Introductory Info
Date introduced: 18 March 2021
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Education, Skills and Employment
Commencement: The day after the Act receives Royal Assent, except the provisions relating to former permanent humanitarian visa holders (Schedule 1, Part 1), which commence 1 January 2022.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Education
Legislation Amendment (2021 Measures No. 2) Bill 2021 (the Bill) is to
amend the Higher
Education Support Act 2003 (HESA) and the Education Services
for Overseas Students Act 2000 (ESOS Act) to make a number of
administrative changes to:
- extend
access to student loans to former permanent humanitarian visa holders
- provide
for refunds of student upfront payments in certain circumstances where the
provider has remitted a student loan amount
- change
the administrative arrangements for certain grants and
- clarify
that the ESOS Act continues to apply to formerly registered providers of
education to overseas students for the purposes of resolving issues that relate
to their time as registered providers.
Background information for each of these provisions is
included in the key issues and provisions section of this Bills Digest.
The Bill also amends HESA to correct the mistaken
inclusion of Indigenous language courses as foreign languages, and clarify that
if a student’s course is restructured by a higher education provider, they can
still be treated as a grandfathered student under the Higher Education
Support Amendment (Job-Ready
Graduates and Supporting Regional and Remote Students) Act 2020 (Job
Ready Graduates Act) if they are a continuing student who was enrolled
prior to 2021. These amendments are not discussed in the Digest.[1]
Committee
consideration
Senate
Standing Committee for the Selection of Bills
At its meeting of 17 March 2021, the Senate Standing
Committee for Selection of Bills deferred consideration of the Bill to its next
meeting.[2]
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
At the time of writing, no non-government
parties/independents have commented on the specifics of the Bill.
Position of
major interest groups
At the time of writing, no major interest groups have
commented on the specifics of the Bill.
Financial
implications
The Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill states that the
amendments to HESA have ‘negligible financial implications’, while the
amendments to the ESOS Act will have no financial impact.[3]
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.[4]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights had no
comment on the Bill.[5]
Key issues
and provisions
Student
loans for former permanent humanitarian visa holders
The Higher Education
Loan Program (HELP) provides loans to students to defer certain study costs,
with amounts paid to providers by the Australian Government on behalf of the
student, and repaid through the Australian Taxation Office once a borrower’s
repayment income reaches a minimum
repayment threshold.[6]
There are four HELP sub-schemes:
- eligible
students enrolled in a Commonwealth Supported Place (CSP) can defer the cost of
their student contribution amount (essentially, their course fees) using HECS-HELP[7]
- eligible
students enrolled in full fee-paying places at approved higher education
providers can defer the cost of their course fees using FEE-HELP[8]
- eligible
students can use SA-HELP
to defer the cost of the student
services and amenities fee (SSAF), which covers certain student services and
amenities of a non-academic nature, and is capped at $313 for 2021[9]
- eligible
students enrolled in an undergraduate CSP can defer the cost of certain
overseas study expenses using OS-HELP.[10]
Currently under HESA, all Australian citizens and resident
permanent humanitarian visa holders are eligible for all sub-schemes.[11]
With the exception of certain New Zealand citizens, other visa holders are
generally not eligible for HELP.[12]
The number of humanitarian visa holders receiving HELP
assistance in the five years to 2019 (latest year available) is shown in Table
1 below. Humanitarian visa holders represent a small minority of HELP
borrowers. In 2019, a total of 974,330 students received HELP assistance
through one or more sub-schemes, with only 4,577 of
these (0.5 per cent) being humanitarian visa holders.[13]
Table 1: Number
of humanitarian visa holders receiving HELP assistance by HELP type, 2015–2019
|
HECS-HELP
|
FEE-HELP
|
OS-HELP
|
SA-HELP
|
TOTAL
|
2015 |
2,995 |
555 |
24 |
2,666 |
3,594 |
2016 |
3,124 |
486 |
27 |
2,806 |
3,676 |
2017 |
3,166 |
492 |
33 |
2,891 |
3,713 |
2018 |
3,455 |
516 |
18 |
3,118 |
4,034 |
2019 |
3,962 |
542 |
19 |
3,562 |
4,577 |
Source: Supplied by the Department
of Education, Skills and Employment (DESE), from the Higher Education Student
Collection, extracted 29 March 2021.
Note: Number of persons accessing each sub-scheme does not equal
the total number of students as students often access more than one sub-scheme.
Proposed
amendments
Items 1 to 3 of Schedule 1 of the Bill amend
the HELP citizenship and residency requirements in HESA for each
sub-scheme to extend HELP to eligible former permanent humanitarian visa
holders.
Item 4 inserts the following definition of eligible
former permanent humanitarian visa holder to the dictionary in Schedule
1 of HESA:
a person who:
- is not a *permanent humanitarian visa holder; and
- was previously a permanent humanitarian visa holder;
and
- is the
holder of a visa in a class or subclass of visas specified in a determination
under subclause (1A)
Proposed subclause (1A), to be inserted at Schedule
1 of HESA by item 5 allows the Minister with responsibility for
higher education to specify, by legislative instrument, a class or subclass of
visas under the Migration
Act 1958 or its regulations for inclusion in the definition of eligible
former permanent humanitarian visa holder.
The Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill indicates that the
intention is to use this provision to extend HELP to former permanent
humanitarian visa holders who hold a Resident Return visa, which is required to
enable them to travel outside Australia, if they have held the permanent
humanitarian visa for at least five years.[14]
Permanent visa holders, including those granted permanent
humanitarian visas, are usually granted a five-year ‘travel facility’ which
allows them to travel overseas and re-enter Australia for up to five years from
the time the visa was granted. After five years, this travel facility expires,
and a permanent visa holder wishing to travel overseas and re-enter Australia
must apply for a Resident Return visa (subclass 155 or 157).[15]
A Resident Return visa is a permanent visa, but is not a humanitarian visa.
This means anyone who moves from a permanent humanitarian visa to a Resident
Return visa loses their entitlement to HELP. The Minister’s second reading
speech indicates that this provision is intended to ensure that permanent
humanitarian visas holders do not lose access to HELP simply because they
travel outside of Australia after the expiry of their five-year travel
facility:
As a permanent
humanitarian visa holder in this situation would have retained their HELP
eligibility if they had not travelled outside of their travel facility, this
bill ensures permanent humanitarian visa holders can still access HELP,
ensuring continued access to quality tertiary education while they are
Australian residents.[16]
The proposed application provisions at item 6 mean
the extension of HELP eligibility will be from 1 January 2022, with
HECS-HELP and FEE-HELP available for units (sometimes known as subjects) with a
census date on or after this date, and OS-HELP and SA-HELP available for
applications for assistance on or after this date.
Recrediting upfront
payments
Currently, HESA contains provisions to ensure that
if a provider contravenes certain requirements of the Act in relation to HECS-HELP,
they will be required to repay the Commonwealth assistance wrongly received as
a result.
A higher education provider must re-credit a person’s HELP
balance if HECS-HELP is provided on the basis of an application where the provider
completed any part of the application that the person was required to complete
themselves, or if the person was not entitled to receive HECS-HELP assistance
for the unit.[17]
This discharges the student from liability to pay the student contribution for
the unit, up to the re-credited amount.[18]
The provider must then repay the amount to the Commonwealth.[19]
If the student was then unable to properly complete the application
and/or pay the full student contribution amount on or before the census date
for the unit, the provider would be required to cancel their enrolment, and
refund any upfront payment the student may have made.[20]
Circumstances that arise after the census date would normally be dealt under
the special circumstances provisions, which allow a student who has withdrawn
from a unit due to a matter beyond their control that makes it impracticable
for them to complete the requirements of the unit, to apply for a refund within
12 months.[21]
Proposed
amendments
Item 7 of Schedule 1 inserts proposed sections
36-24BB and 36-24BC, which specify that if the person’s HELP balance is
re-credited under the above circumstances, and the person had paid some of the
student contribution amount upfront, that amount must be refunded to the
student—this puts a positive obligation on the provider to refund the upfront
payment, rather than relying on other processes (such as enrolment cancellation,
or the student making a special circumstances application) to initiate the
refund process.
The proposed sections also include requirements for the
provider to repay the amount of HECS-HELP assistance received to the
Commonwealth, and the existing section requiring this is repealed at item 8.
The significance of this change is to move the obligation into Division 36,
which sets out the conditions of receiving Commonwealth Grant Scheme grants,
the main source of Australian Government funding for higher education providers—breaching
these conditions can result in bodies having a grant reduced, or being required
to repay a grant, under Part 2-5.
The repayment requirements will not automatically apply in
the case of replacement units, or provider default (that is, failing to provide
a unit as promised), but these circumstances may be dealt with in the Higher Education
Provider Guidelines.[22]
The application provisions at item 12 mean the new
refund requirements will only apply to units with a census date on or after 1
January 2021. The Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill suggests that this
retrospectivity is justified in order to avoid financially disadvantaging
students, but also argues that it will have no practical effect due to the
existing refund arrangements.[23]
Other
provisions
Grant
administration
Parts 3 and 4 of Schedule 1 of the Bill include
changes to the administration of certain grants provided to higher education
providers under HESA.
Part 3 of the Bill amends the ‘other grants’
provisions in Part 2-3 of HESA. The ‘other grants’ provisions cover a
range of purposes set out in section 41-10, including equality of opportunity,
capital development projects, and activities that assure and enhance the
quality of the sector.
Key programs funded using these provisions currently include:
- the
Indigenous, Regional and Low SES Attainment Fund (IRLSAF), which was announced
in 2020 as part of the Job-ready
Graduates Package.[24]
The IRLSAF combines equity funding from a range of existing programs, including
the Higher Education Participation and
Partnerships Program (HEPPP) as well as the enabling loading and regional
loading, which previously formed part of the funding provided for learning and
teaching under the Commonwealth Grant Scheme[25]
- the
National Priorities and
Industry Linkage Fund, also announced as part of the Job-ready Graduates Package, which
from 2021 will provide grants to universities to invest in more innovative
approaches to industry engagement, with the aim of improving graduate
employability[26]
- Regional University
Centres, which provide facilities such as computers and study spaces, and
support such as study advice and academic support services, to assist students
studying at a distance from their provider[27]
- the
Higher
Education Disability Support Program, which funds institutions to undertake
activities that assist in removing barriers to access for students with
disability, and maintain the Australian
Disability Clearinghouse on Education and Training, currently hosted by the
University of Tasmania.[28]
Currently, section 41-25 allows for the conditions for
such a grant to either be determined by the Minister on an individual basis, or
specified in the Other Grants Guidelines, but not both.[29]
Item 13 repeals section 41-25 and replaces it with proposed section
41-25, which would allow for both options to be used in combination.
A minor adjustment is also made to the provisions for
rollover of grant amounts in subsection 41-40(1). Currently, this subsection
allows unspent amounts to be rolled over into the following year if the
Secretary (currently of the Department of Education, Skills and Employment) so
determines. Item 14 repeals the subsection and replaces it with proposed
subsection 41-40(1), which allows for unspent amounts to be rolled over by
default, unless the Secretary determines otherwise under proposed subsection
41-40(5).
Item 18 proposes to repeal section 41-50, which
currently requires the Minister to provide, by legislative instrument by the
start of each year, a list of the maximum amounts of all grants which may be paid under the ‘other grants’
provisions in the following year (although this can be varied at any time
before the end of the year).
The Explanatory
Memorandum to the Bill states that ‘this instrument is no longer required’,
citing the similarity of the instrument required under subsection 41-45(1B).[30] Subsection
41-45(1B) requires that the Minister must, by legislative instrument, determine
the total payments made under Part 2-3 each year. The key difference between
these provisions is that, while subsection 41-45(1B) requires only a total
funding amount, section 41-50 requires an amount to be specified for
each grant purpose. Despite this, recent interpretations of this provision have
arguably undermined this intent. The 2019 and 2020 instruments provide a table
which includes, for each purpose in section 41-10, that the maximum grant will
be the ‘total amount determined under s 41-45 of the Act’.[31]
In contrast, earlier examples provide dollar figures where the intent is to
make a grant for the specified purpose.[32]
Part 4 deals with the Commonwealth scholarships provisions
in Part 2-4. The scholarships provisions are currently used to fund the Research
Training Program (RTP), which provides fee
offsets and stipends for both domestic and overseas students undertaking postgraduate
research courses (masters by research and doctorate by research).[33]
Grants are made to providers on the basis of research income and postgraduate
research student completions.[34]
Providers are responsible for program administration, such as the selection of
students and determinations about whether a stipend is to be provided.[35]
Currently, provisions in subsection 46-35(1) for rolling
over Commonwealth scholarship grant amounts are in the same terms as those for
the other grants. That is, they allow the Secretary to determine that an
unspent amount be rolled over into the next year. Item 20 repeals the
subsection. Proposed subsection 46-35(1) parallels the change to the ‘other
grants’ provisions. It would allow unspent amounts to be rolled over by
default, unless the Secretary determines otherwise under proposed subsection
46-35(4).
The application and transitional provisions at items 19
and 23 apply the changes to all grants from the day after the Act
receives Royal Assent. For grants made before this time, conditions will be
treated as imposed under section 41-25 as amended—this means that any current
grant with conditions set out in the Other Grants Guidelines where the Minister
has also specified conditions on an individual basis will be subject to both
sets of conditions. This appears intended to clarify the legal status of some
grants, which, according to the Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill, do currently
have conditions specified using both mechanisms.[36]
Former registered providers of education for
overseas students
Schedule 2 of the Bill deals with arrangements for
formerly registered providers under the ESOS Act.
Currently, under section 6E, the ESOS Act generally
applies to current and prospective providers of courses to overseas students,
including those in the higher education, vocational education and training
(VET), schools, and English Language sectors.
One of the main protections for overseas students under
the ESOS Act is the Tuition Protection
Service (TPS), which assists students whose education provider is unable to
deliver their course as planned (that is, when a provider ‘defaults’).[37]
The service ensures that eligible students either continue their studies with a
different provider, or have the unused portion of the tuition fee reimbursed—the
provider is ultimately responsible for this cost.[38]
To this end, sections 28 and 29 of the ESOS Act require
that registered providers receiving tuition fees from overseas students prior
to the commencement of a course maintain an account credited with those fees.[39]
Withdrawals from the account can be made to cover the provider’s obligations in
case of provider default, or if the student defaults, for example if their visa
application is refused.[40]
To clarify the responsibilities of former providers, item
1 inserts proposed section 7AB, which provides that the ESOS Act
as a whole continues to apply to a person or entity that was a registered
provider for the purposes of dealing with or resolving matters that arise or
relate to the period of their registration. Proposed subsection 7AB(2)
explicitly includes issues related to tuition fees or other money in these
continuing responsibilities, but not to the exclusion of other matters. Item
6 also inserts a note after subsection 28(1) specifying that the obligation
to maintain the account may continue to apply to a person or entity that ceases
to be a registered provider until matters relating to the tuition fees in the
account are dealt with or resolved. The intention of these changes is to remove
avenues for providers to extinguish their obligations to students by ending
their registration under the ESOS Act.[41]
Concluding comments
The Bill proposes a number of unrelated and largely
administrative changes to HESA and the ESOS Act, which are
broadly consistent with current policy. The extension of HELP to former
permanent humanitarian visa holders, and the inclusion of upfront payments in
the HELP recrediting provisions are the most significant changes in the Bill. The
proposed repeal of the requirement for the Minister to specify, by legislative
instrument, the planned spending on each of the ‘other grants’ each year may
also warrant consideration, as this change would formalise the limited use of
this instrument in recent years, in favour of an instrument which provides only
a total figure.