Summary
1.1
The Telecommunications Legislation Amendment Bill 2018 includes two
measures. The first is to allow access to NBN towers by emergency service
organisations and the second is to specify temporary telecommunications towers
as low-impact facilities.
1.2
The Australian Greens support the intent of this bill and we strongly
support access to telecommunications services during emergencies. We support
Schedule 1 of the bill.
1.3
We support the components of Schedule 2 that pertain to emergencies and
unplanned outages. However, we do not support carrier immunity to local
planning rules and processes for events, seasonal demand, and scheduled
maintenance.
Issues relating to
Schedule 2
1.4
The WA Local Government Association[1]
(WALGA) and the Australian Local Government Association[2]
(ALGA) both support making NBN towers accessible to emergency services and
simplifying the regulations around the provision of temporary towers for
emergencies and emergency maintenance. However, they do not support the
exemption of temporary towers from state, territory, and local planning
approvals for events, holidays, or schedule maintenance.
1.5
WALGA notes in their submission that:
WALGA does not support the notion that events and seasonal demand
are either emergencies or are unduly subject to "delays imposed by lengthy
development and approvals and processes". These conditions are clearly
predictable and should therefore be subject to normal planning provisions.
Current protocols and procedures covering event management
are well established, with Local Government and/or affected land-owners
consulted about temporary structures and services...The importance of this
interactivity with Local Government cannot be under-stated as the Local
Government invariably retains responsibility for the amenity, aesthetics,
safety and well-being of event attendees, local residents and business owners.
We do not consider Telecommunication Carriers to have a sufficiently compelling
case to bypass these important planning provisions.
A similar argument exists for seasonal demand. This is
clearly a predictable situation and should not be beyond the capacity of
Carriers to plan ahead with reasonable confidence. Once again, Local
Governments have a range of permit and/or planning options to allow for a
mutually-satisfactory outcome and bypassing this requirement is likely to lead
to more conflict than cooperation.
Where unique local attributes exist, such as heritage or
other local considerations, it is reasonable to expect that Local Government
will be well-informed about them. Taking advantage of this local knowledge,
rather legislating it into irrelevance, seems to us to be a sensible approach
with a clear public benefit.[3]
1.6
ALGA note in their submission that:
Local Government plays an important role in land use planning
and development approvals systems in all State and Territories in Australia.
Local Governments work closely with their local communities to plan and manage
development, while considering a complex array of issues, to deliver liveable
communities now and into the future.
Local Governments administer the development assessment
process and are able to grant approval, grant approval with conditions, or
refuse an application. The controls regulate densities, height, external design
and siting, building materials, open space provisions, and in some
jurisdictions the level of developer contribution required to cover physical
and/or community infrastructure costs arising from the proposed development.
Local Governments also have control over the demolition of buildings.
Development control also seeks to address a wide range of environmental, social
and economic issues. This includes heritage and environmental protection
issues. It also considers safety aspects of proposed developments.[4]
1.7
ALGA also note in their submission that:
Installation of temporary mobile infrastructure without due
consideration of safety, heritage and areas of special cultural, landscape, or
environmental value as would occur during development assessment could
potentially have significant consequences.[5]
1.8
The majority committee report[6]
states that the 'department's submission provided the rationale for the temporary
facilities amendments'. However, the department's submission does not provide a
justification for the need to exempt carriers from local planning processes in
the case of events, holidays, and scheduled maintenance that can be planned for
well in advance.
1.9
The majority committee report[7]
also notes that the department's submission states that in some jurisdictions
planning approval is not required, including New South Wales and Victoria.
However, the Telecommunications Industry Ombudsman (TIO) notes that:
If enacted, the reforms would provide a national regime by
extending federal carrier powers and immunities for inspect – install –
maintain activities for portable temporary facilities. The national regime
would then override the NSW and Victorian regimes and go much further than
those state regimes.[8]
1.10
The TIO[9]
also states that portable facilities should only be classified as temporary if
they cannot remain at a location for longer than a maximum period (30 days)
and that the carrier should be prohibited from relocating or repositioning the
facility to circumnavigate the maximum period or replacing the portable
facility with a similar portable facility at the end of the 30 day period. The
TIO notes the need to prescribe a maximum period for carrier maintenance and
the unnecessarily long periods allowed for events and holiday periods. The TIO
states that:
The regulatory framework should not assume carrier compliance
and should set well-defined limits on carrier powers and immunities so there is
certainty as to what carriers are lawfully permitted to do. A regulatory
framework that has clearly defined parameters can assist the regulator (the
ACMA) in performing its monitoring and compliance role.[10]
Recommendations
Recommendation 1
1.11
The Australian Greens recommend passing Schedule 1 of the bill.
Recommendation 2
1.12
The Australian Greens recommend passing Schedule 2 of the bill,
amended to remove provisions relating to events, holiday periods, and scheduled
maintenance.
Senator
Janet Rice Senator Jordon
Steele-John
Deputy
Chair Senator for
Western Australia
Senator for
Victoria
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