS Act).
Requirements for the Secretary to re-credit a student’s
HELP balance
As outlined above, requirements for a course provider to
re-credit a student’s FEE-HELP balance if a course is not provided to
completion are currently in section 69. Item 21 would repeal that
section.
Item 22 inserts proposed section 72A, which
would require the Secretary to re-credit a student’s HELP balance if the
student has not completed the requirements of the course, or part of the
course, because the provider defaulted, and the VSL Director decides there is
not a suitable replacement course for the student.
Consistent with the current tuition assurance arrangements
under section 69, the amount to be re-credited would be equal to the loan
amount used to pay tuition fees for the student for the affected part.
In determining the amount, the Secretary would be required
to take into account any submissions by the provider received by the VSL
Director in relation to the amount, and once the decision is made, the
Secretary would be required to give the student and provider written notice as
soon as practicable.
The note to proposed subsection 72A(1) specifies
that the course provider may be required to pay an amount to the Commonwealth
as a result of re crediting under this section. Under section 22, a course
provider must repay a loan amount to the Commonwealth if that amount is
re-credited.
Requirements for a course provider to re-credit a
student’s FEE-HELP balance in special circumstances at section
68, and allowances for the Secretary to act in place of the provider for those
purposes at section 70, are unchanged.[58]
Item 23 inserts an exception to section 73, which
currently requires the Secretary to invite submissions from the provider before
re-crediting a student’s FEE-HELP balance, to the effect that if the re-credit
related to a provider default, the Secretary would not be required to invite
submissions. This prevents the Secretary from duplicating work the VSL Director
would already be required to undertake.
Review of decisions about replacement courses
Item 24 adds the VSL Director’s decisions about
whether or not there is a suitable replacement course to the table of
reviewable decisions in section 74.
Item 26 inserts proposed section 78A, which
would have the effect of preventing a delegate of the VSL Director from
reviewing their own decisions, and ensuring that delegates of the VSL Director
only review decisions of other delegates if they were not involved in making
the original decision, and are not at a lower level than the delegate who made
the decision.
Item 27 adds an exception to section 80, to the
effect that decisions about replacement courses made under proposed
paragraphs 66E(1)(a) or (b) cannot be appealed to the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal.
Making payment of the VSL tuition protection levy a
requirement for approval
An addition to the general requirements imposed on
providers is made by item 18 (inserting proposed section 49A), which requires providers
covered by Part 5A of the VSL Act to pay the VSL tuition protection levy,
which will be imposed by the VSL Levy Act, discussed below. While most
of the administrative arrangements for this levy will be prescribed under rules,
proposed section 49A would require an approved course provider to
pay the VSL tuition protection levy, and any penalty for late payment of the
levy, when it is payable and due.
Proposed subsection 49A(2) would allow the
following matters to be dealt with in the rules:
(a) the
issue of notices setting out the amount of VSL tuition protection levy payable
by a provider;
(b) when VSL tuition protection levy is due and
payable;
(c) the issue of notices extending the time for
payment of VSL tuition protection levy;
(d) penalties for late payment of VSL tuition
protection levy;
(e) to whom VSL tuition protection levy and any
penalties for late payment are payable;
(f) the
refund, remission or waiver of VSL tuition protection levy or penalties for
late payment;
(g) the notional liability of the Commonwealth to
pay VSL tuition protection levy;
(h) the
review of decisions made under the rules in relation to the collection or
recovery of VSL tuition protection levy;
(i) any other matters relating to the collection
or recovery of VSL tuition protection levy.
Information sharing and cooperation provisions
A number of amendments are proposed to include VSL tuition
protection amongst other relevant information sharing and coordination
provisions currently in the VSL Act.
Item 14 repeals section 39, which currently
requires the Secretary to give notice to ASQA if the approval of a course
provider is revoked or suspended, and replaces it with proposed section 39,
which requires both ASQA and the VSL Director to be notified.
Item 16 adds a requirement for an approved course
provider to cooperate with the VSL Director to section 46, at proposed
paragraph 46(ba). This is consistent with the current provisions of section
46, which include cooperation with ASQA, the Secretary, an APS employee of the
Department, a consultant engaged by the Commonwealth to perform work in
relation to the VSL Act, and the operator of the approved external
dispute resolution scheme of which the provider is a member.
Item 19 proposes to insert proposed subparagraph
52(2)(b)(x), listing tuition protection, into paragraph 52(2)(b), which
deals with the ongoing information requirements the approved course
provider may be required to meet to ensure the Secretary has access to
information and documents for the purposes of the VSL Act. This is
consistent with the current provisions of paragraph 52(2)(b), which list the
provider’s financial position, courses of study, and students, among
information requirements the provider may be required to meet.
Item 33 inserts proposed subsection 94(2),
allowing the VSL Director to disclose VET information to a department, agency,
or authority of the Commonwealth, a state or territory, or an enforcement body,[59]
if they believe on reasonable grounds that the disclosure of that information
is necessary for an enforcement related activity.[60]
Item 34 inserts proposed section 104A, which
would allow the VSL Director to require a person to provide information or
documents if the VSL Director gives written notice and they believe on
reasonable grounds that the person has information or documents relevant to
determining if tuition protection requirements have been complied with. The VSL
Director would be able to specify the form and other requirements for the
information to be provided. No limitations are applied in relation to the
identity of the person who would be subject to these requirements.
Review of the operation of VSL tuition protection and the
TPS
Item 38 inserts proposed section 113A, which
would require the Minister to commence a review of the operation of tuition
protection, the VSL Fund and related matters before 1 July 2021. This would be
conducted at the same time as a review of the existing TPS, proposed as an
amendment to the ESOS Act at item 50, and a review of the
proposed higher education version of the tuition protection scheme under HESA,
at Schedule 2. The review would be required to include a report to be tabled in
both Houses of Parliament within 15 sitting days after completion of the
report.
Civil and criminal penalties
Civil and criminal penalties have also been included in
the main Bill to ensure compliance. A penalty of 60 penalty units[61]
applies to each of the following civil penalties and criminal offences in relation
to VSL tuition protection:
- failure
of an approved provider to notify the VSL Director of a default (proposed
section 66C at item 20)
- failure
of an approved provider to give notice of default to affected students (that
is, the students in relation to whom the provider has defaulted) within 24
hours of the default occurring (proposed section 66D at item 20)
- failure
of an approved provider to provide information about replacement courses to
enable the VSL Director to make a decision about whether or not there are one
or more suitable replacement courses for a student, if advised in writing that
they must do so by the VSL Director (proposed section 66F at item 20)
- failure
of an approved course provider who provides the replacement course to give
written notice of the acceptance to the VSL Director within 14 days, and advise
the student of the details of the course arrangements as specified in proposed
section 66G (at item 20) and
- a
person who fails to provide information or documents in accordance with written
notice given by the VSL Director, who believes on reasonable grounds that the
information or documents are relevant to determining if the tuition protection
requirements have been complied with (proposed section 104A at item
34).
Schedule 2 of the Main Bill—changes relating to HELP
Current tuition assurance arrangements
Currently, to be approved by the Minister as a higher
education provider under HESA, a body corporate must fulfil the tuition
assurance requirements, unless exempt.[62]
The tuition assurance requirements that must be adhered to are set out in the Higher Education
Provider Guidelines 2012 (the Guidelines).[63]
Table A providers are exempt from the tuition assurance
requirements.[64]
Other providers may also be exempt from these requirements with written approval
from the Minister, either at the time of approval or after.[65]
Non-exempt providers face a civil penalty of 60 penalty units if they are not
exempt and do not comply with the tuition assurance requirements.[66]
Students who are enrolled in a course of study which the
provider ceases to provide as planned are able to choose between:
- an
offer of a place in a similar course of study with a second provider, without
any requirement to pay the second provider or
- a
refund of their payments for any unit of study that they commenced but did not
complete because their provider ceased to provide the course of study of which
the unit forms a part (if they choose this option their HECS-HELP debt or
FEE-HELP balance will be re-credited a corresponding amount).[67]
Although these arrangements are broadly similar to the
arrangements for VSL students outlined above, the VET tuition assurance
arrangements, and proposed VET tuition protection scheme, give priority to
replacement courses, with the refund of course fees only in the event that a
suitable replacement course is not available.
Items 2, 3, 4, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11, 13, 14, 17, 18 and 32 repeal
all of the tuition assurance provisions, with, where relevant, replacement
references to tuition protection. The effect of these changes is to remove the legal
basis to require bodies making an application for approval as a higher
education provider under HESA to be party to an approved tuition
assurance arrangement as described above in order to be approved.
However, under the application and transitional provisions
at item 34, the same arrangements as apply to the commencement of VSL
tuition protection apply to the commencement of HELP tuition protection. That
is, the repeal of tuition assurance requirements related to becoming an
approved course provider will not apply to providers that are already approved
at the time the changes come into effect. Courses that were not provided to
completion prior to commencement of the proposed changes are to be dealt with
under the tuition assurance arrangements as if these repeals had never
happened.
New definitions
Items 31 and 33 propose a number of new definitions
be inserted into Schedule 1 of HESA (the dictionary), as outlined in
Table 3 below, to support the administration of the proposed new HELP tuition
protection scheme.
Table 3: new
definitions inserted into HESA by Schedule 2
Item reference |
Term |
Definition |
31 |
affected unit |
affected unit, of an
original course, means a unit of study that a student was undertaking as part
of a course of study when a higher education provider defaulted in relation
to the student. |
31 |
default |
See section 166‑10. |
31 |
HELP Tuition
Protection Director |
The person referred to in
section 167‑15. |
31 |
HELP Tuition
Protection Fund |
The HELP Tuition Protection
Fund established by section 167‑1. |
31 |
HELP Tuition
Protection Fund Advisory Board |
The HELP Tuition Protection
Fund Advisory Board established by section 167‑30. |
31 |
HELP tuition
protection levy |
The levy imposed by the Higher
Education Support (HELP Tuition Protection Levy) Act 2019. |
31 |
original course |
A course of study in
relation to which a higher education provider has defaulted. |
31 |
replacement course |
A course of study that
enables a student to finish:
(a) an original
course; or
(b) a course that is equivalent to an original course.
|
31 |
replacement unit |
A unit of study of a
replacement course that replaces an affected unit of an original course. |
33 |
tuition protection
requirements |
Has the meaning given by
section 16‑30. |
Source: Explanatory
Memorandum to the Main Bill.
Establishing
HELP Tuition Protection
According to proposed paragraph 16-25(1)(c)
at item 2, all approved higher education providers under HESA will
be required to meet tuition protection requirements, unless they are exempt. As
outlined below at item 16, Table A providers (Australian public
universities) will be exempt.
Other universities and NUHEPs will be required to meet the
tuition protection requirements, although they may be exempt by the Minister through
the Guidelines.[68]
The Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill states:
This [provision for the Guidelines to be used to exempt
providers] is to provide for additional flexibility should it become apparent
that the risk of a particular provider defaulting is low, and in circumstances
where that provider has demonstrated that it has adequate processes and
procedures in place to provide tuition protection to their students. For
example, currently one Table B provider is exempt from the tuition assurance
requirements.[69]
Item 16 inserts Part 5-1A, which sets out the
proposed HELP tuition protection arrangements, and Part 5-1B, which sets out
arrangements for the HELP Tuition Protection Fund, HELP Tuition Protection
Director and the HELP Tuition Protection Fund Advisory Board. The details of
the proposed parts are set out below.
Proposed Part 5-1A—tuition protection
Proposed section 166-5 specifies that tuition
protection arrangements are to apply to providers other than Table A providers,
and those prescribed in the Guidelines, or by written notice by the Minister.
This arrangement mirrors that for VSL Tuition Protection.
Proposed section 166-10 sets out a new definition
of when a course provider defaults in relation to a student.
While it is not in the same terms as the equivalent proposed section 66B
of the VSL Act, discussed above, it covers similar circumstances. That
is, where:
- the
unit of study the student is enrolled in does not start as scheduled, providing
the student has not withdrawn from the course before that day (proposed
subsection 166-10(1)) or
- the
unit of study the student is enrolled in ceases after starting but before
completion (proposed subsection 166-10(2)).
In both cases, the student must have been entitled to
FEE-HELP or HECS-HELP for the unit of study.
Proposed subsection 166-10(3) provides that the Guidelines
may also prescribe circumstances in which a course provider defaults. The
Explanatory Memorandum to the Main Bill states:
This
provision is not intended to extend the broad circumstances described in
subsections 166-10(1) and (2) but rather allow for greater precision and
clarity in respect of what situations will, in practice, give rise to a
default. For example, the Guidelines may provide that if the provider enters
into liquidation, the provider is taken to be in default, since this is a
circumstance which inevitably means the provider can no longer be delivering
the unit of study to a student.[70]
Proposed section 166-15 would require HELP
providers to give the same notice, with the same notice periods, to the HELP
Tuition Protection Director (the HELP Director) as VSL providers are required
to give the VSL Director (essentially, initial advice within 24 hours and then
details of students affected within three business days), albeit with reference
to the administrative arrangements relevant to higher education rather than
VET:
- requirements
are in relation to higher education units of study rather than VET courses
- a
copy of the student’s records may be required, rather than the statement of
attainment or authenticated VET transcript
- requirements
can be prescribed in the Guidelines, rather than the rules.
Proposed section 166-20 would require HELP
providers to give notice within the same period (24 hours) to students
affected by a default, as VSL providers, albeit with requirements set out in
the Guidelines rather than the rules.
Proposed section 166-25 would require the HELP
Director to make a decision about whether or not there are one or more suitable
replacement courses for the student.
In making this decision, the HELP Director must have
regard to the same matters the VSL Director is required to consider at proposed
section 66E of the VSL Act, discussed above, with the exception that
additional matters are to be prescribed in the Guidelines, rather than the
rules, and the HELP Director must also consider what course credits the student
may receive for the units of study of the original course successfully
completed by the student.
Proposed section 166-27 requires providers to
provide information about replacement courses, if advised in writing that they
must do so by the HELP Director, to enable the HELP Director to make a decision
about whether or not there are one or more suitable courses for the student.
The information must be provided in a form (if any) prescribed by the HELP
Director. This is the same requirement that applies to VET providers under proposed
section 66F of the VSL Act.
If the HELP Director decides that there are one or
more suitable replacement courses, they are required under proposed
subsection 166-25(3) to give written notice to the student that includes:
- a
statement that the student may choose to enrol in a replacement course, enrol
in another course, or receive an equivalent amount as a re-credit to their HELP
balance
- a
description of each suitable replacement course, including the qualification
the course leads to
- the
contact details of the provider for each suitable replacement course
- an
explanation that, if tuition fees have been paid for the affected unit for the
original course, tuition fees would not need to be paid for the replacement
unit
- an
explanation that if the student chooses to enrol in another course, there is no
obligation on the provider of the other course to offer a replacement unit
without charge to the student
- an
explanation of the matters the HELP Director must have regard to in making the
decision about whether or not there is a suitable course available
- any
other matters prescribed by the Guidelines.
This information for the most part reflects the
requirements set out in proposed section 66E of the VSL Act. The
important difference is that, in retaining the rights students have to choose a
replacement course or refund under the existing tuition assurance arrangements
(discussed above) these provisions give HELP students more choice than VSL
students, who may only elect a refund if the VSL Director determines that no
suitable replacement course is available.
Proposed section 166-30 applies to replacement
providers if a student accepts an offer of a place in a replacement course. It
requires the same of HELP replacement providers as proposed section 66G
of the VSL Act requires of VSL replacement providers in terms of
advising the (in this case HELP) Director within 14 days, and ensuring the
student is granted appropriate credit, is charged appropriately, and is
enrolled in the replacement course as soon as practicable.
Proposed section 166-32 requires replacement
providers to keep the following enrolment records in relation to a student in a
replacement course:
(a) the student’s full name
and contact details;
(b) the
name of the replacement course and the units of study the student is currently
enrolled in;
(c) any
student contribution amounts or tuition fees charged to the student for any
units of the replacement course;
(d) details of the units of
study successfully completed by the student;
(e) details
of the course credits for units of study of the original course successfully
completed by the student granted to the student.
If the HELP Director decides that there are not any
suitable replacement courses available, the HELP Director is required under proposed
subsection 166-25(4) to give written notice to the student that includes
the same information as required of the VSL Director at proposed section 66E
of the VSL Act at item 20 of Schedule 1,
covering matters considered, right to request reconsideration within 28 days,
right to indicate reconsideration will not be sought, to facilitate early
re-crediting, and arrangements for re-crediting.
Proposed section 166-35 sets out the obligations
where the HELP Director has decided there is no suitable replacement course for
a student who has been subject to provider default, or where the student elects
to have their HELP balance re-credited. In these cases, the HELP Director must
give written notice of that fact to the Secretary, and to the provider,
specifying the amount that will be re-credited to the student’s HELP balance.
Proposed Part 5-1B—the HELP Tuition Protection Fund, HELP
Tuition Protection Director and HELP Tuition Protection Fund Advisory Board
The HELP Tuition Protection Fund
Proposed sections 167-1 and 167-5 establish the HELP
Tuition Protection Fund (HELP Fund) as a special account for the purposes of
the PGPA Act, with requirements to credit the HELP Fund that reflect
those set out for the VSL Fund under proposed section 66J of the VSL
Act at item 20 of Schedule 1. The most
important of the sources for these credits is the HELP tuition protection levy
amounts paid by higher education providers.
Proposed section 167-10 sets out the purposes of
the HELP Fund, which are equivalent to those set out for the VSL Fund under proposed
section 66L of the VSL Act at item 20 of Schedule 1, albeit in relation to HELP. Provisions for
circumstances in which payments may be made, amounts of different kinds of
payments, and methods for calculating different kinds of payments will be set out
in the Guidelines, rather than the rules.
The HELP Tuition Protection Director
Proposed section 167-15 establishes that there is
to be a HELP Director and, as with the VSL Director, the office is to be held
by the person who holds the office of the TPS Director under section 54A of the
ESOS Act, including an acting appointment under section 54K of the ESOS
Act.
Proposed section 167-20 sets out the functions of
the HELP Director, which are the same as the functions of the VSL Director set
out in proposed section 66N of the VSL Act at item 20 of Schedule 1, albeit with references to
responsibility for the HELP Fund, proposed HELP Levy Act, and
recommending action against higher education providers rather than VET providers.
Proposed section 167-25 sets out administrative provisions related to the HELP
Director, partly by reference to the ESOS Act. Arrangements are as for
the TPS Director in proposed section 66P of the VSL Act, at item
20 of Schedule 1.
Items 23, 24, and 25 insert proposed
subsections 215-15(3), 215-20(3), and 215-40(1A) to give the HELP Director
powers under the Regulatory Powers Act, which are consistent with the
powers to apply to a court for enforcement of a civil penalty provision and
issue, extend the time to pay, or withdraw an infringement notice currently
held by the Secretary and those afforded to the VSL Director at items 28,
29, and 30 of Schedule 1.
Item 27 inserts proposed
section 238-6, which would allow the HELP Director to, in writing, delegate
any or all of their powers under HESA (other than making the legislative
instrument related to the calculation of the levy) to an APS 6 or above
employee, or equivalent or higher, of the Department. These arrangements are
equivalent to the delegations allowed for the VSL Director in proposed
subsection 114(3) at item 41 of Schedule 1. However, while the HELP
Director’s delegates are to be in the Department administered by the Education
Minister only, the VSL Director’s delegates can be in that department, or the department
administered by the Minister with responsibility for the VSL Act (currently
the Department of Employment, Skills, Small and Family Business). This means
that under current administrative arrangements, support for the HELP Director
and VSL Director could either be consolidated into the Department of Education
or split between two departments. The latter is the case for the interim
tuition assurance arrangements currently in place.
The HELP Tuition Protection Fund Advisory Board
Proposed section 167-30 establishes the HELP
Tuition Protection Fund Advisory Board (HELP Fund Advisory Board). Arrangements
are as for the VSL Fund Advisory Board in proposed section 66Q at item
20 of Schedule 1. As for the VSL Fund
Advisory Board, membership of the HELP Fund Advisory Board is the same as the
TPS Advisory Board.
Proposed section 167-25 specifies that the HELP
Fund Advisory Board is to be responsible for, either on its own initiative or
at the request of the HELP Director, providing advice and making
recommendations to the HELP Director in relation to the levy under the proposed
HELP Levy Act. Administrative provisions are set out at proposed
section 167-40. The arrangements in proposed sections 167-25 and
167-40 reflect those for the VSL Fund Advisory Board in proposed sections
66R and 66S at item 20 of Schedule 1.
Requirements to re-credit a student’s HELP balance
Currently, when a provider ceases to provide a course to a
Commonwealth supported student, providers must repay the amount of a student’s
HECS-HELP debt remitted under tuition assurance arrangements.[71]
This provision is repealed by items 8 and 9, and replaced by proposed
subsection 36-24A(1) at item 9, which provides that if a
Commonwealth supported student has not completed the requirements of a unit
because of provider default, and the HELP Director decides that there is not a suitable
replacement course for the person, or the person decides to have their HELP
balance re-credited, then the HECS-HELP debt will be remitted.
For those students who are not Commonwealth supported,
arrangements for re-crediting a person’s FEE-HELP balance when a provider
ceases to provide a course are currently set out in section 104-42. This
section is amended at item 11 to repeal the tuition assurance paragraphs
and substitute arrangements that would require the provider to re-credit a
person’s HELP balance in the same circumstances.
Subsection 104-42(2) currently allows the Secretary to
re-credit the person’s FEE-HELP balance if the provider is unable to do so.
This subsection is repealed at item 12 and replaced with the same
allowance for the Secretary to re-credit a person’s HELP balance.
Items 35 and 36 deal with paragraphs 97-42(1)(b),
(c), and (d) of HESA, which will be inserted as a result of amendments
in the Student Loan Sustainability Act, which will come into effect from
1 January 2020.[72]
As outlined above, Schedule 3 of the Student Loan Sustainability Act
replaces the current lifetime FEE-HELP limit with a renewable HELP limit.
Section 97-42 of the Act will insert, into HESA, arrangements for
re-crediting a person’s HELP balance in relation to HECS-HELP when the provider
ceases to provide a course. Paragraphs 97-42(1) (c) and (d) make reference to
tuition assurance, and item 36 will repeal these and replace them with proposed
paragraphs 97-42(1)(b), (c), and (d) which reference tuition protection,
immediately after the commencement of the Student Loan Sustainability Act.
Review of decisions about replacement courses
Item 19 inserts the following decisions at the end of
the table of reviewable decisions at section 206-1 of HESA:
- a
determination by the Minister under proposed subsection 166-5(2), that
tuition protection requirements do, or do not apply, to a specified higher
education provider and
- a
decision by the HELP Director that they are, or are not, satisfied there are
one or more suitable replacement courses for a student.
While Schedule 1 inserts provisions to disallow the VSL
Director and their delegates from reviewing their own decisions, or those
decisions of delegates at a higher level, in proposed section 78A at item
26, equivalent provisions already exist in HESA at section 209-1.
Item 20 inserts proposed subsection 209-10(4A),
which specifies that review of a decision is not required in cases where, in
accordance with proposed section 166-25, there was no suitable replacement
course, and the student to whom the default related gave notice under that
section that they would not seek reconsideration of the decision, in order to
facilitate early re-crediting.
Item 22 adds an exception to section 212-1, to the
effect that it will not be possible to appeal to the Administrative Appeals
Tribunal in relation to decisions about whether or not a replacement course is
available.
Making payment of the HELP tuition protection levy a
compliance requirement
Proposed section 19-66A at item 5 adds to
the compliance requirements in Subdivision 19-E of HESA, requirements
for approved higher education providers to whom Part 5.1A applies to comply
with the tuition protection requirements and to pay the HELP tuition protection
levy, and any penalty for late payment as imposed under the proposed HELP
Levy Act, discussed below.
Proposed subsection 19-66A(3) would allow the
following matters to be dealt with in the Guidelines:
(a) the
issue of notices setting out the amount of HELP tuition protection levy payable
by a provider;
(b) when HELP tuition protection levy is due and
payable;
(c) the issue of notices extending the time for
payment of HELP tuition protection levy;
(d) penalties for late payment of HELP tuition
protection levy;
(e) to whom HELP tuition protection levy and any
penalties for late payment are payable;
(f) the
refund, remission or waiver of HELP tuition protection levy or penalties for
late payment;
(g) the
review of decisions made under the Higher Education Provider Guidelines in
relation to the collection or recovery of HELP tuition protection levy;
(h) any other matters relating to the collection or
recovery of HELP tuition protection levy.
With the exception of the Commonwealth’s notional
liability to pay the VSL tuition protection levy, these are the equivalent
items that can be included in the rules as set out in proposed section 49A
at item 18 of Schedule 1.
Review of
the operation of the HELP tuition protection
Item 28 repeals and replaces section 238-7, which
is an outdated requirement for the Minister to require, before 31 December
2006, a review to be commenced of the impact on the higher education sector of
the higher education reforms enacted through HESA.
Proposed section 238-7 would require the Minister
to commence a review of the operation of tuition protection, the HELP Fund and
related matters before 1 July 2021, to be conducted at the same time as the
review required under the VSL Act (item 38 of Schedule 1) and the
ESOS Act (item 50 of Schedule 1).
Civil and criminal penalties
In respect to HELP tuition protection, a penalty of 60
penalty units applies to breaches of each of the following provisions:
- failure
of a non-exempt provider to adhere to the tuition protection requirements (proposed
section 19-66A at item 5, this is a civil penalty only)
- failure
of a provider to provide the prescribed notice to the HELP Director in the
event of a default (proposed section 166-15 at item 16, this is a
civil penalty and criminal offence)
- failure
of a provider to provide the prescribed notice to HELP students in the event of
a default (proposed section 166-20 at item 16, this is a civil penalty
and criminal offence)
- failure
of a higher education provider to provide the HELP Director with information in
relation to replacement courses if requested (proposed section 166-27 at
item 16, this is a civil penalty and criminal offence)
- failure
of a replacement provider to provide notice to the HELP Director and to manage the
students enrolment as prescribed (proposed section 166-30 at item 16,
this is a civil penalty and criminal offence) and
- failure
of a replacement provider to keep enrolment records for a student in a
replacement course as prescribed (proposed section 166-32 at item 16,
this is a civil penalty and criminal offence).
Students who pay up-front fees
The Bills work by imposing, on non-exempt providers,
participation in a tuition protection scheme and payment of an associated levy
as a condition of continuing approval as a provider of either VSL or FEE-HELP.
The effect of this is that domestic students who pay
up-front fees are not covered by the proposed new tuition protection schemes,
or existing TPS. Instead, under current arrangements:
- those
accessing state funding or subsidies are referred to their state or territory
Department of Education
- those
who have paid more than $1,500 are asked to contact ITECA
- those
who paid less than $1,500 are referred to the Australian Competition and
Consumer Commission.[73]
The VSL Levy
Bill and the HELP Levy Bill—imposition of the levies
The VSL Levy Bill imposes, and sets out a framework for
calculating, the VSL tuition protection levy under the proposed VSL Levy Act.
Under this Act, the levy will apply to a body that is
a ‘leviable provider’ at any time in a year. Clause 5 specifies that a
‘leviable provider’ is an approved course provider to whom Part 5A (proposed
in the Main Bill) of the VSL Act applies.
The HELP Levy Bill is in near identical terms to the VSL
Levy Bill. It imposes, and sets out a framework for calculating, the HELP
tuition protection levy under the proposed HELP Levy Act. Under this
Act, the HELP tuition protection levy will apply to a
body that is a ‘leviable provider’ at any time in a year. Clause 5 specifies
that a ‘leviable provider’ is a higher education provider to whom
Part 5‑1A (proposed in the Main Bill) of HESA applies.
Under clause 7 of both proposed Acts, the
respective levies will consist of:
- an
administrative fee component
- a
risk rated premium component and
- a
tuition protection component.
Subclause 7(3) specifies providers that are owned
by the Commonwealth or a state or a territory, and TAFE providers are exempt
from the risk rated premium and special tuition protection components.[74]
That is, they will only pay the administrative fee component.
In comparison with the TPS Levy, these new levies do not
include a base fee component.
The administrative fee component
Clause 8 of both Bills sets out how the
administrative fee component of the respective levies is to be calculated.
For new providers for the year, the administrative fee
component will be determined in a legislative instrument under clause 9 of
both Bills.
For other providers, the administrative fee component will
be the amount determined in the legislative instrument under clause 9,
multiplied by the total VSL/HELP students for the provider for the year.
Legislative instruments under clause 9 for the
purposes of clause 8 must be made by the Minister. For 2020 the Minister
is required, before 1 August 2020, to determine an amount for new providers,
and an amount for other providers. For later years the Minister may, but is not
required to, determine new amounts for new providers and/or other providers. If
the Minister does not make a new determination, the amount determined
previously will be indexed under clause 10.
Proposed subclause 9(3) imposes limits on the fee
amounts:
- the
amount for new providers must not exceed $325 and
- the
amount for other providers (which is to be multiplied by the total VSL/HELP
students for the provider for the year) must not exceed $31 for HELP or $15 for
VSL.
Notes to subclauses 9(2) and 9(3) direct the reader
to the effect of clause 10, which provides for the amounts for new and existing
providers, and the caps on those amounts, to be indexed from 2021.
The indexation arrangements for the administrative fee
component of each levy, set out in clause 10 of each Bill, specify
an indexation factor based on the change in the All Groups
Consumer Price Index number from the original series (being the weighted
average of the eight capital cities) published by the Australian Statistician
for that quarter.
Under subclauses 9(4) and 9(5), in making the
legislative instrument, the Minister:
- must
have regard to the sustainability of the VSL/HELP Fund and
- may
have regard to ‘any other matter the Minister considers appropriate’.
Under current administrative arrangements, for the purpose
of the VSL Levy Act, the Minister is the Minister for Employment,
Skills, Small and Family Business, who currently has responsibility for the VSL
Act, and for the purposes of the HELP Levy Act, the Minister is the
Minister for Education, who has primary responsibility for HESA.[75]
The risk rated premium and tuition protection
components
Clause 11 of both Bills sets out how the risk rated
premium component of the respective levies is to be calculated.
For new providers for the year, the risk rated premium
component will be zero.
For other providers, the risk rated premium component will
be calculated according to the method set out in subclause 11(2). The
proposed calculation method is:
- the
sum of:
- the
number of VSL/HELP students for the year multiplied by the amount determined in
a legislative instrument under clause 13 and
- the
amount of VSL/FEE-HELP and HECS-HELP assistance[76]
paid to the provider in the previous year, multiplied by the percentage
determined in a legislative instrument under clause 13 (subclause
13(2) allows this percentage to be zero)
multiplied by
- the
sum of each risk factor value worked out for the year in accordance with a
legislative instrument under proposed clause 13, plus 1—under subparagraph
13(1)(c)(i), the legislative instrument must determine one or more risk
factors that reflect the risk of payments being made out of the VSL Fund or
HELP fund, and, for each risk factor, a risk factor value or method for working
out the risk factor value for providers or a class of providers, and if a value
is provided, under subclause 13(3) it must be a number between zero and
10.
Clause 12 of both Bills sets out how the special
tuition protection component of the respective levies is to be calculated.
For new providers for the year, the special tuition
protection component for the year will be zero.
For other providers, the special tuition protection
component for the year is equal to the total amount of VSL/FEE-HELP and
HECS-HELP assistance[77]
paid to the provider in the previous year, multiplied by the percentage
determined in an instrument under clause 13 (subclause 13(2)
allows this percentage to be zero).
Subclause 13(1) requires that a legislative
instrument for the purposes of the risk rated premium component and tuition
protection component must be made by the VSL/HELP Director before 1 August
each year from 2020. Subclause 13(6) requires that before a Director
makes this legislative instrument, the Treasurer must approve it in writing.
In making the legislative instrument, under subclauses
13(4) and 13(5) a Director:
- must
have regard to any advice from the VSL/HELP Fund Advisory Board in relation to
the matters dealt with in the instrument
- must
have regard to the sustainability of the VSL/HELP Fund and
- may
have regard to any other matter that Director considers appropriate.
Exemptions
As set out above, new providers in a given year will not
pay the risk rated premium component or tuition protection component for that
year.
Clause 14 of both Bills also allows that the
rules/Guidelines to prescribe one or more classes of leviable providers who are
exempt from one or more of the three components of the respective levies.
The Governor-General may make Regulations
Clause 15 of both Bills allows that the
Governor-General to make Regulations prescribing matters:
- required
or permitted by the proposed Act to be prescribed or
- necessary
or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to the
respective proposed Acts.
Other provisions
Schedule 3 of the Main Bill—changes to arrangements for
revoking VSL provider status at the request of the provider
Schedule 3 of the Main Bill is
the only part of the package of Bills that does not relate specifically to
tuition protection. It proposes minor amendments to the VSL Act provisions
related to the Secretary revoking approval as a VSL provider at the request of
that provider.
Currently, under section 38, if
an approved provider makes a written request to the Secretary for their
approval to be revoked, the Secretary must revoke provider approval and advise
the provider in writing.
Schedule 3 consists of items
1 and 2, which amend section 38 and insert proposed subsections
38(2) and 38(3), to allow the Secretary to refuse to revoke the approval if
suspending or revoking approval is already in progress under another section of
the VSL Act:
- Proposed
subsection 38(2) will allow the Secretary to refuse to revoke approval if
they have already given the provider written notice under subsection 36(2) that
they are proposing to revoke or suspend approval, and they have not yet given
written notice, as required under subsection 36(4), of their decision about the
proposed suspension or revocation. (Revocation or suspension of approval under
section 36 occurs when the Secretary is satisfied that the provider is not
complying with their responsibilities under the VSL Act.)
- Proposed
subsection 38(3) will allow the Secretary to refuse to revoke approval if
they have given the provider written notice, under subsection 36(4) or 37(2),
that they have suspended the provider’s approval, and the suspension has not
ended. (Suspension under section 37 occurs when the Secretary suspects on
reasonable grounds that the provider is not complying with their
responsibilities under the VSL Act, and is satisfied that the
circumstances require urgent action.)
This will prevent approved providers subject to
investigations that may result in their VSL provider status being cancelled
from pre-empting such moves by requesting their approved provider status be
cancelled.
Concluding
comments
These Bills provide a long-term response to the question
of how best to protect domestic vocational education and training and higher
education students in cases of provider or course closure. They propose to
replace sector-managed tuition assurance arrangements with two new Australian
Government administered sector-funded tuition protection schemes, modelled on
the existing TPS.
The practical effect of the Bills will be to create
simpler arrangements for students, with a single statutory office holder directing
the existing TPS and both new schemes, and processes for decision-making,
student placement, and VSL/HELP re-crediting.
TAFE providers and providers that are owned by the Commonwealth
or a state or a territory will not be subject to the risk rated premium and
special tuition protection components of the levy, while Table A universities
will be exempt from the new arrangements entirely. However, most VSL providers,
as well as NUHEPs and Table C providers, will be subject to the proposed new
arrangements.
Consistent with the TPS, and current tuition assurance
arrangements, a range of details will be specified in legislative instruments.
These include any providers that may be exempt, and inputs used in the calculation
of the two levies, which are designed to be responsive to possible changing
circumstances, including the risk profile of providers.