Introductory Info
Date introduced: 5 December 2018
House: Senate
Portfolio: Regional Services, Sport, Local Government and Decentralisation
Commencement: The day after Royal Assent.
Purpose and
structure of the Bill
The purpose of the Major
Sporting Events (Indicia and Images) Protection Amendment Bill 2018 (the
Bill) is to amend the Major Sporting
Events (Indicia and Images) Protection Act 2014 (the MSE Act)
to:
- provide
protection against ambush marketing by association for the International
Cricket Council (ICC) T20 World Cup 2020 and
- remove
historical schedules related to the Asian Football Confederation Asian Cup 2015
and the ICC Cricket World Cup 2015.
The proposed amendments to the
MSE Act are
contained in Schedule 1 of the Bill.
Background
Sponsorships are a valuable means of generating revenue
and resources for major sporting events. In return for financial or other
support, sponsors can benefit from displaying indicia (words and phrases) or
images in connection with the event. However, other businesses can attempt to
commercially benefit by associating their products and services with major sporting
events despite not being official sponsors or supporters. This practice is referred
to as ‘ambush marketing’.[1]
The MSE Act was passed in 2014 to protect major
sporting event sponsorship and licensing revenue from being undermined by
unauthorised commercial use of event indicia and images for three specific
events.[2]
It followed previous legislation which protected the sponsors of the Sydney
2000 Olympic Games and the Melbourne 2006 Commonwealth Games by preventing the
unauthorised commercial use of certain indicia and images associated with these
events.[3]
On 25 November 2018, the Minister for Sport, Senator Bridget
McKenzie announced that Australia would host the ICC T20 World Cup 2020.[4]
This followed an earlier measure in the Budget 2018–19 to grant tax exemptions
over five years to a subsidiary of the International
Cricket Council as part of the Australian Government’s ‘commitment
to support the International Cricket Council to stage the World Twenty20 in
Australia’.[5]
The Bill is a further measure intended to assist the running of this event. The
Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill states:
The Government is committed to supporting the staging of T20
World Cup in Australia ...
The Bill seeks to provide protection for T20 World Cup
indicia and images in the lead up to, during, and in the immediate aftermath of
the T20 World Cup. The protection of T20 World Cup indicia and images during
this period will enable T20 World Cup organisers to protect existing sponsors,
attract additional sponsors, and achieve its sponsorship revenue targets. In
turn, this will reduce the financial impact on government.[6]
Committee
consideration
Senate
Selection of Bills Committee
The Senate Selection of Bills Committee recommended that
the Bill not be referred to a committee for inquiry.[7]
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills had
no comment on the Bill.[8]
Policy
position of non-government parties
At the time of writing, non-government parties have not
expressed policy positions on the Bill. However, the Opposition supported the
passage of the MSE Act in 2014.[9]
In this context, bipartisan support for the Bill can be considered likely.
Position of major
interest groups
At the time of writing, no major interest groups have
commented on the Bill.
Financial implications
The Explanatory Memorandum indicates the Government
expects that the Bill will not have any financial impact on Commonwealth
expenditure or revenue.[10]
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.[11]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
At the time of writing, the Parliamentary Joint Committee
on Human Rights has not considered the Bill.[12]
Key issues and provisions
Clarification
of consequences for unauthorised use
Subsection 16(1) of the MSE Act provides that a person
must not use a major sporting event’s protected indicia or images for
commercial purposes during the event’s protection period (except where
otherwise provided in section 16).
Items 1 and 2 of the Bill make amendments to
insert a second note under subsection 16(1). The proposed note clarifies the
consequences of unauthorised use which exist in the other parts of the MSE
Act. In particular, under Part 4, imported goods can be seized if an
event’s protected indicia or images have been applied to goods in contravention
of section 16. Further remedies for contraventions of section 16 are set
out in Part 5. These include injunctions, damages or an account of profits.
Repeal of references
to previous major sporting events
In the MSE Act, the details of each protected major
sporting event is listed as a separate schedule. Item 3 of the Bill
repeals Schedules 1 and 2 of the MSE Act which relate to the Asian
Football Confederation (AFC) Asian Cup 2015 and the ICC Cricket World Cup 2015.
The protection period of the indicia and images of these events under the MSE
Act has already expired.[13]
Item 3 also inserts proposed Schedule 1—ICC T20
World Cup which largely follows the content and format of the repealed
schedules above.
Authorising
body and event bodies
Proposed clauses 1–3 of Schedule 1 provides
that the ICC T20 World Cup 2020 is a major sporting event and outlines the
relevant authorising body and the event bodies.
Under the MSE Act, an authorising body (in this case,
a corporation which is a wholly-owned subsidiary of International Cricket
Council Ltd) has key obligations and rights. In particular, this includes creating
and maintaining a register of authorised persons and relevant authorisations
relating to the use of protected indicia or images.[14]
A number of ‘event bodies’ for the ICC T20 World Cup 2020 are also listed, such
as Cricket Australia (which has been granted the rights to host the event in
Australia). Event bodies are defined as ‘official users’ in the MSE Act
which allows them to seek certain remedies under the legislation where persons use
the event’s protected indicia or images for commercial purposes with
authorisation.[15]
Protected
indicia for the ICC T20 World Cup 2020
Proposed clause 4 of Schedule 1 lists the
protected indicia for the ICC T20 World Cup 2020. Like the schedules for
earlier major sporting events in the MSE Act, proposed clause 4 lists
a number of specific expressions, such as ‘WT20’, which will be protected
indicia for the ICC T20 World Cup 2020. The expressions in the list will be
protected regardless of whether they are used alone or they are accompanied by ‘any
other expressions, letters, numbers or symbols’.
Also in accordance with previous lists, the list of
protected indicia for the ICC T20 World Cup 2020 can be expanded to ‘any
expression that is prescribed by the rules’. The Explanatory Memorandum states:
The rules may prescribe additional words, phrases or
expressions to be added to the schedule.
Previous experience indicates that between the Bill receiving
Royal Assent and the commencement of the event, there may be additional
protections required which need to be added promptly or when Parliament is not
sitting. For example the AFC Asian Cup 2015 was held in January 2015 and immediately
prior to the event, the event organisers requested additional protections for
new phrasings including a newly created mascot. As Parliament was not sitting,
these protections were only able to be added to the existing schedule for the
event through use of the rules.
The rules will not be used to remove or limit the rights of
the community to freedom of expression, particularly in relation to words that
have passed into common usage.[16]
There is an inherent tension between adequately protecting
the interests of major sporting events sponsors from ambushing marketing by
association while not unduly interfering with the rights of others. This issue is
evident in Minister Anne Ruston’s second reading speech for the Bill. She
stated:
While it is important to protect T20 World Cup sponsors from
ambush marketing, the rights of the community to freedom of expression must
also be respected, particularly in relation to words that have passed into
common usage. A pragmatic approach has been taken with generic words and
references excluded from the list of protected expressions. It must also be
emphasised that restrictions on the usage of T20 World Cup indicia and images
will apply only to their unlicensed commercial use.
The Bill will protect the use of a range of expressions
associated with the T20 World Cup from ambush marketing and unlicensed
commercial use in the lead up to, during and in the immediate aftermath of the
T20 World Cup.
In addition to protecting specific event-related terminology,
the Bill also provides protection to certain images that in the circumstances
of their presentation suggest, or are likely to suggest, a connection with the
T20 World Cup. These images may be either visual or aural representations.
A number of exceptions will exist in relation to the T20
World Cup allowing for:
-
the continued operation of rights
and liabilities under the Trade Marks Act 1995, Design Act 2003
and the Copyright Act 1968;
-
the provision of information,
criticism and review of the T20 World Cup, such as in newspapers, magazines and
broadcasts;
-
use of the protected indicia and
images for the reasonable needs of sporting bodies in relation to fundraising
and promotion; and
-
communities and businesses to
engage in city dressing and festival promotions supporting the T20 World Cup in
non-commercial ways.
In line with the Australian Government's deregulation agenda,
the Bill is not intended to increase the burden on business or affect their
everyday operations. The Bill fully protects the rights of the existing holders
to use T20 World Cup indicia and images to carry out their business functions.[17]
In this context, it is of note that the protected indicia
listed in clause 4 of proposed Schedule 1 to the MSE Act differ
in one respect to the lists for the earlier sporting events protected under the
MSE Act. Unlike the protected indicia for earlier events, proposed clause
4 of Schedule 1 includes:
(k) any
expression that, to a reasonable person, would suggest a connection with the
ICC T20 World Cup 2020.
This change appears to extend the scope of protection of
indicia for the ICC T20 World Cup 2020 compared to earlier major sporting
events covered by the MSE Act. While the second reading speech refers to
the Bill providing ‘protection to certain images that in the
circumstances of their presentation suggest, or are likely to suggest, a
connection with the T20 World Cup’, proposed clause 4 appears to be
limited to ‘protected indicia’.[18]
The Explanatory Memorandum does not address the rationale for this expansion of
protected indicia, merely stating that the ‘agreed list’ of protected indicia
in proposed clause 4 was ‘developed in consultation with the
event bodies and IP Australia’. It may therefore be assumed this change derived
from this consultation process.[19]
The proposed expansion of protected indicia in the Bill
for the ICC T20 World Cup 2020 appears to be broader that the legal protection
for ‘protected olympic expressions’ under the Olympic Insignia
Protection Act 1987. Subsection 24(1) of that legislation provides a
list of protected olympic expressions (such as ‘Olympiad’) which are prohibited
for commercial use unless the user holds a licence granted by the Australian Olympic
Committee. Subsection 24(2) extends this prohibition so that ‘an expression so
closely resembling a protected olympic expression mentioned in subsection (1)
as to be likely to be mistaken, by a reasonable person, for such a protected
olympic expression is taken to be a protected olympic expression’.
The proposed expansion of protected indicia under the MSE
Act to ‘any expression that, to a reasonable person, would suggest a
connection with the ICC T20 World Cup 2020’ could raise a number of issues. The
language of the proposed amendment means it may be difficult to determine whether
the commercial use of other expressions will infringe on protected indicia. Terms
such as ‘suggest’ and ‘connection’ are undefined in the MSE Act and it
is unclear how broadly these terms could be interpreted. In particular, the proposed
amendment is not limited to expressions ‘closely resembling’ a limited list of specific
expressions (such as in the Olympic Insignia Protection Act) and so could
potentially be applied to any expression. A lack of clarity in the possible
application of the protected indicia for the ICC T20 World Cup 2020 could cause
uncertainty for other persons and businesses undertaking related commercial
activities.
The expansion of protected indicia in the Bill for the ICC
T20 World Cup 2020 may also have implications for the safeguard in section 52
of the MSE Act relating to groundless legal threats. Under this section,
where an official user makes a groundless threat of legal proceeding, any
person aggrieved may bring an action in a relevant court seeking a declaration
or injunction, or damages for loss that the person has suffered as a result of
the threat. This section prevents those whose interests are protected under the
legislation from unfairly using this protection to threaten competitors and
others. However, if there is a lack of clarity concerning protected indicia
under the legislation, this could undermine this safeguard mechanism.
When protected
indicia and images relate to an event body
Proposed clause 5 clarifies that the protected
indicia and images for the ICC T20 World Cup 2020 ‘relate’ to the authorising
body, except as prescribed by the rules. Further, protected indicia and images will
be taken to relate to any other event body, as prescribed in the rules. This
clarification mirrors the content of the schedules for previous events.
In relation to this amendment, the Explanatory Memorandum
indicates that changes prescribed in the rules ‘may become necessary should,
ahead of the event, the ICC, Cricket Australia or T20 World Cup 2020 Ltd. agree
to add further event bodies that the protected indicia and images for the ICC
T20 World Cup 2020 relate to’.[20]
Protection
period
Proposed clause 6 provides the protection period
for the ICC T20 World Cup 2020. This period starts on commencement of the Bill (the
day after Royal Assent) and ends on 30 November 2021 unless the rules
prescribe an earlier day when the protection period will cease. This appears to
accord with the protection periods granted to other major sporting events under
the MSE Act (approximately one year after the conclusion of the event).
The Explanatory Memorandum notes that prescribing ‘an
earlier day’ for the cessation of the protection period under the rules ‘may
become necessary should the ICC remove hosting rights for the event from
Australia or should unforeseeable date changes to the event occur’.[21]
Concluding comments
The MSE Act establishes a legislative framework in
Australia which protects specific major sporting events from ambush marketing
by association. In particular, the MSE Act prohibits the unauthorised
commercial use of protected indicia and images of events. The Bill will amend
the MSE Act to apply this framework to the ICC T20 World Cup 2020 as
part of the Government’s support for this event. The Bill will also repeal two historical
schedules referring to previous events.
The amendments made by the Bill highlight how this
legislative framework established by the MSE Act can be utilised to
protect the indicia and images of other major sporting events. If continued, this
practice may enhance Australia’s reputation as a jurisdiction with appropriate legal
protections regarding ambush marketing when competing to host other international
sporting events in the future.
The Bill appears to extend the scope of the protected
indicia for the ICC T20 World Cup 2020 compared to previous major sporting events.
Unlike the protected indicia for previous events (which were largely limited to
listed indicia, or other expressions prescribed in the rules) the protected
indicia in the Bill include ‘any expression that, to a reasonable person, would
suggest a connection with the ICC T20 World Cup 2020’. A rationale for the
expansion of protected indicia for this event does not appear to be provided in
the Explanatory Memorandum. Potentially, this expansion of protected indicia
could cause uncertainty for persons conducting related commercial activities
which would otherwise be legal. A lack of clarity concerning protected indicia
could also undermine the safeguard mechanism contained in the MSE Act to
deter groundless threats of legal proceedings being made against others.