Introductory Info
Date introduced: 25 August 2021
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Indigenous Australians
Commencement: The whole Act will commence the first 1 January or 1 July to occur after it receives the Royal Assent.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Corporations
(Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander) Amendment Bill 2021 (the Bill) is
to amend the Corporations
(Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander) Act 2006 (the Act) to implement
‘either in whole or in part, a large majority of the recommendations’ made by
the Final
Report of the CATSI Act Review (Final Report)[1]
to:
- reduce
the administrative burden on small CATSI corporations dealing with low-value
related party transactions by making it easier to satisfy reporting and meeting
obligations
- provide
greater flexibility for CATSI corporations to enable the realisation of
economic and community development priorities
- ensure
governance requirements are fit-for-purpose by expanding the capacity of CATSI
corporations to determine their own operational rules
- increase
transparency of CATSI corporation operations through improved reporting and
access to reports for members, common law holders and other stakeholders by:
- requiring
reporting of information about remuneration of key management personnel to the
Registrar and AGMs
- requiring
corporations to lay before an AGM any reports they are required to submit to
the Registrar
- requiring
corporations to lay prescribed reports in respect of a financial year before
their AGM
- enhance
support for CATSI corporations that are experiencing difficulties to enable
these entities to return to health and, ultimately, the control of their
members
- streamline
the process of winding up defunct CATSI corporations
- enhance
the efficacy of operations by increasing access by CATSI corporations to modern
technology, including for managing their membership bases and
- provide
the Registrar with expanded powers to enable a graduated, proportionate
response to non-compliance.[2]
The Government notes that the Final Report ‘builds on’ two
earlier reviews of the Act, namely:
Structure of
the Bill
The Bill has one Schedule that is divided into 18 Parts as
follows:
- Part
1—Review of operation of the Act: imposes a statutory requirement for the Act
to be reviewed every 7 years to enable Parliament to determine whether the Act
has achieved its objects as a special measure
- Part
2—sets out and provides for enhanced regulatory (investigation and compliance) powers
and functions of the Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations
- Part
3—Membership applications: deals with the process for making, receiving and
processing membership applications, and also enables CATSI corporations to
collect contact details for members so as to better facilitate effective
communication of relevant information to members in a timely manner with contact
details and electronic communication
- Part
4—Subsidiaries and joint ventures: contains amendments which introduce greater
flexibility in the minimum membership requirements for CATSI corporations, and
provide increased flexibility in how they structure their affairs, and promote
the use of CATSI corporations as vehicles for economic and social development
- Part
5—aims to simplify the classification of Corporation (the criteria for
determining the size of a CATSI corporation) so that corporations are registered
as a small, medium or large corporation based on a simple consolidated revenue
test only. The size of a corporation is relevant as it determines the
associated reporting obligations
- Part
6—Meetings and reports: proposes changes to meeting and reporting requirements
of CATSI corporations to provide for flexibility in the scheduling of their
AGMs, as well as providing for enhanced transparency to members in relation to
the operations of their corporations, including by access to financial reports
- Part
7—Constitutions: proposes changes to make constitutions for CATSI corporations
that are fit-for-purpose, requiring that all relevant replaceable rules be
referred to in the constitution of a corporation and provides a process for the
Registrar to reject a constitutional change that is lodged after a special
administrator has changed the constitution[4]
- Part
8—Officers of corporations, contains changes to increase the transparency of
senior management arrangements, including by reporting senior management
remuneration to members and to the Registrar
- Part
9—Related party transactions: contains changes to simplify related party
transactions to remove red tape
- Part
10—proposes changes to enable the Registrar to exempt a corporation from the
requirement that the majority of directors of a corporation must not be
employees of the corporation
- Part
11—Independent Directors: makes amendments designed to promote the appointment
of independent directors who bring relevant knowledge, skills and experience for
the benefit and improved working of CATSI corporations
- Part
12—Modernising publication requirements: contains amendments enabling the
Registrar to publish notices on platforms that are more accessible to members. It
also proposes amendments to the Registrar’s power to exempt corporations and
their directors from exemptible provisions in Chapter 5 of the Act for specific
entities by written instrument or, as a class, by legislative instrument
- Part
13—Storage of information: contains amendments allowing corporations to store
information on platforms such as cloud servers and requires corporations to
provide a means by which the stored information (required to be contained in a
book) is accessible at its place of inspection
- Part
14—Contains amendments designed to better align particular provisions with the Corporations
Act by:
- inserting
a new definition of the term ‘dishonest’
- applying
and modifying whistleblower provisions in Part 9.4AAA of the Corporations
Act in a manner that reflects the operating context for CATSI corporations
- aligning
penalties in the Act for making or authorising the making of statements that
are materially false or misleading with the Corporations Act and
- inserting
a definition of qualified privilege for auditors of a CATSI corporation in a
similar way to the Corporations Act
- Part
15—Finalising processes: propose changes to provide for provide certainty to
corporations following an examination or compliance notice[5]
- Part
16—Dealing with unclaimed property, contains amendments which provide for the creation
of a new special account for the purposes of the Public Governance,
Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (PGPA Act), to hold funds
transferred from the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Corporations
Unclaimed Money Account (Unclaimed Money Account)
- Part
17—Contains amendments relating to external administration and deregistration
of a CTATSI corporation
- Part
18—Minor technical amendments
- Part
19—Review of financial reports: contains amendments which provide for reviews
of financial reports as an alternative to audits under Chapter 7 of the CATSI
Act
- Part
20—Native Title Register: contains amendments to enable the Native Title
Registrar to update the National Native Title Register to reflect a change to
the name or address of a prescribed body corporate or an agent prescribed body
corporate.
Background
Under the Act, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Island
Corporations (CATSI Corporations) are subject to a specialist regulatory
framework designed to make it easier for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
persons to form and manage corporations in a manner that takes account of the
unique cultural contexts of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. As
such, whilst the Act mirrors many requirements of the Corporations Act
2001 it differs in some respects with the aim of providing the
flexibility and support needed to meet those unique cultural needs.
Following the commencement of the Act, CATSI Corporations
now play a crucial role in delivering services and supporting economic
development in Indigenous communities, particularly in remote Australia.[6]
Key areas in which CATSI Corporations operate include the provision of
essential services such as land holding, housing, health, education, employment
and native title services.[7]
In this regard, the spectrum of CATSI Corporations
includes a large number that are not-for-profit and/or delivering community
services (as noted above) in addition to for-profit businesses operated for
purely economic gain. The Final Report noted:
The unique provisions of the CATSI Act reflect its history
and that of its predecessor, the Aboriginal Councils and Associations Act 1976
(ACA Act). Following the 1967 Referendum, it was considered Aboriginal and
Torres Strait Islander people could realise community priorities through
government grants to community organisations. The ACA Act was enacted as a
vehicle to enable people to incorporate community controlled organisations and
was seen to be a measure of self-determination. The nature of corporations
registered under the CATSI Act has changed over time and there are now
for-profit entities, registered charities, community controlled entities and
native title bodies—all at varying degrees of maturity. Some of these entities
are required to incorporate under the CATSI Act, such as RNTBCs, while the
majority of corporations are voluntarily incorporated under the CATSI Act.[8]
As such, the nature of CATSI Corporations is diverse and
hence whilst some have many similarities with for-profit Corporations Act companies,
others are more like not-for-profit incorporated associations and businesses, or
charities regulated by the Australian Charities and Not‑for‑profits
Commission (ACNC). The Final Report noted that this ‘diversity in corporation
types also adds to the complexity in supporting CATSI corporations.’[9]
Role of the Registrar
The Act establishes the Office of the Registrar of
Indigenous Corporations (ORIC) and sets out its functions and powers. Those
powers and functions include:
- advising
on how to incorporate
- training
directors, members and key staff in good governance
- ensuring
compliance with the law and
- intervening
when needed.[10]
Whilst ORIC, as a regulator of corporations, has
similarities with the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC)
there are differences including:
- the
Registrar of ORIC (the Registrar) can intervene when necessary to solve
problems within CATSI corporations, including assisting with dispute resolution
and examining the books of a corporation (in this regard, it has a greater
capacity to intervene by request, or on its own initiative, in the affairs of a
CATSI corporation than ASIC does in relation to companies) and
- whilst
possessing various enforcement powers, the Registrar does not possess all of
the regulatory powers of ASIC. Notably this includes the lack of the power to
impose fines by way of infringement notice or to enter into enforceable
undertakings, both of which may be more appropriate than criminal prosecution
or civil litigation, particularly if the breach is the first offence by a CATSI
corporation.[11]
Reviews of the Act
In recent years the Act has been the subject of several
reviews and reports. This Digest summarises the most recent and substantive
reviews. To the extent they are relevant to the measures contained in the Bill,
recommendations made by these reports are examined in the Key issues and provisions
section of the digest below.
The 2016 Report
In September 2016 the Department of the Prime Minister and
Cabinet (PM&C) commissioned KPMG to conduct a review of the Registrar and
the Act (the 2016 Report), with the object of strengthening the Registrar’s
ability to support the Indigenous corporate sector, and considering whether any
amendments to the Act were necessary to improve the Registrar’s ability or
performance or ensure harmony with other corporate law.[12]
Some of the recommendations about the Act from KPMG’s report appear to have
formed the basis of the subsequent ‘technical review’ of the Act.[13]
The 2017 Technical Review
On 5 July 2017 the Minister for Indigenous Affairs Nigel
Scullion and the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations Anthony Bevan announced a
‘technical review’ of the Act. The purpose of the review was to consider
whether any strengthening or improvement of the Act was necessary, and align it
with ongoing changes in corporate law and regulation.[14]
The Registrar also produced a discussion paper to inform stakeholders and the
review of prospective areas of reform and invite submissions.[15]
The review was contracted to the law firm DLA Piper and
concluded on 31 October 2017 (the 2017 Technical Review). After the review had
taken place, the Registrar released a summary of proposed changes to the Act
stemming from the review, and conducted further consultations with stakeholders
on these proposed changes.[16]
The government has provided a tabulation of responses to the DLA Piper
recommendations in its submission
to the Senate
Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee inquiry into the Corporations
(Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander) Amendment (Strengthening Governance and
Transparency) Bill 2018.[17]
Comprehensive Review of the CATSI
Act 2019-20
In December 2019 the Minister for Indigenous Australians,
the Hon Ken Wyatt, announced a comprehensive
review into the Act (the Final Report).[18]
The National Indigenous Australians Agency (NIAA) led the review. The review
‘built on’ the findings of the 2017 Technical Review and the 2016 Report.[19]
However, the 2019 review had an expanded scope to include a wider range of
issues:
- whether
the CATSI Act is meeting its objects and continues to be desirable as a special
measure for the advancement and protection of Indigenous people as set out in
the Act’s preamble
- whether
the functions and powers of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations are
appropriate, effective and adequate and
- possible
amendments to the CATSI Act to better support the regulation of CATSI
corporations.[20]
Two phases of consultations were conducted.
Feedback from the second phase of consultations informed
the drafting of the Final Report.[21]
The Final Report included 72 recommendations outlining changes to the Act and
identifying additional support that could be provided to corporations
incorporated under the Act. The review also considered aspects of the CATSI
Act that are working effectively, and areas that could be improved. [22]
The Government notes:
The Bill implements, either in whole or in part, a large
majority of the recommendations made by the Final Report of the CATSI Act
Review released by the Australian Government in February 2021.[23]
Committee consideration
Senate Finance and Public
Administration Legislation Committee
The Bill was referred to the Senate Finance and Public
Administration Legislation Committee (the Committee) for inquiry and report by 14
October 2021. Details of the inquiry are at the
inquiry homepage.
The Committee inquiry received 13 submissions into the
Bill. Of those, four were from Government departments, tribunals or agencies
(government-connected submissions).[24]
Nine submissions were from various indigenous groups, entities, corporations
and non-indigenous industry groups (non-government connected submissions).
After considering the submissions and evidence presented
to it, the Committee stated:
Overall, the committee is of the view that the measures
proposed in the bill represent a positive step for Indigenous Australians, and
will support the ability to form and manage Indigenous corporations in a way
that benefits First Australians and takes account of their unique cultural
circumstances.[25]
The Committee recommended that the Bill be passed.[26]
The ALP Senators, whilst noting their support for the
objectives of the Bill,[27]
recommended in their additional comments that:
- the
Government should improve the Bill by adding an amendment to the objects of the
Act to better reflect the intention to build capacity, promote modern
governance and accommodate Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander tradition and
circumstance, consistent with Recommendation 1 of the Final Report of the CATSI
Act Review and
- the
Government should amend the Bill to include a non-exhaustive list of
considerations guiding the Registrar’s discretion to issue or withdraw infringement
notices. At a minimum, these considerations should include the gravity of the
contravention, the likely impact of issuing a notice on an individual or
corporation’s financial security, a corporation’s ability to continue to carry
out its functions and whether the other interventions are more likely to
promote compliance with the Act.[28]
The Australian Greens Senators, whilst noting their ‘support
of the recommendation outlined in the committee report’,[29]
made nine recommendations in their additional comments, including:
- small
corporations under the CATSI Act continue to be required to hold AGMs
- for
increased transparency and accountability, medium and large corporations under
the Act, be required, with sufficient notice before an upcoming Annual General
Meeting or Special General Meeting, to provide members with hard copies of:
- the
Incorporation Certificate
- the
Rule Book [constitution of the CATSI corporation]
- Notices
and Agenda for the meeting
- Annual
Audits
- Other
statutory documents
- Native
Title Act 1993 (Cth) Native Title Documents such as a Native Title
Determination or an Indigenous Land Use Agreement and
- penalties
in the CATSI Act, where higher than for similar offences under the Corporations
Act, be aligned with the penalties under the Corporations Act.[30]
Senate Standing Committee for the
Scrutiny of Bills
At the time of writing the Senate Standing Committee for
the Scrutiny of Bills had conducted its initial analysis of the Bill.[31]
It had sought further information regarding:
- the
imposition of a reversed evidential burden for certain offences and the
imposition of offence-specific defences
- the
imposition of strict liability offences that attract criminal penalties
- the
abrogation of the common law privilege against self-incrimination in some
circumstances and the failure to provide any use or derivative use immunity and
- standing
appropriations that enable entities to spend money from the Consolidated
Revenue Fund on an ongoing basis without regular parliamentary approval and
therefore parliamentary control.[32]
At the time of writing the Minister’s responses to the Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills were not publicly available and
its views on the issues above were not finalised.
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
As noted above, the Opposition has indicated its support
for the objectives of the Bill, whilst recommending two potential changes.[33]
At the time of writing the positions of other non-government
parties and independents regarding the specific measures contained in the Bill
could not be determined.
Position of
major interest groups
Views on the Bill as a whole and in relation to specific
measures contained in the Bill varied substantially between major interest
groups. These views are examined in the Key issues and provisions section of
the Digest below. However, concerns were raised in a number of submissions to
the Senate Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee inquiry into
the Bill regarding:
- whether
the Act is or is not properly characterised as a permissible ‘special measure’
under international human rights conventions and/or the Racial
Discrimination Act 1975 (not explored in this Digest)[34]
and
- the
adequacy of not only the exposure draft consultation process, but previous
consultation processes including those related to the Final Report.[35]
The Final Report indicates that many of its
recommendations that the Bill seeks to implement had support from most (or
many) organisations that engaged in that consultation process.
Financial
implications
According to the Explanatory Memorandum states the Bill
will have no financial impact on the Commonwealth.[36]
Special appropriations
Part 16 of the Bill will
create a new special account for the purposes of the Public Governance,
Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (PGPA Act), to be known
as the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Corporations Assets Protection
Account (Assets Protection Account). This new special account will hold funds
transferred from the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Corporations
Unclaimed Money Account (Unclaimed Money Account) after a period of 6 years and
these funds will be used to meet the costs associated with managing property
vested with the Registrar.
Item 279 establishes a new special account to hold
funds held in the Unclaimed Money Account for a period of 6 years that would
have otherwise be paid to the Consolidated Revenue Fund formed under section 81
of the Constitution.
As such, as noted by the Senate Standing Committee for the
Scrutiny of Bills, the Bill creates standing appropriations that enables the
Registrar to spend money from the Consolidated Revenue Fund on an ongoing basis
without regular parliamentary approval and therefore parliamentary control.[37]
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.[38]
Parliamentary Joint Committee on
Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights made no
comment on the Bill on the basis that it does not engage, or only marginally
engages, human rights; promotes human rights; and/or permissibly limits human
rights.[39]
Key issue: powers
of the Registrar
Part 2 of the Bill makes several changes to the
Registrar’s powers, including a power to accept enforceable undertakings and
issue infringement notices in connection with contraventions of the Act.
The Bill will alter existing powers of the Registrar
including:
- provision
of a process to reject changes to the constitution of a CATSI Corporation made
by a special administrator in particular circumstances[40]
- placing
a CATSI Corporation into special administration.[41]
The Bill will also remove certain powers of the
Registrar including:
- to
provide comments to members of a CATSI Corporation on related party
transactions[42]
- those
related to providing exemptions to the prohibitions on certain third-party
transactions.[43]
These are examined below.
Power to issue infringement notices
A general description of infringement notices is:
a notice of a pecuniary penalty imposed on a person by
statute setting out particulars of an alleged contravention of a law …
Infringement notices are administrative methods for dealing with certain
breaches of the law and are typically used for low-level offences and where a
high volume of uncontested contraventions is likely.[44]
That is, infringement notices are used for low-level
contraventions of civil penalty provisions. They provide a regulator with an
alternative to civil (that is, court) litigation as an enforcement mechanism.
Importantly, issuing an infringement notice to a regulated entity (in this
instance, a CATSI Corporation) means:
- the
regulated entity can pay an amount of money specified in the notice, as an
alternative to having court proceedings brought against it for an alleged
contravention (which can save the entity time and money) and
- allows
the regulator to commence enforcement action in court if the regulated entity
does not pay the amount specified in the notice and
- importantly,
allows the regulated entity to elect to contest the notice in court if it
desires.
As such, infringement notices are a long-standing
regulatory mechanism that are designed to increase the range of tools and
responses available to a regulator to allow for a more flexible approach to
regulation whilst also ensuring that regulated entities and persons retain
their rights to contest alleged breaches in court (should they choose to).
Current situation under the Act
Currently, Part 8 of the Act deals with the civil
consequences of contravening civil penalty provisions in the Act (essentially
conferring powers upon the court to impose civil penalties). Other enforcement
powers are scattered throughout the Act. Currently the Act applies the Regulatory Powers
(Standard Provisions) Act 2014 infringement notices framework in
relation to Part 6-7A, which deals with director identification numbers.[45]
The Act currently allows for the Regulations to prescribe
offences to which penalty notices (essentially infringement notices by another
name) can be issued, and the penalties that would apply. No offences or
associated penalties have been prescribed.[46]
Previous report recommendations in
relation to infringement notices
The 2016 Report noted the Registrar expressed a view that
‘penalty notices are not an effective enforcement tool, but are generally used
by other regulators as ‘revenue raising’ tools’.[47]
The Final Report appears to have reached a different conclusion regarding the
effectiveness of infringement notices as an enforcement tool, noting:
Despite having essentially the same role, the Registrar does
not possess all of the regulatory powers of ASIC. For example, currently the
only action open to the Registrar where a corporation has failed to lodge
reports is to consider commencing a criminal prosecution and refer a matter to
the Commonwealth Director of Public Prosecutions (CDPP) for this purpose. Depending
on the facts of the case, this may be a heavy-handed response to what might be
a minor regulatory breach. Unlike ASIC, the Registrar does not have the
power to impose fines by way of infringement notice, which may be more
appropriate, particularly if the breach is the first offence by a corporation.
In 2017—after 10 years of administering the CATSI Act—it
was very clear that there was a gap in the regulatory tools at the disposal of
ORIC and the Registrar resulting in a sometimes disproportionate response to
non-compliance. Feedback from CATSI corporations and members also indicated
a frustration with Registrar’s inability to respond to certain situations. The
Technical Review was asked to consider this and reported that some stakeholders
expressed the view that the Registrar and ORIC require additional powers which
are less severe in scope or consequence to supplement existing powers. In other
words, there was a widespread view that a broader range of powers (and
resulting regulatory and support options) is needed.[48]
[emphasis added]
This led the Final Report to note:
We proposed to expand the powers of the Registrar to include
a suite of lower level discretionary powers, modelled on those of ASIC,
including the power to issue penalty notices which in essence impose fines.
This would enable the Registrar to respond in a proportionate manner,
reflecting the nature of the breach. Of the 17 responses to the survey on this
Chapter, 88 per cent agreed with providing the Registrar with a broader suite of
lower level powers modelled on those of ASIC, including the power to issue
penalty notices. The two responses that did not agree with this proposal
offered no reasons for their objection.[49]
The Final Report recommended that the Registrar be given
the power to issue penalty notices.[50]
The Bill implements that recommendation.
Power of the Registrar to issue infringement
notice under new infringement notice scheme
The Bill will expand the existing ability for regulations
to create an infringement notice regime. This is by virtue of proposed
Division 571 (Part 13-3) which establishes an infringement notice scheme
based on offences to be prescribed in the Corporations (Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander) Regulations 2017 (CATSI Regulations). Thus, the Regulations
will specify the offences in respect of which the Registrar can issue an
infringement notice. The Explanatory Memorandum notes that the proposed
provisions in this part are based on similar provisions in the Corporations
Act, which provide for more regulatory flexibility.[51]
Under the regime, the Registrar will be able to issue an
infringement notice to a person who they believes on reasonable grounds has
committed an offence prescribed in the Regulations.[52]
Importantly, an infringement notice must be issued within 12 months after the
day on which the offence was alleged to have been committed.[53]
The Corporations Act contains a similar limitation.[54]
The Explanatory Memorandum notes that applying that limitation:
is aimed at ensuring that the Registrar takes timely action
to address alleged contraventions of the law.[55]
Proposed section 571-10 sets out the matters that
must be included in an infringement notice including the details of the alleged
offence, the amount that is payable under the notice, stating payment is not an
admission of guilt and that the person may make written representations to the
Registrar seeking the withdrawal of the notice. One notable change is that the Registrar
will have the power to extend the payment period for an infringement notice and
enter into an arrangement to allow a person to pay the amount by instalments.[56]
Stakeholder views
None of the non-government connected submissions to the Senate
Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee inquiry into the Bill
directly addressed the changes to the power of the Registrar to issue
infringement notices. The Final Report noted:
We proposed to expand the powers of the Registrar to include
a suite of lower level discretionary powers, modelled on those of ASIC,
including the power to issue penalty notices which in essence impose fines.
This would enable the Registrar to respond in a proportionate manner,
reflecting the nature of the breach. Of the 17 responses to the survey on this
Chapter, 88 per cent agreed with providing the Registrar with a broader suite
of lower level powers modelled on those of ASIC, including the power to issue
penalty notices. The two responses that did not agree with this proposal
offered no reasons for their objection.
In total, 22 submissions made comments in regard to this
Chapter, and responses were quite varied. Twelve submissions supported or
expressed qualified support for the proposal for the Registrar to have the
power to issue fines, four did not support, and a further six made no comment
or wanted further information before indicating a position.[57]
The Final Report concluded that ‘on balance, there is
support for providing the Registrar with lower-level powers including the power
to issue penalty notices’.[58]
Power to accept enforceable
undertakings
An enforceable undertaking is a legal agreement where the
person undertakes to a regulator to either perform, or refrain from, a
particular action in exchange for avoiding, or minimising, the disciplinary
action required to be taken against them by the regulator for the alleged
breach.[59]
They are considered an efficient and effective alternative to criminal offences[60]
or civil prosecution.[61]
The use of enforceable undertakings was pioneered by ASIC
and the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) in the early
1990s—that is, by corporate regulators.[62]
The Australian Law Reform Commission in 2003 noted:
The flexibility of undertakings has enabled ASIC and the ACCC
to secure timely and cost-effective outcomes that would not be achievable by
court order, offering, it is said, tangible benefits for affected parties, and
the prospect of lasting improvement in market conduct by the entity involved ….
Undertakings are also popular with the regulated community. It was observed in
one consultation that enforceable undertakings for corporations are ‘a nice
way’ of warning and giving the regulated entity ‘another chance’. It was also
stated that enforceable undertakings encourage greater candour and promote
compliance.[63]
Current position under the Act
Currently the Act does not provide the Registrar with the
power to enter into enforceable undertakings, unlike ASIC or the ACCC. The
Final Report noted:
We proposed the Registrar’s powers be expanded to accept
enforceable undertakings as well as to identify situations where the
corporation is failing to fulfil the undertaking it has made. This was one of
the more uncontroversial proposals, encountering little resistance either in
the consultation sessions, the survey or submissions. Participants in
consultation sessions questioned what types of breaches might be addressed
through an enforceable undertaking and what an undertaking might look like.
Enforceable undertakings can be used as a remedy for a broad range of
non-compliance.[64]
Previous report recommendations in
relation to enforceable undertaking
The Final Report noted:
At the moment, the CATSI Act effectively offers an
‘all or nothing’ regulatory approach with criminal prosecution being one of the
only remedies available to the Registrar in many instances. Effective
regulatory models provide for a graduated, proportionate approach to dealing
with non-compliance. There was support for such an approach under the CATSI
Act and for the Registrar to be able to access a suite of powers enabling
him or her to take appropriate action to address the specific nature of any
non-compliance … Depending on the facts of the case, this [criminal
prosecution] may be a heavy-handed response to what might be a minor regulatory
breach … An enforceable undertaking can also avoid the Registrar having to
take prosecution action for relatively minor breaches of the Act. Both the
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) and ASIC use enforceable
undertakings. However, the Registrar does not currently have the power to
accept enforceable undertakings from corporations.[65]
[emphasis added]
The Final Report recommended that the Registrar be given
the power to enter into enforceable undertaking.[66]
The Bill implements that recommendation.
The Bill provides the Registrar
with the power to accept enforceable undertakings
The Bill will introduce a new power for the Registrar to
enter into enforceable undertakings in lieu of court-based enforcement action.[67]
The Explanatory Memorandum notes that they are based on the ASIC Act and
will give the Registrar ‘similar powers to ASIC’.[68]
The Explanatory Memorandum further notes:
… the Registrar could accept enforceable undertakings where
there has been repeated non-compliance with the Act and the terms of the
undertaking would be directed at the type of non-compliance involved. For
example, if a CATSI corporation has not held general meetings when requested to
do so by the prescribed number of members, despite being required to do so
under the Act, the Registrar might consider accepting an enforceable undertaking
whereby the corporation might undertake to hold a general meeting within a
specified period, or have directors undergo governance training. In certain
circumstances, an undertaking might be given that involves public
acknowledgement of the non-compliance such as publishing an apology or
providing compensation for those members who were inconvenienced or
disadvantaged.[69]
Importantly, entering an enforceable undertaking is
voluntary. That is, the person or entity that gives them to the Registrar will
have voluntarily elected to do so. Proposed subsection 439-25(2)
reinforces this by providing that the person who has given the undertaking can
withdraw or vary the terms of that undertaking at any time, so long as the
Registrar consents. As noted by the Explanatory Memorandum this ‘ensures that
no person who has given an undertaking is bound by terms that they do not agree
to’.[70]
Consequences for non-compliance
with an enforceable undertaking
Where a person or entity fails to comply with an
enforceable undertaking, the Registrar can commence criminal or civil action
against a person for breaches of the Act.
Importantly however, the Bill provides the Registrar with
an alternative. Proposed subsection 439-25(3) allows the Registrar to
apply to the Court if they consider that the person who has given the
undertaking has breached any of its terms. In turn, proposed subsection
439-25(4) allows the Court to make a range of orders including:
- directing
the person to comply with the term of the undertaking that has been breached
- directing
the person to pay the Commonwealth an amount reasonably attributable to the
breach, up to the amount of any financial benefit the person gained by
committing the breach
- directing
the person to compensate any other person who has suffered loss or damage as a
result of the breach or
- any
other order that the Court considers appropriate.
The Explanatory Memorandum notes:
This power provides the Registrar with an effective and more
cost-efficient alternative to having to initiate criminal or civil action
against a person for breaches of the Act. The power may be utilised by the
Registrar for lower-level matters for which criminal or civil prosecution may
be a disproportionate response in terms of cost and regulatory overstep.[71]
Stakeholder views
None of the non-government connected submissions to the Senate
Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee inquiry into the Bill
directly addressed the power of the Registrar to accept enforceable
undertakings. The Final Report noted:
Of the 17 survey responses, 88 per cent agreed that the
Registrar should be able to accept enforceable undertakings. One of the two
survey respondents who disagreed indicated a more general disaffection with the
role of the Registrar as a whole.
Thirteen of the 22 submissions that addressed this Chapter
made a comment on enforceable undertakings including 12 that expressed support
for the proposal, and one indicated the proposal appeared reasonable but
required further detail.[72]
Power to reject changes to CATSI
Corporation constitutions
As with other incorporated entities (including companies
regulated by the Corporations Act), a CATSI Corporation’s internal
management may be governed by legislation (in this case the Act) that apply
‘replaceable rules’ to the entity, by a constitution, or a combination of both.[73]
As noted in the Final Report:
Constitutions outline a corporation’s purpose, guide
operations, and clarify the relationship between members and directors.[74]
Typically, a company constitution sets out the rules
governing matters such as the rights of shareholders, the conducts of
shareholders’ and directors’ meetings, powers of directors, their appointment
and remuneration. They may also deal with the purposes and objects of the
company, which can operate to restrict the business activities in which the
company may engage in.[75]
A company constitution can also deal with a range of other lawful matters.
However, a company constitution will be invalid if it is contrary to public
policy, if it purports to limit the statutory rights or liabilities of its
members, or if it is expressly or impliedly rendered void by legislation.[76]
Current position under the Act
Currently the Act allows the constitution of a CATSI
Corporation to be changed in a number of ways including by:
- the
corporation passing a special resolution effecting the change, complying with
any applicable requirements in its constitution and lodging certain documents
with the Registrar
- by
court order
- by
the Registrar and
- by
a special administrator.[77]
The Corporations Act contains no similar provisions
allowing ASIC or an administrator to alter the constitution of a company.[78]
Whilst ASIC does not have the power to alter a company’s constitution, it is
not uncommon for regulators overseeing other types of incorporated entities (many
of which operate businesses) to have similar powers (for example, refusing to
register changes to the rules of an entity in certain circumstances). For
example, in Queensland the Associations
Incorporation Act 1981 (QLD) provides for the Chief Executive to:
- refuse
an application for incorporation if they are satisfied that the proposed rules
of the association do not comply with that Act[79]
and
- refuse
to register a rule change (noting no limitations are placed on this power other
than to provide reasons for the refusal).[80]
Equivalent ACT legislation contains a similar power.[81]
The General Manager of the Fair Work Commission can likewise refuse rule
alterations and make rule alterations for entities regulated by the Fair Work
(Registered Organisations) Act 2009 (FWRO Act) where the rules of
the organisation (comparable to a company constitution) ‘do not, in the General
Manager’s opinion, make provision required by this Act’.[82]
The ACNC, whilst not having the power to alter an entities constitution or
rules, has the power to deregister or refuse registration of entities where
they do not comply with the Act or relevant governance standards,[83]
which potentially includes where the entities constitution is the cause of such
non‑compliance.
Current powers of the Registrar
with respect to CATSI Corporation constitutions
The Act currently provides that various constitutional
changes are subject to review by the Registrar, and the Registrar can change a CATSI
Corporation’s constitution in certain circumstances.[84]
Currently the Registrar:
- must
not register a constitutional change made by a CATSI Corporation via special
resolution or by a special administrator unless the Registrar is satisfied that,
with the constitutional change, the internal governance rules of the
corporation would comply with the internal governance rule requirements set out
in the Act[85]
or
- must
not register a constitutional change where it is lodged after the Registrar has
changed the constitution unless the Registrar is satisfied that:
- the
lodged change is consistent with the change made by the Registrar, taking into
account the Registrar’s reasons for making that change and
- the
reasons for the Registrar making that change are no longer applicable[86]
- may,
on his or her own initiative, change a CATSI Corporation’s constitution where
they are satisfied that the corporation is not meeting the internal governance
rules requirements.[87]
- may,
on his or her own initiative, change a CATSI Corporation’s constitution where
they are satisfied that the conduct of the corporation’s affairs, or an actual
or proposed act or omission by or on behalf of the corporation, or a
resolution, or a proposed resolution, of members or a class of members of the
corporation, is either:
- contrary
to the interests of the members as a whole or
- oppressive
to, unfairly prejudicial to, or unfairly discriminatory against, a member or
members whether in that capacity or in any other capacity.[88]
Where the Registrar, on their own initiative, exercises the
power to change the constitution of a CATSI Corporation, the Act currently
provides that the Registrar may only make changes that they consider
appropriate, having regard to the internal governance rules requirements and
the circumstances of the particular corporation.[89]
Previous report recommendations in relation to amending CATSI Corporation
constitutions
The 2016 Report recommended that the Registrar retain its
existing powers to amend CATSI Corporation constitutions and provide an
additional power to amend or refuse to register an amendment to a CATSI
Corporation constitution if its terms are inconsistent with a native title
determination.[90]
The 2017 Technical Review recommended:
the Registrar be granted the power to refuse to register a
rule book if, in the Registrar's opinion, it is deemed "not fit for
purpose" for the CATSI corporation. Where such a determination occurs the
members must either confirm adoption of the rule book in its current state or
provide a re-drafted rule book, which the Registrar must approve (subject to
the other requirements for registration being satisfied).[91]
The Final Report recommended that ‘an explicit provision
be included in the CATSI Act to allow the Registrar to reject changes to
a rule book [constitution] that are inconsistent with ones made by a special
administrator’.[92]
The Bill is consistent with that recommendation.
New powers of the Registrar regarding
CATSI Corporations constitutions
The Explanatory Memorandum notes:
Special administrators often make changes to a corporation’s
constitution with the purpose of addressing aspects of the corporation’s
operations that are leading to governance or financial difficulties.[93]
The Bill will prevent CATSI corporations from seeking to
reverse changes made by a special administrator except where the corporation’s
circumstances (that led to the constitution being changed) have sufficiently
changed.[94]
Table 1 below compares the current powers of the Registrar and those proposed
by the Bill.
Table 1: power of Registrar to
refuse certain changes to a CATSI Corporation’s constitution
Current powers and requirements |
Proposed powers and requirements |
- A constitutional
change can be made by a special administrator or by the CATSI Corporation via
a special resolution[95]
- The
Registrar must decide whether to register such a constitutional change[96]
- The
Registrar must not register such a change unless the Registrar is satisfied
that, with the constitutional change, the internal governance rules of the
corporation would comply with the internal governance rule requirements.[97]
|
- Unchanged
except that in addition to being satisfied that the change complies with relevant
internal governance requirements, the Registrar must not register a
constitutional change lodged after a special administrator has changed the
constitution under section 499-5 unless the Registrar is satisfied that:
- the lodged
change is consistent with the change made by the special administrator,
having regard to the purposes of making that change; or
- the
circumstances of the corporation have changed sufficiently that the lodged
change does not need to be consistent with the change made by the special
administrator.[98]
|
Source: as per footnotes in table above.
View of stakeholders
None of the non-government connected submissions to the Senate
Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee inquiry into the Bill
directly addressed the power of the Registrar to power refuse to register an
amendment to a CATSI Corporation constitution if its terms are inconsistent
with a change made by a special administrator.
The Final Report noted that in relation to Registrar having
the power to reject inconsistent changes only for a specified period of time (for
example, three years after the conclusion of a special administration):
Of the 19 survey respondents, 79 per cent agreed with this
proposal. Two of the reasons provided by those who did not agree included the
view that the special administrator does not always make the right changes and
changes to the rule book should be the responsibility of the board.[99]
Power to appoint a special administrator
The Act provides that CATSI Corporations can be placed
into external administration in the same ways that companies can under the Corporations
Act, as well as providing for a unique form of external administration termed
special administration.
External administration under the Corporations
Act
Under the Corporations Act the three main forms of
external administration are voluntary administration,[100]
liquidation[101]
and receivership.[102]
All of those can apply to CATSI Corporations.[103]
External administration involves an independent person with accounting and
management expertise being appointed to take control of the company, usually to
the exclusion of the directors. Whilst not explored in detail in this Digest,
in summary:
- Administration
is designed to resolve a company’s future direction quickly and to administer
the affairs of the company in a way that results in a better return to
creditors than they would have received if the company had been placed straight
into liquidation[104]
- Liquidation
is designed to ensure the orderly winding up of a company’s affairs, including
the realisation of assets to satisfy creditors (to the extent possible),
investigating the affairs of the company and reporting to creditors about the
company’s affairs, including any unfair preferences which may be recoverable,
any uncommercial transactions which may be set aside, and any possible claims
against the company’s officers[105]
and
- Receivership
(which can either be general or particular) is designed to protect contractual
rights of lenders to companies, but also (in some circumstances) the rights of
minority shareholders and other persons who may be impacted by improper or
fraudulent activity by a company or its officers.[106]
Under the Corporations Act all three main forms of
external administration involve either the directors, creditors, a general
meeting, or a court (depending on the form of external administration)
appointing a person to over control of the company as a whole, or in relation
to particular property owned by it (in the case of some forms of receivership).
Importantly, ASIC does not have the power under the Corporations Act to directly
place a company into a form of external administration.[107]
In contrast, the ACNC can appoint an acting ‘responsible
entity’ to control certain forms of regulated entities where the ACNC has
suspended the directors of a company or the trustees of a trust.[108]
Further, unlike the situation under the Act, the ACNC Commissioner can give
directions to an acting responsible entity.[109]
In relation to co-operatives, recent national
law reform has seen model co-operative laws introduced. Under those laws
the relevant Registrar can appoint an administrator to take control of a co-operative
where (among other things):
- the
Registrar is of the opinion that the co-operative is insolvent or likely to
become insolvent at some future time
- the
co-operative has wilfully and after notice from the Registrar violated the
provisions of this law or the rules of the co-operative or
- after
an inquiry under this law into the affairs of a co-operative or the working and
financial condition of a co-operative, it is in the interests of members or
creditors of the co-operative or the public that the action (appointing an
administrator) concerned should be taken.[110]
Special administration under the
Act
Part 11-2 of the Act currently allows the Registrar to
place a CATSI Corporation into special administration in a wide range of
circumstances including where:
- the
corporation has traded at a loss for at least 6 months during the period of 12
months before the determination is made
- the
corporation or the officers of the corporation have failed to comply with, or
to ensure that the corporation complies with, the Act, an internal governance
rule of the corporation, certain notices given by the Registrar to the
directors where there is a failure to give the Registrar a satisfactory
explanation for the relevant failure(s) (includes various reporting obligations)
or
- a
majority of the directors request the Registrar to do so.[111]
Under the Act, before placing a CATSI Corporation into
special administration the Registrar must:
- provide
a written notice to the corporation to show cause within the period specified
as to why a special administrator should not be appointed and
- consider
the response to the show cause notice.[112]
This applies even where the directors of a CATSI
Corporation have asked the Registrar to appoint a special administrator.[113]
The 2016 Report noted that the power to
appoint a special administrator to a CATSI Corporation was one of ‘the more
significant and unusual powers of the Registrar’, but one aimed at addressing
‘the unique role and circumstances of Indigenous corporations.’[114]
In general terms the Act currently allows a special
administrator to be appointed by the Registrar to take control of a CATSI Corporation
in a broad range of situations, many (but not all) of which are often
co-symptomatic of serious irregularity in the financial affairs of a
corporation. These include failures to comply with reporting requirements,
financial losses and the directors of a company acting in their own interests.
The 2016 Report noted that usually
‘special administrators are appointed as a result of an examination, and
occasionally directors or members of a corporation also request a special administration’.[115] The 2016 Report also noted that once an administrator has been
appointed, special administrations generally go through three key stages:
- resolving the critical issues that resulted in the special
administrator being appointed
- consolidating and ensure proper procedures and processes are in
place
- preparations to hand back the corporation.[116]
As mentioned above, no comparable power is provided to
ASIC by the Corporations Act but the ACNC and state-based cooperative
regulators have similar powers to those provided by the Act to the Registrar.
Previous
report recommendations in relation to amending CATSI corporation constitutions
The 2016 Report recommended that the Act be amended so
that:
… for the purpose of establishing that there are grounds
under which to place a corporation into special administration, a corporation
should be presumed to have been operating at a loss where financial records
have not been kept. This would be somewhat similar to the provisions relating
to those available to liquidators under section 588E of the Corporations Act.
The review supports progressing this potential change.[117]
The 2016 Report also recommended allowing CATSI Corporations
to be placed into special administration without following the show cause
process where all the relevant directors make a request.[118]
The 2017 Report recommended the Act be amended to provide:
- an
additional ground for placing a CATSI Corporation into special administration
be that an authorised officer appointed to conduct an examination has reported
that the corporation is insolvent
- for
CATSI Corporations to be placed into special administration without following
the show cause process where all the relevant directors make a request and
- additional
grounds for placing a CATSI Corporation into special administration be added:
- the
corporation has no directors.
- where
in the opinion of the Registrar there is doubt as to whether the board of
directors is validly constituted and that doubt, when it first came to the
attention of the Registrar is not resolved either within 21 days of the date,
or such longer period as the Registrar may, in writing to the corporation allow
and
- where
all the directors of the corporation request in writing
- breaches
of native title legislation and
- substantial
or repeated breaches of the prohibition on related party transactions.[119]
The Final Report recommended:
- the
‘show cause’ notice procedure not be required under the Act when a majority of
directors have requested that a special administrator be appointed and
- the
current ground for appointing a special administrator that the CATSI
Corporation has traded at a loss for at least six of the last 12 months be
changed to identification of an irregularity in the management of a
corporation’s financial affairs.[120]
The changes proposed by the Bill in relation to special
administration is consistent with the Final Report recommendations set out
above.
Changes to power
to place CATSI Corporations into special administration
The Bill will change only one of the grounds that allow CATSI
Corporations to be placed into special administration.[121]
It will also change how requests from a majority of directors to place a CATSI
Corporation into special administration are dealt with by the Registrar.[122]
As noted above, currently the Registrar can place a CATSI
Corporation into special administration where the corporation has traded at a
loss for at least 6 months during the period of 12 months before the
determination is made.[123]
The Bill would replace that ground with ‘where there is a serious irregularity
in the financial affairs of the corporation’, which narrows the range of
circumstances under which the Registrar could place a CATSI Corporation under
special administration. It would also reduce pressure on the Registrar to make
inquiries into CATSI Corporations that have made such losses in order to
evaluate if the power should be exercised. In that regard, the Explanatory
Memorandum states:
This will enable the Registrar to better identify CATSI
corporations requiring assistance and make it easier for the Registrar to
appoint a special administrator to assist a CATSI corporation.[124]
The Bill replaces that ground with where there is ‘a
serious irregularity in the financial affairs of the corporation’. As the word
‘serious’ is not qualified or defined in the Bill or the Act it is likely to be
interpreted as having its ordinary meaning and would therefore appear unlikely
to capture repeated low-level financial irregularities.
From the drafting, the new power is directed at financial
irregularities rather than trading outcomes. This means that what is captured and
can trigger the appointment of a special administrator are intentional
misstatements or omissions of information relating to financial transactions,
matters or reports that are detrimental to the interests of the CATSI
Corporation. It therefore covers fraud, the falsification of records to
misappropriate assets of the company, falsification of financial reports and so
forth. These will often be detected through audits, whistle-blowers,
examinations conducted by authorised persons and other means. As such, the Bill
will result in the Registrar will have an increased focus on governance and
compliance with reporting obligations, rather than trading outcomes per se.
The second change made by the Bill is to provide that the
Registrar does not have to give a ‘show cause notice’ where a majority of the
corporation’s directors requested, in writing, that the Registrar appoint a
special administrator. It appears that this measure is aimed at reducing ‘red
tape’ and improving the timeliness and efficiency of the use of the power to
place the company into special administration when requested by the directors
to do so.
Views of key
stakeholders
The First Nations Bailai, Gurang, Gooreng Gooreng,
Taribelang Bunda People Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC opposed the measure on a
number grounds including:
- there
are ‘fundamental issues with the special administration regime that cannot be
justified under the special measure tests’
- ‘there
is nothing within these provisions that could not be addressed, and in a manner
more consistent with the rights of self-determination, under a new Special
Regulatory Assistance Scheme’
- ‘it
fails to act as a learning experience for the corporation, its management and
its board thus First Nations Corporations can end up back in special
administration for a second or third time’
- ‘it
acts as a deterrent for First Nations Corporations to seek assistance early
when they are facing difficulties as by bringing their issues to the attention
of ORIC, the Registrar can step in and appoint a special administrator
resulting in them losing control of their corporations. This can potentially
have the adverse effect that by the time a corporation is put into special
administration it is in a far worse position than it would otherwise be had it
sought assistance when it first began facing difficulties’ and
- ‘it
is a negative discriminatory measure as no other corporations in Australia can
be taken over by a regulator in this manner without the consent of the Board or
members’.[125]
None of the other non-government connected submissions to
the Senate Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee inquiry into
the Bill addressed the power of the Registrar to place a CATSI Corporation
under special administration. The Final Report noted that in response to the
suggestion of changing one of the grounds for the appointment of a special
administrator from where a CATSI Corporation has traded at a loss for at least
six of the last 12 months to an irregularity in the management of a
corporation’s financial affairs:
There was general support for these changes from participants
in the consultation sessions and one question around how financial irregularity
would be defined. It is proposed the existing definitions for examinable
affairs and operations would be used for this purpose. Of the 12 survey
responses, 100 per cent agreed with the proposal. However, more than half of
the submissions that commented on this proposal raised concerns about the
suggested ground lowering the threshold for the appointment of a special
administrator. While they saw merit in changing the current ground, they
contended that ‘irregularity in the management of financial affairs’ was too
broad, too vague, and needed further refinement.[126]
[emphasis added]
Key issue: changes
to CATSI Corporations
The Bill makes changes to how CATSI Corporations are
classified as small, medium or large and also makes changes relating to joint
ventures with, and subsidiaries of, CATSI Corporations.
Classifications
The classification of a CATSI Corporation determines a
range of obligations under the Act, including for example, the corporation’s
annual reporting obligations.[127]
Under the Corporations Act companies are classified by both type and
size, and both factors affect reporting obligations (for example, disclosure of
executive remuneration).[128]
In relation to small and large propriety companies, classification is based on
consideration of the company’s consolidated revenue, assets and number of
employees.[129]
Currently CATSI Corporations are classified according to
their size.[130]
A CATSI Corporation’s size is currently determined by a threefold test based on
income, assets and number of employees.[131]
Previous report recommendations in
relation to classification of CATSI Corporations
The 2016 Report noted that that a ‘simplification of
corporation size categories (from three to two)’ would ‘better align’ the Act
with ‘mainstream incorporation legislation’.[132]
The 2017 Technical Review recommended:
The CATSI Act should embody a three tiered model based on
revenue with small companies below $250,000 of revenue having significantly
lesser obligations. It is recommended that the threshold be aligned with
requirements for companies limited by guarantee (i.e. revenue of $250,000,
below $1m and $1m and above), that the deductible gift recipient requirement not
be replicated and the same reporting requirements apply as for companies
limited by guarantee.[133]
The Final Report recommended that CATSI Corporation
classification framework in the Act be ‘aligned with that of the Australian
Charities and Not-for-profits Commission Act 2012 size classification
framework’.[134]
Changes to how CATSI Corporations
will be classified
The Bill provides that CATSI Corporations will be
registered as a small, medium or large based on a simple consolidated revenue
test only.[135]
Threshold consolidated revenue amounts for each sized corporation will be
prescribed in the Regulations.[136]
The Explanatory Memorandum notes:
The introduction of the new size classification system will
align the Act with the criterion for determining entity size under the ACNC
Act. This measure will assist nearly 30 per cent of CATSI corporations who are
also registered under the ACNC Act.[137]
Table 2 below gives a comparison of the relevant revenue
thresholds that currently apply to entities regulated by the ACNC.
Table 2: consolidate income thresholds
Size of entity |
ACNC Act consolidated revenue threshold |
Existing Act consolidated revenue threshold |
Thresholds proposed by the Final Report |
Small |
Less than $250,000 |
Less than $100,000 |
Less than $250,000 |
Medium |
Between $250,000 and $1m |
Between $100,000 and $5m |
Between $250,000 and $1m |
Large |
Greater than $1m[138] |
Greater than $5m[139] |
Greater than $1m[140] |
Source: as per footnotes in table.
Views of key stakeholders
The Victorian Aboriginal Heritage Council (VAHC) supported
the principle that the reporting requirements of CATSI Corporations under the
Act should equate to those of the Corporations Act[141]
and hence opposed the measure on a number grounds, including that while it may
reduce reporting requirements for some corporations it may increase the
reporting requirements for mid-size corporations.[142]
VAHC also noted:
Second, and more fundamentally, the equation of all CATSI
corporations with companies limited by guarantee [not-for-profit and charitable
organisations] under the CA [Corporations Act] is inappropriate. While
all CATSI corporations have a member (as opposed to shareholder) structure as
do companies limited by guarantee under the CA not all CATSI corporations are
established for public or community purposes as is usually the case with
companies limited by guarantee.
Many CATSI corporations are established for private business
purposes. These companies equate more closely with Proprietary Limited
corporations under the CA. In respect of a Proprietary Limited corporation the
CA has only two classifications; small (revenue < $12.5m) and large (revenue
> $12.5m). The proposed amendment would only operate to continue or increase
the regulatory burden on CATSI corporations of this nature. In addition, it
continues the false perception that CATSI corporations are necessarily “social
enterprises” when this is manifestly not the case as indicated by the fact that
70% of CATSI corporations are not ACNC registered.[143]
[emphasis added]
None of the other non-government connected submissions to
the Senate Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee inquiry into
the Bill addressed how CATSI Corporations should be classified.
The Final Report noted that in response to the suggestion
of changing how the size classification of CATSI Corporations operates:
We asked whether people thought the CATSI size classification
should be changed to that of the ACNC. Overall, we received mixed support. In the
consultation sessions, participants could see the benefit to registered
charities that are also CATSI corporations with aligning the two frameworks.
However, they did not think that revenue as the only determinant of size
accurately reflected the nature or risk of corporations with significant asset
holdings such as land holding and housing corporations. Similarly, number of
employees was considered to be an important consideration of size by the
Stakeholder Reference Group … In the survey we asked people whether they
thought the three sizes should be retained with a simplified test or they
thought there should be only two sizes: small and large. Sixty-eight per cent
of survey respondents agreed with the question with 10 respondents indicating a
preference for a three-tier model and six respondents preferring a two-tier
model. One respondent suggested moving to a five-tier model.
Two of the responses suggested that three tiers should be
retained because there is a significant shift in obligations between small and
large corporations. This was also raised in the consultation sessions where
participants considered that there was value in having a medium tier to enable
corporations to gradually build their capacity before being subject to the
obligations associated with a large corporation. Overall there was very limited
support for a two-tier model in the consultation sessions.[144]
Joint ventures and subsidiaries
Currently, the Act contains rules relating to membership
that are viewed as inhibiting the ability of CATSI Corporations to establish wholly
owned or joint-venture subsidiaries.[145]
Current position under the Act
One of the basic requirements for registration of a CATSI
Corporation is that it meets the ‘minimum number of member’s requirement’ under
subsection 77-5(1) of the Act. Broadly, this requires a CATSI corporation to
have at least five members unless
otherwise exempted by the Registrar.[146]
Importantly, currently the Act only permits individuals to become members of a
CATSI Corporation.[147]
The Act also imposes an ‘Indigeneity Requirement’. This is
set out in section 29-5 of the Act.[148]
A CATSI Corporation satisfies this requirement if:
- in
the case of a corporation with five or more members—at least 51 per cent of the
members are Aboriginal and Torres Strait
Islander persons (also referred to as Indigenous persons in this Digest)
- in
the case of a corporation with less than five members but more than one—all of
the members, or all but one of the members are Indigenous persons or
- in
the case of a corporation with only one member—the member is an Indigenous
person.[149]
Previous report recommendations
regarding wholly owned or joint-venture subsidiaries
The 2016 Report recommended amending the Act to ‘provide
greater flexibility for Indigenous people and bodies corporate when
establishing corporate structures’.[150]
The 2017 Technical Review recommended:
in order to promote greater flexibility in the design of
corporate structures for CATSI corporations, which would, in turn, promote increased
economic activity, that:
1. CATSI corporations be permitted to wholly-own other CATSI
corporations as the sole corporate member, unless this is expressly prohibited
by the CATSI corporation in its rule book;
2. That where a CATSI Act corporation is established with 2
members, one of which is not Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander person, that
the requirement in section 246-5(2) of the CATSI Act that a majority of
directors to be Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander persons be removed where
the director that is an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander person has a
casting (deciding) vote; and
3. an entity or group of entities be permitted to establish a
CATSI corporation as a subsidiary, or joint venture entity, if that entity, or
each member in the group of entities, at all times, satisfies the Indigeneity
requirement in section 29-5 of the CATSI Act (and the requirements prescribed
by the CATSI Regulations) when the underlying membership is assessed.[151]
The Final Report recommended:
- the
membership and directorship provisions in the CATSI Act be changed to make it
easier for corporations to establish subsidiaries and joint ventures and
- the
CATSI Act be changed to allow for the incorporation of two-member corporations
where only one member is Indigenous as long as that member has the deciding
vote.[152]
The Bill implements the Final Report recommendations.
The Bill will enable the formation
of joint ventures and wholly-owned subsidiaries
The Bill provides that a CATSI Corporation must have at
least five members except where:
- the
corporation is a wholly-owned subsidiary of a body corporate (including a CATSI
Corporation)—in which case the minimum number is one member or
- if
the corporation is not a wholly owned subsidiary of a body corporate (including
a CATSI Corporation) and the corporation’s only members are body
corporates—the minimum number is 2 members.[153]
Item 103 to 105 ensure that, where a
corporation is a wholly-owned subsidiary or a corporation whose only members
are body corporates, those corporations cannot seek an exemption from the
Registrar in relation to minimum membership requirements.
The Bill will retain Indigenous
control over CATSI Corporations
The Bill provides that for CATSI Corporations with two
members, only one of whom is an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander person,
the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander member will have the casting vote at
a general meeting. This is consistent with the existing principle of the
Indigeneity Requirement. It means that in the context of two-member CATSI Corporations,
when only one member is an Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander person, that
person will retain effective control over the CATSI Corporation.
Currently the Act provides that a majority of directors of
a CATSI Corporation must be:
- individuals
who are Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander persons
- members
of the corporation
- ordinarily
resident in Australia and
- not
employees of the corporation (with special rules relating to a CEO who is also
a director).[154]
This ensures indigenous control over CATSI Corporations. The
Bill retains those requirements but provides that, for two-member CATSI
Corporations, the requirement that a majority of the directors be individuals
who are Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander persons will be satisfied if:
- at
least one of those directors is an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander person and
- that
person has the casting vote.[155]
The Bill retains the requirement that a majority of the
directors of a CATSI Corporation must be members of the Corporation, but
effectively provides that that requirement does not apply where the Corporation
is a wholly-owned subsidiary or only has body corporate members.[156]
Due to the on-going application of the ‘Indigeneity Requirement’ in section
29-5 of the Act, these measures will ensure that joint ventures and
subsidiaries remain subject to Indigenous control.
Views of key stakeholders
The Victorian Aboriginal Heritage Council (VAHC) indicated
support for the measures on the basis that they would result in the removal of
‘existing discriminatory provisions’ in the Act.[157]
In contrast the NSW Aboriginal Land Council (NSWALC) noted it:
does not support Items 108 to 110 in the CATSI Amendment
Bill, which support the establishment of a two-member corporation where only
one member is an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander person as long as that
person has the deciding vote. This change is not in accordance with the general
principle of Aboriginal community control and could lead to the exploitation of
Aboriginal people. For example, the formation of partnerships seeking to profit
from organisations with an Aboriginal status.[158]
The Final Report noted that, in response to allowing joint
ventures and wholly-owned subsidiaries:
Of the 19 survey respondents, 79 per cent agreed that it
should be easier under the CATSI Act to establish joint ventures and
wholly-owned subsidiaries. Respondents who did not agree suggested the proposal
would result in too much influence from non-Indigenous sources and insufficient
transparency for common law holders and members …
During the consultation sessions there was general support
for this proposal as participants saw value in CATSI corporations having
greater flexibility of corporate structures which in-turn is expected to assist
with the realisation of economic opportunities. Similar to the survey
respondents above, some participants did raise concern about the opportunity for
‘black-cladding’ and CATSI corporations to be taken advantage of in a joint
venture arrangement with a non-Indigenous entity.
Among the 15 written submissions that commented on this
proposal, there was unanimous support noting: two indicated they were supportive
and would like more detail on the proposal; one was supportive and suggested
corporations should include a rule in their rule books if they do not want to
establish a subsidiary as part of their structure; and two were supportive and
suggested the provision in the CATSI Act that the majority of directors must
also be members should be removed altogether.[159]
Key issue: changes
to governance and reporting requirements
The Bill proposed to make a number of changes to
governance and reporting requirements including when and how meetings are held,
the appointment of independent directors and the reporting of key management
personnel remuneration.
Meetings
Company meetings are formal gatherings of company members
that represent a critical decision‑making process. Calling and conduct of
meetings are part of the internal regulation of companies and is covered by the
replaceable rules and/or the company's constitution. In addition, the Act sets
out additional requirements that must be followed. Meetings allow members to:
- obtain
information and ask questions regarding the management of the company[160]
- elect
directors, appoint an auditor (and fix the auditor’s remuneration)[161]
- pass
various resolutions (ordinary or special).[162]
As such, they are a critical aspect of corporate
governance.
Current position under the Act
Currently, the Act requires a CATSI Corporation (other
than a corporation with one member) to hold an AGM within five months after the
end of its financial year.[163]
Failure to do so is a strict liability offence, with a maximum penalty of 10
penalty units.[164]
All CATSI Corporations can apply to the Registrar for an extension of time,
with the provision not limiting the grounds on which the request can be made.
If approving the request, the Registrar must specify the period of the
extension and may impose conditions with which the Corporation must comply.[165]
Previous report recommendations
regarding wholly owned or joint-venture subsidiaries
The 2016 Report recommended amending the Act to provide
greater flexibility as to when meetings could be held or deferred, including ‘providing
for members of medium and large corporations to have the power to pass a resolution
to not require an AGM for up to three years’.[166]
The 2017 Technical Review made several recommendations in
relation to AGMs including that the Act be amended so that:
- small
CATSI Corporations can pass a special resolution not to have an AGM for up to
three years, provided:
- the
directors do not vote on that resolution and
- the
corporation is obliged to advise the Registrar if there is any material change
in its circumstances
- a
CATSI Corporation can trigger an automatic once-only extension of time for a
period of 30 days (or such longer period permitted by regulation) to hold a particular
AGM, where a CATSI Corporation:
- reports
that there is a death in the community, natural disaster, cultural activity or
an unavoidable delay in the audit; and
- the
CATSI corporation has not notified an automatic extension of time more than
three years in a row
- …
it allows for an automatic extension of time for a period of 30 days (or such
longer period as permitted by regulation) reporting and lodgement of reports
under Division 348 of the Act, in the case of death, natural disaster and
certain cultural activities in Indigenous communities and
- the
Registrar has the power to call and hold a general meeting of the corporation
where the Registrar decides that it is reasonable to do.[167]
The Final Report recommended that a CATSI Corporation is
able to:
… access an automatic 30-day time extension to hold an Annual
General Meeting where it notifies the Registrar before the period to hold the
Annual General Meeting has expired that there is a death in the community,
natural disaster, cultural activity or an unavoidable delay in the audit; and
it has not notified the Registrar of an extension of time more than three years
in a row.[168]
Changes to holding meetings
proposed by the Bill
The Bill makes several changes broadly consistent with the
recommendations noted above.
Deferring AGMs
The Bill will enable small CATSI Corporations that:
to pass a special resolution to not hold the next one or
two AGMs.[169]
Directors cannot vote on that resolution unless all members are directors.[170]
Once a resolution is passed, the corporation is required to advise the
Registrar if there are any material changes in its circumstances.[171]
The Registrar will have the power to direct a corporation to call and hold an
AGM if the Registrar is satisfied there is a need to do so.[172]
Automatic extensions of time to
hold AGM and lodge financial reports
The Bill will allow CATSI Corporations to activate an
automatic, one-off extension of 30 days to the mandatory five-month period in
which to hold an AGM and the time in which to lodge their reports.[173]
Extensions will be available where there has been a death in the community, a
natural disaster, cultural business or an unavoidable delay in the audit or
review.[174]
This extension cannot be used more than 3 years in a row.[175]
Deferral of meetings by directors
The Bill will allow directors to defer a meeting for up to
30 days after a notice has been issued.[176]
A deferral may include a change to the date, time and/or place of the meeting,
and would be allowable, for example, in the case of death, natural disaster or
certain cultural activities.[177]
In practice this will help CATSI Corporations to accommodate unexpected
circumstances that make it difficult to hold scheduled meetings.
Other changes
The Bill will enable meetings to be held remotely (that
is, it permits virtual meetings held by electronic communications).[178]
Where a meeting is to be held in two or more places using technology without a
physical venue, instructions for participating in the meeting must be included
in the relevant notice provided to members.[179]
These changes will enable CATSI Corporations to hold general meetings virtually,
with a goal of aiming to improve participation rates and reduce meeting costs.[180]
Currently CATSI Corporations are unable to cancel meetings
once they have been called unless they have a rule in their company
constitution that allows that to occur.[181]
A new replaceable rule will enable directors to cancel general meetings (other
than those called by the Registrar) unless the corporation changes the rule by
providing otherwise in its constitution.[182]
This power is not limited to the circumstances that allow meetings to be
deferred, and meetings will still be required to be held within certain periods
(subject to any extensions or exemptions).[183]
The Registrar will also have the power cancel general
meetings and AGMs they called.[184]
In addition, the Bill will require CATSI Corporations to lay before an AGM any
reports they are required to submit to the Registrar.[185]
The Explanatory Memorandum notes:
This will provide greater transparency to members in relation
to the operations of their corporations, including with respect to financial
reports.[186]
Views of key stakeholders
The National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health
Organisation (NACCHO) opposed ‘changes that reduce an organisation’s
accountability to members’ and noted in relation to allowing small CATSI
Corporations to not hold AGMs:
This may seem like a minor concern, but it is a critical
element for some of the more remote, smaller and vulnerable communities. It
will have the effect of depriving members of a key mechanism to ensure the
accountability of its boards and officials. NACCHO does not support changes
that reduce an organisation’s accountability to members. They are counter to
the fundamental principle of community control. We do not, therefore support
recommendations that allow small corporations to avoid holding AGMs.
Transparency and accountability to members is very important and we encourage
any revisions to be targeted towards greater transparency around operations and
membership. Furthermore, AGMs serve as a touch-point for the communities the
corporations serve and provide a familiar means for members to ask questions
about their management and results achieved (or lacking).[187]
NACCHO recommended that all CATSI Corporations should be
required to hold AGMs.[188]
The NSW Aboriginal Land Council (NSWALC) noted its support for enabling CATSI
Corporations to hold their meetings virtually to allow for full participation
of members.[189]
The Final Report noted that, in response to its proposal
to allow ‘small corporations be allowed to pass a special resolution to not
hold their AGM for up to three years after their most recent AGM’:
Fifty-three per cent of survey respondents did not agree with
this proposal. Many of the survey respondents indicated that an AGM was a
critical mechanism to ensure accountability and provide information to members.
One respondent suggested the absence of an AGM would enable unscrupulous
directors to take advantage of a corporation.
During the consultation sessions, participants were generally
not supportive of this measure but became more encouraging when we discussed that
this proposal is aimed at corporations that may not be generating large amounts
of revenue or income and may simply be land holding corporations, but are
incurring significant costs each year to hold an AGM. Four written submissions
did not support this proposal and eight did with one recommending that it
should be a replaceable rule and another suggesting that it should be two years
instead of three years.[190]
Independent directors
Currently the Act provides that a majority of directors
must not be employees of the Corporation.[191]
In practice this prevents the majority of directors from working as employees
of the Corporation. The Corporations Act does not impose such a
restriction.
Previous report recommendations
The 2016 Report and 2017 Technical Review did not directly
examine the issue of employee‑directors. The Final Report noted:
… in some cases such as art centres where artists may be
employed to provide, maintain or promote art work, or native title corporations
where members may be employed to do cultural heritage work, it may be
appropriate for the majority of directors to also be employees. Allowing the
Registrar to grant exemptions to the requirement that the majority of directors
of a CATSI corporation must not be employees would provide a direct benefit to
many corporations and their members. Granting such an exemption could be
subject to certain conditions such as the presence of an independent director
on the Board.[192]
The Final Report recommended that the Act be amended to
allow the Registrar to exempt a corporation or class of corporations from the
requirement that a majority of directors must not be employees.[193]
What the Bill does
The Bill implements the Final Report recommendation noted
above. Items 204 and 205 provide the Registrar with the power to
exempt a corporation, class of corporations, directors of a corporation or
directors of a class of corporations from the requirement that the majority of
directors of a corporation must not be employees of the corporation.
Independent directors
The Corporations Act does not define what
constitutes an ‘independent’ director and does not impose a requirement that a
proportion of the board be comprised of independent directors. In practice
however directors can, broadly speaking, be classified as:
- executive directors—a person who is both a
director and a full-time employee of the company
- non-executive directors—a person not involved
in the full-time management of the company and not an employee of the company
- independent directors—a non-executive director
who:
- is
not a member or shareholder of the company and
- is free
of business and personal relationships that could interfere with the
independent exercise of their judgment.[194]
Current position under the Act
Currently, CATSI Corporations are prohibited from
appointing non-member directors unless the Corporation's constitution provides
for this.[195]
Previous report recommendations
The 2016 Report noted that ‘there would
seem to be a case’ allowing members of a CATSI Corporation to appoint directors
‘from a broader pool of independent directors if they wish’.[196] The 2017 Technical Review recommended
that the Act be amended to reverse the prohibition on the appointment of
independent directors unless the company constitution provides for their
appointment to a default position that all CATSI Corporations may
appoint independent directors unless their constitution expressly provides
otherwise.[197]
The Final Report recommended the Act be amended to allow CATSI
Corporations to appoint independent directors without an explicit rule in their
constitution.
What the Bill does
The Bill gives effect to the 2017 Technical Review and
Final Report recommendations by:
- enabling
the appointment of an independent director by the directors of a corporation,
as a standard inclusion in the list of replaceable rules in the Act[198]
and
- removing
the existing prohibition on the appointment of independent directors unless the
corporation’s constitution provides otherwise[199]
In addition, the Bill inserts proposed section 246-17
which allow the appointment of independent directors by other directors of a
CATSI Corporation. As proposed section 246-17 is a replaceable rule, CATSI
Corporations can modify it should they wish to do so, including (for example)
by providing that all directors must be members of the corporation (and
therefore not allowing the appointment of independent directors).
As such, the Bill adopts the Final Report recommendation
that the default position under
the Act is that all CATSI Corporations can appoint independent directors unless
their constitution expressly provides otherwise.
Proposed subsection 246-25(1A) inserts a new replaceable rule limiting the term of the appointment
of an independent director to a period of no more than one year. However, as a
replaceable rule it is open to a Corporation to adopt in its constitution a
rule that allows independent directors to be reappointed for consecutive terms,
provided such a rule does provide for a term of appointment inconsistent with
the Act.
The Explanatory Memorandum notes that the
default position (independent directors can only be appointed for no more than
a year) will:
… ensure that directors who are members of
the corporation are able to review the contribution of independent directors
and the needs of the corporation at appropriate intervals.[200]
Views of key stakeholders
NACCHO supported the ability of CATSI Corporations to
appoint independent directors for 12‑month periods.[201]
The First Nations Bailai, Gurang, Gooreng Gooreng, Taribelang Bunda People
Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC noted:
The need for skills-based Directors is behind the new
provision s246-17 in the proposed Bill, however, true self-determination would
dictate that a CATSI Corporation could have as many skills-based directors as
it desires and not have the composition of the Board dictated by requirements
under the Act.[202]
The VAHC indicated support for the measures on the basis
that they would result in the removal of ‘existing discriminatory provisions’
in the Act.[203]
The Final Report noted that, in response to its proposal
to provide that the default position under the Act is that CATSI Corporations
can appoint independent directors (rather than only being allowed if the
company constitution permitted it):
Six submissions specifically commented on this proposal and
all were supportive. There was also general support for this proposal among participants
of consultation sessions.
Sixty-two per cent of the 21 survey respondents agreed that
the CATSI Act should be amended to allow corporations to appoint an independent
director without first having to change their rule books. Some of the reasons
put forward by those respondents who did not agree with this proposal suggested
that the survey question may not have been clear. For example, a couple of the
responses indicated this change would result in insufficient transparency to
members and/or diminished decision-making of members. Whereas, if the change
was introduced, it is expected that members would still need to be involved in
deciding to elect an independent director as well as deciding who should be
elected.[204]
Officers’ remuneration reporting
Under the Corporations Act public corporations must
have a company secretary,[205]
proprietary companies must have at least one director and public companies at
least three.[206]
The definition of ‘director’ is expansive and encompasses not only individuals
appointed as a director, but also a person not formally appointed as a director
but the company or its directors ‘are accustomed to act in accordance with the
person’s instructions or wishes’.[207]
This means a CEO or CFO of a company can, in some circumstances, be considered
a director of a company.
A company must lodge with ASIC a notice of the personal
details of a director or secretary within 28 days after they are appointed.[208]
A similar position applies in relation to CATSI Corporations under the Act.[209]
Current position under the Act
Whilst a similar position applies in relation to CATSI
Corporations under the Act with respect to directors and secretaires, it does
not impose a specific obligation to provide the Registrar with up‑to-date
information regarding the key management personnel of a CATSI
Corporation.[210]
Previous report recommendations
The 2017 Technical Review and the Final Report both made
recommendations reflected in the measures proposed by the Bill. The 2017
Technical Review recommended that CATSI Corporations ‘include their CEOs and
senior executives' names, addresses, contact details and employment history
over the last ten years in their annual reports’.[211]
The Final Report recommended that the Act be amended to require CATSI
Corporations to:
- notify
ORIC ‘within 28 days of a change in Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial
Officer and Chief Operating Officer’ and
- include
in their annual reports to the Registrar details of corporate structure
(including any subsidiaries or trusts) and key management personnel within that
structure.[212]
What the Bill does
The existing definition of ‘chief executive officer
function’ (CEO Function) currently refers to either a person who is primarily
and directly responsible to the directors for the general and overall
management of the corporation or, a person who is primarily responsible for
financial matters in relation to the corporation.[213]
The Bill replaces the definition of CEO function with two separate definitions:
one for the CEO function and one for the ‘chief financial officer function’
(CFO Function).[214]
A person will perform a CEO function where they are primarily
and directly responsible to the directors for the general and overall
management of the corporation. A person will perform a CFO function where they
are:
- primarily
responsible for financial matters in relation to the corporation and
- directly
responsible for those matters to either the directors or the person or persons
who perform the CEO function in relation to the corporation.[215]
CATSI Corporations will be to advise the Registrar if
there has been a change in the person performing the CEO and CFO roles within
28 days of that change.[216]
Proposed Officer remuneration
reporting requirements
Under the Corporations Act the level of detail
regarding the disclosure of executive remuneration for Corporations Act
companies depends on the type of corporate entity.[217]
In summary, the default position is that all financial reports for a financial
year (including those presented at the AGM) for listed and unlisted companies
must disclose each directors’ qualifications, experience and special
responsibilities.[218]
In addition, listed companies must also disclose the remuneration paid
to directors and ‘key management personnel’.[219]
Current position under the Act
regarding remuneration reporting
Currently there are substantial differences between the
disclosure of the experience of, and remuneration paid to, senior management
personnel in CATSI Corporations and some forms of companies regulated by the Corporations
Act.
Currently division 7-3 of the Act deals with reporting
obligations of CATSI Corporations. Briefly, all CATSI Corporations must prepare
a general report in relation to each financial year. Large CATSI Corporations
and certain small and medium CATSI Corporations must also prepare:
- a financial report and/or a directors’ report in relation to each
financial year, as required by the Regulations and
- any
other reports required by the Register.[220]
The general report—as its name suggests—only includes
general information about the CATSI Corporation and its directors, including
details of its members and directors, contact information and so forth.[221]
Section 330-1 of the Act requires that CATSI Corporations
must prepare a general report in respect of each financial year, which must
include any information required by the Regulations.[222]
The current requirements are that the general report includes details of each
director’s qualifications, experience and special responsibilities in relation
to the Corporation which are to be disclosed to members at the AGM (as part of
the financial report). [223]
Importantly, currently, the Act does not contain an
explicit requirement to disclose remuneration paid to directors of a CATSI Corporation
in any of its reports presented to the AGM (noting members can request such
information, which must then be provided).[224]
Current
financial and directors’ report requirements
Section 333-5 of the Act provides that the Regulations may
require financial reports, directors’ reports and other reports to be prepared.
Section 333-10 then provides that the content of such reports is determined by
the Regulations. In turn, the Regulations provide that the financial report
must include, among other things:
- the
financial statements for the year required by the relevant accounting standards
- the
notes to the financial statements required by the accounting standards and any
other information necessary to give a true and fair view of the financial
position and performance of the CATSI corporation and
- the
directors’ declaration about the statements and the notes.[225]
The Regulations then provide that the Directors’ report
must include, among other things:
- the
name of each person who has been a director of the corporation during the
financial year and the period of the director’s tenure and
- details
of each director’s qualifications, experience and special responsibilities in
relation to the corporation.[226]
Power to require the require the
disclosure of remuneration already exists
As such, whilst the power already exists to require the
disclosure of remuneration of key management personnel by CATSI Corporations,
it has not been used. This means that currently such information is not
regularly reported to the Registrar or disclosed to members.
Key management personnel disclosure obligations imposed on
other entities
As noted above, under the Corporations Act listed
companies must disclose the remuneration paid to directors and ‘key
management personnel’.[227]
In addition, however, similar remuneration disclosure requirements are also
imposed on other types of entities.
For example, under the FWRO Act registered
organisations (and branches of organisations) must disclose the identity of at
least the five highest remunerated officers, their remuneration and the value
(and form) of any non-cash benefits provided to them over the financial year.[228]
Similar obligations are imposed on some charities regulated by the ACNC Act.[229]
As such, it can be seen that the reporting of the
remuneration of key personnel, whilst not currently applied to all forms
of companies and other similar entities, is not new and has been applied to a
range of entities under different legislation.
Previous report recommendations
regarding remuneration disclosure
The 2016 Report recommended:
- large
(or potentially medium) sized corporations be required to disclose the nature
and value of remuneration of key management personnel in annual reporting,
consistent with the requirements of all listed companies and
- providing
members with the same powers relating to approval of remuneration reporting as
is available to shareholders in listed companies under the Corporations Act.[230]
The 2017 Technical Review recommended:
Other than small sized CATSI corporations, CATSI corporations
should provide details of their director, CEO and senior management salary and
benefits packages to the Registrar … It is recommended that further
investigation be undertaken about whether certain large sized CATSI
corporations (e.g. those with a gross operating income of $10 million per
annum) be required to disclose the nature and value of remuneration of
directors and employees in their annual reports in a similar fashion to listed
entities.[231]
The Final Report recommended:
- senior
executive remuneration information be included in annual reporting to the
Registrar and that the same information is laid before Annual General Meetings
- remuneration
information of key personnel of associated entities also be reported in annual
reports to the Registrar and
- corporations
must report how much each director is paid in sitting fees in their annual
financial reports that are lodged with the Registrar.[232]
The Bill requires disclosure of key
management personnel remuneration
The Bill will require that remuneration information about
key management personnel to be reported in a remuneration report to the
Registrar.[233]
The Bill enables the Regulations to deal with the content of the report covering
remuneration of key management personnel.[234]
Whilst such remuneration reports are not specifically
included in the list of documents that must be entered on the Register of CATSI
Corporations (which is publicly available), in proposed section 418-10,
the Regulations can require those reports to be included, and therefore be
publicly available.[235]
In any case, items 184 to 186 provide that a CATSI Corporation
that is required to prepare remuneration reports for a financial year must give
a copy of the report to each member who requests it.[236]
The changes proposed by the Bill are consistent with the
2017 Technical Review and Final Report recommendations. The Explanatory
Memorandum notes that these changes will increase ‘transparency with respect to
key management personnel employed by CATSI corporations’.[237]
Views of key stakeholders
NACCHO opposed the remuneration reporting requirements on
the basis that:
The changes set higher standards (e.g. remuneration reports)
and penalties for directors and officers than what other Australians are
expected to meet under the Corporations Act 2001 and the regulatory frameworks
of ASIC and the ACNC. These measures will also have the effect of adding to the
administrative and compliance burden for corporations.[238]
The NSWALC also opposed the measure, noting:
These measures will also have the additional adverse impact
of increasing administrative and compliance burdens for Aboriginal
corporations. The Government has justified this approach by stating that it is
in line with the remuneration reporting for listed companies. However, listed
companies are large businesses on the ASX trading in shares. Many Aboriginal
and Torres Strait Islander corporations are not of this nature nor size.
Remuneration reports are not a requirement for companies including
not-for-profits incorporated under the Corporations Act 2001. NSWALC is not
opposed to greater transparency around remuneration, but the requirements
should not discriminate and treat Aboriginal corporations differently from
non-Aboriginal corporations.[239]
The Kimberly Land Council, First Nations Bailai, Gurang,
Gooreng Gooreng, Taribelang Bunda People Aboriginal Corporation RNTBC and VAHC also
opposed the measure.[240]
The Final Report noted that in response to mandatory
reporting of key management personnel remuneration for medium and large CATSI
Corporations:
62 per cent of survey respondents agree, while reasons for
disagreement varied widely including: remuneration is a confidential agreement;
in small communities, disclosure of information can cause issues for
individuals; and only payments above a threshold amount should be required to
be reported. Several responses considered there was a role for ORIC either in
providing external advice on standard remuneration, or in receiving
confidential reporting of remuneration in order to provide benchmarking
information. One response also argued that executive roles in CATSI
corporations should in fact be voluntary to ensure that the officer is
undertaking the role for the right reason …
Twenty-eight submissions made comments against this Chapter,
of which 19 specifically addressed this issue. Interestingly, of the nine
submissions that indicated some support for the proposal, only two of those was
unqualified … Of the nine submissions that did not support this proposal,
nearly all expressed support for increased transparency and accountability
around senior executive remuneration… the volume of feedback and diversity of
opinions highlighted that executive remuneration is a contentious and sensitive
issue that requires consideration of the rights of members and common law
holders with the rights of individuals to privacy and corporations to
confidentiality. Despite the broad spectrum of opinions and perspectives put
forward in the consultations, there was a strong consensus that the appropriate
outcome would be an increase to transparency by providing members with
remuneration information.[241]
Related party transactions
Related party transactions occur when a company or similar
entity provides a financial benefit to a related party such as a director,
their spouse and certain other relatives. Related parties are likely to be in a
position to influence the decision of whether, and on what terms, a benefit is
provided to them. These transactions will, therefore, very often involve
conflicts of interest.[242]
Current position under the Act related
party transactions
Currently the Act provides that, generally, member
approval is needed before a CATSI Corporation can give a financial benefit to a
related party.[243]
This applies regardless of the size of the CATSI Corporation in question. Division
287 then sets out exceptions to the member approval requirement for related
party transactions (for example, remuneration paid to a related party that is
an employee).[244]
In addition, under the Act CATSI Corporations must prepare explanatory
materials for members to consider in relation to the proposed related party
transactions, and lodge those with the Registrar. In turn, the Registrar may
comment on the proposed resolution to approve a related party transaction, by
giving written comments on the explanatory materials.[245]
Under the Corporations Act ASIC has similar powers,
but only public companies and registered schemes are subject to similar rules
and exemptions relating to related party transactions.[246]
The Government notes that the current rules for related
party transactions in the Act can:
… make it difficult for corporations to do business,
especially in small communities with extensive kinship ties and limited options
for purchasing goods or services.[247]
Previous report recommendations
regarding related party transactions
The 2016 Report recommended amending the Act so that related
party financial transactions are dealt with in the same manner as proprietary
companies and companies limited by guarantee under the Corporations Act.[248]
The 2017 Technical Review recommended:
- the
provisions relating to restrictions on related party dealings be retained, but
that the Registrar be empowered to exempt particular opportunities or
transactions from the related party provisions, where it would be beneficial to
the affected director and in no way detrimental to the members of the CATSI
Corporation
- a
threshold for transactions that trigger the related party transactions
provisions in the Act be introduced for small CATSI Corporations. A de minimis
exception of $5,000 or such other amount as may be prescribed in regulations
from time to time should apply. However, we further recommend that all related
party benefits be described in an appropriate way in an annual report that is
provided to members and the Registrar.[249]
The Final Report recommended:
- the
provisions dealing with related party transactions be revised ‘to simplify and
align more closely with the needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
communities’ and
- CATSI
Corporations be required to report any related party provisions in their annual
reports to the Registrar.[250]
What the Bill does
The Bill eases the requirements for CATSI Corporations
dealing with low value related party transactions. Part 9 proposes to provide
a general exemption to small CATSI Corporations from the requirement to obtain
the approval of members where the total amount of:
- the
amount or value of the financial benefit given to the related party and
- the
total of all other amounts or values of financial benefits given to the related
party, in the financial year, for which member approval was not needed
is less than or equal to the amount prescribed by the Regulations.[251]
The Bill also removes the requirement that a CATSI
Corporation:
- lodge
with the Registrar information detailing proposed related party transactions
that the corporation intends to provide to members when seeking their consent
to the transactions and
- prepare
an explanatory statement that outlines proposed related party transactions for
members.[252]
The Bill likewise removes the power of the Registrar to
provide comments to the Corporation in relation to the material it intended to
provide to members when seeking their agreement to related party transactions.[253]
Instead, the effect of items 197 and 198 is
that a CATSI Corporation will simply be required to include in the notice
convening a meeting to approve a financial benefit to a related party relevant
information including:
- the
text of the proposed resolution
- the
related parties to whom the proposed resolution would permit financial benefits
to be given
- the
nature of the financial benefits and
- the
value of the financial benefits.
The effect of these changes is that CATSI Corporations
will not be required to seek member approval for low value related party
transactions and where they must seek member approval, simplify the disclosure
and approval process.
Whilst the Explanatory Memorandum states that the Bill
‘modifies the requirements in relation to small corporations dealing with
low-value related party transactions’ none of the changes in Part 9 of
the Bill appear to limit the changes noted above to only small CATSI
Corporations. Instead, they appear to be applicable to CATSI Corporations of
all sizes, with blanket exemptions applying on the basis of the value of the
financial benefits given to a related party, rather than the size of the CATSI
Corporation in question.
In this regard the changes proposed by the Bill differ
somewhat from the recommendations in the 2017 Technical Review, but can be
viewed as broadly consistent with those in the 2016 Report and Final Report.
Views of key stakeholders
The VAHC indicated support for the measures on the basis
that they would result in the removal of ‘existing discriminatory provisions’
in the Act.[254]
None of the non-government connected submissions to the Senate Finance and
Public Administration Legislation Committee inquiry into the Bill directly
addressed the proposed changes in relation to related party benefits.
The Final Report noted that in response to related party
benefits:
Ninety-five per cent of the 21 survey responses agreed Part
6-6 of the CATSI Act which deals with third party provisions should be
redrafted to be simplified and to bring it more in line with the Corporations
Act. Suggestions from respondents as to specific provisions that could be
simplified included exemption provisions if certain conditions exist such as
corporations: in remote or very remote locations; with small membership bases;
and without access to reliable and cost effective service providers. Other
suggested exemption provisions were if: the total value of transactions do not
exceed a certain amount; the transactions are listed in the annual report; or
if the directors agree to or approve the transactions …
Sixteen submissions expressed strong support for streamlining
the provisions around related party benefits in the CATSI Act, with a view to
ensuring they are simpler and work in the best interests of corporations, members
and communities. While some indicated that changes proposed under the
Strengthening Governance and Transparency Bill would be welcomed, most
highlighted the need for a broader revision of Part 6-6 of the CATSI Act …
The extensive nature of the comments on this topic indicates
its importance to stakeholders. While there was a range of views expressed in
submissions about factors to consider, there was unanimous support for revising
this part in the CATSI Act for simplification and greater alignment with the
needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander corporations.[255]
Key issue:
review of the Act
The Final Report noted:
As a special measure, the CATSI Act should be periodically
reviewed to assess whether it is meeting its objects. Special measures are
designed to ensure the full and equal enjoyment of human rights and fundamental
freedoms by certain racial or ethnic groups or individuals. By definition, a
special measure is to be discontinued once its objects have been achieved.[256]
The Final Review therefore recommended that the Act be
amended to include a provision requiring it be reviewed every seven years.[257]
Part 1 of the Bill gives effect to that
recommendation. Proposed section 643-1 sets out the review requirements.
In summary those requirements are:
- the
Minister must cause a review to be undertaken of the operation of the Act as
soon as possible after the seventh anniversary of the Bill, and on each
successive seventh anniversary after that date
- the
review must consider the effectiveness of the Act as a special measure
for the advancement and protection of Aboriginal peoples and Torres Strait
Islanders peoples
- the
reviewer(s) must give the Minister a written report of their review within 18
months after the relevant anniversary date and
- the
Minister must have the report tabled in both Houses of Parliament within 25
sitting days of the relevant house after completion of the report.
Views of key stakeholders
NACCHO opposed the requirement that the Act be reviewed
every seven years, stating:
The Bill includes a cumbersome review process in which there
will be 18-month reviews held in every seven-year period. This means that the
sector’s legislation will be under review 21 per cent of the time, representing
an enormous drain on resources and long periods of disruption for the sector
and uncertainty for the 80+ NACCHO members operating under the CATSI Act.[258]
NACCHO recommended:
Either the review intervals need to be lengthened (say, every
ten years) or the review period made efficient and targeted (i.e. completed
within six months, with a three-month extension granted under exceptional
circumstances).[259]
None of the non-government connected submissions to the Senate
Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee inquiry into the Bill
directly addressed the measure.
The Final Report noted that, in response to the Act being
regularly reviewed:
Eighty-eight per cent of the 26 survey respondents agreed
that the CATSI Act should be subject to regular review. Suggestions varied in
relation to how regularly such a review should be undertaken, including from
twice a year at the shortest to five to 10 years at the longest. Seven
respondents indicated every five years; three respondents indicated every three
years; and three respondents indicated every two years. Some respondents also
offered ranges such as five to seven years, five to 10 years, or a minor review
every three years with a major review every seven years.
The survey responses were at odds with the views put forward
as part of the consultation sessions where participants suggested that 10 years
was too long an interval but five years was also seen to be too short as it was
likely to result in the legislation constantly being subject to some kind of
legislative amendment process whether that be a review, drafting changes or
seeking passage of a Bill through Parliament.[260]
Concluding comments
The Bill is the result of a number of reviews and
consultation processes over a number of years. It represents a substantial
rewrite of the Act. In relation to the issues examined in this digest, whilst
many appear to have substantial support amongst indigenous stakeholders’ others
appear to be more contentious, attracting both support and criticism from
different indigenous stakeholders.
Such diversity of views is not surprising, given that
CATSI Corporations span a range of different business models, functions and
purposes covered by not only ‘traditional’ for-profit Corporations Act
companies, but also incorporated associations, co-operatives, charities and
not-for-profit companies. As such, whilst the Bill attempts to amend the Act to
apply ‘appropriate’ governance and reporting standards, the appropriateness of
those standards to the entire range and different sizes of entities regulated
by the Act appears to remain an issue of some concern to indigenous
stakeholders and different types of CATSI Act entities.