Introductory Info
Date introduced: 9 December 2020
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Prime Minister
Commencement: The primary Bill commences on the day after Royal Assent. The consequential Bill commences at the same time.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Data
Availability and Transparency Bill 2020 (the Bill) is to establish a new
data sharing scheme (‘the scheme’) which will serve as a pathway and regulatory
framework for sharing public sector data.[1]
The Bill also establishes a new independent regulator, the National Data
Commissioner, to oversee this process, and an Advisory Committee to assist the
Commissioner. The purpose of the Data
Availability and Transparency (Consequential Amendments) Bill 2020 (the
consequential Bill) is to make amendments to other existing Acts. These
amendments are necessitated by provisions in the Bill.
Structure of
the Bill
The Bill is structured in six chapters, with each
referring to a separate subject. They are:
- Chapter
1 – Preliminary
- Chapter
2 – Authorisations to share data
- Chapter
3 – Responsibilities of data scheme entities
- Chapter
4 – National Data Commissioner and National Data Advisory Council
- Chapter
5 – Regulation and Enforcement
- Chapter
6 – Other matters
The consequential Bill has a single Schedule, with
amendments to the Administrative
Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977, the Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation Act 1979, the Freedom of
Information Act 1982 and the Privacy Act 1988.
Background
Current uses
of data
Public sector agencies collect a large amount of data in
the course of fulfilling their legislative functions—data which could be
readily available for other uses if that were considered appropriate. This has
particularly been the case over recent decades because of the digitisation of
information.[2]
Australian government agencies already share data for a
number of purposes. Some examples include:
- in
the administration of welfare payments—for example, Services Australia and the
Australian Taxation Office compare income data
- in
monitoring suspicious financial transactions by collecting and analysing
financial reports and information (AUSTRAC) and
- in
emergency situations, to quickly identify vulnerable people through the use of,
for instance, aged care records.[3]
A wide range of datasets compiled by various agencies are
contained on the website data.gov.au.
However, this website does not contain data that includes identifiable personal
information.
In response to a Question on Notice in April 2021, the
current interim National Data Commissioner stated:
In 2010, the Australian Government Secretaries Board endorsed
a set of principles to govern integration of Commonwealth data, as well as a
set of governance and institutional arrangements to support these principles.
Details of these arrangements are available publicly at https://toolkit.data.gov.au/Statistical_Data_Integration.html
An important part of the governance and institutional
arrangements is being able to hold one agency accountable for the safe
implementation of a data integration project. To make this happen, an
integrating authority must be appointed for every data integration project
involving Commonwealth data. For data integration proposals that involve
Commonwealth data and are considered 'high risk', an accredited Integrating
Authority must be used.
There are four Commonwealth Integrating Authorities
accredited under these arrangements to undertake high risk data integration
projects involving Commonwealth data:
- Australian Bureau
of Statistics
- Australian
Institute of Health and Welfare
- Australian
Institute of Family Studies
- Department of
Social Services.[4]
History of Reviews
The uses to which the data held by public sector agencies
could be put has been the subject of consideration by government for some time.
Following recommendations contained in the 2014 Financial
System Inquiry Final Report and the 2015 Harper Competition
Policy Review: Final Report, then Treasurer Scott Morrison commissioned
a Productivity Commission inquiry into data availability and use in March 2016.[5]
The Terms of Reference for the inquiry asked the Productivity
Commission to:
- look
at the benefits and costs of making public and private datasets more available
- examine
options for collection, sharing and release of data
- identify
ways consumers can use and benefit from access to data, particularly data about
themselves
- consider
how to preserve individual privacy and control over data use.[6]
The Commission issued its final report to
Government on 31 March 2017.[7]
The Commission noted on its website a number of key points that had arisen in
its inquiry. These included indications that:
- Extraordinary growth in data generation and usability has enabled
a kaleidoscope of new business models, products and insights. Data frameworks
and protections developed prior to sweeping digitisation need reform. This is a
global phenomenon and Australia, to its detriment, is not yet participating.
-
Improved data access and use can enable new products and services
that transform everyday life, drive efficiency and safety, create productivity
gains and allow better decision making.
-
The substantive argument for making data more available is that
opportunities to use it are largely unknown until the data sources themselves
are better known, and until data users have been able to undertake discovery of
data.
-
Lack of trust by both data custodians and users in existing data
access processes and protections and numerous hurdles to sharing and releasing
data are choking the use and value of Australia's data. In fact, improving
trust community-wide is a key objective.[8]
The Commission made a number of recommendations relevant
to this Bill under the heading ‘A risk-based approach to data sharing and
release’.[9]
These included that:
- the
Australian Government should establish an Office of the National Data Custodian
to take overall responsibility for the implementation of data management policy
(Recommendation 6.6)[10]
- selected
public sector and public interest entities should be accredited as release
authorities (ARAs), with responsibility for, among other things, deciding
whether a dataset is available for public release or limited sharing with
trusted users (Recommendation 6.8)[11]
- ARAs
should be given responsibility to grant, on a continuing program-wide basis,
data access to trusted users (Recommendation 6.12)[12]
- ARAs
and data custodians should be required to refer suspected and actual violations
of data use conditions that have system-wide implications to the National Data
Custodian (Recommendation 6.13)[13]
- Privacy
Act exceptions that allow access to identifiable information in certain
circumstances, without seeking the individuals’ agreement, be expanded to apply
to all research determined by the National Data Custodian to be in the public
interest (Recommendation 6.16).[14]
In its response to the Productivity Commission’s report,
the Australian Government agreed that:
… a network of Accredited Data Authorities will be integral
to a reformed Australian data system. These Authorities will be catalysts for
efficient and safe sharing and release of data.
…Data sharing agreements between data custodians, Accredited
Data Authorities and data users will be a key part of the governance framework.[15]
Following this the Government in 2018, through the
Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet, published the Review
of Australian Government Data Activities 2018.[16]
The Department noted that ‘efficient collection, use and re-use of data is key
to improving the efficiency of government spending and delivering more
effective and better targeted—evidence-based—government policies, programs and
services’.[17]
In 2018 the Minister for Human Services and Minister Assisting
the Prime Minister for Digital Transformation announced that an interim
National Data Commissioner, Deborah Anton, had been appointed to lead the
Office of the National Data Commissioner (the ONDC),[18]
which was established as a unit within the Department of the Prime Minister and
Cabinet PM&C.[19]
In 2019 the ONDC, as part of the PM&C, published its Best
Practice Guide to Applying Data Sharing Principles. The purpose of this Guide
was ‘to assist agencies holding Australian Government data (data custodians) to
safely and effectively share the data they are responsible for by using five
Data Sharing Principles (the Principles)’.[20]
On 14 September 2020 an Exposure Draft
of the Bill and a Discussion Paper on the draft Accreditation Framework, were released.[21]
This followed consultation processes through an issues paper in 2018 and a
discussion paper in 2019.[22]
At each stage input from interested parties was sought and taken into account.
The ONDC published 71 submissions on its website in
response to the 2020 Accreditation Discussion Paper.[23]
Submissions to the earlier papers are also available through the links in this
Digest. Finally, 31 submissions were made to the Senate Finance and Public
Administration Committee Inquiry (see following section), a number of which
contained information previously submitted, and some of the submissions will be
discussed later in this Digest.
The ONDC has also published three Privacy Impact
Assessments. The ONDC states that the Bill has been developed using a
‘privacy-by-design’ approach, which means that data privacy and security has
been considered at every stage of the development of the legislation.[24]
Committee
consideration
Senate Finance
and Public Administration Committees
The Senate referred the Bills to the Senate Finance and
Public Administration Committee for inquiry and Report by 29 April 2021 (the
Senate inquiry). On the Committee’s home
page, there are links to:
- 31
submissions to the inquiry
- four
documents from the National Data Commissioner
- a
transcript of the public hearings held on 20 April 2021 and
- the
Committee’s Report.[25]
Submissions
The submissions to the Senate inquiry contained many of the
same arguments as were considered in response to the Discussion Papers and the
exposure draft. Indeed, some of the submissions to the exposure draft process
were resubmitted to the Senate inquiry. The submissions to the Senate inquiry,
and some in the Exposure Draft process, are considered in the section ‘Position
of major interest groups’ below.
Transcript
of public hearings
The information provided in the public hearings on 20
April 2021 largely expounded on information provided in submissions to the
inquiry and to the Exposure Draft.[26]
Documents
from NDC
These included two documents tabled at public hearing on
20 April 2021, a follow up response dated 22 April 2021 and the response to a
Question on Notice dated 22 April 2021.[27]
The
Committee’s Report
The Committee reported on 29 April 2021.[28]
The majority examined and discussed many of the issues, and made three
recommendations, namely that:
- assurances
are provided to Parliament regarding appropriate ongoing oversight by security
agencies of data sharing agreements and potential security risks
- any
relevant findings of the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and
Security inquiry into national security risks affecting the Australian higher
education and research sector are taken into account as part of the development
of any additional data codes and guidance material and inform continued
engagement with the national security community and
- consideration
is given to whether amendments could be made to the Bill, or further
clarification added to the Explanatory Memorandum to provide additional
guidance regarding privacy protections, particularly in relation to the
de-identifying of personal data that may be provided under the Bill’s
data-sharing scheme.[29]
Unusually, the Committee did not make a recommendation on
whether the Bill should be passed.
The Labor Senators on the Committee issued a dissenting
report, stating that there were ‘of the view that the bill is deeply flawed’,
commenting that:
… while there is a clear need for an effective scheme for the
management and regulation of public data, and clear public benefits from using
such data, the measures outlined in this bill do not represent a proportionate
means of achieving that objective. If passed, the scheme outlined in the bill
would undermine current privacy protections, most notably the Privacy Act
1988. The regulatory structure designed to oversee the scheme is weak,
poorly designed and subject to abuse. This bill violates community standards
about the protection of private data and, if passed, would erode public trust
in the government’s ability to protect the privacy of its citizens.[30]
Assuming that the views expressed by the Labor Senators on
the Committee are the views of Labor more generally, it seems clear that the
Opposition will not support the Bill in its current form.
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills (Scrutiny Committee) made
substantial comments on the primary Bill, and requested further ministerial
advice in its first Scrutiny Digest of 2021.[31]
Concerned about the Bill’s potential impact on the right to privacy, the Scrutiny
Committee sought the Minister’s advice on whether the Bill could be amended to:
- include
a public interest test which prioritises privacy interests in decision-making
under the scheme
- provide
guidance on the face of the Bill about the circumstances in which it will be
‘unreasonable or impracticable’ to seek an individual’s consent for sharing
their personal information
- require
that, where possible, data that includes personal information is shared in a de‑identified
way
- clarify
the scope of the permitted data sharing purposes, and include guidance on the
face of the Bill about precluded purposes and
- provide
minimum standards for ethics approvals for private entities seeking to use data
that includes personal information.[32]
The Scrutiny Committee also made other comments, including
in relation to personal review rights for persons whose data was allegedly
misused; the extensive use in the scheme of delegated legislation; and the
broad delegation of investigatory powers in the Bill.[33]
Minister Stuart Robert responded to the Scrutiny Committee
addressing the points raised.[34]
In relation to privacy issues, he said that the Bill has
been developed using a privacy-by-design approach to identify, minimise and
mitigate privacy impacts wherever possible.[35]
The Bill works with the Privacy Act to protect the information of
individuals shared under the scheme, and includes a range of ‘privacy-positive’
measures.[36]
He also noted that two of the three permitted purposes for
data sharing, namely government policies and programs, and research and
development, would ordinarily involve the sharing of aggregate rather than
personal data.[37]
He further implied that the use of stricter definitions
could limit the future use of the scheme – saying ‘[c]onsistent with other
laws, the Bill and its Explanatory Memorandum do not define the public interest
to ensure the Bill can adapt to changing community expectations’.[38]
He also noted that the term ‘unreasonable or impractical’ was already used in a
similar context in the Privacy Act,[39]
and that guidance on their use would be provided by the Australian Information
Commissioner.[40]
In response to the Minister’s advice on privacy issues,
the Scrutiny Committee requested that an addendum to the Explanatory
Memorandum, containing the additional information provided by the Minister, be
tabled in Parliament. The Committee remained concerned about the possible
breadth of the ‘unreasonable or impractical’ exception to requiring consent for
the sharing of personal information and requested the Minister’s further advice
on whether:
- the
requested addendum to the Explanatory Memorandum can provide specific examples
of current guidance on the meaning of 'unreasonable or impracticable' and
provide information on where this current guidance can be accessed and
- why
it is considered necessary and appropriate for guidelines on aspects of the
data sharing scheme, which may play an important role in minimising the risk of
interpretations of the operation of the scheme that trespass on personal
privacy, to be included in non-legislative instruments that are not subject to
parliamentary scrutiny.[41]
In response, the Minister advised that he has approved an addendum
to the Explanatory Memorandum to address the Scrutiny Committee’s concerns and
provide further information about the meaning of the expression ‘unreasonable
or impracticable’.[42]
At the time of writing this Digest, the addendum has not yet been tabled. In
relation to why it is considered necessary and appropriate for guidelines on
aspects of the data sharing scheme to be included in non-legislative
instruments that are not subject to parliamentary scrutiny, the Minister
advised:
The Bill establishes a framework of resources, of scaled
legal weight, to assist its interpretation and application. These resources
range from fact sheets, guidelines on aspects of the Bill which entities must
have regard to when engaging with the sharing scheme, to legislative
instruments subject to Parliamentary scrutiny that set binding legal
requirements…
This approach is consistent with that of other
principles-based legislative schemes, in particular the AIC’s powers and
framework of instruments to support understanding of, and compliance with,
privacy law. It is also supported by findings from a review of the Public
Interest Disclosure Act 2013, which found a principles-based, graduated
approach to regulation to be well adapted to achieving cultural change in data
handling, and to driving fair and outcomes-focussed conversations between
regulators and decision makers…
Learning from this experience, the approach taken in the Bill
enables the National Data Commissioner to produce both informal guidance
material, and more formal “guidelines”. Scheme entities must have regard for
the guidelines however they are not binding. The guidelines do not alter the
law but provide clear guidance from the Commissioner about their view of law
applied and better practice. It is not appropriate for such guidance to be
disallowable. Data codes made by the Commissioner, and rules made by the
Minister, are binding on scheme entities and are legislative instruments
subject to disallowance. [emphasis added][43]
In response, the Scrutiny Committee welcomed the promised
addendum to the Explanatory Memorandum and left to the Senate as a whole the
appropriateness of leaving guidelines on aspects of the data sharing scheme to
non-legislative instruments that are not subject to parliamentary scrutiny or
disallowance.[44]
In relation to review rights, the Minister commented that
individuals will have access to current complaints and administrative review
processes, stating that this would reduce duplication and overlap.[45]
After considering the Minister’s response, the Committee drew its scrutiny
concerns to the attention of senators and left to the Senate as a whole the
appropriateness of the complaint mechanisms available to individuals whose
privacy interests may be affected by the scheme.[46]
As to delegated legislation, the Minister noted that
allowing Rules to provide for procedures, requirements and other matters
relating to accreditation was consistent with the Department of the Prime
Minister and Cabinet’s Legislative Handbook, which states that matters
of detail and matters that may change frequently are best dealt with in
delegated legislation. He stated that the information to be included in the
Accreditation Rules fell into these categories.[47]
The Scrutiny Committee requested that the addendum to the Explanatory
Memorandum include the information provided by the Minister on the expected
content of the Accreditation Rules. It drew its scrutiny concerns to the
attention of senators and left to the Senate as a whole the appropriateness of
leaving procedures, requirements and other matters relating to the
accreditation of entities for the purposes of the data sharing scheme to
delegated legislation.[48]
Finally, the Minister advised that, while investigatory
powers could be widely exercised, the Bill adopts the standard approach to the
exercise of regulatory powers to promote an efficient, flexible and accountable
approach to regulation. He also noted that persons assisting must act under the
direction of the Commissioner and that any valid actions that they took would
be taken to be the actions of the Commissioner.[49]
After considering the Minister’s response, the Committee drew its scrutiny
concerns to the attention of senators and left to the Senate as a whole the
appropriateness of allowing authorised persons who are exercising monitoring
and investigation powers to be assisted by other persons with no requirement on
the face of the Bill that the other person has appropriate training or
experience.[50]
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
The policy position of the Opposition is summed up in the
Labor Senators’ Dissenting Report to the Senate Committee, quoted above.
Senator Roberts of Pauline Hanson’s One Nation Party was a member of the Senate
Finance and Public Administration Committee that reported on the Bill, making
the three recommendations discussed above. At the time of writing, no statement
of position from other non-government parties or independents could be located.
Position of
major interest groups
Health
bodies
Research Australia, which describes itself as the national
peak body representing the whole of the health and medical research pipeline,
said:
Research Australia believes the Bill will improve the access
of researchers to information held by the Australian Government, leading to
improvements in the health of Australians which would otherwise not be
possible. This benefit is the opportunity the Bill provides; it is not risk
free, but the risks are worth it. [51]
In discussing privacy concerns, Research Australia also
said:
The potential for privacy breaches or for trespass on
individuals’ privacy already exists, and data is already being shared for a
range of different purposes. The Bill does not create this potential, and
Research Australia believes the Bill has the capacity to reduce the risk to
individuals’ privacy.[52]
The George Institute for Global Health Australia said:
The George Institute recommends the Senate support the
passage of the bills. We believe they will mitigate risk and create opportunity
for accredited users, that will most definitely include Australian health and
medical researchers, to undertake research and development in line with community
expectations.[53]
However, the Australian Medical Association (AMA) and the
National Aboriginal Community Controlled Health Organisation (NACCHO) were less
enthusiastic about the Bill.
The AMA raised a number of specific concerns, which
included that the Bill does not afford a level of privacy protection for health
data that is equivalent to the protections in the Privacy Act, the National
Health Act 1953 and the Health Insurance Act 1973.[54]
The AMA submitted:
- there
is no minimum privacy protection in the Bill, with the data sharing principles
in section 16 being ‘inherently subjective’[55]
- there
is no complaint mechanism for affected individuals[56]
and
- the
dual roles of the Commissioner, as effectively both the regulator and promoter
of the scheme, are inconsistent.[57]
NACCHO expressed concern about the ownership of data,
stating:
There must be laws and policies that recognise the rights of
Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people to access to data and regulate the
behaviour of institutions and individuals involved in gathering, disseminating,
and sharing data and knowledge. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people
and organisations have been given little historic and current opportunity to
contribute to decision making on what data should be collected about them and
their communities and why. This Bill presents an opportunity to begin the
reforms agreed to in the National Agreement [this refers to the National
Agreement on Closing the Gap][58]
NACCHO also recommended that the National Data Advisory
Council should contain an Aboriginal or Torres Strait Islander representative.[59]
Tertiary
Institutions
The Group of Eight Australia, representing eight of
Australia’s senior universities, said:
The Go8 endorses the Data Availability and Transparency
Bill’s goal to improve how Australia shares and uses its public sector data to
enhance research and policy outcomes for the benefit of all Australians. We
also welcome the Australian Government’s commitment to establishing a safe,
accountable, and transparent pathway to share public sector data. [60]
The Group of Eight expressed some concern that the new
scheme should not supplant current data access arrangements that are
functioning well.[61]
While Universities Australia ‘supports the concept of data
availability and transparency, and appreciates the Commonwealth’s efforts to
make data available for research and development’, it also expressed concern
that decisions by data custodians are not subject to internal or external merit
review.[62]
It also expressed some concern about the fee charging
proposals in the Bill, concerned that this may dissuade university researchers
from conducting valuable research.[63]
The University of Sydney made similar comments and
expressed similar concerns.[64]
Like Universities Australia, it also expressed concern that significant
portions of the scheme will be contained in subordinate legislation which is
not yet available, so that the likely impact of the legislation on universities
was difficult to gauge at this time.
In earlier submissions in relation to the Bill’s Exposure
Draft, submissions from universities and other research-based organisations
were generally supportive of the policy basis of the proposed legislation.[65]
For example, the Australian National University said:
The ANU congratulates your office on their efforts to address
the issue of data availability and transparency. We believe the intended steps
towards standardisation will substantially enhance access to public data for
research purposes.[66]
Privacy
Concerns
A number of other submissions expressed deep concerns
about privacy issues. The information gathered by agencies frequently includes
information that would be defined as personal information in terms of the Privacy Act 1988.[67]
In accordance with Australian Privacy Principle 6 (APP 6) personal information
can generally only be used for the purpose for which it is collected (for
example, the assessment of a claim), or where the use or disclosure of the
information is required or authorised by law.[68]
While the Bill would represent a law authorising the use
or disclosure of personal information, there is concern that such a
wide-ranging law on data sharing and use effectively overrides the privacy
protections in APP 6 in relation to public sector data.
The Australian Privacy Foundation said:
The proposed regime provides transparency about Australians
but not about government and the partners of government. Despite
reference to ‘safes’ and supervision by a statutory body it does not provide
adequate safeguards, instead eroding an already weak data protection regime. It
does not provide transparency about how governments (and the partners of those
governments) are sharing and using information about people, in particular data
that was collected on a mandatory basis. The Bills should accordingly be
rejected.[69]
The Foundation also questioned the premise behind the
legislation claiming that:
There is no evidence that the erosion of privacy
protection will indeed support our ‘modern data-based society’.
There is no evidence that the sharing within
government and indeed sharing by government with non-government entities will
substantively drive innovation. The mantra under successive ministers that
‘new’ equals better and ‘digital’ necessarily results in innovation has not
been substantiated and is indeed questioned by authoritative analysts such as
Robert J Gordon and Nicholas Carr. What’s good for service providers such as
Oracle and KPMG and IBM is not necessarily good for ordinary Australians.[70]
Similarly, the NSW Council for Civil Liberties stated:
It must be remembered the ‘robodebt’ scheme, now recognised
as unlawful and responsible for untold stress and suffering, was an automated
data-matching scheme using data shared between two government agencies –
Centrelink and the Australian Taxation Office (ATO).
This Bill ignores that real world experience and gives
unjustified priority to a technocratic vision of ‘improved service delivery’.
The Bill gives a green light for government agencies to share
data with each other and the private sector exempt from the law (Australian
Privacy Principle 6) which governs and limits how personal information is used
and shared. This will have enormous consequences for individuals and is
unnecessary to achieve the aims of delivering better government services,
informing government programs and research.
The Privacy Act was initially enacted to regulate the
activities of Commonwealth agencies – only later was it extended to the private
sector. To exempt agencies from a key principle would fundamentally undermine
the original purpose of the Act. [71]
In submissions on the Exposure Draft, the Information and Privacy
Commission New South Wales said:
Greater clarity is required in the Bill as to its
relationship with the Privacy Act 1988 (Cth) …
It appears that the scheme will authorise release of personal
information regardless of whether the disclosure falls within one of the
specific exemptions provided for under Australian Privacy Principle (APP) 6 of
the Privacy Act. Given the very broad nature of the permitted purposes under
the Bill, this would effectively appear to nullify the operation of APP 6 in
respect of disclosure by Australian government agencies in a broad range of
circumstances.[72]
In its submission on the Exposure Draft, the Australian
Medical Association similarly said:
… the AMA’s main concern with the fundamental structure of
the proposed new data sharing powers is that, although the five data sharing
principles have the potential to protect sensitive identified or potential
re-identifiable health data, there is no guarantee that individuals’ privacy
will be protected in all circumstances.[73]
Media
In February 2020 the Canberra Times reported that
almost half of Australians were uncomfortable about their personal data being
used to inform research and policy. The report also quoted the Boston
Consulting Group as saying that the satisfaction of people with the standard of
government online services was falling and undermining trust.[74]
Bruce Baer Arnold writing in The Conversation stated
that the Draft (exposure) Bill:
… will not fix ongoing problems in public administration. It
won’t solve many problems in public health. It is a worrying shift to a
post-privacy society.
While noting that:
Consultations over the past two years have highlighted the
value of inter-agency sharing for law enforcement and for research into health
and welfare. Universities have identified a range of uses regarding urban
planning, environment protection, crime, education, employment, investment,
disease control and medical treatment.
Mr Arnold also stated:
Outside the narrow exclusions centred on law enforcement and
national security, the bill’s default position is to share widely and often.
That’s because the accreditation requirements for agencies aren’t onerous and
the bases for sharing are very broad.
This proposal exacerbates ongoing questions about day-to-day
privacy protection. Who’s responsible, with what framework and what resources?
Responsibility is crucial, as national and state agencies recurrently
experience data breaches.
Although as RoboDebt revealed, they often stick to denial.
Universities are also often wide open to data breaches.
Proponents of the plan argue privacy can be protected through
robust de-identification, in other words removing the ability to identify
specific individuals. However, research has recurrently shown
“de-identification” is no silver bullet.
Most bodies don’t recognise the scope for re-identification
of de-identified personal information and lots of sharing will emphasise data
matching.[75]
Financial
implications
The Government notes that the Bill will have a financial
impact on the Government of $20.5 million from 2018–19 to 2021–22; $11.1
million from 2020–21 over four years and $0.7 million ongoing from 2024–25.[76]
The Bill will also result in compliance costs. The measure
will increase average regulatory costs by $0.11 million over two years, comprising
a cost to business of $0.2 million per year, to community organisations of
$0.06 million, and to individuals of $0.02 million per year.
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
Bills’ 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 Bills are compatible.[77]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
The Committee expressed a number of concerns on the principal
Bill, particularly in relation to privacy.[78]
There was however no comment on the consequential Bill.[79]
The Committee commented that the Bill would facilitate the
sharing of an extremely wide range of data, and that the terms ‘public sector
data’ and ‘data’ itself are very broadly defined.[80]
In addition, the scheme would override a range of existing secrecy provisions
preventing the sharing of data, to facilitate the sharing of data.[81]
Noting that the right to privacy is multi-faceted, comprising respect for
informational privacy, including the right to respect for private and
confidential information, particularly in relation to the storing, use and
sharing of such information, the Committee sought the Minister’s advice on a
number of issues. Among these, the Committee sought information on the specific
objectives of the scheme, and whether these were pressing and substantial
enough to warrant limiting the right to privacy;[82]
and asked for further information on data sharing purposes.[83]
The Committee raised many of the same privacy concerns as had the Scrutiny
Committee, such as in relation to defining the terms ‘public interest’ and
‘unreasonable or impracticable’ and in relation to the making of complaints.
The Committee also asked for information on the ongoing monitoring of
accredited entities, and to what extent the scheme would be compromised by not
sharing personal information.[84]
The Minister advised that the
Bill’s objective of promoting greater data sharing will remove legislative
barriers to sharing, and will support informed decision-making and timely
delivery of government services to people in need; pointing out that the
natural disasters and health and economic crises of the recent past
demonstrated the advantages of greater data sharing.[85]
He also advised that there had been extensive public consultation on data
sharing purposes, which were considered as part of three Privacy Impact
Assessments.[86]
The Minister’s responses in relation to definitions and
complaints were essentially the same as his responses to the Scrutiny Committee
(see above).[87]
As to the ongoing monitoring of accredited agencies, he noted that provisions
in the Bill empowered the Commissioner to undertake such activities, and that
the Commissioner would receive information about entities’ handling of data
through the Bill’s data breach notification and information transfer
provisions.[88]
In response to the question about to what extent the
scheme would be compromised by not sharing personal information, the Minister advised:
Sharing of personal information will generally be reasonably
necessary to support delivery of government services to particular individuals.
Sharing of personal information may also be required some data integration
projects for a permitted purpose, as certain personal information may be
necessary to support the integration of datasets.
In these circumstances, data custodians will still be required to share
only the personal information necessary to facilitate the data integration
project, and would be expected to apply appropriate protections to the data.
There are well-established conventions for integrated data, including to
maintain functional separation of identifying information (e.g. name or date of
birth) from content information (e.g. clinical information or benefit details)
throughout the data integration process. These safeguards work with the project
principle, under which data custodians must consider engaging a technical data
expert, an accredited data service provider, to perform the data integration.[89]
The Minister also noted that the ‘statutory override’
provisions were necessary as it would be complex and impractical to amend over
500 secrecy provisions in other legislation to give effect to the limited
override provisions contained in the Bill.[90]
In its comments on the Minister’s response the Committee
noted the legitimate objectives of the scheme, but also reiterated that the
data sharing purposes are framed very broadly and could capture disclosure of
personal information in an extremely wide range of circumstances.[91]
In its summary the Committee said:
This bill appears to be directed towards the legitimate
objective of facilitating controlled access to public sector data for specific
purposes in the public interest, and would appear to be rationally connected to
that objective. However, it is not clear that the measure would constitute a
proportionate means by which to achieve that objective.[92]
The Committee also expressed particular concern about the
‘statutory override’ provisions, noting:
… this scheme would permit a Commonwealth body to disclose
personal data regardless of any law that currently prohibits this, and without
parliamentary oversight of the specific privacy implications of sharing that
type of data.
… no information has been provided to demonstrate that a less
rights restrictive mechanism–such as amending individual pieces of legislation
to invoke this umbrella data sharing scheme–would not be equally as effective
to achieve the scheme’s objectives. While the committee appreciates that this
may be a complex undertaking this does not, itself, indicate that it would not
be effective to achieve the objective of facilitating controlled access to
public sector data, Accordingly, the committee considers it has not been
established that this data sharing scheme would constitute a permissible
limitation on the right to privacy.[93]
Accordingly, the Committee recommended:
… that consideration be given to establishing overarching
data sharing legislation which does not override existing secrecy provisions
but which requires that the data sharing powers must be specifically invoked by
individual pieces of legislation, to ensure appropriate regard is had to
whether these broad data sharing powers are appropriate in each specific
context.[94]
The Committee advised that it considered that the
proportionality of the measure may be assisted if the Bill was amended to
provide that:
- determining
if 'the sharing of information can reasonably be expected to serve the public
interest', requires consideration of the impact on an individual’s right to
privacy, the potential for serious harm to the public, and whether those
impacts are reasonable, necessary and proportionate, as well as the potential
benefits to the community that would arise from the project
- the
application of appropriate protections to the data includes, where possible,
ensuring personal information is shared in a manner that does not allow for the
identification of individuals
- it
is a condition of accreditation that an entity which is required to provide
evidence for accreditation must provide updated evidence at specified intervals
to support its continued suitability for accreditation and
- the
Commissioner may consider complaints from individuals with respect to the
scheme, and establish a mechanism for dealing with such complaints.[95]
Key issues
and provisions
The basic
premise of the Bill
The Bill establishes a data sharing scheme so that data
held by many Commonwealth agencies can be shared with bodies who seek and
obtain accreditation within a framework, and for purposes, set out in the Bill.
The entities that will be part of the scheme are to be
collectively known as data scheme entities.[96]
These are Commonwealth bodies (other than excluded entities)[97]
that hold and control data (a data custodian),[98]
and accredited entities.[99]
The latter will be known as either an accredited user, or an accredited
data service provider (ADSP).[100]
A simple explanation of these terms is that the data custodian is the entity
that shares the data, the accredited user is an entity with whom the data is
shared, and an ADSP is a body that frequently acts as an intermediary in the
process.
As noted, some Commonwealth bodies are excluded from the
scheme. These bodies are listed in the Bill and can generally be classified as
agencies that operate in investigatory or national security fields.[101]
For regulatory and advisory purposes, the Bill establishes a new statutory
office and advisory committee, as follows.
New office
and advisory council
The Bill establishes the statutory office of the National
Data Commissioner (the Commissioner).[102]
However, it does not establish a corresponding new statutory agency–rather the
Commissioner is an official in the relevant Department (being the Department of
the Prime Minister and Cabinet),[103]
and will have staff provided by that Department.[104]
The Commissioner will be able to hire contractors and consultants,[105]
and will not be subject to direction in relation to the exercise of their
functions and powers.[106]
The Commissioner has the function of being an advocate for
the scheme, to promote understanding and acceptance of the benefits of, and
best practice in, sharing and releasing public sector data, and of safe data
handling practices.[107]
The Commissioner also has three-pronged administrative functions:
- providing
advice to the Minister, including on the operation of the Act (note—references
to ‘the Act’ here and in following parts of this Digest mean the Data
Availability and Transparency Act, once enacted)[108]
- providing
guidance on the actions to be taken by data scheme entities to comply with the
Act,[109]
by making codes of practice about the data sharing scheme,[110]
and by making written guidelines[111]
and
- performing
the regulatory functions as set out in Chapter 5.[112]
The Commissioner is to be appointed by the
Governor-General for up to five years at a time,[113]
and is to be paid the remuneration set by the Remuneration Tribunal, or in the
absence of this remuneration being set, the remuneration prescribed by rules
made under the Act.[114]
The Commissioner’s employment provisions in the Bill are standard for statutory
office holders. The Commissioner’s appointment can only be terminated for
cause, relating in general terms to incapacity, misbehaviour or bankruptcy.[115]
Stakeholder comment
A number of parties have questioned whether there is an
inherent contradiction in the one office holder being an advocate for the data
scheme and the regulator of it. For example, the AMA said:
If an agency seeks advice from the Data Commissioner prior to
entering into a data sharing agreement, there is a potential conflict at the
point of providing advice between the Data Commissioner’s role of promoting
safety and their role of promoting sharing. Moreover, if the data is
subsequently re-identified or a complaint is made, the Data Commissioner will
be investigating a data sharing agreement that they advised on.[116]
National
Data Advisory Council
A National Data Advisory Council is
also established.[117]
This will contain four ex officio members,[118]
being the Commissioner, the Australian Statistician, the Information
Commissioner and the Chief Scientist.[119]
It will also contain between five and eight directly appointed members.[120]
These members will be appointed by the Commissioner on a part-time basis and
must have the appropriate qualifications, skills or experience that will help
the Council perform its functions.[121]
The directly appointed members will be paid the remuneration determined by the
Remuneration Tribunal, or in the absence of this remuneration being set, the
remuneration prescribed by rules made under the Act.[122]
As is implied by its name, the Council will have an advisory
role and will not be a decision-making body. Its function is to provide advice
to the Commissioner about:
- ethics
- balancing
data availability with privacy protection
- trust
and transparency
- technical
best practice
- industry
and international developments and
- any
other matters
as they relate to the sharing and use of public sector
data.[123]
Stakeholder Comment
In submissions to the Senate inquiry into the Bill, bodies
representing Indigenous views on the legislation, such as NACCHO, considered
that the Bill should stipulate that at least one Council member should be an Aboriginal
or Torres Strait Islander person.[124]
Data Sharing
Data, for the purposes of the Bill, is a
defined term broadly meaning any information in a form capable of being
communicated, analysed or processed,[125]
and includes data that is a result of the proper use of data (‘output’).[126]
‘Public sector data’ is data lawfully obtained, created or held by or on behalf
of a Commonwealth body and includes data that is enhanced from that data.[127]
That is to say, a data custodian can only share data under the scheme if they
lawfully hold the data in the first place.
Public sector data can only be shared by a data custodian:
- to
an accredited user, either directly or through an ADSP
- for
a defined data sharing purpose and not a precluded purpose
- where
the sharing is consistent with the data sharing principles
- where
the sharing is not excluded and is in accordance with a data sharing agreement
and
- where
it is approved by both or all custodians if there is more than one custodian.[128]
It is an offence and a breach of a civil penalty provision
to share data other than as permitted by the scheme.[129]
The approved data sharing purposes are for the
delivery of government services; informing government policy and programs; and
research and development.[130]
A data sharing agreement is one that is properly
entered into where the parties include a data custodian of public sector data
and an accredited user.[131]
Such an agreement must contain certain mandatory terms. The mandatory terms
include that the agreement must specify:
- the
parties to the agreement
- that
sharing under the agreement is to be done under the Act
- the
public sector data to be shared and any agreed outputs of that data
- who
is the data custodian of the original data and of the output
- any
law that would be contravened by the proposed sharing, without the authorisation
provided by the Act
- what
the relevant data sharing purposes for the agreement are
- a
prohibition on the accredited user using the data for other purposes
- a
description of how the sharing is in the public interest
- the
role of any ADSP to be used, including prohibiting the ADSP from using the data
for another purpose
- the
actions the parties will take in relation to any breach
- the
duration of the agreement and how often it will be reviewed and
- how
scheme data will be handled after the agreement ends.[132]
Parties to agreements must comply with these mandatory
conditions. A maximum civil penalty of 300 penalty units ($66,600) applies to a
breach by an individual.[133]
A maximum penalty of 1,500 penalty units ($333,000) applies to a breach by
a body corporate.[134]
Precluded
purposes
As mentioned above, public sector data cannot be shared
for a precluded purpose.
Precluded purposes are:
- enforcement
related purposes
- a
purpose that relates to or prejudices national security or
- another
purpose prescribed by the rules (at this stage, no rules have been made).[135]
An enforcement related purpose means:
- detecting, investigating,
prosecuting or punishing:
- an
offence; or
- a
contravention of a law punishable by a pecuniary penalty;
- detecting, investigating
or addressing acts or practices detrimental to public revenue;
- detecting, investigating
or remedying serious misconduct;
- conducting surveillance
or monitoring, or intelligence-gathering activities;
- conducting protective or
custodial activities;
- enforcing a law relating
to the confiscation of proceeds of crime;
- preparing
for, or conducting, proceedings before a court or tribunal or implementing a
court/tribunal order.[136]
However, data sharing for enforcement related purposes or
national security related purposes is not precluded in a general sense, so long
as it does not involve any person undertaking an activity in the above list.[137]
The Explanatory Memorandum explains the precluded
provisions in the following terms:
The Bill precludes sharing public sector data for certain
enforcement related purposes, such as law enforcement investigations and
operations. The Bill also does not authorise data sharing for purposes that
relate to or could jeopardise national security, including the prevention or
commission of terrorism and espionage. While these activities are legitimate
functions of government, they require specific oversight and redress mechanisms
that are better dealt with through dedicated legislation. Existing legislation
governing these activities, including offences and penalties, will continue to
operate alongside the Bill.[138]
The data sharing principles comprise the:
- project
principle, meaning that the data sharing is for a project that is
ethical and serves the public interest, and that any sharing of personal
information is done with the consent of the individuals unless that is
unreasonable or impracticable
- people
principle, meaning that data is only shared with appropriately
qualified people
- setting
principle, meaning that the data is shared in an appropriately
controlled environment (for example, reasonable security standards are applied
when sharing the data)
- data
principle, meaning that the data shared is only that necessary to be
shared, with the minimisation of sharing personal information
- outputs
principle, meaning basically that the data custodian and the accredited
user know what the data is to be used for before sharing the data.[139]
Each of these principles is to be applied in such a way,
when viewed as a whole, to mitigate any risks involved in the data sharing.[140]
Stakeholder
and committee comment
A relatively common complaint in submissions to both the Exposure
Draft of the Bill and the Senate inquiry has been that the language used,
particularly in the project principle, is vague and poorly defined. The words
most commented on are ‘public interest’ and ‘unreasonable or impracticable’.
For example, the AMA has questioned paragraph 16(2)(c), which says that ‘any
sharing of the personal information of individuals is done with the consent of
the individuals, unless it is unreasonable or impracticable to seek their
consent’. The AMA submitted:
It is entirely foreseeable that this exception will be used
to justify the disclosure of MBS and PBS data large datasets of identified or
identifiable sensitive health information without patient consent.[141]
The language question was also raised by the Senate
Scrutiny of Bills Committee, which stated that:
The committee is concerned that there is a significant amount
of flexibility in the meaning of ‘unreasonable or impracticable’ in this
context, and that this may undermine the effectiveness of clause 16 as a
safeguard against undue trespass on the privacy of individuals whose data may
be shared under the scheme. The committee also notes that, while the data
principles contemplate minimising the sharing of personal information as far as
possible and sharing only the data reasonably necessary to achieve an
applicable purpose, there are no requirements for sharing only de-identified
data in the principles or elsewhere in the bill.[142]
In response, the Minister Stuart Robert said:
entities must consider the Bill’s consent requirements on a
project-by-project basis. The Bill’s approach to consent builds upon the Privacy
Act 1988, requiring consent for any sharing of personal information, unless
it is unreasonable or impracticable to seek consent. The Bill’s standard of
consent is that set by the Privacy Act 1988 and the language of
‘unreasonable or impracticable’ is drawn from section 16A of that Act. As noted
in the Explanatory Memorandum, these terms should be interpreted using relevant
guidance on consent made by the Australian Information Commissioner (AIC).[143]
In respect of defining ‘public interest’ the Minister
said:
Consistent with other laws, the Bill and its Explanatory
Memorandum do not define the public interest to ensure the Bill can adapt to
changing community expectations. The question of whether a project can reasonably
be expected to serve the public interest must be made on a project-by-project
basis, weighing the range of factors for and against sharing.[144]
The Committee stated that it remained concerned about the
breadth of possible definitions of the above terms, and requested that the
proposed addendum to the Explanatory Memorandum provide further guidance,
including specific examples.[145]
Excluded
sharing
As well as the precluded purposes for data sharing
mentioned earlier, some sharing is excluded from the scheme where:
- the
data held by a custodian originated with or was received from an excluded
entity
- it
is operational data that is held by, or originated with or was received from
AUSTRAC, the Australian Federal Police (AFP), or the Department of Home Affairs[146]
- where
the data is legally barred—for example, if its sharing would infringe
copyright, breach parliamentary privilege or if the data is evidence before a
court
- sharing
the data is inconsistent with Australia’s obligations under international law
- the
data was collected from a foreign government, unless the foreign government agrees
to the sharing
- disclosure
of the data is prohibited by a law prescribed by the regulations, or an order,
direction, certificate or other instrument made under such a law[147]
- the
custodian of the data is prescribed by the regulations as an entity that must
not share data in that capacity
- it
is otherwise prescribed by the regulations.[148]
How does an
accredited user or ADSP become accredited?
An ADSP or accredited user becomes accredited by applying
for accreditation,[149]
and being accepted by the Commissioner as meeting the eligibility criteria.[150]
In most cases, this is a discretionary decision by the Commissioner—the Bill
says that the Commissioner may accredit an entity.[151]
Decisions on accreditation by the Commissioner must be in writing and be given
to the applicant entity.[152]
Decisions to not accredit, or to change the accreditation status, of foreign entities
for reasons of security are not reviewable.[153]
Discretion to accredit does not apply to non-corporate
Commonwealth entities within the meaning of the Public Governance,
Performance and Accountability Act 2013 and Commonwealth bodies
prescribed by the Minister in the rules. Those bodies are automatically
accredited on application, however, where bodies are prescribed in the rules by
the Minister, the Minister must be first satisfied that the body meets the
eligibility criteria.[154]
In its submission to the Senate Inquiry, the Office of the
Australian Information Commissioner questioned why non-corporate Commonwealth
entities should be automatically accredited. The OAIC stated:
… the OAIC considers that it is important that the
accreditation framework include an upfront assessment of each entity that
wishes to be accredited under the DAT scheme, and that the assessment is
undertaken consistently in relation to all potential accredited entities. An
upfront assessment component is an important safeguard in any accreditation
framework to verify that an entity is compliant with regulatory and
accreditation requirements and build accountability and transparency.[155]
There are seven basic eligibility criteria for accreditation,
namely:
- the
entity is able to manage ‘scheme data’[156]
accountably and responsibly
- the
entity has designated an appropriately qualified individual to be responsible
for overseeing the management of scheme data
- the
entity is able to apply the data sharing principles
- the
entity is able to minimise the risk of unauthorised access, sharing or loss of
scheme data
- the
entity is committed to continuous improvement in ensuring the privacy and
security of scheme data
- the
entity is able to comply with an accredited entity’s obligations under the data
sharing scheme
- the
entity’s participation in the data sharing scheme would not pose concerns for
reasons of security.[157]
Other eligibility criteria can be prescribed by the
Minister in the rules.[158]
The Commissioner can impose conditions on accreditation,
such as where the Commissioner considers it appropriate for security purposes,
or by placing limitations on which people in the applicant body can have access
to the shared data.[159]
Other than for reasons of security, the Commissioner must
not impose, vary or remove a condition without giving the accredited entity a
written notice. The written notice must set out the proposed condition and
request a written statement from the entity relating to the condition, except
where the Commissioner considers that the reasons for the condition, or its
variation or removal, are serious and urgent. Where a written statement is
requested, the Commissioner must consider that statement. After considering the
statement the Commissioner must then give the accredited entry written notice
of their decision.[160]
Under certain specified circumstances, such as that the
entity has breached a condition of accreditation or that it no longer fulfils
the eligibility criteria, the Commissioner, either at the written direction of
the Minister, or on their own initiative, can suspend or cancel an entity’s
accreditation.[161]
Where the Commissioner intends to make such a decision they must first advise
the entity in writing and provide the entity the opportunity to show cause as
to why accreditation should not be suspended or cancelled.[162]
This requirement does not apply if the suspension or cancellation is for
security reasons.[163]
The need for the Commissioner to provide the accredited
entity with prior notice of a suspension or cancellation does not apply when
the Commissioner is acting at the direction of the Minister. However, except in
relation to security matters, the Minister must not give such a direction to
the Commissioner without first giving the accredited entity a written notice
setting out details of the proposed direction and giving the accredited entry
the right to make a written statement within a specified time. This last
provision is not necessary if the Minister considers that the reason for the
direction is serious and urgent.[164]
On application to the Commissioner, accreditation can be
transferred from one entity to another, where the original entity has changed
its governance structure.[165]
Responsibilities
of data scheme entities
All data scheme entities must comply with the rules and
data codes and must have regard to guidelines.[166]
Data codes are described in clause 126 of the Bill.
The codes are in the form of legislative instruments made by the Commissioner. Being
legislative instruments, data codes are subject to the normal provisions of the
Legislation Act
2003 as regards parliamentary tabling and disallowance. Provisions
written in the rules or regulations override inconsistent code provisions, to
the extent of any inconsistency.[167]
Codes can cover a variety of subjects, for example:
- how
data definitions are to be applied and complied with in practice
- additional
responsibilities for entities, so long as those additional responsibilities do
not create inconsistencies with the Act
- how
complaints are to be handled and
- other
matters that the Commissioner considers it necessary to make a code about.[168]
Data scheme entities also have responsibilities for
providing full and accurate information to the Commissioner.[169]
What are the
guidelines?
Written guidelines are made at the discretion of the
Commissioner about matters for which the Commissioner has functions under the
Act.[170]
Data scheme entities are required to have regard to these guidelines while engaging
in conduct in the scheme.[171]
The guidelines can be published in any manner that the Commissioner deems
appropriate, most probably on the Commissioner’s website.[172]
They are not legislative instruments.[173]
Guidelines can cover principles and processes on subjects such as:
- data
release
- data
management and curation
- technical
matters and standards and
- emerging
technologies.[174]
The Explanatory Memorandum says that it is the intention
that guidelines:
… will be developed in consultation with specialists and
other bodies and agencies, such as the Office of the Australian Information
Commissioner and the National Archives of Australia. The National Data Advisory
Council may also advise the Commissioner on the development of guidelines,
particularly those that relate to the council’s functions.[175]
Privacy
The Bill’s potential impact on privacy is probably its
most contentious issue. The views of a number of organisations in relation to
privacy issues were set out earlier in this Digest.
Clause 28 of the Bill is about privacy coverage in
the scheme. All entities taking part in the scheme will be required to comply
with the provisions of the Privacy Act 1988,
or a state or territory laws that provide similar protection of personal
information to that contained in the Australian Privacy Principles, including
the monitoring of compliance and the ability for an individual to seek recourse.[176]
Most importantly, this means that in general personal information obtained by
an entity in the data sharing scheme can only be used for the purpose for which
it is shared and for no other purpose.[177]
Disclosure for other purposes however is still possible in some circumstances,
such as where the individual has consented to the disclosure/use of the
information or where disclosure is authorised by Australian law. Should this
Bill be passed by the Parliament, ‘Australian law’ will of course include the
provisions in this Bill.
Where entities are not subject to the Privacy Act
but wish to participate in data sharing, they can become subject to that Act
through existing provisions of that Act.[178]
However, submissions to the Senate inquiry and on the
Exposure Draft saw a broader problem than this. One complaint was that this
Bill would widen the exceptions to APP 6 to such an extent that it would
effectively nullify that Principle.[179]
Forcing entities to comply with such a weakened Principle would not provide
much protection.
Clauses 35 to 38 inclusive of the Bill set out the
responsibilities of entities in the case of a data breach. A data breach occurs
not only where data is accessed in an unauthorised manner, but where it is lost
in circumstances which could suggest unauthorised access.[180]
In such circumstances entities have a responsibility to ‘take reasonable steps’
to mitigate the damage.[181]
Where a data custodian of public sector data has shared
personal information with an accredited user and a breach occurs, the breach
notification provisions of the Privacy Act apply as if the breach
occurred from the data custodian.[182]
As all data custodians are covered by the Privacy Act, this is to ensure
that all breaches are also covered by the Privacy Act.[183]
The processes for dealing with data breaches are set out in the notifiable data
breaches provisions of Part IIIC of the Privacy Act and apply here. The
following information from the OAIC explains how the notifiable data breaches
(NDB) scheme in Part IIIC operates:
Complaints
A data scheme entity can complain to the Commissioner if
it reasonably believes that another data scheme entity has breached the Act.
This includes entities that are no longer members of the scheme but were within
the last 12 months.[185]
The Commissioner can also assess whether conduct of an entity was consistent
with the Act on their own initiative and in a manner they consider appropriate.[186]
The Commissioner must advise the complainant within 30
days as to how the Commissioner is dealing with, or intends to deal with, the
complaint.[187]
Initially, the Commissioner must make any preliminary inquiries thought
necessary, and can refer the matter to conciliation if appropriate.[188]
The Commissioner has the option of not dealing with a complaint for a number of
reasons, including:
- it
is considered that the respondent (the person about whom the complaint has been
made) has not breached and is not breaching the Act
- the
respondent has already dealt with the subject of the complaint
- the
complaint is being investigated elsewhere
- the
complainant has failed to provide requested information
- the
complaint is lacking in substance or frivolous or
- it
is considered that an investigation is not warranted.[189]
If the Commissioner decides that a full investigation is
warranted in regard to a breach of the Act, and that conciliation would not, or
has not, settled the problem; the Commissioner may investigate in any manner
the Commissioner considers appropriate; and in so doing, obtain information
from any person and make any inquiries necessary.[190]
Following an investigation, the Commissioner must make a determination
setting out the decision, the reasons for the decision, and what action the
Commissioner intends to take if the finding is the entity is in breach.[191]
The Commissioner may make the determination publicly available.[192]
Comment
Individuals cannot complain to the National Data
Commissioner if they consider that their personal privacy has been breached in
the scheme. This has been the source of considerable adverse comment in
submissions and by the Senate Scrutiny of Bills Committee. The latter said:
The committee also notes that under the complaints mechanism
established in Division 1 of Part 5.3, only data scheme entities may make a
complaint … The committee is concerned that establishing a narrowly focused
complaints mechanism may result in the Data Commissioner rarely or never
hearing privacy complaints, which may result in privacy concerns not being
given adequate consideration in decision making under the scheme … The
committee therefore requests the minister’s advice as to why individuals whose
privacy interests may be affected by the data sharing scheme should not have
access to … the dedicated complaints process established in Division 1 of Part
5.3.[193]
The Minister has stated that not creating a new public
complaints scheme was intentional and that persons who wish to complain can use
‘existing complaints and administrative review processes’, for example, the
complaints mechanism under the Privacy Act or similar state/territory
schemes.[194]
Regulatory
Powers
The Commissioner has a number of regulatory powers, set
out in clauses 104 to 116 of the Bill. Among other things, the
Commissioner can:
- require
the provision of information and documents relevant to an investigation,[195]
other than documents from an excluded entity, or information or documents the
giving of which would, in summary, be contrary to the public interest in the
view of the Attorney-General,[196]
but including documents that would otherwise attract legal professional
privilege[197]
- disclose
information to a number of listed, normally investigatory, agencies if the
Commissioner considers that the information would assist those bodies to fulfil
their functions[198]
- make
recommendations to an entity[199]
- give
written directions to an entity.[200]
Penalty
Provisions
The Bill contains a number of civil penalty provisions for
breaches of Bill provisions. For example, a failure to follow a Commissioner’s
written direction renders an entity liable to a maximum penalty of 300 penalty
units ($66,600).[201]
There are also a number of offence provisions. It is an offence to collect,
share or use scheme data for a purpose other than those set out in the scheme,
with a maximum penalty of two years’ imprisonment.[202]
There is also an offence for failing to comply with a requirement to provide
information or documents to the Commissioner, with a maximum penalty of 12
months imprisonment.[203]
Civil penalties, and infringement notices setting out
penalties, will be enforceable under the provisions of the Regulatory Powers
(Standard Provisions) Act 2014 (RPA).[204]
The RPA contains a standard suite of investigative, compliance
monitoring and enforcement powers which may be applied to other Commonwealth
laws. These standard provisions are intended to be ‘an accepted baseline of
powers required for an effective monitoring, investigation or enforcement
regulatory regime, providing adequate safeguards and protecting important
common law privileges’.[205]
For the RPA to apply, its powers must be ‘triggered’ by another Act,
with or without modification.[206]
The Bill triggers the RPA’s monitoring and investigation powers, and civil
penalty provision enforcement (including through the use of infringement
notices, enforceable undertakings and injunctions), as explained below.[207]
Compliance
monitoring powers
Part 2 of the RPA creates a framework for
monitoring:
- compliance
with provisions of an Act or legislative instrument and
- whether
information given in compliance (or purported compliance) with a legislative
provision is correct.[208]
Clause 109 of the Bill provides that:
- the
civil penalty provisions of the Bill
- subclauses
14(2) and (4) of the Bill (offences for unauthorised sharing, collection and
use of data)
- subclause
104(3) of the Bill (offence of failure to comply with a requirement to provide
information or documents to the Commissioner) and
- a
provision of Chapter 3 of the Bill (responsibilities of data scheme entities)
are subject to monitoring under Part 2 of the RPA.
Part 2 of the RPA provides that an authorised
person (in this case the Commissioner or their delegate)[209]
may exercise various standard monitoring powers for the above purposes—these
include the power to:
- enter
and search premises, and observe activity carried out on the premises[210]
- deal
with evidence found on premises, including by inspecting, examining, making
recordings of and securing things (pending the regulatory agency obtaining authorisation
to seize them under investigation powers)[211]
and
- require
persons on the premises to answer questions and produce documents.[212]
The standard provisions prescribe the authorisation
process for the exercise of monitoring powers (under warrants issued by a
judicial officer acting in a personal capacity, or with the consent of the
occupier of the premises).[213]
They also set out the obligations applying to persons
exercising monitoring powers (such as providing the occupier with details of a
warrant, and carrying identification),[214]
and the rights and responsibilities of persons occupying the premises being
searched.[215]
The standard provisions also state that the compliance monitoring powers do not
abrogate legal professional privilege and the privilege against
self-incrimination.[216]
Investigation
powers
Part 3 of the RPA creates a framework for gathering
material that relates to the contravention of offence provisions and civil
penalty provisions.[217] It contains standard investigation powers, including
related authorisation and procedural requirements, which enable an agency to
gather evidence of contraventions of criminal offences and civil penalty
provisions within its statutory enforcement functions. Standard investigation
powers include the power to:
- enter
and search premises for evidential material[218]
- seize
evidential material[219]
and
- require
persons on the premises to answer questions and produce documents.[220]
The standard investigation powers must be authorised under
a warrant issued by a judicial officer acting in a personal capacity, or
exercised with the consent of the occupier of the premises.[221]
They set out the conditions and limits of the
investigation powers able to be authorised as well as the obligations of
persons exercising powers and the rights and responsibilities of persons
occupying the premises being searched.[222]
Like the compliance monitoring powers, the investigation powers expressly do
not abrogate self-incrimination or legal professional privilege.[223]
Enforcement
powers
Parts 4 to 7 of the RPA contain standard
enforcement mechanisms for contraventions of regulatory legislation,
principally through the use of civil penalties, infringement notices,
enforceable undertakings and injunctions.
The standard provisions prescribe requirements governing a
regulatory agency’s ability to:
- apply
to the court for a civil remedy in relation to the contravention (a civil
penalty or an injunction)[224]
- issue
an infringement notice to a regulated entity (which means that the regulated
entity can pay an amount of money specified in the notice, as an alternative to
having court proceedings brought against them for a contravention) and to
commence enforcement action in court if the regulated entity does not pay the
amount specified in the notice[225]
and
- accept
an enforceable undertaking from a regulated entity (for example, to cease
engaging in activities that contravene regulatory requirements) and to commence
proceedings in court if the regulated entity does not adhere to the terms of the
undertaking.[226]
For a person to have breached the civil penalty provisions
of the Bill the conduct, or result of the conduct, must either have occurred at
least partly in Australia; or if it occurred outside Australia, have been
performed by an Australian entity.[227]
Review of
decisions
Most decisions made by the Commissioner will be reviewable
decisions at administrative law.[228]
This is a two-step process. First, the Commissioner must reconsider the
decision, and can affirm, vary or revoke the decision.[229]
The Commissioner must make a reconsideration decision within 90 days; if
this time frame is not met, it is deemed that the Commissioner has affirmed the
decision.[230]
Any reconsideration decision that is made by the
Commissioner directly, or affirmed (including deemed to be affirmed) or varied on
reconsideration, is subject to further review by the Administrative Appeals
Tribunal.[231]
Other provisions
A number of documents are required to be maintained, or
can be made, in relation to the scheme. These include publicly available registers
of:
- ADSPs
- accredited
users and
- data
sharing agreements.[232]
However, the Commissioner may omit details that the
Commissioner considers are not appropriate to be made public.
Legislative
instruments
The Bill provides for the following categories of
legislative instruments to be made in relation to the scheme:
- the
Governor-General can make Regulations required or permitted by the Bill or
necessary or convenient to give effect to the Bill[233]
- the
Minister can make rules required or permitted by the Bill or necessary or
convenient to give effect to the Bill[234]
- the
Commissioner can make data codes.[235]
Written
notices that are not legislative instruments
The Commissioner can:
- make
guidelines[236]
- approve
forms[237]
- recognise
external dispute resolution schemes.[238]
Stakeholder
comments
A number of stakeholders have expressed concern that
significant aspects of the scheme will be contained in legislative instruments
and written notices, and that these will not be in existence when the Bills
come up for a parliamentary vote. In a legal sense this is inevitable as, until
the Bills become Acts of Parliament, there is no statutory power to make the
necessary legislative instruments. However, as implied by some stakeholders,
this means that the Parliament is to some extent voting on an incomplete
scheme.[239]
Draft legislative instruments were prepared for the Exposure Draft process, but
these are by their nature not final documents.[240]
In an additional statement to the Senate Finance and
Public Accounts Committees following her personal appearance, the National Data
Commissioner said:
I understand that the Minister’s intention is to make
available another version of the draft Regulations before the Bill is debated
in the House of Representatives.[241]
At the time of writing this does not appear to have
occurred.
The
consequential Bill
The consequential Bill amends a number of other Acts to
give recognition to the proposed scheme and office of Commissioner as well as
making consequential amendments in relation to the Bill’s review provisions. An
amendment to the Administrative
Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 makes decisions in relation to the
accreditation, or otherwise, of a foreign entity, not susceptible to judicial
review, if made for reasons of security.[242]
The Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation Act 1979 (ASIO Act) is amended to include
a reference (item 3) to the exercise of a power under the accreditation
framework of the principal Bill in the definition of ‘prescribed administrative
action’ in the ASIO Act. The Explanatory Memorandum notes that this
means:
… an exercise of power by the Commissioner under the
accreditation framework in the principal Bill is a ‘prescribed administrative
action’ for the purposes of Part IV of the ASIO Act[243]
and that the amendment ensures:
ASIO can provide advice (including security assessments) to
inform an exercise of power under the accreditation framework, such as a
decision to accredit an entity, or to suspend or cancel an entity’s
accreditation.[244]
Item 4 proposes to insert a new paragraph into
subsection 36(1) of the ASIO Act. The effect of this is that security
decisions in relation to foreign entities under the accreditation framework
will not be subject to merits review. The Explanatory Memorandum comments that:
The underlying intent is to control for the security risks
associated with foreign national individuals who may be affiliated with foreign
powers. Disclosing knowledge of this affiliation through the review process in
Part IV of the ASIO Act risks jeopardising ongoing security operations
and poses a threat to Australia’s national security. This is consistent with
the Administrative Review Council publication, What decisions should be
subject to merits review? (1999), which states that decisions concerning
national security may justify exclusion from merits review (para 4.23).[245]
Amendments to the Privacy Act at items 6 to 8
insert references to the National Data Commissioner. These references have the
effect of making the National Data Commissioner an alternative complaint body
under the Privacy Act, meaning that the Privacy Commissioner can transfer
a complaint to the National Data Commissioner, if the Privacy Commissioner
forms the opinion that the complaint could be more conveniently or effectively
dealt with by that office.
An amendment to the Freedom of
Information Act 1982 at item 5 exempts agencies from FOI
processes in relation to documents shared with an agency or created for Data
Availability and Transparency Act purposes.[246]