This Bills Digest replaces the preliminary Bills Digest published on 12 February 2024.
Key points
The National Vocational Education and Training Regulator Amendment (Strengthening Quality and Integrity in Vocational Education and Training No. 1) Bill 2024 amends the National Vocational Education and Training Regulator Act 2011 (NVETR Act) to:
- enable the automatic lapsing of a Registered Training Organisation’s (RTO) registration where the RTO has not delivered training and/or assessments for 12 consecutive months from 1 January 2023
- prevent RTOs from changing the courses they are registered to deliver to students in the first 2 years of registration
- extend the period ASQA can conduct internal reviews of decisions when a review application is made by an RTO—from 90 to 120 days
- provide greater flexibility to ASQA in terms of how it prioritises initial applications for registration
- provide the Minister for Skills and Training with the power to determine, via a legislative instrument, a specified period where ASQA is not required to or must not accept or process initial applications for RTO registration
- expand offence and civil penalty provisions regarding false and misleading representations made by RTOs
- increase the penalty units specified under certain provisions of the NVETR Act
- make amendments designed to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of VET regulation.
The Bill has not been referred to Committee for inquiry and report.
Introductory Info
Date introduced: 7 February 2024
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Employment and Workplace Relations
Commencement: Part 1 of Schedule 1 commences on the later of 1 July 2024 or 90 days after Royal Assent. Parts 2 to 9 of Schedule 1 commence on the day after Royal Assent.
Purpose of
the Bill
The purpose of the National
Vocational Education and Training Regulator Amendment (Strengthening Quality
and Integrity in Vocational Education and Training No. 1) Bill 2024 (the
Bill) is to amend the National
Vocational Education and Training Regulator Act 2011 (the NVETR Act)
and the National
Vocational Education and Training Regulator (Transitional Provisions) Act 2011
to improve regulation of the vocational education and training (VET) sector.
Structure
of the Bill
The Bill comprises 9 Parts as set out below.
- Part
1—Enables the automatic lapsing of a Registered Training Organisation’s (RTO’s)
NVETR registration where the RTO has not delivered training and/or assessments
for 12 consecutive months from 1 January 2023.
- Part
2—Prevents RTOs from changing the courses they are registered to deliver to
students in the first 2 years of registration.
- Part
3—Extends the period ASQA can conduct internal reviews of decisions when a
review application is made by an RTO—from 90 to 120 days.
- Part
4—Provides greater flexibility to ASQA in terms of how it prioritises initial
applications for registration.
- Part
5—Provides the Minister for Skills and Training with the power to determine,
via a legislative instrument, a specified period where ASQA is not required to
or must not accept or process initial applications for RTO registration.
- Part
6—Expands the offence and civil penalty provisions regarding false and
misleading representations made by RTOs.
- Part
7—Increases the penalty units specified under certain provisions of the NVETR
Act.
- Part
8—Makes amendments to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of VET
regulation including: clarifying how personal information can be used in audit
reports, aligning registration requirements with those under the Education
Services for Overseas Students Act 2000; and clarifying review
processes to align with the processes in the Tertiary
Education Quality and Standards Agency Act 2011.
- Part
9—Sets out transitional arrangements.
Background
The
Vocational Education and Training Sector
Australia’s Vocational
Education and Training (VET) system provides training for jobs from entry
level positions through to highly technical occupations. It also provides
non-employment related training.
The National
Centre for Vocational Education Research states that VET:
… encompasses training delivered by registered training
organisations (RTOs) and other providers that can lead to both nationally
recognised qualifications under the Australian Qualifications Framework (AQF)
and skill sets, as well as certifications or skills from training programs that
are not nationally accredited but respond to local industry and community
needs.
There are some 4,000 RTOs in
Australia. Providers must be registered in order to deliver nationally
recognised courses and AQF-accredited VET qualifications, or to receive
government funding for the provision of VET courses.
Accredited VET programs cover a wide range of activities,
including part-day employer-specific training, general use courses such as
first aid training, year-long employment-related certificates, multi-year
apprenticeships, and postgraduate diplomas. Apprenticeships and traineeships
provide training for specific occupations.
In 2022, there were around
4.5 million VET students (p. 1). Around 3.4 million were enrolled with
private training providers and around 720,000 were enrolled in Technical and
Further Education (TAFE) institutes (p. 11). Around 490,000 were enrolled with
community education providers and others were enrolled at schools,
universities, and enterprise providers (p. 11). Students can be enrolled with
multiple provider types.
Australian
Skills Quality Authority
The Council
of Australian Governments (COAG) agreed to the creation of a National VET
Regulator in December 2009 (p. 1), and ASQA was established in 2011 under the NVETR
Act. All states except Victoria and Western Australia have referred powers
for VET regulation to the Commonwealth.[1]
As the National Vet Regulator (NVR), ASQA:
- registers
training providers
- registers
VET and English language course providers that wish to offer courses to
overseas students studying in Australia (via the Commonwealth Register of
Institutions and Courses for Overseas Students, CRICOS)
- accredits
VET accredited courses.
Providers who only offer courses in Victoria or Western
Australia, and who do not offer online courses or courses for interstate and
overseas students, register with their relevant state regulator instead (the Victorian
Registration and Qualifications Authority or the Western Australian Training
Accreditation Council).
At the time of writing this Bills Digest there were 3,686
training organisations registered with ASQA, representing the vast majority of
the 4,018 RTOs with current registration.[2]
Reviews of
ASQA
When ASQA was established, its role brought the
Commonwealth into greater contact with thousands of RTOs.[3]
ASQA has received considerable scrutiny, including about the nature of its
engagement with RTOs, its leadership structures, and quality issues,
particularly linked to the misuse of the former VET FEE-HELP scheme (replaced
by VET Student Loans in 2017) by unscrupulous providers.[4]
Several reviews of the Australian VET system have sought to address these
issues.
2018
Braithwaite Review of the NVETR Act
In 2017, the Government commissioned a comprehensive
review of the NVETR Act, as well as the broader VET legislative
environment. All
eyes on quality: review of the National Vocational Education and Training
Regulator Act 2011 report (Braithwaite Review) reported in January 2018.
The Braithwaite Review acknowledged the challenging role
ASQA faced in ‘maintaining and improving quality in the VET sector’, given the size
of the sector and the range in size, quality and behaviours among organisations
(p. 7). It found that while ASQA had ‘a wide range of regulatory powers at its
disposal’ and had performed well in evolving its regulatory practice towards
greater sophistication, the VET sector could benefit from ‘a stronger ability
to manage entrance to the market.’ (p. 7)
The Braithwaite Review also uncovered VET student
experiences that ‘could be classed as disappointing if not demoralising’ (p. 9),
and considered that ASQA had helped to address some of the abuses and
exploitation of students by providers:
The review accepts that the establishment of ASQA under the
NVETR Act has, on balance, been a helpful start to establishing a VET
regulatory framework to clean up such abuses. It has reduced overlap and
duplication across the country, and the reforms to ASQA’s audit model augur
well for the future. It is also acknowledged that ASQA performs its essential
role in a complex and challenging environment. Few regulators in Australian
history have cancelled registrations for such a large number of businesses in a
relatively short period of time; yet few have faced such major challenges of
profound importance to Australia’s future. (p. 9)[5]
The Braithwaite
Review contained 23 recommendations, addressing ASQA’s engagement with the
sector, registration requirements, teaching quality, collection and sharing of
data, and protecting and informing students.[6]
Professor Braithwaite stated that the review’s recommendations were intended to
improve the likelihood of positive VET student experiences (p. 5). The Australian
Government response supported 9 of the recommendations, and 11 in
principle. It noted 3 recommendations.
Recommendation 6 was supported by the Australian
Government at the time, and Recommendation 17 was noted (pp. 7–8, 13).
The amendments in Parts 1 and 2 of the Bill implement
Recommendation 6 from the Braithwaite Review:
Recommendation 6: The Australian Government amends the
legislative framework to ensure greater scrutiny of new providers to:
-
provide that where an RTO without reasonable justification does not
commence providing training within 12 months of being registered, or during its
registration ceases to provide training for a 12-month period, its registration
automatically lapses, meaning that it would no longer be registered.
-
prevent RTOs changing the scope of the courses they deliver where an RTO
has been operating for less than 12 months. (p. 66)
The amendments in Part 6 relate to Recommendation 17 of
the Braithwaite Review:
Recommendation 17: The legislative framework be amended to
strengthen ASQA’s ability to take action under a general prohibition against
misleading or deceptive conduct which reflects Australian Consumer Law
requirements. (p. 85)
2019 Joyce
Review of the VET system
Commissioned in November 2018, the Joyce Review of the VET
sector as a whole was delivered in March 2019 as Strengthening
skills: expert review of Australia’s vocational education and training system.
It drew on the Braithwaite Review and its own consultations and analysis, and
was more critical of ASQA:
While there was
general acceptance of the need for a robust national regulator, particularly
after the damage caused to the reputation of the vocational education sector
during the VET FEE-HELP scheme, there was a strong sense that the approach the
regulator is taking to its role is causing its own problems. Most concerningly,
industries and RTOs in a number of jurisdictions, particularly smaller ones
with thin training markets, cited examples of good long-term smaller providers
leaving the sector because of the perceived risks and compliance costs
associated with the way the ASQA regulatory regime is currently being implemented.
(p. 36)
Among its wide-ranging recommendations, the Joyce Review called
for ASQA to ‘urgently be given the new powers’ recommended by the Braithwaite
Review ‘to better control the registration’ of RTOs, including Recommendation 6
(p. 42).
The Government included several response measures to the
Joyce Review in the 2019–20
Budget (pp. 69–70) and the Mid-Year
Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO) 2019–20 (p. 214). Further, in 2019 COAG leaders agreed to
a new ‘Vision’ for VET and the COAG
Skills Council tasked officials with developing a roadmap, agreeing on
three priorities for VET system improvements:
- relevance―actions
in this area will ensure that VET is relevant and responsive to the job market,
employers, industry and learners
- quality―actions
in this area will support public confidence in the quality and value of VET for
students throughout their lives and move it to parity with the higher education
system
- accessibility―actions
in this area will ensure all prospective students and employers can access
suitable information and training when and where it is required, and include a
specific focus on supporting access for disadvantaged Australians. (p. 1)
At the same meeting, the Skills Council:
[agreed that ASQA] should improve its engagement with the VET
sector and expand its educative role…
…[and] called for immediate work to be done to reform ASQA’s
regulatory approach, improve confidence in the regulator and support continuous
improvement in training provision across the VET sector. (p. 1)
Following the meeting, the Australian
Government confirmed its commitment to regulatory reforms in response to the
Braithwaite Review and the Joyce Review.
2023 Nixon Review of exploitation of Australia’s visa
system
In January 2023, the Government commissioned a Rapid
Review into the Exploitation of Australia’s Visa System, that was completed
by the end of March. Its third finding was that the ‘regulation of education
agents must be considered, and the regulation of education providers
strengthened to stop exploitation of the system’ (p. 15).
According to the Explanatory
Memorandum, the Bill ‘responds more broadly to the findings of the Nixon
Review’ in relation to RTOs ‘that do not have the genuine purpose of delivering
quality training and instead undermine integrity in the VET sector and exploit
vulnerable students’ (p. 1).
2023 Joint Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade
report on international education
In his second
reading speech, the Minister for Skills and Training, Brendan O’Connor,
stated the Bill had been informed by the 2023 interim report of the Joint
Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence and Trade: 'Quality
and integrity—the quest for sustainable growth': interim report into
international education.
Recommendation 14 of this report was for the Government to
‘take firm action to address persistent and deep-seated integrity issues in the
private Vocational Education and Training (VET) sector’ (p. xxii). The
Committee suggested that legislative changes could include:
a pause for at least 12 months by Australian Skills Quality
Authority (ASQA) in processing new provider applications for Commonwealth
Register of Institutions and Courses for Overseas Students (CRICOS) registered
VET providers, with limited exceptions for legitimate applications such as
industry linked entities, high economic value proposals or those endorsed by
state and territory governments. (p. xxii)
The amendments in Part 5 of the Bill would allow for such
a pause to be put in place through a ministerial determination.
The Committee also suggested that changes to improve
integrity could include: ‘cancellation of a provider’s CRICOS registration if
no training is delivered for a period of 12 months or more’ (p. xxiii).
The proposed amendments in Part 1 of the Bill would provide for the automatic
lapsing of a RTO’s ASQA registration where the RTO has not delivered training
and/or assessments for 12 consecutive months.
2022 Regulator Performance Omnibus Bill
The amendments in
Part 8 were previously included in Schedule 3 to the Regulator
Performance Omnibus Bill 2022, introduced by the Morrison Government
in the 46th Parliament. This Bill lapsed at the dissolution of the Parliament
on 11 April 2022.
Committee
consideration
Senate
Standing Committee for the Selection of Bills
At its meeting of 8 February 2024, the Selection
of Bills Committee deferred its consideration of whether the Bill should be
referred for inquiry and report.
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
At the time of writing, the Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills had not considered the Bill.
Policy position of non-government
parties/independents
During the debate in the House of Representatives, the
Deputy Leader of the Opposition, Sussan Ley,
stated that after seeking ‘the views of the training sector and business groups’
there was ‘broad alignment on the intent of the Bill.’ However, there was also
feedback about a lack of consultation and transparency, as well as ‘a high
level of caution around this bill, particularly the Minister's new power to
pause the establishment of new training organisations.’
A similar concern was voiced by Sam
Birrell, Deputy Nationals Whip, who focused on a need for more transparency
around the ministerial powers in the Bill.
Independent Dai
Le also scrutinised the ministerial powers in the Bill and called for
constructive consultations with the sector to ensure legislation works to all
parties’ best interest.
Position of
major interest groups
Several major interest groups publicly backed the Bill,
namely the Australian
Education Union, the Australian
Council of Trade Unions and the Australian
Industry Group, seeing the measures for acting against unscrupulous
providers as necessary.
The Independent Tertiary Education Council Australia (ITECA),
the peak body of independent providers in the higher education and VET sectors,
stated
that its members had raised concerns with the Bill:
The amendments to the National Vocational Education
Training Regulator Act 2011 (Cth) appear to create a power that would
allow the government to effectively ban the establishment of new independent
Registered Training Organisations (RTOs). It would also place a ban on some
RTOs expanding the support provided to students by offering new nationally
accredited courses.
ITECA has noted that the amendments introduce a degree of
market intervention that we’ve not seen before, not only in the skills training
system but elsewhere in the economy. It would be concerning if the legislation
to be introduced into the Parliament today did not clearly articulate why and
for how long the government may act to stop the creation of new RTOs, nor spell
out in what circumstances it would stop existing RTOs from seeking to offer new
accredited courses.
ITECA
Chief Executive Troy Williams stated that the council wanted amendments:
ITECA wants to see amendments that strengthen the legislation
by putting in place safeguards. These include placing a limit on the amount of
time that a ban on new RTOs would be in place. It’s also sensible that the
government publish the underpinning reason for making such decisions.
Financial
implications
According to the Explanatory
Memorandum, the Bill would have a positive financial impact of around $2.0
million over the 4 years from 2024–25, and $0.9 million ongoing from 2028–29
(p. 6). This is primarily due to the proposed increase in penalties. The Explanatory
Memorandum notes:
There is necessarily some uncertainty in these projections
relating to the fact that courts have the discretion to determine the
appropriate penalty amount, up to the maximum set under the law. (p. 6)
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.[7]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
At the time of writing, the Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights had not considered the Bill.
Key issues
and provisions
Provider
registration
Lapse of
registration
There is currently no provision for automatic lapsing of
registration with ASQA within the normal term of a provider’s registration if
they meet all the conditions in Subdivision B-Conditions of Registration in
Division 1 of Part 2 of the NVETR Act. The maximum length of
registration, before a renewal application, is set at 7 years.[8]
Item 2 inserts proposed Subdivision C – Lapse of
registration into Division 3 of Part 2 of the NVETR Act, in which proposed
section 40A contains the circumstances that give rise to a lapse of
registration and the actions to be taken. It stipulates that a registration
lapses if the organisation does not provide assessments or training necessary
to ‘satisfy a requirement of a VET qualification or a unit of competency or
module in relation to a VET statement of attainment’ over a period of 12 consecutive
months beginning on or after 1 January 2023 (called the measurement
period). In that case, the National VET Regulator must give the
organisation a written notice to that effect: proposed subsection 40A(3)
and the organisation must return its certificate of registration: proposed
subsection 40A(4).
Proposed section 40B allows organisations to seek
an extension of the measurement period. The organisation must
make an application for an extension at least 90 days before the end of the 12-month
period during which the relevant activities have not occurred. This provision
allows for the National VET Regulator to give an extension of up to 12 months.
If an organisation is given notice that its registration
lapsed and it does not return its certification of registration within 10 days,
it is liable to a maximum civil penalty of 600 penalty units (equivalent to
$187,800), under proposed subsection 112(3), inserted by item 3.[9]
The Explanatory
Memorandum states the following:
It is intended that extensions will only be
granted where the reason for which the NVR RTO has not provided training or
assessments is demonstrably outside the control of the NVR RTO. Such limited
circumstances could include, for example, natural disasters such as fire,
flood, or pandemic events. Provided an NVR RTO begins delivering training
and/or assessment within the period specified in the extension and it
demonstrates that it is otherwise capable and committed, the NVR RTO’s
registration will not lapse after the extension period concludes (p. 8).
A decision to extend or not extend the period before a
registration lapses is a reviewable decision, under
the NVETR Act.[10] Such a decision is reviewable at first instance by the National VET
Regulator[11] and then by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal if the Regulator has
affirmed or varied the original decision.[12]
Scope of
registration
ASQA defines the scope of
registration as the VET ‘training package qualifications, accredited courses
and units of competency that [a] Registered Training Organisation (RTO) is
approved to deliver.’ RTOs must apply to ASQA to add or remove training package
qualifications, accredited courses and unites of competency.
RTOs have their scope of registration listed on the national register.
Item 12 of the Bill inserts proposed subsection
32(3) into the NVETR Act to prevent organisations from applying to
change the scope of their registration until they have been registered for at
least 24 months at the time of applying.
Whilst items 1–12 of the Bill are intended to implement Recommendation 6
of the Braithwaite Review (p. 66), the amendment to section 32 goes
further than the recommendation which was to prevent a change of scope for RTOs
that have been operating for less than 12 months.
New
ministerial powers
Suspension of initial applications for registration
Currently section 16 of the NVETR Act allows for either
a person, or a body of a state or territory to apply for registration with the National
VET Regulator (NVR), as an NVR registered training organisation. The relevant
application for registration must be ‘in a form approved by the National VET
regulator’ and accompanied by documents required by the Regulator. An
application fee determined by the Minister by legislative instrument is payable
at the time the application is made.[13]
Item 22 of the Bill inserts proposed Division 3C—Suspension
of initial applications for registration into Part 12 of the NVETR Act.
The new Division consists of proposed sections 231C to 231F.
Proposed subsections 231C(1) and (2) provide that
the Minister may determine that the NVR is not required to process
initial applications for registration as an RTO until after a day specified in
a legislative instrument. The pause in processing initial applications extends
from the day the instrument commences until after a day specified in the
instrument.
In addition, proposed subsections 231C(3) and (4)
provide that the Minister may determine that the NVR must not deal with initial
applications for registration as an RTO until after a day specified in a
legislative instrument. The suspension of processing of initial applications
extends from the day the instrument commences until after a day specified in
the instrument.
Proposed subsection 231C(5) provides that these
legislative instruments may apply to all initial applications, or one or more
classes of initial applications and may apply to initial applications made
before and/or after the commencement of the instrument.
Importantly, proposed subsection 231C(6) provides
that the relevant legislative instruments are not subject to disallowance. This
reflects subsection 44(1) of the Legislation
Act 2003, which provides that a legislative instrument made under
an Act that:
(a) facilitates
the establishment or operation of an intergovernmental body or scheme involving
the Commonwealth and one or more States or Territories; and
(b) authorises
the instrument to be made by the body or for the purposes of the body or scheme
is not subject to disallowance unless otherwise provided.
As set out in the Explanatory
Memorandum:
This process [of obtaining Ministerial Council approval of
determinations proposed to be made by the Minister, discussed below] is the
product of the Act’s initial drafting which followed the then Council of
Australian Governments’ decision to establish a new approach to national
regulation of VET. The Act was enacted consistent with the Intergovernmental
Agreement for Regulatory Reform in VET, thereby facilitating the establishment
and operation of an intergovernmental scheme involving the Commonwealth and
referring States for the purposes of VET regulation (p. 39).
Proposed subsection 231D(1) allows the Minister to
determine that no initial applications for registration can be made. The pause
in accepting initial applications extends from the day the instrument commences
until after a day specified in the instrument. The relevant legislative
instrument can apply to all initial applications or to specific classes of
application: proposed subsection 231D(3).[14]
The legislation instrument is not subject to disallowance: proposed
subsection 231D(4). The Government explains
that this is for the same reasons as outlined above, namely that it is an
instrument made under an Act that facilitates the establishment and operation
of an intergovernmental scheme involving the Commonwealth and referring states
for the purposes of VET regulation (pp. 40-41).
Proposed section 231E and section 231F stipulate
that in making the determinations above, the Minister must first consult with
the NVR and gain the agreement of the Ministerial Council. The Ministerial
Council, defined in the Act as ‘a body established by the Council of Australian
Governments to deal with training and skills’, is the Skills
and Workforce Ministerial Council. Requiring the consent of the Ministerial
Council prior to the implementation of the legislative instruments means that
it must consider the views of the states and territories, as well as ASQA.
Expanded
and increased penalties
False or
misleading representations
Item 23 of the Bill inserts criminal offences and
civil penalties for ‘making false or misleading representation’ in
advertisements or relating to VET courses, qualifications or operations.
Similar provisions exist under Subdivision C – Other
prohibited conduct in Division 1 of Part 6 of the NVETR Act. Those
provisions relate to ‘a person’ committing an offence or contravening a civil
penalty provision. The provisions of this Bill relate to an RTO. In 2020, an
ASQA investigation led to the conviction
and fine of Qualify Me! Pty Ltd under section 123A, for advertising a course as
a non-RTO without making clear who the actual issuer of the qualification was.
Proposed sections 100A to 100D are to be inserted
into Subdivision A—Conduct by NVR registered training organisations in Division
1 of Part 6. The Explanatory
Memorandum states that these additions broaden the ‘existing provisions to
clarify that prohibited conduct includes making false and misleading
representations in relation to the NVR RTO’s operations’ (p. 3).
Proposed provisions cover false or misleading
representation connected to advertisements and an organisation’s operations, in
relation to VET courses and qualifications. Prohibited conduct includes false
or misleading claims in advertising, publishing false or misleading
descriptions and images of an RTO’s facilities or location, fabricating
testimonials, falsely claiming associations or endorsements and misleading
potential student about student services offered by the RTO (p. 3).
The offences and civil penalty provisions are in
equivalent terms—but carry a different standard of proof and different monetary
penalties. The maximum penalty for an offence is 300 penalty units (equivalent
to $93,900) whilst the maximum civil penalty is 600 penalty units (equivalent
to $187,800).
In addition, item 24 of the Bill amends the table
in section 133A of the NVETR Act so that an executive officer of a
registered training organisation commits an offence if the organisation commits
an offence; the officer knew that the offence would be committed; the officer
was in a position to influence the conduct of the organisation in relation to
the commission of the offence; and the officer failed to take all reasonable
steps to prevent the commission of the offence (subsection 133(1)).
Penalty
Increases
The table below compares current and updated penalty amounts
which are set out in items 25–65 of the Bill.
Table 1 Proposed
increases in penalty units
Provision |
Current penalty
(units) |
Proposed
penalty (units) |
64 Failure to comply with National VET Regulator’s
request |
30 |
150 |
71 Failure
to comply with a request by an authorised officer to answer questions or
produce documents |
30 |
150 |
79 Failure of an occupant to provide reasonable
facilities and assistance for the effective exercise of an authorised
officer’s powers under a warrant |
30 |
150 |
93 Offence for providing all or part of VET course which
is outside the RTO’s scope of registration |
120 |
600 |
94 Civil penalty for providing all or part of VET course
which is outside the RTO’s scope of registration |
240 |
1,200 |
95 Offence of issuing a VET qualification which is outside
the RTO’s scope of registration |
300 |
1,500 |
96 Civil penalty for issuing a VET qualification which is
outside the RTO’s scope of registration |
600 |
3,000 |
97 Offence of issuing a VET statement of attainment which
is outside the RTO’s scope of registration |
300 |
1,500 |
98 Civil penalty for issuing a VET statement of
attainment which is outside the RTO’s scope of registration |
600 |
3,000 |
99 Offence of advertising all or part of a VET course which
is outside the RTO’s scope of registration |
120 |
600 |
100 Civil penalty for advertising all or part of a VET
course which is outside the RTO’s scope of registration |
240 |
1,200 |
101(1) and (2) Offence of engaging in certain conduct which
is prohibited while the RTO’s scope of registration is suspended |
120 |
600 |
102(1) and (2) Civil penalty for engaging in certain
conduct which is prohibited while the RTO’s scope of registration is suspended |
240 |
1,200 |
103(1) and (2) Offence of issuing a VET qualification
without providing an adequate assessment |
120 |
600 |
104(1) and
(2) Civil penalty for issuing a VET qualification without providing an
adequate assessment |
240 |
1,200 |
105(1) and
(2) Offence of issuing a VET statement of attainment without
providing an adequate assessment |
120 |
600 |
106(1) and
(2) Civil penalty for issuing a VET statement of attainment without
providing an adequate assessment |
240 |
1,200 |
107 Offence of issuing a VET qualification without
ensuring that the student satisfied the requirements of the qualification |
120 |
600 |
108 Civil penalty for issuing a VET qualification without
ensuring that the student satisfied the requirements of the qualification |
240 |
1,200 |
109 Offence of issuing a VET statement of attainment
without ensuring that the student satisfied the requirements of the units of
competency or modules specified in the statements |
120 |
600 |
110 Civil penalty for issuing a VET statement of
attainment without ensuring that the student satisfied the requirements of
the units of competency or modules specified in the statements |
240 |
1,200 |
111(1) Civil penalty for an RTO which breaches a condition
of its registration |
240 |
1,200 |
111(2) Civil penalty for an RTO which breaches a
condition of its registration as prescribed by regulations |
120 |
600 |
112(1) and (2)
Civil penalty for a failure to return certificate of registration |
120 |
600 |
114 Offence of falsely claiming to
be an NVR registered training organisation |
300 |
1,500 |
115 Civil penalty for falsely claiming
to be an NVR registered training organisation |
600 |
3,000 |
116(1) and (2) Offence of providing,
or offering to provide, all or part of a VET course without registration |
300 |
1,500 |
117(1) and (2) Civil penalty for providing,
or offering to provide, all or part of a VET course without registration |
600 |
3,000 |
118 Offence of issuing VET
qualification if the person is not an RTO |
300 |
1,500 |
119 Civil penalty for a person who
is not an RTO issuing a VET qualification |
600 |
3,000 |
120 Offence of a person who is not
an RTO issuing a VET statement of attainment |
300 |
1,500 |
121 Civil penalty for a person
who is not an RTO issuing a VET statement of attainment |
600 |
3,000 |
123A Offence for a person who advertises
or offers a VET course without identifying the issuer of VET qualification or
statement of attainment |
60 |
300 |
123B
Civil penalty for a person who advertises or offers a VET course without
identifying the issuer of VET qualification or statement of attainment |
120 |
600 |
126
Offence of purporting to issue a VET qualification |
300 |
1,500 |
127
Civil penalty for a person purporting to issue a VET qualification |
600 |
3,000 |
128
Offence of purporting to issue a VET statement of attainment |
300 |
1,500 |
129
Civil penalty for a person purporting to issue a VET statement of attainment |
600 |
3,000 |
130
Civil penalty for a person who breaches a condition of accreditation |
120 |
600 |
140(5)
Offence of failing to give the National VET Regulator all reasonable
assistance in connection with an application for a pecuniary penalty order
for a contravention of a civil penalty provision |
30 |
150 |
211(3)
Offence of failing to provide VET student records to the National VET
Regulator |
150 |
750 |
211(4) Civil penalty for
failing to provide VET student records to the National VET Regulator |
300 |
1,500 |
Sources: National
Vocational Education and Training Regulator Amendment (Strengthening Quality
and Integrity in Vocational Education and Training No. 1) Bill 2024 and the
National
Vocational Education and Training Regulator Act 2011.