This
is a preliminary Bills Digest produced to assist early consideration of the
Bill. It provides some background and links to relevant resources. It will be
replaced with a more comprehensive Bills Digest in due course.
Key points
- The Royal Commissions Amendment (Private Sessions) Bill 2023 (the Bill) amends the private sessions regime established under Part 4 of the Royal Commissions Act 1902.
- Private sessions were first introduced in 2013 for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. Access to private sessions was extended in 2019 and private sessions may currently be utilised by the Royal Commission into Violence, Abuse, Neglect and Exploitation of People with Disability and the Royal Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide. The Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety was also permitted to hold private sessions but did not do so.
- At present, private sessions may only be conducted by a sole Commissioner, the Chair of a multi-member royal commission, or another Commissioner who is authorised in writing by the Chair.
- The amendments allow a sole Commissioner or the Chair of a multi-member Royal Commission to authorise, in writing, an ‘Assistant Commissioner’ to hold private sessions. This power cannot be delegated and can only be used when the Commissioner or Chair considers circumstances exist to justify the person holding private sessions.
- The Assistant Commissioner must be a staff member of the Royal Commission, considered by the Chair or sole Commissioner to have suitable qualifications and experience, and an appropriate level of seniority, to hold private sessions.
- These measures are aimed at providing greater opportunity for more people to provide sensitive and confidential personal information in a non-threatening and informal environment of a private session. They will provide further flexibility for Royal Commissions in conducting an enquiry.
Introductory Info
Date introduced: 7 September 2023
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Attorney-General
Commencement: The day after Royal Assent
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the Royal
Commissions Amendment (Private Sessions) Bill 2023 (the Bill) is to amend Part
4 of the Royal
Commissions Act 1902 (the RC Act) to adjust the private sessions
regime. The Bill provides for a sole Commissioner or Chair of a multi-member Commission
to authorise a senior and experienced member of staff to hold private sessions.
As explained in the Attorney-General’s second
reading speech:
Currently under the Act, only a sole Commissioner, the Chair
of a multi-member royal commission, or another Commissioner who is authorised
in writing by the Chair, may conduct private sessions.
This bill proposes amendments to Part 4 of the Act to
introduce a new definition of ‘Assistant Commissioner’ into the Act and related
amendments to enable an Assistant Commissioner to hold private sessions for
royal commissions, whether they are constituted by a sole Commissioner or
multiple Commissioners.
Private sessions were first established for the Royal
Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse as a way of
facilitating the telling of very personal and sensitive matters in a manner
that was less formal or threatening. Private sessions allow people to share
their experiences with a Royal Commissioner in a confidential setting with the
aim, as stated in the Attorney-General’s second
reading speech for the Bill to:
…allow more people to engage with the royal commission and
have their experience heard.
Private sessions can now be used by Royal Commissions that
have been prescribed under section 7 of the Royal Commissions
Regulations 2019. The regulations permit both the Royal Commission into
Violence, Abuse, Neglect and Exploitation of People with Disability and the
Royal
Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide to hold private sessions. The Royal Commission into Aged
Care Quality and Safety (October 2018 to March 2021) was also permitted to
hold private sessions but did not do so.
Background
Part 4 of the RC Act was introduced by the Royal Commissions
Amendment Act 2013 to facilitate private sessions for the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to
Child Sexual Abuse (Child Sexual Abuse Royal Commission).[1]
The Royal Commissions
Amendment (Private Sessions) Act 2019 (2019 Act) provided that
the holding of private sessions be extended to other royal commissions.[2]
The 2019 Act also provided that only sole
commissioners, the chair of multi-member commissions or a commissioner
authorised by the chair could hold private sessions. The 2019 Bill as
introduced into Parliament would have allowed assistant commissioners to hear
private evidence,[3]
but the Government changed that provision after consulting with the disability
community:
Following further engagement with stakeholders, the
Government has determined that only Royal Commissioners should be empowered to
hold private sessions.[4]
The removal of the provision at that time was explained in
the following terms:
While there may be circumstances where it is appropriate for
a senior staff member with particular skills to receive evidence in a private
session in the context of some future royal commissions, Labor agrees that it
would not be appropriate in the context of the disability royal commission.
Labor recognises that survivors of abuse should have the opportunity to have
their stories heard by a commissioner and not by a senior staff member, however
qualified that person may be. While there was no suggestion that the chair of
the disability royal commission would in fact delegate to senior staff members
the power to hold private sessions, the existence of such a power caused
understandable anxiety for some in the disability community. We thank Senator
Steele-John and disability advocates for raising their concerns with Labor on
this issue. We also thank the government for working with Labor to positively
and constructively respond to those concerns by moving this amendment.[5]
The proposed changes in the 2023 Bill will allow the Chair
of a multi-member Royal Commission or a sole Commissioner (as the case may be) to
give written authorisation for other delegates to conduct private sessions.
These individuals would be drawn from the existing pool of senior staff working
for any given Royal Commission.[6]
Assistant Commissioner appointees would only be made in
circumstances that justified the authorisation, and the determination of whether
that person had appropriate seniority, qualifications and experience would be made
by the appointing Chair of a multi-member Royal Commission or a sole
Commissioner. The Assistant Commissioners will not be authorised to undertake
any other role or to exercise any powers of a commissioner for the royal
commission.[7]
Under the reforms, Assistant Commissioners will be granted
the same protections and immunity as High Court justices in the exercise of
their duties.[8]
Involvement in private sessions is voluntary, and
participants are afforded similar protections to witnesses. Information given
at private sessions is not given under oath or affirmation. Private sessions
are not hearings of the Royal Commission, the information provided at a private
session is not evidence and the person giving information at the private session
is not considered a Royal Commission witness.[9]
A number of strong protections apply in relation to private sessions, to
encourage people to give information to a Royal Commission without being
concerned about adverse consequences of doing so.[10]
CEO of Disability Advocacy Network Australia Jeff Smith
praised the idea of private sessions:
"(They are) less stressful - insofar as it is more
informal and less alienating for people - and may make people feel and be
safer," he told AAP.
"Private sessions are a more flexible, trauma-informed
way for people to get access to and (offer) stories and information before
royal commissions”.[11]
Committee
consideration
At the time of writing, the Bill had not been referred to,
or reported on by, any committees.
Financial
implications
According to the Explanatory
Memorandum there are no financial impacts in relation to this Bill
(p. 2). The costs will be managed by a Royal Commission within its budget.
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.[12]
Resources
At the time of writing this preliminary Bills Digest,
there was little commentary or views on the Bill. The following links provide
broader background information on Royal Commission private sessions:
- ‘Private
sessions’, Royal Commission into Violence, Abuse, Neglect and Exploitation
of People with Disability.
- ‘Private
sessions’, Royal Commission into Defence and Veteran Suicide.
- ‘Private
sessions’, Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual
Abuse.
- ‘Final
report private sessions’, Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to
Child Sexual Abuse.
- ‘How
am I protected in a private session?’, Your Story Disability Legal Support.
- ‘How
am I protected in a private session?’, Defence and Veterans Legal Service.
- Attorney-General’s
Department, Review
of confidentiality protections in the Royal Commissions Act 1902,
Report, March 2022.
- J.
Tjandra, ‘From
fact finding to truth-telling: an analysis of the changing functions of
Commonwealth Royal Commissions’, UNSW Law Journal, 45(1), 2022, 341–369.