Access All Areas
Report of the inquiry into Inquiry into the draft Disability (Access to Premises - Buildings) Standards
Please note: This page contains links to transcripts of Public Hearings and Submissions in Portable Document Format (PDF). If an alternative format (ie, hard copy or large print) is required, please contact the Committee Secretariat.
To view or print the linked transcripts and submissions you will need Adobe Acrobat® PDF Reader, which can be downloaded free of charge from Adobe.®
June 2009
Canberra
© Commonwealth of Australia 2009
ISBN 978-0-642-79184-9 (printed version)
ISBN 978-0-642-79185-6 (HTML version)
Contents
Chair's Foreword
Membership of the Committee
Terms of reference
List of abbreviations
List of recommendations
Report
Chapter 1 –
Introduction
Chapter 2
– Overview of Standards
Chapter 3
– Scope of the Premises Standards
Chapter 4
– Concessions, exemptions and exceptions
Chapter 5 – Specific provisions of the Premises Standards
Chapter 6 – Matters not addressed by the Standards
Chapter 7 – Implementation and review
Appendices
Appendix A – List of Submissions
Appendix B – List of Exhibits
Appendix C - List of Hearings and Witnesses
Appendix D (PDF only – 113 kb)
Appendix E (PDF only – 63 kb)
Appendix F (see Exhibit 1 – Disability (Access to Premises – Buildings) Standards 2009 – RTF 510 kb or PDF 254 kb)
Foreword
Our vision is a fairer Australia where people with disabilities are regarded as equals, with the same rights as all other citizens, with recourse to systems that redress any infringements of their rights; where people with disabilities can participate in the life of the community in which they live, to the degree that they wish; where people with disabilities can gain and hold meaningful employment that provides wages and career opportunities that reflect performance; where control by people with disabilities over their own bodies, lives and future is assumed and ensured; where difference is accepted, and where public instrumentalities, communities and individuals act to ensure that society accommodates such difference. Only then will we be able to say that justice has been achieved.1
The Disability Discrimination Act was passed by Parliament in 1992 with the promise of producing a radical shift in the way society included people with a disability. After 16 years of operation, the Act has produced substantial benefits for people with a disability and has contributed to attitudinal change in many areas of Australian society. However, in some areas it is clear that much more work remains to be done. Access to premises is one of those areas.
Equal access to premises is crucial to justice and social inclusion for people with a disability because it has a pervasive impact on the interaction of people with a disability with the Australian community. Without access to premises, people with a disability cannot access goods, services and facilities which other Australians take for granted, in areas as simple as the ability to enjoy the cinema with their family, go to the dentist, or to visit their Member of Parliament. Without access, people with a disability face many hurdles to full participation in community life. Failure to provide access may even affect the ability of people with a disability to find work —something which contributes to dignity and self‑esteem, and which represents a sad loss of human potential.
The Disability Discrimination Act recognises the importance of access to premises, by making it unlawful to discriminate in the provision of access to premises. Despite this, it is clear that many public buildings still fail to provide access to people with a disability on an equal or dignified basis. This is partly because the Act places the burden of enforcing its requirements on the individuals who are disadvantaged by an act of discrimination. Perhaps not surprisingly, few individuals are willing to pay the emotional and financial price of taking building owners to court to force them to comply with their obligations under the Act.
The Draft Disability (Access to Premises—Buildings) Standards (Premises Standards) take a fresh approach to access to premises by harmonising the requirements of the Disability Discrimination Act and those of the Building Code of Australia. The result will be that access requirements will be applied consistently to new buildings and new building work throughout Australia, and will be enforced through existing and effective State and Territory building approval processes.
This seems likely to produce a fundamental shift in the way Australian buildings are designed and constructed, which will revolutionise access to premises for people with a disability.
The Committee’s inquiry into the Premises Standards is the latest stage in an extensive negotiation and consultation process which began in 2001. A number of recommendations have been made in this report to strengthen the requirements of the Premises Standards and make them more consistent. But the most important recommendation of the Committee is that the Premises Standards should be finalised quickly and implemented. People with a disability have waited more than long enough for better access to premises.
Mr Mark Dreyfus QC MP
Chair
Membership of the Committee
Chair |
Mr Mark Dreyfus QC MP |
Deputy Chair |
The Hon Peter Slipper MP |
Members |
The Hon. Kevin Andrews MP |
|
Mr Mark Butler MP |
|
Mr Petro Georgiou MP |
|
Mr Daryl Melham MP |
|
Mrs Sophie Mirabella |
|
Ms Belinda Neal MP |
|
Mr Shayne Neumann MP |
|
Mr Graham Perrett MP |
Committee Secretariat
Committee Secretary |
Dr Anna Dacre
Ms Sharon Bryant |
Inquiry Secretary |
Ms Serica Mackay |
Research Officer |
Mr Stephen Still |
Administrative Officers |
Ms Claire Young
Ms Emma Martin |
Terms of reference
The Committee is to consider and report on the draft Disability (Access to Premises - Buildings) Standards covering:
-
the appropriateness and effectiveness of the proposed Premises Standards in achieving their objects;
-
the interaction between the Premises Standards and existing regulatory schemes operating in state and territory jurisdictions, including the appropriateness and effectiveness of the proposed Model Process to Administer Building Access for People with Disability;
-
whether the Premises Standards will have an unjustifiable impact on any particular sector or group within a sector; and
-
any related matters.
List of abbreviations
ABCB |
Australian Building Codes Board |
ACT |
Australian Capital Territory |
AS |
Australian Standard |
BAPC |
Building Access Policy Committee |
BC |
Building Code of Australia |
Building Code |
Building Code of Australia |
CBD |
Central Business District |
Cth |
Commonwealth |
DARG |
Disability Access Reference Group |
DDA |
Disability Discrimination Act 1992 (Cth) |
MCS |
Multiple Chemical Sensitivity |
NIST |
National Institute for Standards and Technology |
NSW |
New South Wales |
Qld |
Queensland |
RIS |
Regulation Impact Statement |
SOU |
Sole Occupancy Unit |
UN |
United Nations |
Vic |
Victoria |
WA |
Western Australia |
List of recommendations
1 Introduction
Recommendation 1
The Committee recommends that the Premises Standards be introduced without delay. Any issues which cannot be finalised without causing delay should be considered at a later date.
2 Overview of the Standards
3 Scope of the Premises Standards
Recommendation 2
The Committee recommends that the requirement for access to be provided to the common areas of Class 2 buildings, which was contained in the 2004 draft Premises Standards be included in the Premises Standards.
Recommendation 3
The Committee recommends that requirements for accessibility be imposed on all new and purpose-built Class 1b buildings regardless of the number of bedrooms or dwellings they contain, but that the proposed four bedroom threshold be maintained for existing buildings. The general provisions of the Disability Discrimination Act continue to be available for existing buildings with one to three bedrooms.
Recommendation 4
The Committee recommends that consideration be given to the development of disability standards in relation to building fit out and places other than buildings.
4 Concessions, exemptions and exceptions
Recommendation 5
The Committee recommends that the small building exemption for Class 5, 6, 7b or 8 buildings be limited to the provision of lift or ramp access between floors.
Recommendation 6
The Committee recommends that the exemptions in paragraphs D3.4 (a)–(e) be replaced with a general exemption for areas which pose a clear health and safety risk for people with a disability.
Recommendation 7
The Committee recommends that the words ‘regional or remote location’ be deleted from paragraph 4.1(3)(f) of the Premises Standards.
Recommendation 8
The Committee recommends that further consideration be given to clarifying the meaning of ‘heritage value’ in paragraph 4.1(3)(k) of the Premises Standards. Consideration should be given to ensuring consistency with the tests used in State and Territory legislation in relation to heritage. The Committee further recommends that the words ‘and to what extent incidental’ be deleted from paragraph 4.1(3)(k) of the Premises Standards.
Recommendation 9
The Committee recommends:
Recommendation 10
The Committee recommends that the current exemption for fire-isolated stairs and ramps in paragraph D3.3(b) be amended to provide accessibility as far as practicable, with particular consideration given to tactile ground surface indicators, luminance contrast stair nosings and second handrails.
5 Specific provisions of the Premises Standards
Recommendation 11
The Committee recommends that technical matters raised by submissions to this inquiry which relate to Australian Standards be referred to Standards Australia for urgent consideration.
Recommendation 12
The Committee recommends that the objects of the Premises Standards be amended to include a reference to dignified access for people with a disability.
Recommendation 13
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government provide funding for new research, to be completed within 12 months of the tabling of this report, into wheelchair sizes and the dimensions of building features necessary to accommodate them. The results and the issue of 90th percentile dimensions should be returned to this Committee for reconsideration at that time.
Recommendation 14
The Committee recommends that Table F2.4(a) be amended to make it clear that every accessible room in a Class 1b building must have an accessible toilet before a concession is provided in relation to common accessible toilets.
Recommendation 15
The Committee recommends that:
-
urgent technical advice be sought as to whether safe alternatives to locking off of lifts and constant pressure devices are available; and
-
the Premises Standards provide that stairway platform lifts should only be used in situations in which they are the only practical accessibility option.
6 Matters not addressed by the Standards
Recommendation 16
The Committee recommends that the Australian Building Codes Board undertake further research to identify deemed-to-satisfy provisions for emergency egress for people with a disability with a view to making changes to the Building Code as soon as possible.
7 Implementation and review
Recommendation 17
The Committee recommends that the Disability Discrimination Commissioner be given the power to investigate non-compliance with the Premises Standards and to bring a complaint where there is non‑compliance with the Premises Standards without requiring an individual complaint.
Recommendation 18
The Committee recommends that an audit of a sample of new buildings or building work be conducted by the Australian Government prior to the review of the Premises Standards.
Recommendation 19
The Committee recommends that:
-
the Premises Standards provide commencement and completion dates for the review process;
-
the completion date for the review be within five years of the commencement of the Premises Standards;
-
the Premises Standards set out the issues to be considered by the review and that these issues include:
-
the small building exemption;
-
the lessee concession;
-
80th and 90th percentile wheelchair dimensions;
-
locking off lifts;
-
accessible toilets;
-
swimming pools;
-
accessible car parking;
-
Class 1b buildings;
-
wayfinding;
-
emergency egress; and,
-
public transport buildings.
-
The Premises Standards set out the criteria by which effectiveness of the Standards is to be assessed;
-
the Australian Government identify what data will be collected and how it will be collected in each jurisdiction during the first four years;
-
baseline data be collected; and
-
funding be provided for the review.
Footnotes
1 |
The Hon Brian Howe MP, Minister for Health, Housing and Community Services, Second Reading Speech for the Disability Discrimination Bill 1992, 26 May 1992. |
Back to top