Bills Digest No.
38, 2022–23
PDF Version [509KB]
Howard Maclean
Law and Bills Digest Section
18 November 2022
Key points
The Bill amends the Biosecurity Act 2015 to:
- create new powers for the Agriculture Minister to, by non-disallowable legislative instrument, determine entry requirements and preventative biosecurity measures in relation to non‑human biosecurity risks (such as foot and mouth disease)
- make amendments to pratique and pre-arrival reporting requirements of inbound aircraft and vessels, and to increase penalties and the scope of powers of officers
- otherwise increase the pecuniary penalties for various fault-based offences and civil penalty provisions in the Biosecurity Act
- allow a new category of officer, a biosecurity worker, to make risk assessments of goods
- empower the Minister for Health and the Minister for Agriculture to authorise expenditure for biosecurity-related programs and activities, to the states or territories or other persons
- repeal and replace provisions related to management of information under the Biosecurity Act, to apply to a broader scope of information and allow for a broader range of authorised uses, including the power to define both by regulation
- reform provisions relating to ‘approved arrangements’ to increase the discretion and powers of officials in managing these arrangements, and alterations to the compensation scheme for damaged or destroyed goods, conveyances or premises.
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Contents
Purpose of the Bill
Structure of the Bill
Comparison with the Biosecurity
Amendment (Enhanced Risk Management) Bill 2021
Background
Committee consideration
Policy position of non-government
parties/independents
Position of major interest groups
Financial implications
Statement of Compatibility with Human
Rights
Key Issue: Entry Requirements and
preventative biosecurity measures
Issue: Omission of human biosecurity
group directions
Key Issue: Schedule 3
Other provisions
Date introduced: 28
September 2022
House: Senate
Portfolio: Agriculture,
Fisheries and Forestry
Commencement: Schedules 1,
4, 5, 6, 7 commence on the day after Royal Assent.
Schedules 2 and 3 commence on the earlier of proclamation
or 6 months after Royal Assent.
Links: The links to the Bill,
its Explanatory Memorandum and second reading speech can be found on the
Bill’s home page, or through the Australian
Parliament website.
When Bills have been passed and have received Royal Assent,
they become Acts, which can be found at the Federal Register of Legislation
website.
All hyperlinks in this Bills Digest are correct as
at November 2022.
Purpose of
the Bill
The Biosecurity
Amendment (Strengthening Biosecurity) Bill 2022 (the Bill or BASB Bill)
amends the Biosecurity
Act 2015 (the Biosecurity Act) to:
-
create new powers for the Agriculture Minister to, by
non-disallowable legislative instrument, determine entry requirements and
preventative biosecurity measures in relation to non‑human biosecurity
risks (such as foot and mouth disease (FMD))
-
make amendments to pratique[1]
and pre-arrival reporting requirements of inbound aircraft and vessels, and
increase penalties and the scope of powers of officers
-
otherwise increase the pecuniary penalties for various
fault-based offences and civil penalty provisions in the Biosecurity Act
-
allow a new category of officer, a biosecurity worker, to make
risk assessments of goods
-
empower the Minister for Health and the Minister for Agriculture
to authorise expenditure for biosecurity-related programs and activities, to
the states or territories or other persons
-
repeal and replace provisions related to management of
information under the Biosecurity Act, to apply to a broader scope of
information and allow for a broader range of authorised uses, including the
power to define both by regulation
-
to reform provisions relating to ‘approved arrangements’[2]
to increase the discretion and powers of officials in managing these
arrangements, and alterations to the compensation scheme for damaged or
destroyed goods, conveyances or premises.
Structure
of the Bill
This Bill has seven schedules. Some schedules are very
similar or identical to schedules of the Biosecurity
Amendment (Enhanced Risk Management) Bill 2021 (the BAERM Bill), which was
before Parliament prior to the 2022 election and lapsed at the dissolution of
the 46th Parliament. All schedules of the Bill amend the Biosecurity Act.
- Schedule
1 consists of two parts:
-
Part 1 proposes a new power for the Agriculture Minister to
determine entry requirements in relation to non-human biosecurity risks (such
as FMD), on similar terms to the existing power the Health Minister has to
determine entry requirements in relation to listed human diseases (such as
COVID-19)
-
Part 2 proposes a new power for the Agriculture Minister
to determine preventative biosecurity measures in relation to non-human
biosecurity risks, on similar terms to the existing power the Health Minister
has to determine preventative biosecurity measures in relation to listed human
diseases
- Schedule
2 consist of two parts:
- Part
1 amends the legislative scheme of pratique
- Part
2 alters pre-arrival reporting requirements
-
Schedule 3 largely repeals and replaces the existing
scheme of information management in Part 2 of Chapter 11 of the Biosecurity
Act
-
Schedule 4 increases the maximum penalty for 80 separate
offences within the Biosecurity Act, in two parts:
-
Part 1 increases the maximum penalty for 17 offences and
13 civil penalty provisions in Chapter 3 of the Biosecurity Act, which
deals with managing biosecurity risks related to goods
-
Part 2 increases the maximum penalty for 29 offences and
21 civil penalty provisions in Chapter 4 of the Biosecurity Act, which
deals with managing biosecurity risks related to conveyances
-
Schedule 5 alters the requirements for conducting risk
assessments in relation to goods being imported or brought into Australia
-
Schedule 6 inserts Part 3A into Chapter 11 (which deals
with miscellaneous issues), creating a new power for the Health Minister or the
Agriculture Minister to make grants of financial assistance for the management
of biosecurity risks and other purposes, and consequential amendments
-
Schedule 7 makes various changes to the approved
arrangement and compensation provisions.
Comparison
with the Biosecurity Amendment (Enhanced Risk Management) Bill 2021
Some Schedules of the Bill are very similar or identical
to the BAERM Bill as introduced by the previous Government in 2021. Table 1
compares the schedules of the two Bills.
Table 1: Comparison
of schedules of the two biosecurity Bills
BAERM Bill |
BASB Bill |
Notes |
No equivalent |
Schedule 1 – Increasing Protection from Diseases and Pests |
New Schedule. |
Schedule 1, Part 1 – Pratique |
Schedule 2, Part 1 – Pratique |
Identical. |
Schedule 1, Part 2 – Human Biosecurity Group Directions |
No equivalent |
Schedule omitted. |
Schedule 1, Part 3 – Pre‑arrival Reporting |
Schedule 2, Part 2 – Pre-arrival Reporting |
Minor technical drafting changes, otherwise identical. |
No equivalent |
Schedule 3 – Information Management |
New Schedule. |
Schedule 2 – Strengthening Penalties |
Schedule 4 – Strengthening Penalties |
Part 1 is identical to BAERM Schedule 2. Part 2 is
entirely new. |
Schedule 3 – Risk Assessment |
Schedule 5 – Risk Assessment |
Minor, non-substantial technical drafting changes,
otherwise identical. |
Schedule 4 – Arrangements and Grants for Dealing with Risks
Posed by Diseases or Pests |
Schedule 6 – Arrangements and Grants for Dealing with Risks
Posed by Diseases or Pests |
Minor technical drafting changes, otherwise identical. |
No equivalent |
Schedule 7 – Approved Arrangements and Compensation |
New Schedule. |
Source: Parliamentary Library research.
The Human Biosecurity Group Directions framework in
Schedule 1, Part 2 of the BAERM Bill was the centrepiece of that Bill. Its
omission is discussed later in this Digest.
Background
The Biosecurity Act is the Commonwealth’s framework
legislation for the management of diseases and pests that may be a threat to
human, animal, plant or ecological health, or to the Australian economy, a
concept defined under the Act as biosecurity risks.[3]
This is in addition to related matters such as the implementation of relevant
international legal obligations, management of infectious human diseases,
ballast water, and biosecurity and human biosecurity emergencies.[4]
This Bill’s seven different schedules have different
backgrounds and origins.
Schedule 1
On 9 May 2022, the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries
and Forestry stated that FMD had been detected in Indonesia.[5]
The Secretary of the Department, Andrew Metcalfe AO has stated that an outbreak
of FMD would be ’utterly devastating for Australian farmers, and could cost up
to $80 billion to the agricultural sector over ten years’.[6]
In response, the Department of Agriculture took several
measures under the Biosecurity Act, including establishing a biosecurity
response zone under section 365 of the Act, through the Biosecurity (Foot and
Mouth Disease Biosecurity Response Zone) Determination 2022.
On 28 July 2022, the Senate referred an inquiry to the
Rural and Regional Affairs and Transport References Committee on the Adequacy
of Australia’s Biosecurity Measures and Response Preparedness, in Particular
with Respect to Foot-and-Mouth Disease and Varroa Mite. This inquiry is
ongoing, with a reporting date of 24 November 2022.
It does not appear that this inquiry directly prompted the
amendments in Schedule 1. The Department in its submission to the inquiry did
not foreshadow Schedule 1,[7]
and it does not appear that any other stakeholder called for these powers
explicitly.
Nor are these amendments foreshadowed or described in the
recent National
Biosecurity Strategy, which otherwise discusses the threat of FMD. The
new powers in this Schedule do not appear to be externally prompted, however,
the Explanatory Memorandum does describe these powers as ‘vital’ stating:
To this end, the measures in Schedule 1 would significantly
enhance the biosecurity framework by creating new, vital powers aimed at
preventing, or reducing the risk that, these diseases enter Australia, and to
combat the devastating effect that these diseases would pose to plant and
animal health, the environment, and the economy. These measures are a crucial
new tool to maintain Australia’s unique biosecurity status and to protect the
nation’s animals, plants, environment and related industries.[8]
Schedule 2
Schedule 2 makes various amendments to Chapter 2 ‘Human
Health’, and arises chiefly out of a response to recommendations made by the NSW Special Commission of
Inquiry into the Ruby Princess and the Inspector-General of
Biosecurity’s subsequent review Confidence
Testing for At Border Delivery of Critical Human Biosecurity Functions – Ruby
Princess Cruise Ship Incident (Inspector-General’s Report).
The background to these reports was discussed in detail in
the BAERM Bill Digest.[9]
Both reports had recommended reforming pratique provisions to make it easier
for human biosecurity officers to withhold pratique in circumstances where they
suspected that a vessel had been exposed to a listed human disease.
Both reports also recommended revised pre-arrival report
requirements to make explicit a requirement to update superseded health
information. The NSW Commission recommended:
2.19 That
the NSW HBO [Human Biosecurity Officer] Guideline should be reconsidered in
light of the criticism made at [11.13], namely that it regards a grant of
pratique as the default position, and indicates that pratique should only ever
be withheld where there is a compelling reason to deny it, for example, where a
HBO has a “genuine belief” that other passengers “were exposed” to a LHD
[listed human disease]. The current HBO Guideline does not appear to
satisfactorily reflect an appropriately precautionary public health approach.
…
2.23 That
the Biosecurity Act make explicit a requirement to update superseded human
health information.[10]
The Inspector-General made 42 recommendations, including 6
that required amendment to the Biosecurity Act, which relevantly
included:
Recommendation 18: Agriculture should seek Health’s
support to amend the Biosecurity Act 2015 to include provision for
biosecurity officers to withhold pratique for vessels that have been assessed
to pose higher risk for potential listed human diseases based on the
Pre-arrival Report and other intelligence, such as whether vessels have visited
high-risk port(s) within the previous 14 days before arrival at an Australian
port.
Recommendation 19: The provisions within the Biosecurity
Act 2015 relating to pratique should be reviewed to provide greater
flexibility in managing pratique based on human biosecurity risk – in
particular, to allow for aircraft and vessels to load and unload cargo and
stores where this represents an acceptably low level of risk. The loading of
provisions for crew onboard commercial cargo vessels and cruise ships in
negative pratique should be incorporated in relevant instructional material.
Recommendation 21: The Biosecurity Act 2015
should be amended to provide biosecurity officers with greater powers to
enforce negative pratique, to provide for penalties to be applied to
individuals who breach negative pratique, and to make the ‘person in charge’
(and operator) of a conveyance, defined in section 22 of the Act, also
responsible for any noncompliance with negative pratique. This includes
provision for issuing Infringement Notices for pratique breaches.
Recommendation 22: The Biosecurity Act 2015
should be amended to provide biosecurity officers with clear powers to revoke
pratique, including where either incorrect or inaccurate information is
supplied by the vessel operator or there are changes to the vessel’s human
biosecurity risk status over time.
Recommendation 24: The Biosecurity Act 2015
should be amended to require vessel operators to report updated biosecurity
information, including human biosecurity information, if there are any changes
to the information required under section 193 between the time that the
Pre-arrival Report was submitted and the time of the vessel’s departure from
Australia.[11]
The Department of Agriculture and Water Resources ((DAWE),
now the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry (DAFF)) agreed in
principle to these recommendations,[12]
and subsequently introduced them in Schedule 1, Parts 1 and 3 of the BAERM Bill.
The provisions have been reintroduced in a virtually identical way in Schedule
2 of this Bill.
Schedule 3
Schedule 3 proposes to effectively repeal and replace the
entirety of Part 2 of Chapter 11 of the Act, which concerns the management of
information under the Act. The new Part differs substantially from the existing
‘confidentiality of information’ provisions, replacing and expanding
definitions, reconceptualising offences, and reconceptualising and expanding
permissible disclosures.
It is unclear what exactly prompted Schedule 3, or why in
the Government’s view the existing provisions are inadequate. The Explanatory
Memorandum states that this Schedule exists to ‘enable more effective sharing
of information with government agencies and other bodies’,[13]
noting:
To support the management of biosecurity risks and the
effective administration of the Biosecurity Act, it is also necessary to
improve the operation of the information management provisions. These
amendments would provide for specific authorisations for the use and disclosure
of relevant information, while ensuring that protected information is afforded
appropriate safeguards.[14]
This Schedule does not appear to be in response to
recommendations of any inquiry or report, a call by the industry, or any other
public concern, and it does not appear that any public consultation with
industry was done or these amendments foreshadowed.
Schedule 4
Schedule 4 proposes to increase the maximum penalty for
various offences and civil penalty provisions in Chapters 3 and 4 of the Act.
While not stated within the explanatory materials,
Schedule 4 may be seen as a further implementation of the recommendations of
the 2017 Inspector-General’s Report Uncooked Prawn
Imports: Effectiveness of Biosecurity Controls (Uncooked Prawn
Report) following the outbreak of White Spot Syndrome Virus (WSSV) among
prawns in south east Queensland in 2016–2017.[15]
The Inspector-General noted:
… the penalties available and applied were often not
commensurate with the potential profits to be made or risks that could be
caused by the non-compliant behaviour.[16]
This Bill, as well as both the BAERM Bill and the Biosecurity
Amendment (Strengthening Penalties) Act 2021 (BASPA), contain
provisions increasing penalties.[17]
The explanatory materials to all three justified these changes on the basis
that stronger penalties were required to prevent the penalties being seen as
just a ‘cost of business’.[18]
The Explanatory Memorandum to this Bill for instance notes:
A stronger penalty regime is necessary to address the
evolving biosecurity risk environment and to ensure that Australia has in place
an effective deterrent against non-compliance, particularly in a regulatory
environment where non-compliance with current penalties may be seen as ‘a cost
of doing business’. Increases to penalty amounts in this Bill would ensure that
the civil and criminal penalty units more appropriately reflect the impact the
contraventions may have on Australia’s biosecurity status, market access and
economy than is currently the case.[19]
This Bill proposes to increase penalties in relation to
Chapter 4 of the Act in addition to the increases in Chapter 3 of the Act previously
proposed by the BAERM Bill.
Schedule 5
Schedule 5 makes amendments to risk assessments. A risk
assessment is conducted to ensure the biosecurity risk associated with certain
goods or certain classes of goods is appropriately managed for the purposes of
making determinations to prohibit, suspend or conditionally prohibit the
importation of certain goods, and for the granting of permits to import goods
so prohibited or suspended.
This Schedule is identical to the previous Schedule 3 in
the BAERM Bill, and was discussed in the Bills Digest to that Bill.[20]
The recently enacted Biosecurity
Amendment (Clarifying Conditionally Non‑prohibited Goods) Act 2021
also concerned the making of risk assessments, inserting section 639A of
the Act, which provides:
- This
section applies if a determination purportedly made under
subsection 174(1) before the commencement of the Biosecurity Amendment
(Clarifying Conditionally Non‑prohibited Goods) Act 2021 would, apart from this section, be wholly or partly
invalid only because the Director of Biosecurity and the Director of Human
Biosecurity, or either of them, did not:
- conduct
a risk assessment for the purpose of deciding whether to make the
determination; or
- apply,
or correctly apply, the ALOP for Australia in conducting a risk assessment for
that purpose.
- This
section also applies if the determination would, apart from this section, be
wholly or partly invalid for any other failure to comply with section 174 or
subsection 541(4).
- The determination is taken for all purposes to be, and
always to have been, valid.
It appears that there was at least the risk of
determinations made under subsection 174(1) being invalid due to non-compliance
with existing administrative decision-making requirements. This may be the
impetus behind Schedule 3 to the BAERM Bill, and Schedule 5 to this Bill.
Schedule 6
Schedule 6 proposes to create a new legislative authority
for the Commonwealth to make grants of financial assistance to respond to risks
posed by diseases or pests. It is substantially the same as Schedule 4 to the
BAERM Bill.
The explanatory materials note that the Commonwealth
already makes a variety of grants for these purposes under section 32B of the Financial Framework
(Supplementary Powers) Act 1997 (FFSP Act) by inserting new
items for each program into the relevant Schedule to the Financial Framework
(Supplementary Powers) Regulations 1997 (FFSP Regulations).[21]
The Explanatory Memorandum further notes:
Schedule 6 to the Bill would provide legislative authority
for arrangements and grants for dealing with risks posed by diseases or pests,
such as the National Citrus Canker Eradication Program which ran in response to
the detection of citrus canker in a Darwin retail nursery. Having tailored
legislative authority provisions in the Biosecurity Act would assist the
Australian Government to respond quickly to fast-changing circumstances where
there is a pest or disease threatening the health of the Australian population,
the environment or the agricultural sector. Including the authority for
expenditure on biosecurity activities and programs in the Biosecurity Act would
support a more agile biosecurity system, and ensure transparency and
accountability for Commonwealth expenditure on biosecurity activities and
programs. Expenditure on biosecurity activities and programs would be reported
by the relevant Agriculture or Health portfolio.[22]
Schedule 7
Schedule 7 makes various changes to provisions relating to
approved arrangements and compensation in the Biosecurity Act. These
changes increase the flexibility of various administrative processes and
increase the discretionary powers of the Director of Human Biosecurity and
Director of Biosecurity in relation to approved arrangements and compensation.
Schedule 7 is a schedule new to this version of the Bill,
there are no analogous provisions in the BAERM Bill.
An ‘approved arrangement’ is an arrangement where a
biosecurity industry participant may carry out certain biosecurity activities
to manage biosecurity risks associated with goods, premises or other things. A
biosecurity industry participant covered by an approved arrangement is
authorised and required to carry out biosecurity activities in accordance with
the approved arrangement.[23]
The Explanatory Memorandum does not state what the impetus
for this Schedule is. It does not appear to be in response to any inquiry or
recommendation or other external pressure. The Explanatory Memorandum does note,
however:
The policy intention is that these measures will provide
clarity, streamline the administration of approved arrangements, reduce
compliance costs and support more efficient movement of goods into Australian
territory.[24]
As discussed in provisions section of this Digest, the
revised compensation provisions may be intended to limit the ability of
biosecurity industry participants to claim compensation for damage they
themselves cause.[25]
Committee
consideration
On 26 October 2022 the Senate
Committee for the Selection of Bills decided not to refer this Bill for
Committee Inquiry.[26]
The BAERM Bill had been referred to the Rural and Regional
Affairs and Transport Legislation Committee. The Committee had previously recommended
that the BAERM Bill be passed in their its
inquiry into that Bill in 2021.[27]
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills considered
this Bill in Scrutiny Digest No. 6 of 2022, published
on 26 October 2022 on pages 1–11. [28]
The Committee expressed considerable scrutiny concerns
with elements of Schedule 1 of the Bill, but also elements of Schedules 6 and
7. These concerns are discussed in the relevant provisions parts of this
Digest.
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
At the time of writing, no non-government parties or
independents have commented on this Bill.
Position of
major interest groups
At the time of writing, no major interest groups had
commented on the Bill explicitly. The submissions to the ongoing Rural and
Regional Affairs and Transport References Committee on the Adequacy
of Australia’s Biosecurity Measures and Response Preparedness, in Particular
With Respect to Foot-And-Mouth Disease and Varroa Mite may assist.
The position of stakeholder groups to the previous Bill
was discussed in the BAERM Bills Digest.[29]
Financial
implications
The Explanatory Memorandum states that there are no
financial implications to the Australian Government Budget due to the Bill.[30]
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.[31]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
At the time of writing, the PJCHR had not commented on
this Bill, deferring consideration of this Bill in the Human Rights Scrutiny
Report No. 5 on 20 October 2022.[32]
Key Issue:
Entry Requirements and preventative biosecurity measures
Schedule 1 proposes to create new powers for the
Agriculture Minister to determine entry requirements and preventative biosecurity
measures in relation to a ‘disease or pest that is considered to pose an
unacceptable level of biosecurity risk’ on substantially similar terms as to
the current powers that the Health Minister has to determine entry
requirements and preventable biosecurity in relation to listed human diseases,
under Part 2 of Chapter 2 to the Act.
The provisions of proposed sections 196A, 196B and 196C
(entry requirements, at item 5 of Schedule 1)
and proposed sections 393B and 393C (preventative
biosecurity measures, at item 11 of Schedule 1) are largely
satisfactorily described in the Explanatory Memorandum. There are, however, a
few key issues that Parliamentarians should be aware of.
Entry
requirements and preventative biosecurity measures are not disallowable by
Parliament
Proposed subsections 196A(4) (entry
requirements) and 393B(4) (preventative biosecurity measures) both provide
that:
(4) A
determination made under subsection (2) is a legislative instrument, but
section 42 (disallowance) of the Legislation Act 2003 does not apply to
the instrument
This makes both entry requirements and preventative
biosecurity measures legislative instruments that Parliament cannot disallow.
During the COVID-19 Pandemic, both the Senate Standing
Committee for the Scrutiny of Delegated Legislation (SSCSDL) and Senate Standing
Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills (SSCSB) have been critical of the large
number of powers in the Biosecurity Act that were not disallowable by
Parliament.
The SSCSDL launched an Inquiry
into the Exemption of Delegated Legislation from Parliamentary Oversight
which made explicit recommendations relating to the Biosecurity Act in
its interim report.[33]
The SSCSB also conducted a Review
of exemption from disallowance provisions in the Biosecurity Act 2015.[34]
Both reports were critical of existing Biosecurity Act provisions that
exempted various instruments from disallowance.
Senator Fierravanti-Wells, the then Chair of the SSCSDL,
moved an amendment to the BAERM Bill that would have made many currently
non-disallowable legislative instruments disallowable, including entry requirements
under section 44 and preventative biosecurity measures under section 51.[35]
This included amendments to the Health Minister’s existing power to determine
entry requirements and preventative biosecurity measures.[36]
The SSCSB in its Scrutiny Digest No. 6 of 2022 raised
scrutiny concerns about the exemption of disallowance of these new powers in
the Bill, reiterating the Senate’s position that legislative instruments should
only be exempted from disallowance in ’exceptional circumstances’. The
Committee noted the Explanatory Memorandum’s argument that these powers should
be exempted due to a ‘significant impact on technical and scientifically based
decision-making’,[37]
and noted:
1.19 However,
the committee notes that whether a matter is scientific or technical is not, of
itself, directly relevant to considering whether that matter should be exempt
from parliamentary disallowance. Neither is it directly relevant that the
impacts of disallowing an instrument may be significant. Simply stating that a
matter is technically complex, or has significant policy implications, is not
an adequate justification for removing democratic oversight over a law of the
Commonwealth. As discussed above, this is particularly so if that law may
impact on personal rights or liberties. The committee also notes that there is
nothing in the bill limiting decisions made under proposed sections 196A, 196B
or 393B to exclusively technical or scientific matters.
1.20 The
committee has made extensive comments on scientific and technical matters and
on the risk that disallowance of an instrument may lead to significant
consequences in the context of the Biosecurity Act, most recently in Scrutiny
Digest 1 of 2022 The committee reiterates those comments here.
1.21 In
particular, the committee reiterates that it is not clear why parliamentarians
would be incapable of taking into account scientific and technical evidence
when considering the appropriateness of an instrument. The committee notes that
parliamentarians are accountable to their electors in relation to how they
exercise their law-making functions, including the power to disallow a
legislative instrument and any resulting outcomes that flow from that disallowance.
[Footnotes omitted][38]
Chapter 2
safeguards do not apply
Chapter 2 of the Biosecurity Act is a regulatory
scheme of non-emergency human biosecurity powers. It includes the power to determine
entry requirements under section 44 and preventative biosecurity measures under
section 51 in relation to listed human diseases.
However, the exercise of all powers in Chapter 2 is limited
by general protections set out in Part 2 of that Chapter. Relevantly:
- Section 35 provides that an entry requirement or preventative
biosecurity measure must not interfere with urgent or life-threatening medical
needs.
- Sections 36–41 provide for special provisions for children and
incapable persons subject to entry requirements or preventative biosecurity measures.
Section 37, for instance, requires that relevant officers contact a parent,
guardian or next of kin before applying a requirement.
Because the new powers to set non-human biosecurity entry requirements
and preventative biosecurity measures are not within Chapter 2, these
safeguards do not apply.
Scope of diseases and pests to which powers apply
The existing power to determine entry requirements and
preventative biosecurity measures in relation to human health apply only in
relation to listed human diseases.
Listed Human Diseases
Human biosecurity powers
engage in relation to ‘listed human diseases’. The Director of Human
Biosecurity (the Commonwealth Chief Medical Officer[39]) may determine (by
non-disallowable legislative instrument) that a disease is a listed human
disease if they consider that the disease may be communicable and may cause
significant harm to human health. The Director of Human Biosecurity must
consult with the Director of Biosecurity (Agriculture Secretary[40]) and the chief health officer
(however described) for each state and territory in making this
determination.[41]
The Biosecurity (Listed
Human Diseases) Determination 2016 details the current listed human
diseases. These are human influenza with pandemic potential, Middle East
respiratory syndrome (MERS), plague, severe acute respiratory syndrome
(SARS), smallpox, viral haemorrhagic fevers (such as Ebola), yellow fever,
and human coronavirus with pandemic potential.[42]
|
The new entry requirements and
preventative biosecurity measures powers proposed in this Bill engage upon ‘a
disease or pest that is considered to pose an unacceptable level of biosecurity
risk’. Proposed subsection 196A(5) (at item 5 of Schedule 1),
for instance, provides:
- A
requirement must not be specified in a determination unless the Agriculture
Minister is satisfied that:
- the disease or pest poses an unacceptable
level of biosecurity risk; and
- the
requirement is appropriate and adapted to prevent, or reduce the risk of, the
disease or pest entering, or establishing itself or spreading in, Australian
territory or a part of Australian territory.
’Unacceptable level of biosecurity risk‘ is an existing
concept in the Biosecurity Act.[43]
What constitutes an ‘unacceptable’ level is not defined within the Act, or articulated
within the explanatory materials to the original Bill. It does not appear to
have been considered in judicial reasoning since the introduction of the
concept. ‘Biosecurity risk’ is defined in the Act.[44]
In comparison to the human health entry requirements and preventative
biosecurity measures, these proposed powers then:
-
may be engaged against any disease or pest, without the need for
them to be listed in a legislative instrument or otherwise identified before
time (as it is with human biosecurity powers, and biosecurity emergency powers)
-
appear to give the Agriculture Minister more discretion in
determining what constitutes an ‘unacceptable’ level of risk than the Director
of Human Biosecurity has when deciding whether or not to list a human disease
to which other powers may apply.
‘No-invalidity’
clause
Before making an entry requirement or a preventative
biosecurity measure under the proposed amendments, the Agriculture Minister must
consult with the Director of Biosecurity, the Director of Human Biosecurity,
and the head of the state or territory body that is responsible for the
administration of matters relating to biosecurity in that state or territory.[45]
These consultation requirements largely mirror the
existing powers of the Health Minister to determine preventative biosecurity
measures.[46]
Unlike the Health Minister’s powers however, the proposed Agriculture
Minister’s powers include a ‘no-invalidity’ clause:
A failure by the Agriculture Minister to comply with
subsection (9) does not affect the validity of the determination.[47]
The Senate Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills drew
attention to this issue, noting:
There are significant scrutiny concerns with no-invalidity
clauses, as these clauses may limit the practical efficacy of judicial review
to provide a remedy for legal errors. For example, as the conclusion that a
decision is not invalid means that the decision-maker had the power (i.e.
jurisdiction) to make it, review of the decision on the grounds of
jurisdictional error is unlikely to be available. The result is that some of
judicial review's standard remedies will not be available. Consequently, the
committee expects a sound justification for the use of a no-invalidity clause
to be provided in the explanatory memorandum.[48]
The Committee further noted the Explanatory Memorandum
does not contain a rationale for the inclusion of this clause. In light of
this, the Committee requested the Minister’s detailed advice as to:
-
why it is both necessary and appropriate to include no-invalidity
clauses in proposed sections 196A and 393B and
-
whether the Bill could be amended to provide that determinations
made under proposed sections 196A, 196B or 393B are subject to disallowance to
ensure that they receive appropriate parliamentary oversight.[49]
At the time of writing this Digest, the Minister’s
response had been received but not yet made available by the Committee.[50]
Issue:
Omission of human biosecurity group directions
A key recommendation of both the NSW Special Commission of
Inquiry and the Inspector-General of Biosecurity’s respective inquiries into
the Ruby Princess incident was that the existing mechanism of human
biosecurity control orders were impractical or ineffective in imposing human
biosecurity requirements on large groups of individuals quickly, for short
periods of time. The NSW Special Commission of Inquiry noted:
The administrative processes relating to Control Orders are
fairly demanding. Consequently, it is impractical to issue Control Orders to
large numbers of individuals. The contents of the Control Order are prescribed
by s 61. Those contents are comprehensive in their requirements to notify
persons subject to Control Orders about the nature and justification of the
Control Order. The Control Order must be given to the individual within 24
hours of it having been made or it is of no effect: s 63.[51]
The Inspector-General’s Report also noted that, while the
operator of a vessel or aircraft denied pratique had an obligation to prevent
passengers from disembarking, the actual passengers themselves would be under
no obligation to not disembark the vessel or aircraft:
Theoretically, on advising a vessel that is subject to
negative pratique, passengers could refuse to comply by disembarking the vessel
to take flights to return to their home country. In that situation, Agriculture
would be powerless to prevent this from occurring unless Human Biosecurity
Control Orders were issued. Similarly, if passengers (believed to be the
carriers of COVID-19 virus), on disembarking the vessel, entered the Australian
community, they will not be committing an offence under the Act. It would then
be up to the jurisdiction to prevent COVID-19 positive passengers from
disembarking the vessel (and entering the Australian community) under local
emergency management or human health legislation, as appropriate.[52]
In response, Schedule 1, Part 2 of the BAERM Bill proposed
to insert a new human biosecurity group direction framework. This framework was
discussed in detail in pages 17 to 34 of the Digest to that Bill.[53]
This Bill does not include a revised version of the human
biosecurity group directions framework. It is the only element of the BAERM
Bill which has not been included as a schedule to the current Bill. The
Explanatory Memorandum and related material do not state why the human
biosecurity group directions framework has not been included in the current Bill,
even as other responses to the recommendations of the report (surrounding the
Schedule 2 amendments to Pratique and pre‑arrival reporting) are
retained. Of course, it is possible that the framework is intended to be
included in a future Bill.
Key Issue: Schedule
3
Schedule 3 proposes to substantially alter the way
that information is treated under the Act. It proposes to change the definition
of protected information, the nature of offences for disclosing or using it,
and the authorisations for using protected information.
Definition
of ‘Protected information’
The current ‘confidentiality of information’ provisions in
Part 2 of Chapter 11 of the Biosecurity Act apply to personal
information or commercial-in-confidence information exclusively. Item 7 proposes
to repeal and replace the definition of protected information in
section 9 to apply to information of
any of the following kinds obtained or generated by a person:
- sensitive
information (within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988)[54];
- information
(including commercially sensitive information) the disclosure of which could
reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the
Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence;
- information
the disclosure of which could reasonably be expected to prejudice the
prevention, detection, investigation, prosecution or punishment of one or more
offences;
- information
the disclosure of which could reasonably be expected to prejudice the
protection of public safety, human health or the environment;
- information
the disclosure of which could reasonably be expected to prejudice Australia’s
security, defence or international relations of Australia;
- information
of a kind prescribed by the regulations.
This definition is expansive, and the power of the regulations
to prescribe additional kinds of information as protected information is broad.
The Agriculture or Health Minister need only be satisfied that the disclosure
of the information would or could reasonably be expected to ‘prejudice the
effective working of the Agriculture Department or the Health Department’ or ‘otherwise
harm the public interest’.[55]
Disclosure
Offences
The current section 585 ‘offence relating to protected
information’ provides that a person commits an offence if they disclose, use or
make a record of protected information, in a way that is not a permissible use
or otherwise authorised in other elements of the scheme.
The maximum penalty for this offence is imprisonment for 2
years or 120 penalty units, or both.[56]
Item 27 of Schedule 3 proposes the repeal of section 585 and
Item 18 proposes the repeal and replacement of section 580 to
provide a new offence provision. This new offence has several important
differences from the existing one:
- The
offence now only applies to people who are ‘entrusted persons’[57]
– Commonwealth public servants and persons specified in proposed subsection
580(2) who are engaged in functions under the Act. This means that other
persons who disclose protected information no longer commit an offence.
- The
offence only applies to protected information that the entrusted or specified person
obtains or generates in the course of, or for the purposes of, performing
functions or duties, or exercising powers under the Act, or assisting another
person in the same.[58]
- The
provision now includes an offence of strict liability, at a reduced maximum penalty
of 60 penalty units, with no term of imprisonment.[59]
- The
provision now includes a civil penalty provision with a maximum penalty of 120 penalty
units and retains a fault-based offence provision with a maximum penalty of two
years imprisonment and/or 120 penalty units.[60]
Authorisations
for disclosure
Schedule 3 of the Bill proposes to substantially
broaden the grounds on which protected information can be disclosed, creating broad
additional policy grounds for disclosure:
- use
or disclosure for the purposes of managing human health risks[61]
-
use or disclosure for the purposes of a state or territory, or foreign
government managing risks[62]
-
use or disclosure for the purposes of the Act, or another Act
administered by the Agriculture Minister or Health Minister[63]
- disclosure
to another Commonwealth entity to assist that entity to perform its functions
or duties or exercise its powers[64]
-
disclosure for the purposes of a court, tribunal et cetera or law
enforcement. Existing section 582 provides an authorisation for disclosure
to a court or tribunal or coronial inquiry, but not to law enforcement[65]
-
disclosure for the purpose of research, policy development, or
data analysis. This must not be done with a body that is not a Commonwealth
entity, or a person who is not employed or engaged by the Commonwealth, unless
that other body or person has undertaken to not use the information except in
accordance with an agreement in force between the Commonwealth and the person
or body[66]
-
disclosure of statistics where the information is not likely to
enable the identification of a person[67]
-
disclosure by the Director of Biosecurity or the Director of
Human Biosecurity to manage severe and immediate threats that have the
potential to cause harm on a nationally significant scale[68]
- use
or disclosure authorised by the regulations.[69]
Other existing exceptions and reasons for disclosure (such
as disclosure to the person that the information relates to) have been retained
in the new framework.
The ability to prescribe additional authorised uses and
reasons for disclosure by regulation under proposed section 590H, is not
limited by reference to any criteria, but such regulations must ‘specify the
legislative power or powers of the Parliament in respect of which the
regulations are made’. The Explanatory Memorandum states:
The authorisation in new section 590H is necessary to allow
the regulations to prescribe the use or disclosure of relevant information in
other circumstances which may arise in the future, and which may require
expedient authorisation to effectively manage biosecurity risks or other risks.
For example, a situation may arise in the future where a new partnership is
formed between the Commonwealth, industry bodies and local community groups to
assess the impacts of climate change, and relevant information about certain
diseases or pests is required to assess those impacts, but no other
authorisation for the use or disclosure of that information under the
Biosecurity Act is available or considered to be appropriate. In such a case,
it may be considered necessary to prescribe regulations under new section 590H
to allow for the use or disclosure of relevant information by the partnership
in certain circumstances.[70]
The combined effect of the power to prescribe information
as protected information under the regulations under proposed paragraph (f)
of the definition in Item 7 and to authorise any disclosure or use under
the regulations made under proposed section 590H is that the operation
of the new information management system may be significantly influenced by
regulation. The regulations can make a broad range of ‘relevant information’
under the Act protected information (subject to the requirements of proposed
subsection 9(2) of the Act, at Item 10 of Schedule 3) and create
any permissible purpose for its disclosure.
However, under current subsection 580(3) of the Act, the
Director of Human Biosecurity and the Director of Biosecurity may authorise the
use or disclosure of protected information by issuing individual
authorisations. The Explanatory Memorandum states:
Under the new information management framework proposed by
this Schedule, it is considered more appropriate for the Governor-General to
make regulations to prescribe any additional authorisations under new section
590H, instead of the Director of Biosecurity or the Director of Human
Biosecurity providing ad-hoc authorisations. This would allow greater
transparency and parliamentary oversight of any regulations made under new
section 590H, noting that they would also be subject to the usual disallowance
process outlined in the Legislation Act 2003.[71]
Other provisions
Schedule 2
As previously stated, Schedule 2 is virtually identical to
previously introduced parts of the BAERM Bill and is covered in more detail in
the Bills Digest for that Bill.[72]
Part 1 concerns amendments to pratique,[73]
making two changes:
-
Item 1 proposes to expand the persons to which pratique
requirements apply to include ‘the person in charge of an incoming vessel or
aircraft’ in addition to the operator of that aircraft or vessel
-
Item 2 proposes to increase the existing civil penalty for
breach of pratique requirements from the current maximum of 120 penalty units
(currently $26,640 for an individual or $133,200 for a body corporate[74])
to 1,000 ($222,000) penalty units for the operator of the aircraft or vessel,
and 300 penalty units ($66,600) for a person in charge of the aircraft or
vessel.
Part 2 concerns amendments to the pre-arrival
reporting requirements of aircraft or vessels that intend to enter Australian territory,
proposing two changes:
-
introducing a new power for the regulations to require additional
pre-arrival reports beyond the first one, rather than just requiring that the
operator update an incomplete or incorrect report of which they become aware[75]
-
increasing the maximum criminal and civil penalties for failing
to comply with reporting requirements under sections 193 or 194 from 120
penalty units ($26,640) to 1,000 penalty units ($222,000).[76]
Where a body corporate is convicted of the criminal offence, a court may impose
a pecuniary penalty equal to five times the maximum standard penalty, or 5,000
penalty units ($1,110,000).[77]
Civil penalty orders may also be made equal to five times the maximum standard
penalty for a body corporate.[78]
Schedule 4
Schedule 4 consists of two parts. Part 1 consists
of 2 items, including a table that amends 30 provisions, increasing the maximum
financial penalties, both civil and criminal, for both fault-based offences and
civil penalty provisions in Chapter 3 of the Biosecurity Act, which
deals with managing the biosecurity risks of goods. This Part is identical to Schedule
2 of the BAERM Bill.
Part 2 consists of 3 items, including a table that
amends 50 provisions, increasing the maximum financial penalties, both civil
and criminal, for both fault-based offences and civil penalty provisions in
Chapter 4 of the Biosecurity Act, which deals with managing the
biosecurity risks of conveyances. This part is new to this Bill.
A Commonwealth penalty unit is currently $222[79]
and generally these changes fall into four categories:
-
increases of civil penalty provision penalty amounts from
120 penalty units ($26,660) to 300 penalty units ($66,600)
-
increases of fault-based offence penalty amounts from 120
penalty units ($26,660) to 300 penalty units ($66,600). These fault-based
offences may also carry a term of imprisonment of up to two years
-
increases of some fault-based offence penalty amounts from
300 penalty units ($66,600) to 1,000 penalty units ($222,000). These
fault-based offences may also carry a term of imprisonment of up to five years
-
increases of other fault-based offence penalty amounts
from 120 penalty units ($26,660) to 1,000 penalty units ($222,000). These
fault-based offences may also carry a term of imprisonment of up to two years.
The Bill does not propose to increase the term of imprisonment from two to five
years to be consistent with the other 1,000 penalty unit fault‑based
offences.
Fine to
imprisonment ratio
The Library has noted in previous Digests on Bills to
amend the Biosecurity Act that proposed penalty unit amounts for
offences exceed the suggested penalties in the Attorney-General’s Guide to
Framing Commonwealth Offences, Infringement Notices and Enforcement Powers.[80]
Relevantly, the Guide recommends a fine-to-imprisonment
ratio of five penalty units to a month of imprisonment.[81]
The offences proposed to be amended by this Bill currently follow this ratio,
imposing a maximum of 120 penalty units on offences also punishable by two
years of imprisonment, and a 300 penalty unit maximum on offences punishable by
five years of imprisonment.
The Bill proposes to alter this ratio to 12.5 penalty
units per month of imprisonment for most of the fault-based offences listed,
and to 41.6 penalty units per month of imprisonment for two offences in
subsections 155(2) and 156(2).
The Explanatory Memorandum addresses this issue:
The proposed maximum pecuniary penalty departs from the
standard fine to imprisonment ratio in the Australian Government Guide to
Framing Commonwealth Offences, Infringement Notices and Enforcement Powers
(the Guide). However, this is necessary as the current penalty does not
adequately reflect the seriousness of the offending conduct in this regulatory
context where offences may be committed by a natural person or bodies
corporate. The potential consequences of failing to provide reports in
accordance with the requirements in subsection 193(2), are such that it is
appropriate to set a higher maximum penalty to punish non-compliance. The
increased pecuniary penalty also aligns with similar offences in the
Biosecurity Act relating to the contravention of importation requirements under
sections 185 to 187.[82]
Schedule 5
Schedule 5 makes amendments to the conduct of risk
assessments for the purposes of determining prohibited goods and conditionally
non-prohibited goods. A risk assessment is conducted to ensure the biosecurity
risk associated with certain goods or certain classes of goods is appropriately
managed for the purposes of making determinations to prohibit, suspend or
conditionally prohibit the importation of certain goods, and for the granting
of permits to import goods so prohibited or suspended.
Schedule 5 is functionally identical to Schedule 3 in the
BAERM Bill, and is discussed at more length in the Digest to that Bill.[83]
Risk assessments currently
Currently risk assessments are required for:
-
the conduct of a Biosecurity Import Risk Analysis (BIRA) under
section 167
-
the making of a determination that a good or class of good is a
‘prohibited good’ under section 173
-
the making of a determination that a good or class of good is a
‘conditionally non-prohibited good’ (that is that specified conditions must be
complied with for the good to be brought or imported into Australian territory)
under section 174
-
the granting of a permit to import conditionally non-prohibited
goods under section 179
-
the temporary suspension of bringing or importing goods into
Australian territory under section 182.
In each case there is a clause that provides that:
The Director of Biosecurity and the Director of Human Biosecurity must
apply the ALOP for Australia in conducting a risk assessment for the purpose of
[making the relevant decision] …
ALOP is the ‘appropriate level of protection’ as defined
under section 5 of the Act:
The Appropriate Level of Protection (or ALOP)
for Australia is a high level of sanitary and phytosanitary protection aimed at
reducing biosecurity risks to a very low level, but not to zero.
As detailed in the BAERM Digest, the fact that the
Director (or their delegate) must themselves apply the ALOP, and the limitation
of delegation to only senior executive service (or acting senior executive
service) employees practically limits the ability to conduct risk assessments
to a small number of employees who all hold senior executive roles.[84]
Proposed amendments
Schedule 5 amends the relevant sections so that the
risk assessments under sections 173, 174, 179, and 182 must instead be
conducted by a ‘biosecurity worker’ rather than the Director of Biosecurity and
Director of Human Biosecurity (or their delegates).[85]
It is proposed that the Director of Human Biosecurity and the Director of
Biosecurity as relevant would still make the actual determinations under these
sections.
‘Biosecurity worker’ is defined by proposed section 14A
at item 3 of Schedule 5. A Biosecurity worker may be any
employee of the Department of Agriculture or Department of Health, or an
employee of another Commonwealth agency whose services have been made available
to those Departments.
The Directors of Human Biosecurity and Director of
Biosecurity may also specify (by written determination) consultants and
contractors of the Departments (or their employees or subcontractors) who are
‘biosecurity workers’ for the purpose of this section.[86]
These determinations are not legislative instruments.[87]
Schedule 6
Schedule 6 proposes to insert a new Part 3A into
Chapter 11 of the Act (comprised of proposed sections 614A to 614H),
creating a new framework for financial grants of assistance for the purpose of
dealing with risks posed by diseases or pests. It is substantially identical to
Schedule 4 of the BAERM Bill.
Grants of financial assistance currently
The Explanatory Memorandum notes that the Commonwealth
already makes a variety of grants for these purposes under section 32B of the FFSP
Act by inserting new items for each program into the relevant Schedule to
the FFSP Regulations.[88]
Amendments proposed by the Bill
The Bill proposes to create a standalone power for the
Agriculture Minister or Health Minister to make, vary or administer
arrangements or grants for dealing with risks posed by diseases or pests on
behalf of the Commonwealth, including with states and territories.
Proposed subsection 614B(1) lists the activities in
relation to which a payment arrangement or grant of financial assistance may be
made. Proposed section 614C requires that grants to states or
territories be set out in a written agreement between the Commonwealth and the
state or territory, which sets out the terms and conditions on which the
financial assistance is granted. The Health Minister or the Agriculture
Minister may enter into such arrangements on behalf of the Commonwealth.
The Senate Select Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills (SSCSB)
had noted its concern with the lack of parliamentary scrutiny of grants or
arrangements, guidance as to how the power might be exercised, and other
matters in its consideration of the BAERM Bill.[89]
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills Concerns
As with its analogous schedule in the BAERM Bill, the SSCSB
drew attention to the broad discretionary power given to the Ministers by
Schedule 6.[90]
As with the previous Bill, the Committee raised the following issues:
- the
lack of Parliamentary Scrutiny of grants or arrangements with states or
territories
- the
lack of guidance as to how the power might be exercised
-
the lack of information as to the terms or conditions on which
financial assistance may be granted (other than that they be in writing)
-
the lack of a requirement to table the written agreement between
the Commonwealth and the state or territory in the Senate.[91]
The Committee requested the Minister’s advice as to:
- whether
the Bill can be amended to include at least high-level guidance as to the terms
and conditions on which financial assistance may be granted and
- whether
the Bill can be amended to include a requirement that written agreements with
the states and territories about grants of financial assistance made under
proposed section 614C are:
- tabled
in the Parliament within 15 sitting days after being made and
- published
on the internet within 30 days after being made.[92]
At the time of writing this Digest, the Minister’s
response had been received but not yet made available by the Committee.[93]
Schedule 7
Schedule 7 consists of 5 parts. The Explanatory Memorandum
adequately explains these measures, summarising that the Schedule would provide
for the following measures:
Allowing a biosecurity industry participant[94]
to make a written declaration to release goods from biosecurity control, where
the biosecurity industry participant is also the person in charge of the goods;
[Part 1]
Providing the relevant Director[95]
with the option of allowing an approved arrangement to remain in force
indefinitely, unless it is revoked; [Part 2]
Extending the power of the relevant Director to give a
direction to a former biosecurity industry participant, to circumstances where
the approved arrangement has expired; [Part 3]
Providing additional powers for an auditor who is carrying
out an audit of an approved or proposed arrangement under section 436 of the
Biosecurity Act; [Part 4] and
Improving the operation of the compensation scheme for
damaged goods or destroyed goods, conveyances or other premises [Part 5].[96]
The Explanatory Memorandum suggests that the amendments in
Part 5 are due in part to the potential for biosecurity industry participants to
claim compensation for damage that they themselves cause:
The amendments proposed by Part 5 of this Schedule to the
Bill seek to assist individuals and businesses to better understand the
circumstances in which compensation may be payable under sections 632 and 633. For
example, it is not intended that sections 632 and 633 would provide
compensation for damage or destruction that is caused by a biosecurity industry
participant who acts in a manner that is not specifically required by a
direction under the Biosecurity Act or by a condition of the approved
arrangement. In such cases, it would be more appropriate for the biosecurity
industry participant to bear responsibility for their own actions.[97]
Part 5 correspondingly proposes to reform the compensation
provisions to increase the discretion of the Director in deciding whether or
not compensation should be paid, and the considerations they may have regard to
in making this decision.
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills concerns
The SSCSB raised concerns with the new discretionary
powers in Part 5 of Schedule 7 of the Bill (the Compensation Scheme), noting
that there was no provision within the Bill that provided that exercises of these
proposed new discretionary powers under proposed sections 632 and 633
would be subject to independent merits review:
The committee considers that, generally, administrative
decisions that will, or are likely to, affect the interests of a person should
be subject to independent merits review unless a sound justification is
provided. It appears that decisions made by the Director of Biosecurity under
section 632 or section 633 of the Biosecurity Act will, or are likely to,
affect individual interests. However, there is nothing on the face of the Act,
the bill, or within the explanatory memorandum, stating that either decision is
subject to independent merits review.[98]
The Committee further noted the Explanatory Memorandum did
not state why decisions made under proposed sections 632 and 633 are not
subject to merits review.[99]
Accordingly, the Committee requested the Minister’s advice
as to:
why it is necessary and appropriate not to provide that
independent merits review will be available in relation to a decision made
under either section 632 or section 633 of the Biosecurity Act 2015.[100]
At the time of writing this Digest, the Minister’s
response had been received but not yet made available by the Committee.[101]
[1]. Pratique
is ‘permission granted to a ship to have dealings with a port, given after
quarantine or on showing a clean bill of health’, Angus, Stevenson, ed., Oxford
English Dictionary, 3rd edn, (Oxford University Press, 2015). As set
out in section 43 of the Biosecurity Act
2015, ‘pratique allows things to be unloaded from, and persons to
disembark from, aircraft or vessels’.
[2]. An
‘approved arrangement’ is an arrangement where a biosecurity industry
participant may carry out certain biosecurity activities to manage biosecurity
risks associated with goods, premises or other things. A biosecurity industry
participant covered by an approved arrangement is authorised and required to
carry out biosecurity activities in accordance with the approved arrangement:
section 404 of the Biosecurity
Act 2015.
[3]. Biosecurity Act 2015, section 9.
[4]. Biosecurity
Act 2015, section 4.
[5]. Department of Agriculture,
Fisheries and Forestry (DAFF), ‘Foot
and Mouth Disease Detected in Indonesia’, media release, 9 May 2022.
[6]. DAFF, ‘Industry
Leaders Back Biosecurity Measures’, media release, 12 August 2022.
[7]. DAFF,
Submission
to the Senate Rural and Regional Affairs and Transport References Committee, Inquiry
into Adequacy of Australia’s Biosecurity Measures and Response Preparedness, in
Particular with Respect to Foot-and-Mouth Disease and Varroa Mite
[Submission no. 73], August 2022.
[8]. Explanatory
Memorandum, Biosecurity Amendment (Strengthening Biosecurity) Bill 2022, 6.
[9]. Howard
Maclean, ‘Biosecurity
Amendment (Enhanced Risk Management) Bill 2021’, Bills Digest, 30, 2021–22,
(Canberra: Parliamentary Library, 2021), 8–11.
[10]. Brett
Walker, Report
of the Special Commission of Inquiry into the Ruby Princess, (Sydney: The
Commission, 14 August 2020), 34.
[11]. Inspector-General
of Biosecurity, Confidence
Testing for At-Border Delivery of Critical Human Biosecurity Functions – Ruby
Princess Cruise Ship Incident, Review Report, 2020–21/02, (Canberra:
DAWE, 29 April 2021), 2.
[12]. Inspector-General
of Biosecurity, Confidence
Testing, 178.
[13]. Explanatory
Memorandum, 2.
[14]. Explanatory
Memorandum, 3.
[15]. Helen
Scott-Orr, Brian Jones and Naveen Bhatia, Uncooked Prawn
Imports: Effectiveness of Biosecurity Controls, (Canberra: Department
of Agriculture and Water Resources, 2017), 6.
[16]. Scott-Orr,
Jones and Bhatia, Uncooked Prawn
Imports, 20.
[17]. BASPA
Schedule 1, Item 1, BAERM Schedule 2, BASB Schedule 4.
[18]. Explanatory
Memorandum, Biosecurity Amendment (Strengthening Penalties) Bill 2021 (BASP),
1; Explanatory
Memorandum, Biosecurity Amendment (Enhanced Risk Management) Bill 2021
(BAERM), 2; Explanatory
Memorandum, Biosecurity Amendment (Strengthening Biosecurity) Bill 2022 (BASB),
3.
[19]. Explanatory
Memorandum, BASB, 3.
[20]. Maclean,
‘Biosecurity
Amendment (Enhanced Risk Management) Bill 2021’, 42–43.
[21]. Explanatory
Memorandum, 111.
[22]. Explanatory
Memorandum, 111.
[23]. Biosecurity
Act 2015, Chapter 7.
[24]. Explanatory
Memorandum, 120.
[25]. Explanatory
Memorandum, 131.
[26]. Senate
Committee for the Selection of Bills, Report,
6, 2022, 27 October 2022.
[27]. Senate
Rural and Regional Affairs and Transport Legislation Committee, Biosecurity
Amendment (Enhanced Risk Management) Bill 2021 [Provisions], (Canberra:
The Senate, October 2021), 17.
[28]. Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills, Scrutiny
Digest, 6, 2022, 26 October 2022: 1–11.
[29]. Maclean, ‘Biosecurity
Amendment (Enhanced Risk Management) Bill 2021’ Bills Digest, 14 and
generally.
[30]. Explanatory
Memorandum, 4.
[31]. The
Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights can be found at page 174 of the
Explanatory Memorandum to the Bill.
[32]. Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights, Human
Rights Scrutiny Report, 5, 20 October 2022, 1.
[33]. Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Delegated Legislation, Inquiry
into the Exemption of Delegated Legislation from Parliamentary Oversight: Interim
Report, (Canberra: The Senate, 2 December 2020), ix–xii. See also, Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Delegated Legislation, Inquiry
into the Exemption of Delegated Legislation from Parliamentary Oversight: Final
Report, (Canberra: The Senate, 16 March 2021).
[34]. See
Chapter 4 of Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills, Review
of Exemption from Disallowance Provisions in the Biosecurity Act 2015: Scrutiny
Digest 7, 2021, 12 May 2021: 33–44; and Scrutiny
Digest, 1, 2022, 4 February 2022: 76–86.
[35]. See
Biosecurity Amendment (Enhanced Risk Management) Bill 2021, Amendment
Sheet 1475.
[36]. See
Biosecurity Amendment (Enhanced Risk Management) Bill 2021, Amendment
Sheet 1475, Items 2 and 6.
[37]. Explanatory
Memorandum, 11 and 20.
[38]. Scrutiny
Digest, 6, 2022, 26 October 2022: 6.
[39]. Biosecurity
Act, subsection 544(1).
[40]. Biosecurity
Act, section 540.
[41]. Biosecurity
Act, section 42.
[42]. Biosecurity (Listed
Human Diseases) Determination 2016, section 4. ‘Human coronavirus with
pandemic potential’ was added on 21 January 2020 via the Biosecurity (Listed
Human Diseases) Amendment Determination 2020. The term ‘human coronavirus
with pandemic potential’ refers to COVID-19, however the determination was made
prior to the WHO adopting the official names for both the disease (COVID-19)
and the coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) on 11 February 2020.
[43]. See
Biosecurity Act 2015, sections 131–149.
[44]. Biosecurity
Act 2015, section 9.
[45]. Proposed
subsections 196A(9) (item 5) and 393B(7) (item 11).
[46]. Biosecurity
Act 2015, subsection 51(7).
[47]. Proposed
subsection 196A(10). See proposed subsection 393B(8) for the
analogous provision.
[48]. Scrutiny
Digest, 6, 2022, 26 October 2022: 7.
[49]. Scrutiny
Digest, 6, 2022, 26 October 2022: 7.
[50]. ‘Ministerial
Responses’, Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills.
[51]. Walker,
Report
of the Special Commission of Inquiry into the Ruby Princess, 58.
[52]. Inspector-General
of Biosecurity, Confidence
Testing, 84.
[53]. Maclean,
‘Biosecurity
Amendment (Enhanced Risk Management) Bill 2021’ Bills Digest, 17–34.
[54]. See
the definition of sensitive information at subsection 6(1) of the
Privacy Act 1988.
[55]. Item
10 of Schedule 3, proposed subsection 9(2).
[56]. A
penalty unit is currently equivalent to $222: see Crimes Act 1914,
section 4AA and Notice
of Indexation of the Penalty Unit Amount, 14 May 2020. Note, however that the Crimes
Amendment (Penalty Unit) Bill 2022, which is currently before Parliament,
proposes to increase the amount of a penalty unit to $275 from 1 January 2023.
This amount would then be indexed on 1 July 2023 and every three years
thereafter.
[57]. A
definition of entrusted person is proposed to be inserted into
section 9 of the Act by item 5 of Schedule 3 to the Bill.
[58]. Proposed
paragraph 580(1)(b).
[59]. Proposed
subsection 580(6).This is consistent with the Attorney-General Department’s
A guide to framing
Commonwealth offences, infringement notices and enforcement powers, albeit
at the upper limits of what is recommended, see page 23.
[60]. Proposed
subsections 580(7) and (5).
[61]. Proposed
section 583.
[62]. Proposed
sections 584 and 585.
[63]. Proposed
section 586.
[64]. Proposed
section 587.
[65]. Proposed
sections 588 and 589.
[66]. Proposed
section 590.
[67]. Proposed
section 590A.
[68]. Proposed
section 590G.
[69]. Proposed
section 590H.
[70]. Explanatory
Memorandum, 62.
[71]. Explanatory
Memorandum, 63.
[72]. Maclean,
‘Biosecurity
Amendment (Enhanced Risk Management) Bill 2021’, 15–17, 35–36.
[73]. Pratique
is the permission granted by officials to vessels or aircraft that allows those
aircraft or vessels to unload or load things and to permit persons to embark or
disembark, (Biosecurity Act, section 43).
Consequently, pratique only imposes an obligation on the operator of the
aircraft, and not any passengers. Individuals who disembark from a vessel or
aircraft that has not been granted pratique do not act unlawfully.
[74]. Biosecurity Act, subsection 519(1); Regulatory Powers
(Standard Provisions) Act 2014, subsection 82(5). A penalty unit is
currently $222. See Crimes
Act 1914, section 4AA and Notice of Indexation
of the Penalty Unit Amount, 14 May 2020. Note, however that the Crimes
Amendment (Penalty Unit) Bill 2022, which is currently before Parliament,
proposes to increase the amount of a penalty unit to $275 on 1 January 2023.
This amount would then be indexed on 1 July 2023 and every three years
thereafter.
[75]. Schedule
2, Part 2, items 5 and 13, proposed subsections 193(1A)
and 194(1A).
[76]. Schedule
2, Part 2, Items 9, 10, 16 and 18.
[77]. Crimes Act 1914,
subsection 4B(3).
[78]. Biosecurity
Act, subsection 519(1); Regulatory Powers
(Standard Provisions) Act 2014, paragraph 82(5)(a).
[79]. Crimes Act 1914,
section 4AA and Notice
of Indexation of the Penalty Unit Amount, 14 May 2020. Note, however that
the Crimes
Amendment (Penalty Unit) Bill 2022, which is currently before Parliament,
proposes to increase the amount of a penalty unit to $275 on 1 January 2023.
This amount would then be indexed on 1 July 2023 and every three years
thereafter.
[80]. Paula
Pyburne, ‘Biosecurity
Bill 2014 [and] Biosecurity (Consequential Amendments and Transitional
Provisions) Bill 2014’, Bills Digest, 93, 2014–15, (Canberra:
Parliamentary Library, 2015), 14; David Markham, ‘Biosecurity
Amendment (Strengthening Penalties) Bill 2021’, Bills Digest, 59,
2020–21, (Canberra: Parliamentary Library, 2020), 2.
[81]. Attorney-General’s
Department (AGD), A Guide to Framing
Commonwealth Offences, Infringement Notices and Enforcement Powers, (Canberra:
AGD, September 2011), 40.
[82]. Explanatory Memorandum, 27.
[83]. Maclean,
‘Biosecurity
Amendment (Enhanced Risk Management) Bill 2021’, 42–44.
[84]. Maclean,
‘Biosecurity
Amendment (Enhanced Risk Management) Bill 2021’, 43.
[85]. Schedule
5, items 4, 5, 6, 9.
[86]. Proposed
subsections 14A(2) and 14A(3).
[87]. Proposed
subsection 14A(4).
[88]. Explanatory
Memorandum, 111.
[89]. Scrutiny
Digest, 15, 2021, 16 September 2021: 14–16.
[90]. Scrutiny
Digest, 6, 2022, 26 October 2022: 7–10; Scrutiny
Digest, 15, 2021, 16 September 2021: 14–16; Scrutiny
Digest, 16, 2021, 21 October 2021: 66–69; Scrutiny
Digest, 17, of 2021, 24 November 2021: 70–73.
[91]. Scrutiny
Digest, 6, 2022, 26 October 2022: 7–10.
[92]. Scrutiny
Digest, 6, 2022, 26 October 2022: 10.
[93]. ‘Ministerial
Responses’, Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills.
[94]. A
‘biosecurity industry participant’ is a person who is a holder of the approval
of an approved arrangement (as defined in section 14 of the Biosecurity Act).
Biosecurity industry participants may, under an approved arrangement, carry out
activities (biosecurity activities) to manage biosecurity risks associated with
specified goods, premises or things—section 404 of the Biosecurity Act.
[95]. The
Director of Biosecurity (the Secretary of the Department of Agriculture,
Fisheries and Forestry) and the Director of Human Biosecurity (Commonwealth
Chief Medical Officer) or their delegates.
[96]. Explanatory
Memorandum, 120.
[97]. Explanatory
Memorandum, 131.
[98]. Scrutiny
Digest, 6, 2022, 26 October 2022: 11.
[99]. Scrutiny
Digest, 6, 2022: 11.
[100]. Scrutiny
Digest, 6, 2022, 26 October 2022: 11.
[101]. ‘Ministerial
Responses’, Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills.
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