Key points
- The Family Law Amendment (Information Sharing) Bill 2023 (the Bill) amends the Family Law Act 1975 to introduce a new framework for information sharing aimed at improving access to information from state and territory family violence and child protection systems during family law proceedings.
- The Bill is considered to be complementary to the reforms proposed in the Family Law Amendment Bill 2023.
- The amendments would give effect to the National Strategic Framework for Information Sharing between the Family Law and Family Violence and Child Protection Systems, agreed by Commonwealth and state/territory Attorneys-General.
- The provisions would:
- empower the family law courts to make two different types of orders requiring prescribed state and territory information sharing agencies to provide particulars, documents or information in their possession or control relating to family violence, abuse and neglect concerns identified within child-related proceedings
- provide for the admission of such particulars, documents or information into evidence, and limited circumstances in which the identity of a notifier of suspected child abuse or family violence may be disclosed
- require information sharing agencies and the courts to have regard to information sharing safeguards, to be prescribed by the regulations, when handling, storing and accessing information.
Introductory Info
Date introduced: 29 March 2023
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Attorney-General
Commencement: On a day to be fixed by Proclamation or six months from the day of Royal Assent, whichever is earlier.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Family
Law Amendment (Information Sharing) Bill 2023 (the Bill) is to amend the Family Law Act 1975
to introduce a new framework for information sharing under the Family Law
Act.
The Bill is aimed at improving access to information between
the family law courts and state and territory family violence and child
protection systems during family law proceedings. The amendments would give
effect to the National Strategic Framework for Information Sharing between
the Family Law and Family Violence and Child Protection Systems (National
Framework).[1]
Background
The Bill is considered to be complementary to the reforms proposed
in the Family
Law Amendment Bill 2023.[2]
Like that Bill, it is informed by the Australian
Law Reform Commission’s (ALRC) 2019 report Family
Law for the Future – An inquiry into the Family Law System,[3]
and reflects the Government response to the 2021 Joint Select Committee on Australia’s Family Law System.[4]
Further background is provided in the Bills Digest for the
Family Law Amendment Bill 2023.[5]
Information
sharing in family law
The problem of sharing relevant information in relation to
family law, family violence and child protection matters across federal and
state jurisdictions has been identified in a number of inquiries and reports.[6]
One of the recent inquires, the 2019 ALRC inquiry into
Australia’s family law system, highlighted these problems and made recommendations
for reform. As the ALRC observed:
The federal family courts have limited investigative powers
to follow up allegations made in family law proceedings that indicate potential
risks to the parties, their children and third parties. The federal family
courts are reliant on receiving information from state and territory courts and
agencies about risks to families and children to inform decision making and
better protect against risk. In particular, the federal family courts often
require information from child protection departments and police in order to
arrive at appropriate orders. The sharing of this information with federal
family courts is limited by statutory provisions at the state and territory
level that prescribe the circumstances in which information may be shared, and
with which agencies.
[…]
Currently, where responsibilities for families and children
are divided between jurisdictions, there are no coercive powers available to
enforce information sharing between courts and entities across jurisdictions
about high risk families.[7]
The ALRC acknowledged the work already being done nationally
and within jurisdictions, by governments and key stakeholders who ‘have taken
action to improve information sharing and collaboration between the systems in
an attempt to minimise the impacts caused by the jurisdictional gap’,
including:
- co-location
of child protection practitioners in family court registries
- implementation
of information sharing agreements between stakeholders in the systems, in
particular the family courts and child protection departments
- convening
of collaboration meetings between key stakeholders in the systems facilitated
by the Commonwealth Attorney-General’s Department
- establishment
of the Council of Attorneys-General Family Violence Working Group to develop
measures to improve the interaction between the systems, including improving
information sharing.[8]
The ALRC, while acknowledging the valuable role that such
initiatives play, was of the view that 'information sharing is no panacea to
the problems caused by the jurisdictional gap, regardless of how efficient and
effective information sharing is between the systems’.[9]
The ALRC therefore recommended that:
- The Australian Government should work with state and territory
governments to develop and implement a national information sharing framework
to guide the sharing of information about the safety, welfare, and wellbeing of
families and children between the family law, family violence, and child
protection systems.
- The framework should include:
-
the legal framework for sharing information;
-
relevant federal, state, and territory court documents;
-
child protection records;
-
police records;
-
experts’ reports; and
-
other relevant information. (Recommendation 2).[10]
The National Framework and the Bill respond to this
recommendation.
The National
Framework
The National Strategic Framework for Information
Sharing between the Family Law and Family Violence and Child Protection Systems
(the Framework) was formally endorsed at the Meeting of Attorneys-General
(now the Standing Council of Attorneys-General) on 12 November 2021.[11]
A protocol to guide the implementation of the National Framework was agreed to at
that meeting.[12]
The protocol sets out the objectives and principles of the Framework and also contains
the operational details of how information will be shared. The protocol states that
the objective of the National Framework is:
… to promote the safety and wellbeing of adults and children
affected by family violence, child abuse and neglect, and support informed and
appropriate decision-making in circumstances where there is, or may be, a risk
of family violence, child abuse or neglect.[13]
The Bill gives effect to the legislative reforms required to
implement the National Framework.
Committee consideration
At the time of writing, the Bill has not been referred to
a committee.
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
At the time of writing, the Committee has not reported on
the Bill.
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
At the time of writing, non-government parties and
independents do not appear to have commented on the Bill.
Position of
major interest groups
At the time of writing, there had been very little public
comment on the Bill.
Financial
implications
The Explanatory Memorandum states that funding for the
family law courts and state and territory information sharing agencies to
support enhanced information sharing under the National Framework, and through
the co-location of state and territory police and child protection officials in
family law court registries, was provided as part of the 2019–20 and 2021–22
Budgets, and the 2021–22 Mid-Year Economic Financial Outlook.[14]
Current funding arrangements will terminate 30 June 2025.[15]
According to the Women’s Budget Statement from the 2021–22
Budget, the Government funding for this new initiative was $29.0 million over
four years.[16]
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.[17]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
At the time of writing, the Committee has not reported on
the Bill.
Key issues
and provisions
Information
sharing
Section 69ZW in Part VII of the Family Law Act
currently provides for information sharing in relation to child related
proceedings between the family courts and relevant state/territory agencies. Item
8 repeals this provision as it is to be replaced by a new expanded
information scheme as introduced in item 7, described below.
The Explanatory Memorandum explains the limitations of
existing section 69ZW, stating:
[it] is limited in scope, focussing on notifications or
investigations of child abuse or family violence affecting a child to whom
proceedings relate. As the understanding of the prevalence and impacts of
family violence, child abuse and neglect has grown, this limited scope has
proven insufficient in providing access to all relevant information to inform
decision-making. This has increasingly led to a reliance on inconsistent State
and Territory information sharing practices, and party-initiated subpoena processes,
which can be expensive, complex, lengthy and resource-intensive for the courts,
agencies, and parties, particularly where self-represented.[18]
Item 7 inserts new Subdivision DA–Orders
for information etc. in child-related proceedings into Division 8 of Part
VII of the Family Law Act. It includes provisions allowing for two
different types of information sharing orders:
- orders
for the particulars of documents or information held, and
- orders
for the production of documents or information held.
The court may make such orders at any time after the
commencement of child-related proceedings and before making final orders (proposed
section 67ZBJ).
Orders for
particulars of documents or information relating to certain matters
Proposed
subsection 67ZBD(1) provides that the court may make an order,
in child‑related proceedings, requiring a prescribed information sharing
agency to:
- inform
the court whether the agency has in its possession or control any documents or
information relating to a certain matter, and
- if
it has—give the court particulars of the documents or information.
Proposed subsection 67ZBD(2) provides that the
particulars of documents or information must relate to the following matters:
- abuse,
neglect or family violence to which a child to whom the proceedings relate has
been subjected or exposed, or to which the court suspects the child has been
subjected or exposed
- family
violence to which a party to the proceedings has been exposed, or in which a
party to the proceedings has engaged, to the extent it may affect a child to
whom the proceedings relate
- any
risk or potential risk of a child to whom the proceedings relate being
subjected or exposed to abuse, neglect or family violence
- any
risk or potential risk of a party to the proceedings being subjected to, or
engaging in, family violence, to the extent any such family violence may affect
a child to whom the proceedings relate.
The order may include a description of the kinds of relevant
documents or information that the court considers the agency may have in its
possession or control (proposed subsection 67ZBD(3)). Examples of
such descriptions are:
- notifications
to the agency of suspected abuse of a child to whom the proceedings relate
- notifications
to the agency of suspected abuse, by a party to the proceedings, of any other
child (proposed subsection 76ZBD(4)).
An ‘information sharing agency’ is defined as an agency,
or a part of an agency, of a state or territory, or part of a Commonwealth
agency that provides services on behalf of a state or territory, prescribed in
the Family Law
Regulations 1984 (proposed section 67ZBC). The Explanatory Memorandum
states that the types of organisations to be prescribed would include those
that:
- have
investigative power, or responsibility for the prevention of family violence,
child abuse and neglect matters, or
- hold
information which is directly relevant to the assessment and mitigation of
family violence, neglect or abuse risk for a child concerned in proceedings, or
a party to proceedings.
These organisations would include state and territory
child protection, policing and firearms authorities but not state courts.[19]
The definitions of ‘child abuse’ and ‘family violence’ currently
in the Family Law Act will apply. ‘Neglect’ is not defined in the Act,
however the position of the Explanatory
Memorandum to the Family Law
Amendment (Shared Parental Responsibility) Act 2006, which inserted the
term, will apply.[20]
Proposed subsection 67ZBD(5) provides that the
agency may also, on its own initiative, give the court particulars of other
documents or information in its possession concerning any of these listed
matters. Where an agency does this, it must consider:
- redacting
any ‘protected material’ or
- not
providing any information or particulars to the extent that it would reveal
‘protected material’ (proposed subsection 67ZBD(6)).
Orders to
provide documents or information relating to certain matters
Proposed section 67ZBE introduces a new order
requiring the production of documents or information held by prescribed
information sharing agencies, which relate to family violence, child abuse or
neglect risk in child-related proceedings.
It is drafted in a similar way to proposed section
67ZBD described above. Rather than targeting the provision of particulars
of documents or information in the control or possession of an agency
(meaning a summary, short description or outline), proposed section 67ZBE
concerns the production and provision of the documents or information
themselves.[21]
Legal exemptions
and safeguards for protected material
Proposed section 67ZBF provides that information
sharing agencies are not required (but are allowed) to provide particulars or
information or produce documents to a court under proposed sections 67ZBD
and 67ZBE where the disclosure contains ‘protected material’. Protected material
is information:
- that
is the subject of legal professional privilege
- that
discloses, or enables a person to ascertain, the identity of a person who communicated
information to the agency in confidence (such as a confidential source of
information or a notifier of suspected child abuse or family violence), or
- the
disclosure of which would:
- endanger
a person’s life or present an unreasonable risk of harm to a person (including
physical, non-physical and psychological harm)
- prejudice
legal proceedings (including proceedings in a tribunal and a coronial inquiry,
investigation and inquest)
- contravene
a court order or law that restricts the publication or other disclosure of
information in connection with legal proceedings, or
- be
contrary to the public interest.
If an agency chooses not to provide the court with
particulars or documents or information on the grounds that it may disclose
protected material, it must inform the court, and state which category of
protected material applies.
Proposed section 67ZBG provides that an agency may
alert the court to any risks the court should consider when disclosing the
particulars, documents or information provided in response to an order under proposed
sections 67ZBD and 67ZBE. The risks could be to:
- a party
in proceedings
- a
child to whom the proceedings relate
- a
person who communicated information to the agency in confidence
- any
other person.
Proposed section 67ZBH requires a court to admit
into evidence any particulars, documents or information provided in response to
the new orders which they intend to rely upon when determining a matter. In
admitting information into evidence, the court must not disclose, except in
limited circumstances, the identity of a person who made a notification of
suspected child abuse or family violence to an information sharing agency.
Information sharing agencies and the courts will be
required to have regard to a set of information sharing safeguards when handling,
storing, accessing or sharing information under the relevant provisions. The
safeguards will be prescribed by amendments to the Family Law Regulations 1984 (proposed
section 67ZBI). The Explanatory Memorandum describes the types of
safeguards that may be included in the regulations.[22]
Proposed
section 67ZBL provides the
provisions in the Bill and related regulations are to be reviewed within 12 months of commencement, with the
Minister to table a copy of the report of the review in each House of
Parliament within 15 sitting days after the report has been completed.