Appendix A: 43rd Parliament relevant Standing Orders[1]
Preparing
a petition
204 Rules for the form
and content of petitions
(a) A petition must:
(i) be addressed to the House of Representatives;
(ii) refer to a matter on which the House has the power to act;
(iii) state the reasons for petitioning the House; and
(iv) contain a request for action by the House.
(b) The terms of the petition must not contain any alterations and must
not exceed 250 words. The terms must be placed at the top of the first page of
the petition and the request of the petition must be at the top of every other
page.
(c) The terms of the petition must not be illegal or promote
illegal acts. The language used must be moderate.
(d) The petition must be in English or be accompanied by a
translation certified to be correct. The person certifying the translation must
place his or her name and address on the translation.
(e) No letters, affidavits or other documents should be attached to
the petition. Any such attachments will be removed before presentation to the
House.
(f) A petition from a corporation must be made under its common seal.
Otherwise it will be received as the petition of the individuals who signed it.
205 Rules for signatures
(a) Every petition must contain the signature and full name and address
of a principal petitioner on the first page of the petition.
(b) All the signatures on a petition must meet the following
requirements:
(i) Each signature must be made by the person signing in his or her
own handwriting. Only a petitioner incapable of signing may ask another person
to sign on his or her behalf.
(ii) Signatures must not be copied, pasted or transferred on to the
petition or placed on a blank page on the reverse of a sheet containing the
terms of the petition.
(c) A Member must not be a principal petitioner or signatory to a
petition.
Presentation
of petitions
206 Lodging a petition
for presentation
(a) Petitions may be sent directly to the Standing Committee on Petitions
or via a Member.
(b) The Standing Committee on Petitions must check that each petition
lodged for presentation complies with the standing orders, and if the petition
complies it shall be approved for presentation to the House.
207 Presenting a
petition[2]
A petition may be presented in
one of two ways:
(a) The Chair of the Standing Committee on Petitions shall present
petitions and/or reports of that committee, and the Chair and one other
Member of the Committee may make statements concerning petitions and/or such
reports presented, in accordance with standing order 34 (order of
business). The time provided may extend for no more than 10 minutes.
(b) A Member may present a petition during:
(i) the period of Members’ statements in the House, in accordance with
standing order 43;
(ii) the period of Members’ constituency statements in the Main
Committee*, in accordance with standing order 193;
(iii) adjournment debate in the House in accordance with standing
order 31, and in the Main Committee* in accordance with standing order
191; and
(iii) grievance debate in accordance with standing order 192B.
Chair’s
presentation time
34 Order of business[3]
Petition
presentation by Chair scheduled in the House at 10.00am‑10.10am on
sitting Mondays.
Action
on petitions
208 Action by the House
(a) Discussion on the subject matter of a petition shall only be
allowed at the time of presentation as provided for under standing order
207(b).
(b) Each petition presented shall be received by the House, unless
a motion that it not be received is moved immediately and agreed to.
(c) The only other motion relating to a petition that may be moved
is a motion on notice that the petition be referred to a particular committee.
(d) The terms of petitions shall be printed in Hansard.
(e) The Standing Committee on Petitions shall respond to petitions
on behalf of the House and report to the House.
209 Petition may be
referred to a Minister for response[4]
(a) After a petition is presented to the House, the Standing
Committee on Petitions may refer a copy of the petition to the Minister
responsible for the administration of the matter raised in the petition.
(b) The Minister shall be expected to respond to a referred
petition within 90 days of presentation by lodging a written response with
the Committee.
(c) The Chair of the Petitions Committee shall announce any ministerial
responses to petitions. After the announcement, ministerial responses shall be printed
in Hansard and published on the House’s website.
220 Standing Committee on Petitions
(a) A Standing Committee on Petitions shall be appointed to receive
and process petitions, and to inquire into and report to the House on any
matter relating to petitions and the petitions system.
(b) The committee shall consist of ten members: six government and
four non-government members.
History of amendments to the relevant standing orders
Standing order and date amended[5]
34 Amended
24.6.08 (at 10.00am—10.10am sitting Mondays); Amended 1.12.08; Amended 29.09.10
(at 8.30pm-8.40pm sitting Mondays). (Between 13.2.08 and 14.6.08—presentations
made by the Speaker.)
204 Amended
13.2.08
205 Amended
13.2.08
206 Amended
13.2.08
207 Amended
13.2.08; amended 12.3.08; amended sessional order 24.6.08 (for the remainder of
2008); sessional order extended 1.12.08 for the life of the 42nd
Parliament; amended 20.10.10 and became a Standing Order in the 43rd Parliament;
*amended 08.02.12, the words ‘Main Committee’, wherever occurring, were
replaced by ‘Federation Chamber’
208 Amended
13.2.08; amended 12.3.08
209 Amended
13.2.08; amended sessional order 24.6.08 (for the remainder of 2008); sessional
order extended 1.12.08 for the life of the 42nd Parliament; amended 20.10.10
and became a standing order in the 43rd Parliament
220 Amended
13.2.08