Introductory Info
Date introduced: 27 May 2021
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Social Services
Commencement: 1 July 2021
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Social Services Legislation Amendment
(Portability Extensions) Bill 2021 (the Bill) is to amend the Social Security Act
1991 (the SS Act), the Social Security
(Administration) Act 1999 (the SS Admin Act) and the Social Services
and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2014 (the SS Act 2014) to
introduce a permanent discretionary power to provide extensions to portability
arrangements for certain pensioners who are temporarily absent from their
country of residence and unable to return home within 26 weeks for reasons such
as serious illness, death of a family member, natural disaster or a public
health crisis. Portability refers to a person's continuing entitlement to an
Australian social security payment while outside Australia.
As part of its COVID-19 response, the Australian
Government introduced temporary and discretionary portability extensions to
pensioners outside Australia who were unable to return within 26 weeks of their
departure.[1]
Some pensioner’s payment rates can be reduced after 26 weeks overseas. Extensions
were also granted to some pensioners who normally live overseas but were in
Australia and unable to depart because of the COVID-19 pandemic. Some
pensioners in this category were grandfathered from previous portability
changes but were at risk of losing their grandfathered status by being in
Australia for a continuous period of 26 weeks or more. These portability
extensions were made via legislative instruments and, later, via amendments to
the SS Act allowing for extensions to be made until 30 June 2021.[2]
The Bill proposes to introduce a permanent discretionary
power within the SS Act allowing for pension portability
arrangements to be extended in certain circumstances. Similar provisions
already exist allowing for the extension of portability periods for other
payment categories in certain circumstances.
Background
Portability
The portability conditions for social security payments vary
depending on the payment.[3]
Some social security payments have limited portability and can only be received
for short periods (usually up to six weeks) while a person is temporarily
overseas and some may only provide portability in special circumstances.[4]
Other payments, such as the Age Pension, have unlimited portability and a
person can continue to receive the Age Pension while living permanently outside
Australia. The Disability Support Pension has different portability conditions
depending on an individual’s circumstances:
- people
who are permanently and severely impaired and have no future work capacity may
be eligible for unlimited portability
- people
with terminal illnesses who return to their country of origin to be near or
with a family member may be eligible for unlimited portability or
- other
DSP recipients generally have a portability period of up to four weeks in any
12-month period (four-week periods separate from this general period can be
granted for specific purposes such as medical treatment or family crises).[5]
While a pensioner may be eligible to receive their payment
under the portability rules, their pension rate can be affected after a certain
period of time outside of Australia depending on the time they spent residing
in Australia during their working life (between the age of 16 and Age Pension
age).[6]
This period of residence in Australia is known as their Australian Working Life
Residence (AWLR). Those with less than 35 years AWLR will, after 26 weeks
overseas, have their payment reduced to a rate equivalent to the proportion of
35 years their AWLR represents.[7]
For example, a person with 16 years of AWLR will receive around 46 per cent of
the rate otherwise payable if they resided in Australia. Those with 35 years or
more AWLR residence will not have their payment reduced.
Some Disability Support Pension recipients with unlimited
portability may be exempt from the AWLR rate reduction.[8]
Some supplementary payments, such as Rent Assistance, are
not payable to pensioners with unlimited portability after 26 weeks of a
temporary absence from Australia.[9]
COVID-19
response measures
In response to COVID-19-related overseas travel
restrictions, the Australian Government provided extended portability periods
to those pensioners with unlimited portability who were unable to return to or
depart from Australia within 26 weeks.
For those pensioners unable to return to Australia, the
extended period meant that their payment rate would not be affected by the AWLR
proportionality rules, or the rules around payment of certain supplements,
while they were unable to return home.
Some of the pensioners who faced issues with being unable
to depart Australia are part of groups grandfathered from previous changes to
portability (and who remain covered by previous portability rules only if they
have not returned to Australia for periods of 26 weeks or more).[10]
One group is grandfathered from changes commencing 20 September 2000, including
some with exemptions from the AWLR proportionality rules and some allowed to
used their partner’s AWLR in calculating the proportional rate; and one group
is grandfathered from changes commencing on 1 July 2014 that increased the AWLR
period from 25 years to 35 years.[11]
These groups only remain covered by the grandfathering provisions if they have
not returned to Australia for a continuous period of 26 weeks or more.[12]
The COVID-19 response measures did not change the
allowable portability period for these pensioners, but the period they could
remain overseas without their payment rate being affected by the AWLR rules or
the period they could remain in Australia without losing their grandfathered
status.
Changes were made
to the portability provisions in the SS Act for those outside Australia
unable to return and those in Australia unable to depart for the period 10 June
2020 to 31 December 2020 via the Social Security
(Coronavirus Economic Response—2020 Measures No. 10) Determination 2020.
These changes were extended until 31 March 2021 via the Social Security
(Coronavirus Economic Response—2020 Measures No. 16) Determination 2020.
Both instruments were made under temporary powers provided to the Minister to
amend certain provisions of the SS Act via determinations—first by item
40A of Schedule 11 to the Coronavirus
Economic Response Package Omnibus Act 2020, and later by Part 4 of
Schedule 1 to the Social
Services and Other Legislation Amendment (Extension of Coronavirus Support) Act
2020.[13]
Part 5 of the Social Services
Legislation Amendment (Strengthening Income Support) Act 2021 amended
the SS Act to allow for extensions to pension portability periods, under
similar circumstances to those prescribed in the two determinations, to be made
until 30 June 2021. The amendments enabled the Secretary of the Department of
Social Services to determine a different portability period where the
pensioner’s relevant 26-week period ends on or after 11 March 2020 and:
-
the Secretary is satisfied the person’s absence from Australia is
temporary and
-
the Secretary is satisfied the person in unable to return to
Australia before the end of the 26‑week period because of the impact of
COVID-19.[14]
The different period set by the Secretary cannot end after
30 June 2021.
Similar amendments were made for those in Australia at
risk of losing their grandfathered status. These amendments allowed the Secretary
to determine a different period the person can remain in Australia before they
lose their grandfathered status. The Secretary must be satisfied of the same
conditions listed above and cannot set a period that ends after 30 June 2021.[15]
Portability
extensions for other payments
Payment recipients subject to limited portability periods
(such as Carer Payment and Parenting Payment) and those eligible for limited
portability in specific circumstances (such as JobSeeker Payment and Youth
Allowance) may have their portability period extended in certain circumstances.
Section 1218C of the SS Act allows for discretionary extensions to be
granted to a person’s portability period in specific circumstances:
- the
person or a family member is:
- involved
in a serious accident
- seriously
ill
- hospitalised
or
- the
victim of robbery or serious crime
- the
person is:
- involved
in custody proceedings
- required
to remain overseas in connection with criminal proceedings (other than in
respect of a crime alleged to have been committed by the person)
- unable
to return because of war, industrial action, or social or political unrest in
which the payment recipient is not willingly participating or
- unable
to return because of a natural disaster
- if
a family member dies.[16]
The event preventing the person’s return must be
considered extreme or an emergency and must have occurred/begin during the
person’s allowable portability period.[17]
The discretion to extend a person’s portability period
belongs to the Secretary of the Department of Social Services but, according to
the policy guidelines, is delegated to specific staff in Services Australia.[18]
Separate provisions allow for portability extensions to
those receiving financial assistance under the Medical Treatment Overseas
Program, including those accompanying someone receiving assistance under this
program.[19]
Bill before
the Senate will remove pension supplement after six weeks overseas
The Social Services Legislation Amendment (Payment
Integrity) Bill 2019, currently before the Senate, also includes a proposed
change to portability arrangements.[20]
The Bill proposes to stop payment of the pension supplement (a payment provided
in addition to certain income support payments such as the Age Pension) after
six weeks of a temporary overseas absence, or immediately for permanent
departures. Currently, the pension supplement can be paid for temporary
absences longer than six weeks, and for permanent departures, but at a reduced
rate known as the basic amount.[21]
Committee
consideration
Senate
Community Affairs Legislation Committee
On 13 May 2021, the Senate passed a motion referring
certain time critical Bills (which includes this Bill) to the relevant
committee for inquiry and report by 11 June 2021.[22]
On 10 June 2021 the Senate Community Affairs Legislation Committee
reported that by unanimous decision it had determined there were no substantive
matters in the Bill that required examination.[23]
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
At the time of writing, the Senate Standing Committee for
the Scrutiny of Bills had not considered the Bill.[24]
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
At the time of writing, the non-government parties and
independents had not commented on the Bill.
Position of
major interest groups
At the time of writing, key stakeholders had not commented
on the Bill.
Financial
implications
According to the Explanatory Memorandum, the measures in
the Bill are estimated to cost $5.0 million over the forward estimates
period.[25]
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 because it promotes the
protection of human rights for pensioners.[26]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
At the time of writing, the Parliamentary Joint Committee
on Human Rights had not considered the Bill.[27]
Key issues
and provisions
Amendments provide options for pensioners unable to
return to Australia
The COVID-19 pandemic exposed some of the inflexibilities
in social security law in responding to international crises. Special powers
had to be granted to the Minister to allow for legislative instruments to
address specific problems faced by various payment recipients, including
pensioners unable to return home to Australia or to their residence overseas.
The proposed amendments ensure Services Australia has much more discretion in
dealing with special circumstances—not just pandemics—that affect pensioners’
travel plans, ensuring these payment recipients are not worse-off due to events
beyond their control.
New public
health crisis circumstance only applies to certain pensioners
The proposed circumstances allowing for extensions to the
period a pensioner can be overseas before their payment rate is affected by the
AWLR proportionality rules, or be in Australia before losing their
grandfathered status, are similar to the circumstances in which other payments
can have their portability period extended (see ‘Portability extensions for
other payments’ section). The Bill proposes an additional circumstance: a ‘public
health crisis affecting Australia or the country in which the person is located
or both’.
This public health crisis circumstance only applies to
pensioners with unlimited portability. The Bill does not propose any additions
to the circumstances allowing for other payment recipients to have their
portability period extended. The Explanatory Memorandum notes that the
inclusion of the public health crisis circumstance has been included to cover
events such as the current pandemic.[28]
It is unclear if the pandemic would fit into the existing circumstances for
these payments such as a natural disaster or social unrest.
Unclear how
many will benefit
The Minister’s second reading speech and the Explanatory
Memorandum do not give any indication as to how many pensioners are currently unable
to return home or leave Australia and will benefit from the proposed
amendments.
Key
provisions
Social
Security Act 1991
Item 1 repeals and substitutes subsections
1216(2) and (3) of the SS Act to specify circumstances where the
Secretary of the Department of Social Services can extend the 26-week absence
period allowed before certain supplementary payments, including Rent
Assistance, are no longer added to a person’s payment rate. The Secretary can
determine an alternative absence period. The circumstances allowing for the
extension are:
- a
serious accident involving the person or a family member of the person
- a
serious illness of the person or a family member of the person
- the
hospitalisation of the person or a family member of the person
- the
death of a family member of the person
- the
person’s involvement in custody proceedings in the country in which the person
is located
- a
legal requirement for the person to remain outside Australia in connection with
criminal proceedings (other than criminal proceedings in respect of a crime
alleged to have been committed by the person)
- robbery
or serious crime committed against the person or a family member of the person
- a
natural disaster in the country in which the person is located
- a
public health crisis affecting Australia or the country in which the person is
located or both
- political
or social unrest in the country in which the person is located
- industrial
action in the country in which the person is located or
- a
war in the country in which the person is located.
The relevant event must have occurred or began during the
absence period for the Secretary to determine a longer period. If the relevant
event is political or social unrest, industrial action or war, then the payment
recipient must not be willingly involved or a willing participant.
Section 1220A of the SS Act sets out the
application of the AWLR proportionality rules for Age Pension recipients where
they have been continuously absent from Australia for longer than 26 weeks.
Item 2 inserts proposed subsections 1220A(1A)–(1D) which will
allow the Secretary to determine a different period from the 26-week period currently
specified in paragraph 1220A(1)(a) where the pensioner is unable to return to
Australia before the end of the 26-week period because of a certain event. The
events are specified in proposed subsection 1220A(1B) and are the same
as those listed above (at proposed subsection 1216(3) inserted by item
1), with the same conditions applying.
Item 4 inserts proposed subsections
1220B(1A)–(1D) which provide for extensions to the 26-week temporary absence
period before the AWLR proportionality rules are applied to certain Disability
Support Pension recipients.
Item 7 inserts proposed subclauses 128(1A)–(1D)
to Schedule 1A to allow for those covered by saving/grandfathering
provisions protecting them from the portability changes introduced by the Social Security and
Veterans’ Entitlements Legislation Amendment (Miscellaneous Matters) Act 2000
to remain in Australia for periods longer than 26 weeks, in certain situations,
and remain covered by the saving provisions. The Secretary can determine a
different period than 26 weeks where the person is unable to leave Australia
due to one of the following events:
- a
serious accident involving the person or a family member of the person
- a
serious illness of the person or a family member of the person
- the
hospitalisation of the person or a family member of the person
- the
death of a family member of the person
- the
person’s involvement in custody proceedings in Australia
- a
legal requirement for the person to remain in Australia in connection with
criminal proceedings (other than criminal proceedings in respect of a crime
alleged to have been committed by the person)
- robbery
or serious crime committed against the person or a family member of the person
- a
natural disaster in Australia or
- a
public health crisis affecting Australia or the country to which the person
intends to return to or both.
The event must have occurred or begun during the period in
which the person had returned to Australia.
Social
Security (Administration) Act 1999
Item 9 amends the SS Admin Act to insert proposed
section 114A. Currently section 114 provides that a favourable
determination made by the Secretary of the Department of Social Services (such
as a determination extending the period pensioners can be outside Australia
before the AWLR proportionality rules apply) can only take effect on or after
the day the determination is made, or not earlier than 13 weeks before the day
the determination is made.[29]
The Explanatory Memorandum foreshadows that given the
Bill’s commencement date of 1 July 2021, it may not be possible for
relevant determinations to be made within the 13-week timeframe to ensure that pensioners’
payment rates remain uninterrupted.[30]
Proposed section 114A will allow the relevant determinations to take
effect retrospectively without any limit on the retrospective application.
Social
Services and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2014
Schedule 4 to the SS Act 2014 sets out amendments
to the SS Act with respect to the period of the AWLR used in the
calculation of a pensioner’s payment rate under the proportionality rules: the
relevant AWLR period was increased from 25 years to 35 years. Some pensioners
were saved or grandfathered from this change if they were residing in another
country or were outside Australia and have not returned to Australia for a
consecutive period longer than 26 weeks since 1 July 2014.
Item 10 amends Schedule 4 of the SS Act 2014
to insert proposed subitems 6(6)–(11) to allow for those covered by
saving/grandfathering provisions protecting them from the portability changes set
out in items 1-4 of Schedule 4 to remain in Australia for periods longer than
26 weeks, in certain situations, and remain covered by the saving provisions.
The Secretary can determine a different period than 26 weeks where the person
is unable to leave Australia due to one of the following events:
- a
serious accident involving the person or a family member of the person
- a
serious illness of the person or a family member of the person
- the
hospitalisation of the person or a family member of the person
- the
death of a family member of the person
- the
person’s involvement in custody proceedings in Australia
- a
legal requirement for the person to remain in Australia in connection with
criminal proceedings (other than criminal proceedings in respect of a crime
alleged to have been committed by the person)
- robbery
or serious crime committed against the person or a family member of the person
- a
natural disaster in Australia or
- a
public health crisis affecting Australia or the country to which the person
intends to return to or both.
The Secretary can determine a different period than 26
weeks where the person is unable to leave Australia due to one of the events
listed. The event must have occurred or begun during the period in which the
person had returned to Australia.
Item 11 inserts similar provisions as item 10 which
will apply to those with pensions affected by an international social security
agreement who were covered by savings provisions at item 14 of Schedule 4 of
the SS Act 2014.
Application
provisions
Items 12–15 provide that the amendments to sections
1216, 1220A, 1220B and clause 128 of Schedule 1A of the SS Act apply to:
- periods
of absence from Australia or return to Australia starting on or after the
commencement of the amendments (1 July 2021) or
- periods
of absence or return starting before commencement of the amendments, where the
person is absent from Australia or in Australia immediately before commencement
and:
- the
person’s relevant 26-week period had not ended immediately before commencement
or
- the
person had an extended period determined by the Secretary under the COVID-19.
The application provisions also provide that where the
Secretary has made a determination for a period of absence or return under the
temporary COVID-19 arrangements, then references to 26 weeks in the
amended sections are taken to be references to the extended period.
This means the proposed changes can apply to those
pensioners who had the relevant portability extended under the COVID-19
arrangements until 30 June 2021 (the maximum extension allowable under the
current arrangements). Those already granted an extension under the COVID‑19
arrangements can have this period extended under the discretionary powers
proposed in the Bill.
Similar application provisions are included in the
amendments to SS Act 2014.[31]