CHAPTER 2
Overview of the Bill
2.1
This chapter describes the main provisions of the Bill.
United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples
2.2
Proposed new section 3A (item 1 of Schedule 1) inserts as an additional
object of the Act a requirement for Australian governments to take all
necessary steps to implement the following principles set out in the
Declaration:
(a) the rights of all peoples including Indigenous peoples
to self‑determination;
(b) full and direct consultation and participation of the
Indigenous peoples concerned;
(c) free, prior and informed consent of Indigenous peoples
in matters affecting them;
(d) the right of Indigenous peoples to their traditional
lands, territories and natural resources;
(e) demonstrated respect for Indigenous cultural practices,
traditions, laws and institutions;
(f) reparation for injury to or loss of Indigenous
interests;
(g) non-discrimination against the interests of Indigenous
peoples.[1]
2.3
Proposed new subsections 3A(2) and 3A(3) (item 1 of Schedule 1) provide that
the provisions of the Act are to be interpreted and applied in a manner that is
consistent with the Declaration, including by each person exercising a power or
performing a function under the Act.
2.4
Senator Siewert noted in her Second Reading Speech:
The Objects of the [Act] serve to provide some direction to
the Courts as to the intentions of the Parliament as to how the Act as a whole
should be interpreted.[2]
Proposals aimed at enhancing the effectiveness of the native title system
2.5
Part 2 of the Act sets out the provisions relating to native title.
Division 3 of Part 2 deals specifically with future acts (the future acts
regime).
Future acts passing the freehold
test
2.6
Subdivision M of Division 3 of the Act concerns future acts which pass
the freehold test.[3]
The Bill proposes to amend two key provisions in Subdivision M – current
paragraphs 24MB(1)(c) and 24MD(2)(c).
Heritage protection or preservation
2.7
Current subsection 24MB(1) applies Subdivision M to non-legislative
future acts which pass the freehold test, providing:
(c) a law of the Commonwealth, a State or Territory makes
provision in relation to the preservation or protection of areas, or sites,
that may be:
(i) in the area to which the
act relates; and
(ii) of particular significance
to Aboriginal peoples or Torres Strait Islanders in accordance with their
traditions.
2.8
The Bill proposes to repeal and replace paragraph 24MB(1)(c) (item 2 of
Schedule 1) to read:
(c) a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory:
(i) applies to the area to
which the act relates; and
(ii) provides effective
protection or preservation of areas, or sites, that may be of particular
significance to Aboriginal peoples or Torres Strait Islanders in accordance
with their traditions.
2.9
The stated purpose of this amendment is to address a problem with the
interaction between the Act, and Commonwealth, state and territory heritage
protection laws:
[T]he intent of section 24M[B] is to ensure that, before a
future act is permitted on native title land, the heritage values of any areas
of particular cultural significance are protected. However, as it stands, the
way this provision is worded means that the mere existence of applicable state
heritage legislation would satisfy these criteria and permit the future act – irrespective
of whether the application of those state heritage laws will actually provide
effective protection of those sites of cultural significance.[4]
Compulsory acquisition and the
non-extinguishment principle
2.10
Current section 24MD sets out how future acts which pass the freehold
test are to be treated. For example, subsection 24MD(1) provides for validation
of an act, subject to Subdivision P of Division 3. Subsection 24MD(2) provides,
in paragraph (c), for the extinguishment of native title rights and
interests by compulsory acquisition.
2.11
The Bill proposes to repeal and replace paragraph 24MD(2)(c) (item 3 of
Schedule 1) with the following two new paragraphs:
(bb) the non-extinguishment principle applies to the
acquisition;[5]
and
(c) nothing in this Act prevents any act that is done in
giving effect to the purpose of the acquisition from extinguishing the native
title rights and interests[.]
2.12
Senator Siewert described the proposed amendment as an improvement to
the future act regime[6]
and a reinstatement of the language used in paragraphs 23(3)(a) and 23(3)(b) of
the original Act,[7]
as recommended in 2010 by the (then) Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander
Social Justice Commissioner, Mr Tom Calma.[8]
Right to negotiate
2.13
Subdivision P of Division 3 sets out provisions relating to the right to
negotiate. The Bill proposes to amend current subsection 26(3), current
paragraph 31(1)(b), current section 35, and current subsection 38(2), and to
insert proposed new subsections 31(1A) and 31(2A).
Offshore areas
2.14
Current section 26 provides for the application of Subdivision P, with subsection 26(3)
specifically excluding sea and inter-tidal zones.
2.15
The Bill proposes to repeal subsection 26(3) (item 4 of Schedule 1),
with an amendment aiming to improve procedural rights over offshore areas for
native title holders.[9]
Normal (non-expedited) negotiation
procedure
2.16
In her Second Reading Speech, Senator Siewert referred to 'sustained
criticism of the manner in which the future acts regime has led to protracted
and uncertain outcomes', as well as:
calls for the [Act] to be amended to create stronger
incentives for beneficial agreements and [to] achieve greater procedural
fairness by striking a better balance between native title and non-native title
interests.[10]
2.17
Senator Siewert explained that, to address these concerns, the Bill
proposes to expand and strengthen the requirements for the normal negotiation
procedure set out in current section 31.[11]
For example, paragraph 31(1)(b) requires the negotiation parties to negotiate
in good faith with a view to obtaining the agreement of each of the native
title parties.
2.18
The Bill proposes to repeal and replace this provision (item 5 of
Schedule 1) as follows:
(b) the negotiation parties must, for a period of at least 6
months, negotiate in good faith using all reasonable efforts to come to an
agreement about:
(i) the doing of the act; or
(ii) the conditions under which
each of the native title parties might agree to the doing of the act.
2.19
The meaning of the term 'negotiate in good faith using all reasonable
efforts' is defined in proposed new subsection 31(1A) (item 6 of Schedule 1) to
mean:
(1A) For the purposes of paragraph (1)(b), negotiate in
good faith using all reasonable efforts includes but is not limited to:
(a) attending, and actively
participating in, meetings at reasonable times including, where reasonably
practicable, at a location where most of the members of the native title parties
reside, if so requested by them;
(b) disclosing relevant
information (other than confidential or commercially sensitive information) in
a timely manner;
(c) making reasonable offers and
counter-offers;
(d) demonstrably giving genuine
consideration to proposals made by other negotiation parties;
(e) responding to proposals made
by other negotiation parties in a timely and detailed manner, including
providing reasons for the relevant response;
(f) refraining from capricious
or unfair conduct that undermines the beneficial nature of the right to
negotiate.
2.20
In her Second Reading Speech, Senator Siewert noted that the burden of
proof for proving the absence of good faith negotiations currently rests with
the native title party, rather than the proponent of a future act:
This appears procedurally unfair as it is in effect the
proponent who is effectively asserting that they have negotiated in good faith for
the required period when they apply for a matter to be taken to arbitration.[12]
2.21
To address this concern, the Bill inserts the following new subsection
31(2A) (item 7 of Schedule 1) into the Act:
(2A) In any proceeding in which the application of paragraph
(1)(b) is raised, the party asserting good faith has the onus of proving that
it negotiated in good faith.
2.22
In addition, the Bill amends current section 35 (item 9 of Schedule 1) to
require a negotiation party to demonstrate compliance with subsection 31(1) and
proposed new subsections 31(1A) and 31(2A) before the negotiation party is able
to apply to the arbitral body under subsection 35(1).[13]
Profit-sharing and royalties
2.23
Current section 38 provides for the kinds of determination that may be
made by the arbitral body. Subsection 38(2) specifically prohibits the making
of a determination that a future act may be done, subject to a condition
entitling the native title parties to subsequent payment calculated with
reference to: the amount of profits made; any income derived; or any things
produced.
2.24
Senator Siewert told the Parliament:
[Subsection 38(2) places native title interests] at an unfair
disadvantage in negotiations, as the proponent knows that if they are not
inclined to share profits or pay royalties at the level they propose, they can
simply force the issue to arbitration.[14]
2.25
The Bill proposes to repeal and replace subsection 38(2) (item 10 of
Schedule 1) as follows:
Profit-sharing conditions may be determined
(2) Without limiting the nature of conditions that may be
imposed under paragraph (1)(c), they may, if relevant, include a condition that
has the effect that native title parties are to be entitled to payments worked
out by reference to:
(a) the amount of profits made; or
(b) any income derived; or
(c) any things produced;
by any grantee party as a result of doing anything in
relation to the land or waters concerned after the act is done.
Coexistence and agreement to
disallow extinguishment
2.26
Division 4 of Part 2 of the Act sets out miscellaneous provisions
relating to native title. The Bill proposes to insert new section 47C (item 11
of Schedule 1) into the Act.
2.27
Proposed new subsection 47C reads:
47C Agreements to disregard prior extinguishment
When section applies
(1) This section applies if:
(a) an application under section
61 is made in relation to an area; and
(b) any time prior to a
determination, there is an agreement between the applicant and the Government
party that the extinguishment of native title rights or interests by a prior
act affecting native title in relation to the area, or any part of the area,
covered by the application be disregarded.
2.28
In her Second Reading Speech, Senator Siewert described the 'low' bar on
extinguishment of native title rights and interests as a failure of the Act, which
results, in practice, in 'the principle of 'coexistence' of native title
rights, which is clearly envisaged within the [Act as being] too often brushed
aside or ignored':
[Proposed new section 47C is] consistent with the current
application of the [Act], and merely allow[s] the existing coexistence
provisions to be extended to allow extinguishment to be disregarded with an
agreement in a wider range of circumstances.[15]
Burden of proof
2.29
Part 3 of the Act contains the provisions relating to applications,
including, in Division 1, applications to the Federal Court of Australia for
native title determinations, revised native title determinations and
compensation. The Bill proposes to insert new sections 61AA and 61AB (item 12
of Schedule 1) into Division 1 of the Act.
Rebuttable presumption
2.30
Proposed new section 61AA introduces a rebuttable presumption of continuity
for applications for a native title determination:
61AA Presumptions relating to applications
(1) This section applies to an application for a native title
determination brought under section 61 if the following circumstances exist:
(a) the native title claim
group defined in the application applies for a determination of native title
rights and interests where the rights and interests are asserted to be
possessed under laws acknowledged and customs observed by the native title claim
group;
(b) the members of the native
title claim group reasonably believe the laws so acknowledged and the customs
so observed to be traditional;
(c) the members of the native
title claim group, by the laws acknowledged and the customs observed, have a
connection with the land or waters the subject of the application;
(d) the members of the native
title claim group reasonably believe that persons, from whom one or more of
them is descended, acknowledged traditional laws and observed traditional
customs at sovereignty by which those persons had a connection with the land or
waters the subject of the application.
(2) If this section applies to an application, it must be
presumed, in the absence of proof to the contrary:
(a) that the laws acknowledged
and customs observed by the native title claim group are traditional laws
acknowledged and traditional customs observed at sovereignty;
(b) that the native title
claim group has a connection with the land or waters by those traditional laws
and traditional customs;
(c) if the native title rights
and interests asserted are capable of recognition by the common law – that the
facts necessary for the recognition of those rights and interests by the common
law are established.
Continuing connection
2.31
Proposed new section 61AB stipulates what is required to set aside the
presumption:
61AB Continuing connection
(1) A presumption under section 61AA that a native title
claim group has a connection with land or waters by traditional laws and traditional
customs, or a finding to that effect, may be set aside only by evidence of a
substantial interruption in the acknowledgment of those traditional laws or the
observation of those traditional customs.
(2) In any proceeding relating to the application of
subsection (1), the court must treat as relevant:
(a) whether the primary reason for
any demonstrated interruption in the acknowledgment of traditional laws or the
observance of traditional customs is the action of a State or a Territory or a
person who is not an Aboriginal person or a Torres Strait Islander; or
(b) whether the primary reason for
any demonstrated significant change to the traditional laws acknowledged or the
traditional customs observed by the Aboriginal peoples or Torres Strait Islanders
is the action of a State or a Territory or a person who is not an Aboriginal
person or a Torres Strait Islander.
2.32
When explaining proposed new sections 61AA and 61AB in her Second Reading
Speech, Senator Siewert stated:
The issue of prior occupation and hence the pre-existence of
native title rights is not being questioned (as the preamble to the [Act]
readily acknowledges) and so under these circumstances it seems to be 'fundamentally
discriminatory' and a gross injustice to place the burden of proof upon the
dispossessed. This is particularly true when we consider that it is State and
Commonwealth Governments that have granted the rights that have lead to the
possible extinguishment of native title, and that it is those governments who
hold many of the historic records needed to establish connection.
The intent of providing for a rebuttable presumption of continuity
is to shift the burden of proof in a way that encourages government parties
(who must now take on the role of adducing evidence in their archives to rebut presumptions)
to be more inclined to settle claims with a strong prospect of success.[16]
Key concepts in the Act
2.33
Division 2 of Part 15 defines key concepts in the Act, including, in
current section 223, the meaning of 'native title'.
Common law meaning of 'native
title' and 'native title rights and interests'
2.34
Current subsection 223(1) sets out the common law meaning of 'native
title' and 'native title rights and interests':
Common law rights and interests
(1) The expression native
title or native title rights and interests means the communal,
group or individual rights and interests of Aboriginal peoples or Torres Strait
Islanders in relation to land or waters, where:
(a) the rights and interests are
possessed under the traditional laws acknowledged, and the traditional customs
observed, by the Aboriginal peoples or Torres Strait Islanders; and
(b) the Aboriginal peoples or
Torres Strait Islanders, by those laws and customs, have a connection with the
land or waters; and
(c) the rights and interests are
recognised by the common law of Australia.
2.35
The Bill proposes to define the meaning of the terms 'traditional laws
acknowledged' and 'traditional customs observed' in paragraph 223(1)(a), by
inserting two new subsections into the Act – proposed new subsections 223(1A)
and 223(1B) (item 13 of Schedule 1). The proposed provisions would read as
follows:
Traditional laws and customs
(1A) Without limiting subsection (1), traditional laws
acknowledged in that subsection includes such laws as remain
identifiable through time, regardless of whether there is a change in those
laws or in the manner in which they are acknowledged.
(1B) Without limiting subsection (1), traditional
customs observed in that subsection includes such customs as remain
identifiable through time, regardless of whether there is a change in those customs
or in the manner in which they are observed.
2.36
In presenting the Bill to the Senate, Senator Siewert stated:
[T]he manner in which 'traditional' culture is defined by [current]
section 223 of the Act fails to recognise the dynamic and living nature of
Indigenous Australian cultures. Instead it seeks to freeze culture in some
pre-colonial past, which defines traditional culture based on a snapshot of
cultural practices at the time of European settlement and an expectation that
they should continue unchanged.[17]
2.37
The Bill also proposes to insert new subsections 223(1C) and 223(1D)
(item 13 of Schedule 1) into the Act. The proposed provisions would read
as follows:
Connection
(1C) To avoid doubt, and without limiting subsection (1), it
is not necessary for a connection with the land or waters
referred to in paragraph (1)[b] to be a physical connection.
(1D) Nothing in subsection (1) is to be interpreted as
requiring:
(a) in the case of traditional
laws–the laws to be acknowledged continuously;
(b) in the case of traditional
customs–the customs to be observed continuously;
(c) in the case of connection
with the land or waters–the connection to be maintained continuously.
2.38
Senator Siewert explained:
[T]he interpretation of what counts as an ongoing Indigenous
culture and law is based on a more realistic understanding of the maintenance
and continuity of traditional practices and cultural values over time. This
should help ensure that communities who have maintained a strong connection to their
lands, laws, cultural practices and values will not have their recognition
discounted based on changes which do not fundamentally alter the core of their
cultural identity as traditional custodians of their land and sea country.[18]
Trade and other commercial rights
2.39
Current subsection 223(2) provides that the 'rights and interests'
referred to in subsection 223(1) include, but are not limited to, hunting,
gathering and fishing rights and interests.
2.40
The Bill proposes to repeal and replace subsection 223(2) (item 14 of
Schedule 1), with the proposed new subsection to read:
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), rights and
interests in that subsection includes:
(a) hunting, gathering, or
fishing, rights and interests; and
(b) the right to trade and other
rights and interests of a commercial nature.
2.41
In her Second Reading Speech, Senator Siewert remarked that the recognition
of commercial rights would enable Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples
to enter into commercial agreements to advance their social and economic
development, as promoted in the Preamble to the Act.[19]
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