Introductory Info
Date introduced: 1 August 2019
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Veterans' Affairs
Commencement: Schedule 1 on 20 September 2019; Schedule 2 on 1 July 2019 and Schedule 3 on the day after Royal Assent.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Veterans’ Affairs Legislation Amendment
(Partner Service Pension and Other Measures) Bill 2019 (the Bill) is to amend
the Veterans’
Entitlements Act 1986 (the VEA) and the Defence Service
Homes Act 1918 to:
- allow
former partners of veterans, irrespective of marital status, to continue to
receive Partner Service Pension for 12 months on separation from the veteran or
indefinitely following the death of the former veteran partner or in specified
other circumstances. Currently, only those who were married to the veteran
prior to separation or the veteran’s death are eligible to continue to receive
Partner Service Pension. Separated spouses currently also lose eligibility for
Partner Service Pension when they divorce
- classify
service on submarine special operations by members of the Australian Defence
Force during the period 1 January 1993 to 12 May 1997 as operational and
qualifying service for the purposes of the VEA and
- make
technical amendments relating to the definitions of ‘widow’ and ‘widower’ in
the Defence Service Homes Act 1918 to reflect the 2017 changes to the Marriage
Act 1961 allowing for any two people to marry, regardless of their sex or
gender.
The Partner Service Pension measure was announced in the
2019–20 Budget.[1]
The remaining measures were not previously announced.
The Partner Service Pension measure is expected to
commence on 20 September 2019. The classification of service on submarine
special operations is expected to have retrospective effect from 1 July 2019.
The remaining technical amendments are to have effect from the day after Royal
Assent.
Structure of
the Bill and Bills Digest
The Bill contains three schedules containing discreet
measures. This Bills Digest will provide background and analysis of the three
schedules in separate sections.
Committee consideration
Senate Standing
Committee for the Selection of Bills
In its report on 12 September 2019, the Senate Standing
Committee for the Selection of Bills deferred consideration of the Bill until
its next meeting.[2]
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills had
no comment on the Bill.[3]
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
At the time of writing, non-government parties and
independents had not stated a position on the Bill.
Position of
major interest groups
At the time of writing, major interest groups had not
stated a position on the Bill.
Financial
implications
According to the Explanatory Memorandum, extending
eligibility for the Partner Service Pension will cost $6.2 million over the
forward estimates and around $1.4 million per year ongoing.[4]
Reclassifying certain service on submarine special
operations will cost $3.2 million over the forward estimates and around $2.1
million per year by 2041–42.[5]
The financial impact of the other proposed amendments is
expected to be negligible.
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.[6]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights had no
comment on the Bill.[7]
Schedule
1—Extended eligibility for partner service pension
Schedule 1 proposes amendments to the VEA to allow
former partners of veterans, irrespective of marital status, to continue to
receive Partner Service Pension for 12 months on separation from the veteran or
indefinitely following the death of the former veteran partner or in specified
other circumstances. Currently, only those who were married to the veteran
prior to separation or the veteran’s death are eligible to continue to receive
Partner Service Pension. Separated spouses also lose eligibility for Partner
Service Pension when they divorce.
Service Pension
The Service Pension is a means tested income support
payment provided to veterans on the ground of age or disability, and to
eligible partners, widows and widowers.
The Service Pension is paid at the same rate as the social
security Age Pension and Disability Support Pension—currently a maximum of
$926.20 a fortnight for single recipients and $698.10 per fortnight for each
member of a couple.[8]
The Service Pension is also subject to similar income and assets tests as
social security pensions. However, the Service Pension paid in respect of age
can be paid earlier than the social security Age Pension: from age 60 rather
than 67 for the Age Pension. According to the Department of Veterans’ Affairs
(DVA), this is ‘in recognition of the intangible effects of war that may result
in premature ageing of the veteran and/or loss of earning power’.[9]
Eligible veterans are those with qualifying service under
the VEA—this generally means those that have served in operations
against the enemy while in danger from hostile forces of the enemy—and who meet
the residency requirements.[10]
The residency requirements are that a person be present in and a resident of
Australia at the time of claiming the Service Pension. Veterans who have
qualifying service from their service in the defence force of another
Commonwealth country or an allied country, or as an allied mariner, must have
been an Australian resident for at least ten years in order to meet the
residency requirements.[11]
Partner
Service Pension
Partner Service Pension is the Service Pension payment
made to eligible partners, former partners and widows/widowers of veterans. It
is paid at the same rates as Service Pension.
As at March 2019, there were 45,890 partners or widows in
receipt of the Partner Service Pension. The average age of recipients was 75.7
years.[12]
Eligibility
To be eligible for Partner Service Pension, an individual
must be a:
- partner
of a veteran with qualifying service
- former
partner of a veteran with qualifying service or
- a
widow or widower of a veteran who had qualifying service.
Current
partners
Current partners must be legally married to and living
with a veteran, or living in a de facto relationship. In situations where one
partner needs to live separately due to frailty or illness (such as where one
partner needs to live in residential aged care), and the separation is likely
to be indefinite, then the individual is still considered to be a current
partner.[13]
A current partner can be eligible for Partner Service
Pension if their veteran partner is receiving or is eligible to receive a
Service Pension or is/was registered for the pension bonus scheme with DVA.[14]
A partner who has reached pension age (67) can also qualify for Partner Service
Pension even if the veteran is not 60 years old (so long as they have qualifying
service).[15]
A couple’s de facto status can be determined by reference
to a relationship register (provided for under certain state and territory
laws) or by considering the nature of the relationship such as shared financial
and household responsibilities, whether the couple undertakes joint social and
leisure activities, and if they appear as a couple in the general community.[16]
Current partners need to meet the age requirements or
exemptions set out in Table 1:
Table 1:
Partner Service Pension age requirements and exemptions
Age requirement or
exemption
|
Conditions
|
No
age requirement
|
-
has a dependent child or children when the claim for partner
service pension is made or
-
veteran partner receives the Totally and Permanently
Incapacitated (Special Rate) of Disability Pension under the VEA
-
veteran partner receives or is eligible to receive a Special
Rate Disability Pension (SRDP) under the Military Rehabilitation
and Compensation Act 2004 (MRCA).
|
50
years of age or over
|
veteran partner receives an
above general rate Disability Pension under the VEA or MRCA
|
Qualifying
age (60 years) or over
|
if the other
categories do not apply
|
Source: DVA, ‘Factsheet
IS45 – Partner Service Pension’, DVA, Canberra, last updated 27 March 2019.
Former partners
Former partners of a veteran who remain legally married
(that is, separated but still married) can be paid Partner Service Pension if
they meet the age requirements set out in Table 1. Payment may continue for up
to 12 months following the date of separation unless the partner has reached
age pension age before the period of 12 months is reached, or ‘special domestic
circumstances’ apply. The term special domestic circumstances
refers to situations where ‘the veteran has a psychological or mental health
condition recognised by DVA and there was an unsafe or abusive domestic
environment in respect of the partner or the partner’s family prior to
separation’.[17]
Eligibility for a Partner Service Pension ceases when the
individual divorces or commences a
de facto relationship with another person.
De facto partners lose eligibility for Partner Service
Pension immediately if their relationship with the veteran ceases.[18]
Widows and
widowers
Recipients of a Partner Service Pension can continue to be
eligible for the payment if the veteran dies (the partner must have been in
receipt of the pension immediately before the death). The partner of a deceased
veteran who had qualifying service is eligible for the Partner Service Pension
when they become eligible for the social security Age Pension (that is, they
can receive the Partner Service Pension instead of the Age Pension).[19]
A partner who meets the age requirements set out in Table
1 is eligible for the Partner Service Pension as a widowed partner where:
- the
veteran was receiving or was eligible for Service Pension
- the
veteran was registered for the Pension Bonus Scheme or
- the
veteran had made a claim for Service Pension which would have been granted had
they not died.[20]
Widows or widowers who receive the War Widow’s/Widower’s
Pension—a compensation payment paid where a veteran’s death is linked to their
service—are not eligible to receive Partner Service Pension. War
Widow’s/Widower’s Pension recipients may receive the means tested Income
Support Supplement.[21]
Widows or widowers who were receiving Partner Service
Pension at the time of the veteran’s death, but who had separated prior to the
death (while remaining married), lose eligibility for Partner Service Pension
12 months from the date of separation unless special domestic circumstances
arise or they have reached Age Pension age.[22]
Key issues and
provisions
Inequitable
treatment between married and de facto couples
The current provisions for post-separation Partner Service
Pension eligibility provide for beneficial treatment for married couples
compared to de facto couples. Currently, partners in de facto and registered
relationships lose eligibility for Partner Service Pension immediately upon
separation. Married partners can remain eligible for 12 months or more (in
special circumstances) despite being separated from the veteran. There is no valid
reason to discriminate against non-married former partners in such situations.
Amendments
address inequity and ensure temporary financial support for former partners
In his second reading speech on the Bill, Minister for
Veterans’ Affairs Darren Chester stated the amendments proposed by Schedule 1
‘will ensure a modern legislative provision that recognises the differences in
relationship types and removes any discrimination’.[23]
The Minister also noted:
... where special domestic circumstances apply, including
domestic abuse, legislative instrument amendments will allow all former
partners to remain eligible to receive partner service pension until they enter
into a new relationship. This preventative measure, part of the government's
fourth National Action Plan to Reduce Violence against Women and their
Children, will assist partners to leave a violent relationship by providing
them with financial support.[24]
These measures will ensure that the current differences in
treatment between married and non-married couples will be removed.
Key
provisions
Section 38 of the VEA sets out the eligibility
criteria for Partner Service Pension. Items 1–29 make amendments to
various parts of subsection 38(1) to remove some of the existing
criteria applying to former partners and widows and insert references to proposed
subsections 38(1AA) and 38(1AB) (inserted by item 30) which will set
out the specific criteria for former partners and for former partner/widows of
deceased veterans, respectively.
Proposed subsection 38(1AA) provides eligibility
for Partner Service Pension for the following categories of former partners:
- non-illness
separated spouses of a veteran
- persons
in a relationship with a veteran (whether of the same sex or different sex)
registered under a state or territory law who have separated and are living
separately from the veteran on a permanent basis (but are not considered an
illness separated couple)
- persons
who were in a de facto relationship (in the opinion of the Repatriation
Commission) who have separated and are living separately from the veteran on a
permanent basis (but are not considered an illness separated couple)
- persons
who have become divorced from a veteran but were previously non-illness
separated spouses of a veteran
- persons
whose registered relationship has ceased but who were previously, while the
relationship was still registered, living separately from the veteran on a
permanent basis.
Current subsection 38(2AB) of the VEA limits the
eligibility for all of these categories of former partners to a period of 12
months beginning on the first day on which the person was living separately and
apart from the veteran on a permanent basis.
Subsection 38(2AC) of the VEA provides for
exceptions to this 12 month limit in cases where the former partner has reached
Age Pension age or circumstances specified in a legislative instrument made
under subsection 38(2AD) exist. Currently, this instrument provides for
circumstances where the veteran has service-related psychological or other
mental health incapacity and that the domestic environment shared with the
veteran was unsafe or abusive because of the veteran’s behaviour.[25]
Proposed subsection 38(1AB) of the VEA sets
out the eligibility criteria for the former partners of veterans who have died.
It applies in situations where:
- immediately
before the veteran’s death, the veteran was in receipt of, or eligible for, a
Service Pension and the partner was in receipt of a Partner Service Pension or
social security pension
- the
partner had made a claim for Partner Service Pension before the death of a
veteran who was in receipt of or eligible for a Service Pension, or had made a
claim for Service Pension that would have been granted had they not died
- the
veteran had rendered qualifying service and the partner was qualified for a
social security Age Pension
- the
veteran was registered as a member of the Pension Bonus Scheme or was receiving
or was eligible for a Service Pension and immediately before the veteran’s
death, the partner was registered as a member of the Pension Bonus Scheme or
was receiving Partner Service Pension or social security pension or
- the
partner had made a claim for Partner Service Pension which had not been
determined before the veteran’s death, and immediately before their death, the
veteran registered as a member of the Pension Bonus Scheme.[26]
The criteria for former partners of veterans who have died
are that they:
- are
the widow or widower of the veteran
- immediately
before the veteran died, were in a relationship with the veteran that was
registered under a state or territory law; were separated and living separately
from the veteran on a permanent basis; had not been a member of couple (with
another person) during the period between separation and the death of the
veteran
- had
previously been in a relationship that the Repatriation Commission considered a
de facto relationship and immediately before the veteran died, were living
separately from the veteran on a permanent basis, were not within a prohibited
relationship with the veteran (that is, incestuous), and had not been a member
of couple (with another person) during the period between separation and the
death of the veteran
- became
divorced from the veteran before the veteran’s death, but before the divorce
were considered a non-illness separated spouse of the veteran, and had not been
a member of couple (with another person) during the period between separation
and the death of the veteran or
- had
ceased to be in a registered relationship with the veteran before the veteran’s
death, but while the relationship was still registered were separated and
living apart from the veteran on a permanent basis, and had not been a member
of couple (with another person) during the period between separation and the
death of the veteran.
Former partners subject to the provision in proposed
subsection 38(1AB) can remain eligible for Partner Service Pension
indefinitely and are not subject to the 12 month limit.
Item 31 substitutes proposed subsection 38(2A)
which provides for all former partners (including those where the veteran has
died) to cease being eligible for Partner Service Pension when they become a
member of a new couple. A note included under proposed subsection 38(2A)
provides that the person may become eligible for Partner Service Pension if
their new partner is also a veteran and they again meet the qualification
requirements for the payment.
Item 32 repeals existing subsections 38(2B), (3)
and (3A) of the VEA which are made redundant by proposed subsection
38(2A).
Schedule
2—Extended service on submarine special operations
Schedule 2 proposes amendments to the VEA to classify
service on submarine special operations by members of the Defence Force during
the period 1 January 1993 to 12 May 1997 as operational and qualifying service.
Currently, only service on these operations during the period
1 January 1978 to 31 December 1992 is classified as operational and
qualifying service.
Background
Qualifying
and operational service
Recognition of a particular period or kind of defence service
as operational or qualifying service under the VEA
provides access to certain entitlements. Recognition of the service as
operational service provides access to the Disability Pension compensation
payment and medical treatment for any illness or incapacity that was linked to
this service. Recognition as qualifying service provides access to the Service
Pension (including the age Service Pension from age 60), and, from age 70,
automatic qualification for a DVA Gold Health Treatment Card, which provides
access to treatments for any medical condition at DVA’s expense, regardless of
whether the condition was linked to service. Partners, former partners and
widows of those with qualifying service may also be eligible for a Partner
Service Pension (see Schedule 1 above).[27]
Submarine
special operations
Submarine special operations refer to the deployment of
Royal Australian Navy submarines with special intelligence equipment during
peacetime. The operations are covert and details are classified.[28]
An article in The Australian in 2013 suggested there were around 20 such
operations during the period 1977 to 1992 which included surveillance of the
Soviet and Chinese navies.[29]
Clarke
Review
Prior to 2010, service on submarine special operations was
classified as peacetime service. The 2003 Review of Veterans’ Entitlements (the
Clarke Review) examined the classification of these operations and received a
number of submissions which argued that they should be classified as ‘warlike
service’ as they were authorised and acknowledged as ‘warlike’: ‘Submissions
added that special operations were conducted in a threat environment where
overwhelming force could have been expected if the submarine had been
detected’.[30]
The Clarke Review found that due to the classified nature
of the operations, the classification of this service could only be made by the
Department of Defence. Advice from Defence indicated that ‘there is no evidence
to suggest that warlike service status would be, or should have been, applied
to submarine special operations’.[31]
The Clarke Review recommended that these operations not be considered warlike
service for the purposes of the VEA, but be deemed ‘non-warlike
hazardous’ operational service.[32]
Classification as warlike service would have seen these operations considered to
be qualifying service. Classification as hazardous non-warlike service would
have provided access to Disability Pensions and health treatments for conditions
arising from that service.[33]
The Howard Government did not adopt these recommendations
and, in announcing the Government’s response to the Clarke Review, the then
Minister for Veterans’ Affairs Danna Vale emphasised a desire to limit the
definition of qualifying service to those who were at risk of injury or death
from an armed enemy:
I say, quite clearly, this Government will protect the
integrity of Qualifying Service to continue to give special recognition - and
benefits - to those who serve their country at risk of personal injury or death
from an armed enemy.
So we endorse and accept the Committee's recommendation that
there be no change in the statutory test for Qualifying Service.
However, we reject the Committee's view that the 'incurred danger
test' has been interpreted too narrowly by the courts and administrators.
Public support and confidence in the generosity of our
Repatriation System depends on the 'incurred danger test' remaining objective.
We would create anomalies if we were to confuse a state of readiness, or
presence in a former enemy's territory, with the real and tangible risks of
facing an armed and hostile enemy.[34]
2010
recognition as operational and qualifying service
In 2010, the Labor Government announced a response to the
recommendations of the Clarke Review that the Howard Government had not
accepted or implemented. This included the decision to reclassify certain
submarine special operations service between 1978 and 1992 as operational and
qualifying service. The then Minister for Veterans’ Affairs and Defence
Personnel Alan Griffin noted that ‘this exceeds Clarke’s recommendation that
this service be deemed non-warlike hazardous’.[35]
The decision was included in the 2010–11 Budget.[36]
Around 880 personnel were expected to benefit.[37]
The Bills Digest for the legislation which implemented the
measure noted that classifying this peacetime service as qualifying service,
equivalent to service during wartime, could set a significant precedent for the
recognition of other forms of dangerous peacetime service:
The proponents of the submarine special service insist that,
had they been detected, they were at great and overwhelming risk and danger.
However, the detail of the special submarine service has not been made public
due to the apparently ‘top secret’ nature of its operations. Nor has there been
any publicity relating to its operations, such as might be expected if it had
engaged in any conflict with, or discovered any covert operations by, other
forces or nations. Therefore, the Government’s decision implies acceptance that
the risks the operations ran should be given the same recognition as warlike
service. This is even though the submarine operations were not during a period
of hostilities against an armed enemy force, hitherto a requirement for the
classification of war and warlike service. This budget initiative might
therefore set a precedent for the accreditation of other claims relating to
dangerous peacetime military service.[38]
2018
amendments
In 2018 amendments to the VEA effectively deemed that
any submariner who served on a submarine special operation between 1 January
1978 and 31 December 1992 had operational service for any period they served on
a submarine during this period.[39]
DVA had found that the high level of secrecy around these
operations, and the limited information that could be provided by Defence to
DVA in regards to a veteran’s service on these operations, made it difficult to
establish claims for a Disability Pension. Specifically, DVA had difficulty
linking injuries or illnesses contracted by a submariner with service on a
classified operation as opposed to other service on a submarine during this
period.[40]
Essentially, the amendments allowed veterans who met the
eligibility criteria for service on submarine special operations at any point
in that period, to make a claim for an injury or illness arising as a result of
any service on a submarine during that period.
Eligibility
criteria
Eligibility for qualifying and operational service on a
submarine special operation is determined by whether an individual has
received, or is eligible for, the Australian Service Medal with a clasp
‘SPECIAL OPS’ in respect of a submarine special operation during the period 1
January 1978 to 31 December 1992.[41]
Key issues
and provisions
Covert
nature of operations limits scrutiny of entitlement
The proposed extension to the period of submarine special
operations classified as qualifying and operational service under the VEA
is difficult to assess as so little is known publicly about these operations,
the risk and danger involved, their comparability to service during wartime
and, therefore, the claim these submariners have to the benefits that entail
from the classification. The Parliament is being asked to trust in the
assessment of the departments of Defence and Veterans’ Affairs, despite the
Department of Defence previously advising the Clarke Review that there was ‘no
evidence to suggest that warlike service status would be, or should have been,
applied to submarine special operations’.[42]
It is also unclear how many service personnel will benefit from the
reclassification.
Post-1997
operations considered non-warlike
The Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill notes that submarine
special operations after 1997 do not meet the criteria for ‘warlike’ service.[43]
It states that service on these operations during the period from 13 May 1997
to 30 June 2006 will be the subject of ‘non-warlike’ determinations under the VEA
and the Military
Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.[44]
This means that those with service on submarine special operations during the
period 13 May 1997 to 30 June 2006 will be regarded as having
operational service and be eligible for compensation and treatment for
conditions attributed to this service, but will not be considered as having
qualifying service for the purposes of the Service Pension and other
entitlements. The Minister stated in his second reading speech that classifying
this service between 1997 and 2006 as non-warlike will not require legislative
change but will be made via a Ministerial determination.[45]
Key
provisions
Section 6DB of the VEA sets out the criteria for service
on submarine special operations to be considered operational service.
Item 2 removes any reference to particular dates from
the heading at section 6DB.
Item 3 amends paragraphs 6DB(a) and (b) to change a
reference to 31 December 1992 to 12 May 1997. This provides for
service on submarine special operations from 1 January 1978 to
12 May 1997 that meets the other criteria at section 6DB to be
considered as operational service.
Section 7A of the VEA sets out the criteria for what
is considered qualifying service.
Item 4 amends existing subparagraphs 7A(1)(a)(v) and
(vi) to change references to 31 December 1992 to 12 May 1997. This
provides for service on submarine special operations from 1 January 1978
to 12 May 1997 that meets the other criteria at subparagraphs 7A(1)(a)(v)
and (vi) to be considered qualifying service.
Schedule
3—Other amendments
Schedule 3 makes technical amendments relating to the
definitions of widow and widower in the Defence
Service Homes Act and the VEA to reflect the 2017 changes to the Marriage Act 1961
allowing for any two people to marry, regardless of their sex or gender.
The Marriage Amendment
(Definition and Religious Freedoms) Act 2017 removed restrictions in
the Marriage Act that limited marriage in Australia to the union of a
man and a woman. The amendment allowed for two people to marry, regardless of
their sex and gender.
The amendments proposed by this Schedule are intended to
reflect this amendment in the definitions of widow and widower
used in the Defence Service Homes Act and the VEA. The
definitions make clear that the terms can apply regardless of the sex or gender
of the person to whom the widow or widower was married.
Item 4 of Schedule 3 also makes a technical amendment
to the VEA to replace a reference to ‘direction’ in the definition of non-illness
separated spouse at existing subsection 5E(1) with a reference to the more
accurate term ‘determination’.