An Act to provide for the appointment of an Ombudsman; to define
the functions of the Ombudsman; and for purposes connected
therewith.
Part 1 Preliminary
1 Name of Act
This Act may be cited as the Ombudsman Act
1974.
2 Commencement
(1) This Act, Part 3 excepted, commences on the date of assent to this
Act.
(2) Part 3 commences on such day as may be appointed by the Governor
in respect thereof and as may be notified by proclamation published in the
Gazette.
3 (Repealed)
4 Act binds Crown
This Act binds the Crown not only in right of New South Wales but
also, so far as the legislative power of Parliament permits, the Crown in all
its other capacities.
5 Definitions
(1) In this Act, except in so far as the context or subject-matter
otherwise indicates or requires:administration includes
administration of an estate or a trust whether involving the exercise of
executive functions of government or the exercise of other
functions.
appointed
day means the day appointed and notified under section 2
(2).
conduct
means:
(a) any action or inaction relating to a matter of administration,
and
(b) any alleged action or inaction relating to a matter of
administration.
Department and Department Head have the
same meaning as in the Public Sector
Management Act 1988.
head
means:
(a) in relation to a public authority that is a Department or who is a
public servant or other person employed in or for the purposes of a
Department—the Department Head of the Department,
and
(b) in relation to a public authority that is a local government
authority, or a member or employee of a local government authority—the
mayor (or other presiding officer) of the local government authority,
and
(c) in relation to a public authority that is a corporation sole, or
who is a person employed by a corporation sole—the person constituting
the corporation, and
(d) in relation to a public authority that is any other body, whether
incorporated or unincorporated, or who is a person employed by such a
body—the chief executive officer of that body or, if the affairs of the
body are directed by a governing body, the person who presides at meetings of
that governing body, and
(e) in any other case—the person prescribed by the regulations,
or in the absence of any regulation prescribing a person, the person who, in
the opinion of the Ombudsman, is the chief executive of the public
authority.
Joint
Committee means the joint committee called the Committee on the
Ombudsman, the Police Integrity Commission and the Crime Commission,
constituted under this Act.
local
government authority means a council or a county council within the
meaning of the Local Government Act
1993.
person
includes an unincorporated body of persons.
police
conduct means conduct of a police officer within the meaning of Part
8A of the Police Act
1990.
public
authority means:
(a) any person appointed to an office by the
Governor,
(b) any statutory body representing the Crown,
(c) any Department or any public servant employed in a
Department,
(d) any person in the service of the Crown or of any statutory body
representing the Crown,
(e) any person in relation to whom or to whose function an account is
kept of administration or working expenses, where the account:(i) is part of the accounts prepared pursuant to the Public Finance and Audit Act
1983,
(ii) is required by or under any Act to be audited by the
Auditor-General,
(iii) is an account with respect to which the Auditor-General has powers
under any law,
(iv) is an account with respect to which the Auditor-General may
exercise powers under a law relating to the audit of accounts where requested
to do so by a Minister of the Crown,
(f) any person entitled to be reimbursed his or her expenses, from a
fund of which an account mentioned in paragraph (e) is kept, of attending
meetings or carrying out the business of any body constituted by an
Act,
(f1) any accredited certifier within the meaning of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979,
(g) any holder of an office declared by the regulations to be an
office of a public authority for the purposes of this Act,
(g1) any local government authority or any member or employee of a
local government authority, and
(h) any person acting for or on behalf of, or in the place of, or as
deputy or delegate of, any person described in any of the foregoing
paragraphs.
regulations means regulations
made under this Act.
responsible
Minister means:
(a) in relation to a public authority that is a Department or who is a
public servant or other person employed in or for the purposes of a
Department—the Minister responsible for that Department or, in the case
where more than one Minister is responsible for that Department, the Minister
who, in the opinion of the Ombudsman, is most nearly connected with the
conduct of that Department, and
(b) in relation to a public authority that is a local government
authority or a member or employee of a local government authority—the
Minister administering the Local Government
Act 1993, and
(c) in relation to a public authority, not referred to in paragraph
(a) or (b), involved in the administration of an Act or part of an
Act—the Minister administering the Act or the relevant part of the Act,
and
(d) in relation to any other public authority—the Minister who,
in the opinion of the Ombudsman, is the most nearly concerned with the conduct
of the public authority.
Supreme
Court means the Supreme Court of New South
Wales.
(1A) In this Act, a reference to an investigation under this Act
includes a reference to an investigation of police conduct under this Act
pursuant to Part 8A of the Police Act
1990.
(2) (Repealed)
(3) A reference in this Act, except in section 37 (2) (e), to an
officer of the Ombudsman includes a reference to an acting Ombudsman, a Deputy
Ombudsman and an Assistant Ombudsman.
(4) In this Act, a reference to:(a) a function includes a reference to a power, authority and duty,
and
(b) the exercise of a function includes, where the function is a duty,
a reference to the performance of the duty.
(5) Notes included in this Act do not form part of this
Act.
5A References to Presiding Officers
(1) In this Act, a reference to a Presiding Officer of a House of
Parliament is a reference to the President of the Legislative Council or the
Speaker of the Legislative Assembly.
(2) If there is a vacancy in the office of President, the reference to
the President is taken to be a reference to the Clerk of the Legislative
Council.
(3) If there is a vacancy in the office of Speaker, the reference to
the Speaker is taken to be a reference to the Clerk of the Legislative
Assembly.
Part 2 The Ombudsman
6 Office of Ombudsman
(1) The Governor may, on the recommendation of the Minister, appoint
an Ombudsman on such terms and conditions as are specified in the instrument
of appointment.
(2) Subject to this Act, the Ombudsman holds office for such period,
not exceeding seven years, as is specified in the instrument of his or her
appointment and is eligible for re-appointment.
(3) A person is not eligible for appointment as Ombudsman if the
person:(a) is of or above the age of 65 years, or
(b) is a member of the Legislative Council or the Legislative Assembly
or is a member of a House of Parliament of another State or of the
Commonwealth.
(4) The Ombudsman vacates the office of Ombudsman:(a) on the day on which he or she attains the age of 65 years,
or
(b) if he or she engages in any paid employment outside the duties of
the office, or
(c) if he or she is nominated for election as a member of the
Legislative Council or the Legislative Assembly or as a member of a House of
Parliament of another State or of the Commonwealth, or
(d) if he or she resigns the office by instrument in writing addressed
to the Governor and the Governor accepts the
resignation.
(5) The Ombudsman may, at any time, be removed from office by the
Governor upon the address of both Houses of
Parliament.
(6) The provisions of the Public
Sector Management Act 1988 do not apply to the appointment of
the Ombudsman and the Ombudsman is not subject to those
provisions.
(7) The Ombudsman is entitled to be paid:(a) remuneration in accordance with the Statutory and Other Offices Remuneration Act
1975, and
(b) such travelling and subsistence allowances as the Minister may
from time to time determine in respect of the
Ombudsman.
(8) The Ombudsman has and may exercise the functions conferred or
imposed on the Ombudsman by or under this or any other
Act.
(9) Despite subsection (4) (b), the Ombudsman does not vacate the
office of Ombudsman if the Ombudsman engages in paid employment outside the
duties of the office with the approval of the
Minister.
6A Veto of proposed appointment of Ombudsman
(1) A person is not to be appointed as Ombudsman until:(a) a proposal that the person be appointed has been referred to the
Joint Committee under section 31BA, and
(b) either the period that the Joint Committee has under that section
to veto the proposed appointment has ended without the Committee having vetoed
the proposed appointment or the Committee notifies the Minister that it has
decided not to veto the proposed appointment.
(2) A person may be proposed for appointment on more than one
occasion.
(3) In this section and section 31BA, appointment includes
re-appointment.
7 Acting Ombudsman
(1) The Governor may, on the recommendation of the Minister, appoint
an acting Ombudsman during the absence of the Ombudsman or during a vacancy in
the office of Ombudsman.
(2) An acting Ombudsman is entitled to be paid such remuneration
(including travelling and subsistence allowances) as the Minister may from
time to time determine in respect of the Ombudsman.
(3) No person shall be concerned to inquire whether or not any
occasion has arisen requiring or authorising an acting Ombudsman to act as
Ombudsman.
(4) An acting Ombudsman when acting as Ombudsman is taken to be the
Ombudsman.
8 Deputy Ombudsman and Assistant Ombudsman—appointment
etc
(1) The Ombudsman may appoint one or more Deputy Ombudsman and
Assistant Ombudsman.
(1A) The Ombudsman must appoint a Deputy Ombudsman as the Community and
Disability Services Commissioner for the purposes of the Community Services (Complaints, Reviews and
Monitoring) Act 1993.
(2) The provisions of section 6 (3) (b), (4) (b)–(d) and (5)
apply to and in respect of a Deputy Ombudsman and an Assistant Ombudsman in
the same way that they apply to and in respect of the
Ombudsman.
(3) The employment of a Deputy Ombudsman and an Assistant Ombudsman is
subject to Part 2A of the Public Sector
Management Act 1988, but is not subject to Part 2 of that
Act.
(4) Section 42Q (Removal of executive officers from office) of the
Public Sector Management Act
1988 applies to and in respect of a Deputy Ombudsman and an
Assistant Ombudsman as if the references in that section to the Governor were
references to the Department Head within the meaning of that
Act.
(5) If a Deputy Ombudsman or an Assistant Ombudsman is appointed as
acting Ombudsman, he or she does not, on that account, cease to be Deputy
Ombudsman or an Assistant Ombudsman.
(6) Despite subsection (2), section 6 (4) (b) does not apply to or in
respect of a Deputy Ombudsman or an Assistant Ombudsman if the Deputy
Ombudsman or Assistant Ombudsman engages in paid employment outside the duties
of the office of Deputy Ombudsman or Assistant Ombudsman with the approval of
the Ombudsman.
8A Deputy Ombudsman and Assistant
Ombudsman—functions
(1) A Deputy Ombudsman may, to the extent to which he or she is
directed by the Ombudsman to do so, exercise any function of the Ombudsman
other than the following functions:(a) a function conferred or imposed by section 9, 10, 10A, 21C or
30,
(b) the power to accept or to refuse to accept a delegation to which
section 10B applies,
(c) the power to exercise or to refuse to exercise a function
conferred on the Ombudsman as referred to in section
10B.
(2) For the purposes of this Act (except section 37 (2) (d)), an
Assistant Ombudsman is a special officer of the
Ombudsman.
8B Acting Deputy Ombudsman and Assistant Ombudsman
(1) The Ombudsman may, from time to time, appoint a person to be an
acting Deputy Ombudsman or Assistant Ombudsman, and the Ombudsman may revoke
any such appointment.
(2) In the absence of a Deputy Ombudsman or an Assistant Ombudsman, a
person so appointed is to act in the place of the Deputy Ombudsman or
Assistant Ombudsman.
(3) While acting in the place of a Deputy Ombudsman or an Assistant
Ombudsman, a person has all the functions of the Deputy Ombudsman or Assistant
Ombudsman and is taken to be a Deputy Ombudsman or an Assistant
Ombudsman.
9 Special officers
The Ombudsman may appoint an officer of the Ombudsman to be a
special officer of the Ombudsman.
10 Delegation
(1) Subject to subsection (2), the Ombudsman may delegate to a special
officer of the Ombudsman the exercise of any functions of the Ombudsman,
including any function which the Ombudsman may exercise pursuant to section
10B.
(2) The Ombudsman may not delegate the exercise of:(a) any function to make any report under this Act, except in
accordance with subsection (2A),
(b) any function conferred by section 9, 10A or 21C, or the power to
accept or to refuse to accept a delegation to which section 10B applies or the
power to exercise or to refuse to exercise a function conferred on the
Ombudsman as referred to in that section,
(b1) any function conferred by section 19 (2), other than to an
Assistant Ombudsman, or
(c) the function conferred by subsection (1).
(d), (e) (Repealed)
(2A) The Ombudsman may delegate the exercise of the function to make a
report:(a) under section 26 or 29, to an Assistant Ombudsman,
and
(b) under section 28 or 29 (1) (a) or (2) (a), to a special officer of
the Ombudsman.
(3) A delegation under this section may be made subject to conditions
or limitations as to the exercise of any of the functions delegated, or as to
time or circumstances.
(4) A delegation under this section must be made by instrument in
writing.
(5) An instrument of delegation must specify:(a) the functions the exercise of which is delegated,
and
(b) any conditions or limitations on the
delegation.
(6) The Ombudsman may revoke a delegation under this section at any
time, whether made by the Ombudsman or not.
(7) A delegation under this section is not revoked by the happening of
a vacancy in the office of Ombudsman or by an absence or disability of the
Ombudsman, except to the extent that the instrument of delegation so
provides.
(8) During a vacancy in the office of Ombudsman, if there is no acting
Ombudsman, the Minister may revoke a delegation under this
section.
(9) Notwithstanding any delegation made under this section, the
Ombudsman may continue to exercise all or any of the functions
delegated.
10A Delegation to other Ombudsman
(1) The Ombudsman may delegate the exercise of any functions of the
Ombudsman under sections 13A, 18, 19 (1), 20 and 23 to a person who is
empowered to exercise under a law of another State, the Commonwealth or a
Territory of the Commonwealth functions similar to the functions exercised by
the Ombudsman under this Act, where:(a) the Ombudsman is of the opinion that an investigation authorised
to be carried out by the Ombudsman under this Act may more effectively or more
appropriately be carried out by the person to whom it is proposed the
delegation be made, and
(b) the delegation is for the purpose of enabling that person to carry
out that investigation.
(2) A delegation under this section may be made subject to conditions
or limitations as to the exercise of any of the functions delegated, or as to
time or circumstances.
(3) A delegation under this section must be made by instrument in
writing.
(4) An instrument of delegation must specify:(a) the functions the exercise of which is delegated,
and
(b) any conditions or limitations on the
delegation.
(5) The Ombudsman may revoke a delegation under this section at any
time, whether made by that Ombudsman or not.
(6) A delegation under this section is not revoked by the happening of
a vacancy in the office of Ombudsman or by an absence or disability of the
Ombudsman, except to the extent that the instrument of delegation so
provides.
(7) During a vacancy in the office of Ombudsman, if there is no acting
Ombudsman, the Minister may revoke a delegation under this
section.
(8) Notwithstanding any delegation made under this section, the
Ombudsman may continue to exercise all or any of the functions
delegated.
(9) Where the exercise of a function is delegated under this section,
then, for the purpose of enabling a person to carry out an investigation, as
referred to in subsection (1) (b), that investigation shall, for the purposes
of:(a) the provisions of this Act which confer or impose the delegated
function, and
(b) the provisions of sections 21 and 24,
be an investigation under this Act, and references in those provisions to
the Ombudsman shall be construed as including references to the
delegate.
(10) Where the exercise of a function is delegated under this section,
the provisions of sections 34, 35 and 35A apply to and in respect of the
delegate and officers of the delegate in the same way as those provisions
apply to and in respect of the Ombudsman and officers of the
Ombudsman.
10B Delegation from other jurisdictions
(1) Where by or under the law of another State, the Commonwealth or a
Territory of the Commonwealth any function is conferred on or delegated to the
Ombudsman, the Ombudsman may:(a) exercise the function so conferred or may refuse to exercise the
function, or
(b) accept the delegation and exercise the function so delegated or
may refuse to accept the delegation.
(2) Except where otherwise expressly provided, a function exercised by
the Ombudsman in pursuance of subsection (1) shall, for the purposes of this
Act, be deemed to be exercised in the course of the Ombudsman’s office
or in the execution of this Act, as the case may
require.
11 Effect of certain acts etc
Any act or thing done, suffered or omitted:(a) pursuant to this or any other Act by an acting Ombudsman or a
Deputy Ombudsman, or
(b) pursuant to a delegation under section 10 or
10A,
has the same force and effect as if done, suffered or omitted by the
Ombudsman.
Part 3 Investigations and conciliations
12 Right to complain
(1) Subject to this section, any person (including a public authority)
may complain to the Ombudsman about the conduct of a public authority
unless:(a) the conduct is of a class described in Schedule
1,
(b) the conduct took place more than twelve months before the date of
assent to this Act,
(c) the conduct took place during the period of twelve months that
last preceded the date of assent to this Act and the complaint was made more
than twelve months after the appointed day, or
(d) the conduct, being conduct of a local government authority, took
place before the day appointed and notified under section 2 (2) of the
Ombudsman (Amendment) Act
1976.
(2) Where a person wishes to make a complaint under subsection (1),
the complaint may, with the consent of that person, be made on his or her
behalf by a member of Parliament.
(3) Where a person is detained by, or in the custody of, a public
authority and informs the public authority or another person having
superintendence over him or her that he or she wishes to make a complaint to
the Ombudsman, the public authority or other person so informed shall:(a) take all steps necessary to facilitate the making of the
complaint, and
(b) send immediately to the Ombudsman, unopened, any written matter
addressed to the Ombudsman.
(4) A complaint under subsection (1), and a consent for the purposes
of subsection (2), must be in writing.
(4A) However, the Ombudsman:(a) may accept a complaint that is not in writing if the Ombudsman
considers it appropriate to do so, and
(b) in that event, must reduce the complaint to writing as soon as
practicable.
(5) Where a member of Parliament acts for a person under subsection
(2) the member does not, except for the purposes of sections 15, 16, 26 (4)
and 29, thereby become the complainant.
(6) Where a member of Parliament publishes to a person for whom the
member acts under subsection (2) any matter, or a copy of any matter,
published to the member by the Ombudsman, the publication has, for all
purposes, the same effect as if it had been published to that person by the
Ombudsman.
13 Decision for investigation
(1) Where it appears to the Ombudsman that any conduct of a public
authority about which a complaint may be made under section 12 may be conduct
referred to in section 26, the Ombudsman may, whether or not any person has
complained to the Ombudsman about the conduct, make the conduct the subject of
an investigation under this Act.
(2) Subsection (1) has effect notwithstanding anything in any Act
passed before the passing of this Act.
(3) The Ombudsman may discontinue an investigation under this
Act.
(4) Where any person has complained to the Ombudsman under section 12
about the conduct of a public authority, the Ombudsman, in deciding whether to
make that conduct the subject of an investigation under this Act or whether to
discontinue an investigation commenced by him or her under this Act:(a) may have regard to such matters as he or she thinks fit,
and
(b) without limiting paragraph (a), may have regard to whether, in his
or her opinion:(i) the complaint is frivolous, vexatious or not in good
faith,
(ii) the subject-matter of the complaint is
trivial,
(iii) the subject-matter of the complaint relates to the discharge by a
public authority of a function which is substantially a trading or commercial
function,
(iv) the conduct complained of occurred at too remote a time to justify
investigation,
(v) in relation to the conduct complained of there is or was available
to the complainant an alternative and satisfactory means of redress,
or
(vi) the complainant has no interest or an insufficient interest in the
conduct complained of.
(4A) In deciding whether to discontinue an investigation of police
conduct, the Ombudsman shall have regard to the public
interest.
(5) Notwithstanding any other provision of this section, the Ombudsman
shall not investigate the conduct of a public authority, being a local
government authority, if that conduct is subject to a right of appeal or
review conferred by or under an Act unless the Ombudsman is of the opinion
that special circumstances make it unreasonable to expect that right to be or
to have been exercised.
13AA Preliminary inquiries
(1) The Ombudsman may make preliminary inquiries for the purpose of
deciding whether to make particular conduct of a public authority the subject
of an investigation under this Act.
(2) The inquiries may be made whether or not any person has complained
to the Ombudsman about the conduct under section
12.
(3) If a complaint has been made under section 12 (whether in writing
or otherwise), the Ombudsman may, by way of a preliminary inquiry with respect
to the complaint, require the complainant to provide further written
particulars of the complaint within the time specified by the
Ombudsman.
13A Dealing with complaint by conciliation
(1) The Ombudsman may, at any time, decide to attempt to deal with a
complaint by conciliation under this section.
(2) The conciliator in any conciliation under this section is to be
the Ombudsman or an officer of the Ombudsman. However, the conciliator may,
with the agreement of the complainant, arrange for a mediator to assist in the
conciliation.
(3) Participation in the conciliation by the parties to a complaint is
voluntary, and either party may withdraw at any time. The conciliator may also
terminate the attempt at conciliation at any time.
(4) Evidence of anything said or admitted during the conciliation (or
attempted conciliation) and any document prepared for the purposes of any such
conciliation are not admissible:(a) in any subsequent investigation, under this Part, of the complaint
concerned (unless the person who said or admitted the thing, or to whom the
document relates, consents to its admission), or
(b) in any proceedings in a court or before a person or body
authorised to hear and receive evidence.
(5) If an attempt to deal with a complaint by conciliation under this
section is unsuccessful, the complaint is to be treated under this Part as if
the attempted conciliation had not taken place. However, the conciliator is
excluded from participating as an investigating officer in any investigation
of the complaint.
(6) Nothing in this section prevents a complaint from being dealt with
otherwise than in accordance with this section.
14 Amendment of Schedule
(1) The Governor may, by proclamation published on the NSW legislation
website, amend Schedule 1 so as to add to it, or to omit from it, any class of
conduct of a public authority.
(2) Where Schedule 1 is amended by adding to it any class of conduct
of a public authority, and conduct the subject of an investigation or
conciliation by the Ombudsman is or includes conduct of the added class, the
Ombudsman shall discontinue the investigation or conciliation in so far as it
relates to conduct of the added class and shall not make any report concerning
conduct of the added class.
(3) A proclamation under subsection (1):(a) takes effect from the date of the publication of the proclamation
or a later date specified in the proclamation, and
(b) shall be laid before each House of Parliament within fourteen
sitting days of that House after the date of
proclamation.
(4) If either House of Parliament passes a resolution, of which notice
has been given within fifteen sitting days of that House after a proclamation
has been laid before it, disallowing the proclamation or any part thereof, the
amendment of Schedule 1 made by the proclamation or part thereupon ceases to
have effect.
(5) For the purposes of subsections (3) and (4) sitting days shall be
counted, whether or not they occur during the same
session.
(6) Where, by the operation of subsection (4), an amendment of
Schedule 1 ceases to have effect, the Ombudsman may:(a) resume any investigation or conciliation that he or she
discontinued under subsection (2) by reason of the amendment,
and
(b) make a report concerning the conduct to which the resumed
investigation relates.
15 Reasons for refusal to conciliate, investigate or continue
investigation
(1) Where:(a) a complaint has been made to the Ombudsman under section 12 about
the conduct of a public authority, and
(b) the Ombudsman:(i) refuses to investigate the conduct complained of or to deal with
the complaint by conciliation, or
(ii) discontinues an investigation of that
conduct,
the Ombudsman shall inform the complainant in writing of his or her
decision and the reasons for the decision.
(2) Where the Ombudsman discontinues an investigation of police
conduct, the Ombudsman shall inform the complainant and the Commissioner of
Police in writing of the decision and the reasons for the
decision.
(3) Where the Ombudsman:(a) refuses to carry out any other investigation,
or
(b) refuses to deal with any other complaint, disclosure or allegation
by conciliation, or
(c) discontinues any other investigation,
the Ombudsman must inform the complainant, or the person who made the
disclosure or allegation, in writing of the decision and the reasons for the
decision.
16 Notice of investigation
(1) Upon the Ombudsman deciding to make the conduct or police conduct
of a public authority the subject of an investigation under this Act, the
Ombudsman shall give notice of the decision:(a) where there is a complainant, to the
complainant,
(b) to the head of the public authority and, if practicable, to the
public authority, and
(c) as prescribed.
(2) A notice under this section must be in writing, must describe the
conduct or police conduct the subject of the investigation and must, so far as
practicable, identify the public authority.
17 Privacy
An investigation under this Act shall be made in the absence of
the public.
18 Public authority to give information etc
(1) For the purposes of an investigation under this Act, the Ombudsman
may require a public authority:(a) to give the Ombudsman a statement of
information,
(b) to produce to the Ombudsman any document or other thing,
or
(c) to give the Ombudsman a copy of any
document.
(2) A requirement under this section must be in writing, must specify
or describe the information, document or thing required, and must fix a time
and specify a place for compliance.
19 Inquiries
(1) In an investigation under this Act, the Ombudsman may make or hold
inquiries.
(2) For the purposes of any inquiry under this section, the Ombudsman
has the powers, authorities, protections and immunities conferred on a
commissioner by Division 1 of Part 2 of the Royal Commissions Act 1923 and that
Act (section 13 and Division 2 of Part 2 excepted) applies to any witness
summoned by or appearing before the Ombudsman in the same way as it applies to
a witness summoned by or appearing before a commissioner, but section 11 (2)
of that Act shall have effect subject to section 21 of this
Act.
(3) A witness appearing before the Ombudsman is to be paid such amount
as the Ombudsman determines, but not exceeding the amount that would be
payable to such a witness if he or she were a Crown witness subpoenaed by the
Crown to give evidence.
(4) The Ombudsman may appoint an Australian legal practitioner to
assist the Ombudsman for the purposes of an inquiry held by the Ombudsman and
the Australian legal practitioner may appear before the
inquiry.
19A Restriction on publication of evidence
(1) Direction regarding publication
The Ombudsman may direct that:(a) any evidence given before an inquiry held by the Ombudsman,
or
(b) the contents of any document, or a description of any thing,
produced to the Ombudsman, or
(c) any information that might enable a person who has given or may be
about to give evidence before an inquiry to be identified or located,
or
(d) the fact that any person has given or may be about to give
evidence before an inquiry,
must not be published, or must not be published except in such manner,
and to such persons, as the Ombudsman specifies.
(2) Public interest
The Ombudsman is not to give a direction under this section unless
satisfied that the direction is necessary or desirable in the public
interest.
(3) Offence
A person must not make a publication in contravention of a
direction given under this section.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 12 months,
or both.
(4) Definition
In this section and sections 19B and 19C, inquiry means an inquiry held
under section 19.
19B Publication of evidence given at inquiry
(1) A person who was present at an inquiry must not publish, or permit
to be published, any evidence given before the inquiry or any of the contents
of a document produced at the inquiry, except to the Ombudsman, an officer of
the Ombudsman or an Australian legal practitioner appointed under section 19
(4) or as permitted by the Ombudsman or the regulations.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 12 months,
or both.
(2) Nothing in this section affects section 19A, but a person cannot
be punished under both sections for the same
publication.
(3) This section does not apply to an officer of the Ombudsman or an
Australian legal practitioner appointed under section 19
(4).
19C Disclosures prejudicing investigations
(1) A person who is required by the Ombudsman by a summons issued
under section 19 (2) to give evidence or to produce a document or other thing
must not disclose any information about the summons that is likely to
prejudice the investigation to which it relates.Maximum penalty: 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 12 months,
or both.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a summons unless it specifies
that information about the summons must not be
disclosed.
(3) A person does not contravene this section if:(a) the disclosure is made to an employee, agent or other person in
order to obtain information to comply with the summons and the employee, agent
or other person is directed not to inform the person to whom the information
relates about the matter, or
(b) the disclosure is made to obtain legal advice or representation in
relation to the summons, or
(c) the disclosure is made for the purposes of, or in the course of,
legal proceedings, or
(d) the disclosure is made in accordance with guidelines issued by the
Ombudsman or in accordance with the regulations.
(4) A reference in this section to the disclosure of any information
about a summons includes a reference to:(a) a disclosure about the existence or nature of the summons or of
the investigation to which it relates, and
(b) a disclosure of any information to a person from which the person
could reasonably be expected to infer the existence or nature of the summons
or of the investigation to which it relates.
20 Entry on premises etc
In an investigation under this Act, the Ombudsman may, at any
time:(a) enter and inspect any premises occupied or used by a public
authority as a public authority, and
(b) inspect any document or thing in or on the
premises.
21 Limits on secrecy and privilege
(1) This section applies if, in an investigation under this Act or an
inquiry under section 19, the Ombudsman requires any person:(a) to give any statement of information, or
(b) to produce any document or other thing, or
(c) to give a copy of any document, or
(d) to answer any question.
(2) The Ombudsman must set aside the requirement if it appears to the
Ombudsman that any person has a ground of privilege, whereby, in proceedings
in a court of law, the person might resist a like requirement and it does not
appear to the Ombudsman that that person consents to compliance with the
requirement.
(3) The requirement may however be made despite, and is not required
to be set aside because of:(a) any rule of law which, in proceedings in a court of law, might
justify an objection to compliance with a like requirement on grounds of
public interest, or
(b) any privilege of a public authority which the public authority
might claim in a court of law, or
(c) any duty of secrecy or other restriction on disclosure applying to
a public authority.
21A Privilege as regards entry and inspections on public
premises
(1) The Ombudsman must not exercise powers under section 20 if it
appears to the Ombudsman that any person has a ground of privilege, whereby,
in proceedings in a court of law, the person might resist inspection of the
premises or document or thing or production of the document or thing and it
does not appear to the Ombudsman that that person consents to the inspection
or production.
(2) The powers may however be exercised despite:(a) any rule of law which, in proceedings in a court of law, might
justify an objection to an inspection of the premises or document or thing or
to production of the document or thing on grounds of public interest,
or
(b) any privilege of a public authority which the public authority
might claim in a court of law, or
(c) any duty of secrecy or other restriction on disclosure applying to
a public authority.
21B (Repealed)
21C Injunction
(1) The Supreme Court may, on an application made by the Ombudsman,
grant an injunction restraining any conduct in which a public authority is
engaging or in which a public authority appears likely to engage, where that
conduct is the subject of, or affects the subject of, an investigation or
proposed investigation by the Ombudsman.
(2) The Supreme Court shall not grant an application under subsection
(1) unless it is of the opinion that the conduct sought to be restrained is
likely to prejudice or negate the effect or implementation of a recommendation
which the Ombudsman might make pursuant to section 26 (2) were the Ombudsman
to find that the conduct or part of the conduct, the subject of the
investigation referred to in subsection (1), was conduct referred to in
section 26.
(3) The Ombudsman shall not be required, as a condition for the
granting of an injunction pursuant to an application referred to in subsection
(1), to give any undertaking as to damages.
22 Cabinet information and proceedings
(1) This Act does not enable the Ombudsman:(a) to require any person:(i) to give any statement of information,
(ii) to produce any document or other thing,
(iii) to give a copy of any document, or
(iv) to answer any question,
which relates to information that is Cabinet information under the
Government Information (Public Access) Act
2009 or to confidential proceedings of Cabinet or any
committee of Cabinet, or
(b) to inspect any document or thing which so
relates.
(2) For the purposes of this section, a certificate of the
Director-General or Deputy Director-General (General Counsel) of the
Department of Premier and Cabinet that:(a) information is Cabinet information under the Government Information (Public Access) Act
2009, or
(b) any information, document, thing or question relates to
confidential proceedings of Cabinet or of a committee of
Cabinet,
is conclusive of that fact.
23 Expert assistance
For the purposes of the exercise of any of the Ombudsman’s
functions, the Ombudsman may engage the services of any person for the purpose
of getting expert assistance.
24 Persons to be heard
(1) In an investigation under this Act, the Ombudsman shall give an
opportunity to make submissions on the conduct or police conduct the subject
of the investigation:(a) if practicable, to the public authority whose conduct or police
conduct it is, and
(b) to any other person given notice under section
16.
(2) Where, in an investigation under this Act, the Ombudsman considers
that there are grounds for adverse comment in respect of any person, the
Ombudsman, before making any such comment in any report, shall, so far as
practicable:(a) inform that person of the substance of the grounds of the adverse
comment, and
(b) give the person an opportunity to make
submissions.
(3) Subsection (2) does not apply in relation to a report under
section 28.
25 Consultation with responsible Minister
(1) In an investigation under this Act, the Ombudsman shall, on
request by the responsible Minister, consult that Minister on the conduct or
police conduct the subject of the investigation.
(2) Before publishing a report under section 26, the Ombudsman:(a) shall inform the responsible Minister that he or she proposes to
publish such a report, and
(b) shall, on request by that Minister, consult that
Minister.
Part 3A Child protection
25A Definitions
(1) In this Part:child means
a person under the age of 18 years.
designated government
agency means any of the following:
(a) the Department of Education and Training (including a government
school) or the Department of Health,
(a1) a Division of the Government Service (or a part of a Division of
the Government Service) prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this
definition,
(b) a local health district within the meaning of the Health Services Act
1997,
(c) any other public authority prescribed by the regulations for the
purposes of this definition.
designated
non-government agency means any of the following:
(a) a non-government school within the meaning of the Education Act
1990,
(b) a designated agency within the meaning of the Children and Young Persons (Care and Protection)
Act 1998 (not being a department referred to in paragraph (a)
of the definition of designated
government agency in this subsection),
(b1) an approved education and care service within the meaning of the
Children (Education and Care Services)
National Law (NSW) or the Children (Education and Care Services) Supplementary
Provisions Act 2011,
(c) an agency providing substitute residential care for
children,
(d) any other body prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of
this definition.
employee
of an agency includes:
(a) any employee of the agency, whether or not employed in connection
with any work or activities of the agency that relates to children,
and
(b) any individual engaged by the agency to provide services to
children (including in the capacity of a
volunteer).
head of an
agency means the chief executive officer or other principal officer of the
agency. The regulations may specify the person who is to be regarded as the
head of a particular agency for the purposes of this
definition.
investigation of a matter
includes any preliminary or other inquiry into, or examination of, the
matter.
reportable
allegation means an allegation of reportable conduct against a
person or an allegation of misconduct that may involve reportable
conduct.
reportable
conduct means:
(a) any sexual offence, or sexual misconduct, committed against, with
or in the presence of a child (including a child pornography offence or an
offence involving child abuse material (within the meaning of Division 15A of
Part 3 of the Crimes Act
1900)), or
(b) any assault, ill-treatment or neglect of a child,
or
(c) any behaviour that causes psychological harm to a
child,
whether or not, in any case, with the consent of the child. Reportable
conduct does not extend to:(a) conduct that is reasonable for the purposes of the discipline,
management or care of children, having regard to the age, maturity, health or
other characteristics of the children and to any relevant codes of conduct or
professional standards, or
(b) the use of physical force that, in all the circumstances, is
trivial or negligible, but only if the matter is to be investigated and the
result of the investigation recorded under workplace employment procedures,
or
(c) conduct of a class or kind exempted from being reportable conduct
by the Ombudsman under section 25CA.
Note. Examples of conduct that would not constitute reportable
conduct include (without limitation) touching a child in order to
attract a child’s attention, to guide a child or to comfort a distressed
child; a school teacher raising his or her voice in order to attract attention
or to restore order in the classroom; and conduct that is established to be
accidental.
reportable
allegation means an allegation of reportable conduct against a
person or an allegation of misconduct that may involve reportable
conduct.
reportable
conviction means a conviction (including a finding of guilt without
the court proceeding to a conviction), in this State or elsewhere, of an
offence involving reportable conduct.
(2) A reference in this Part to a designated government or
non-government agency is a reference to a designated government agency or a
designated non-government agency.
(3) A reference in this Part to a reportable allegation or a
reportable conviction extends to any such allegation or conviction in respect
of a matter occurring before the commencement of this
Part.
25B Ombudsman to keep relevant systems under
scrutiny
(1) The Ombudsman is to keep under scrutiny the systems:(a) for preventing reportable conduct by employees of designated
government or non-government agencies or of other public authorities,
and
(b) for handling and responding to reportable allegations, or
reportable convictions, involving those employees.
(2) For that purpose, the Ombudsman may require the head of any such
agency to provide information about those systems and their
operation.
25C Reporting of reportable allegations or convictions to
Ombudsman
(1) The head of a designated government or non-government agency must
notify the Ombudsman of the following:(a) any reportable allegation, or reportable conviction, against an
employee of the agency of which the head of the agency becomes
aware,
(b) whether or not the agency proposes to take any disciplinary or
other action in relation to the employee and the reasons why it intends to
take or not to take any such action,
(c) any written submissions made to the head of the agency concerning
any such allegation or conviction that the employee concerned wished to have
considered in determining what (if any) disciplinary or other action should be
taken in relation to the employee.
(2) The notification must be made as soon as practicable and, in the
case of the notification of a reportable allegation or reportable conviction,
must be made, in any event, within 30 days of the head of the agency becoming
aware of the allegation or conviction (or within such further period as may be
agreed to by the Ombudsman).
(3) The head of the agency must make arrangements within the agency to
require employees of the agency to notify the head of the agency of any such
reportable allegation or conviction of which they become
aware.
(4) (Repealed)
25CA Ombudsman may exempt conduct from reporting
(1) The Ombudsman may exempt any class or kind of conduct of employees
of an agency from being reportable conduct.
(2) The Ombudsman is to notify the agency concerned of any such
exemption.
25D Disclosure to Ombudsman of information about reportable
conduct
(1) The head or other employee of a designated government or
non-government agency may disclose to the Ombudsman or an officer of the
Ombudsman, any information that gives the head or other employee reason to
believe that reportable conduct by an employee of the agency has
occurred.
(2) (Repealed)
25E Monitoring by Ombudsman of investigations
(1) The Ombudsman may monitor the progress of the investigation by a
designated government or non-government agency concerning a reportable
allegation, or reportable conviction, against an employee of the agency if the
Ombudsman considers it is in the public interest to do
so.
(2) The Ombudsman or an officer of the Ombudsman may be present as an
observer during interviews conducted by or on behalf of the agency for the
purpose of the investigation and may confer with the persons conducting the
investigation about the conduct and progress of the
investigation.
(3) The head of the agency is to provide the Ombudsman with such
documentary and other information (including records of interviews) as the
Ombudsman may from time to time request with respect to the
investigation.
25F Results of investigation and action taken to be reported
to Ombudsman
(1) This section applies to an investigation concerning a reportable
allegation, or reportable conviction, against an employee of a designated
government or non-government agency that the Ombudsman monitors under this
Part.
(2) The head of the agency must, as soon as practicable after being
satisfied that the investigation has been concluded:(a) send to the Ombudsman a copy of any report prepared by or provided
to the head of the agency as to the progress or results of the investigation,
and copies of all statements taken in the course of the investigation and of
all other documents on which the report is based, and
(b) provide the Ombudsman with such comments on the report and
statements as the head of the agency thinks fit, and
(c) inform the Ombudsman of the action that has been taken or is
proposed to be taken with respect to the reportable allegation or conviction
the subject of the investigation.
(3) After receiving that material and information, the Ombudsman may
require the head of the agency or any officer involved in the investigation,
or both of them, to provide such additional information as the Ombudsman
considers necessary to enable the Ombudsman to determine whether the
reportable allegation or conviction was properly investigated and whether
appropriate action was taken as a result of the
investigation.
(4) In subsection (3), appropriate action
includes (without limitation) any penalty for the making of a reportable
allegation that is shown to be false and malicious.
25G Investigation of reportable conduct by
Ombudsman
(1) The Ombudsman may conduct an investigation concerning any
reportable allegation, or reportable conviction, against an employee of a
designated government or non-government agency of which the Ombudsman has been
notified under this Part or otherwise becomes
aware.
(2) The Ombudsman may also conduct an investigation concerning any
inappropriate handling of or response to any such reportable allegation or
reportable conviction, whether on the Ombudsman’s own initiative or in
response to a complaint.
(3) The Ombudsman may exercise any conciliation or other relevant
powers under this Act in connection with an investigation by the
Ombudsman.
(4) The head of the agency is to defer an investigation into the
matter if the Ombudsman notifies the head that the Ombudsman intends to
investigate the matter under this Act and that the investigation by the agency
should be deferred.
(5) At the conclusion of an investigation by the Ombudsman, or on a
decision by the Ombudsman to refer the matter back to the agency, the
Ombudsman is to provide the agency with any recommendations for action to be
taken with respect to the matter, together with any necessary information
relating to the recommendations.
25H Protection and other provisions relating to disclosures
of information
(1) A provision of any Act or law that prohibits or restricts the
disclosure of information does not operate to prevent or restrict the
disclosure of information (or affect a duty to disclose information) under
this Part.
(2) If a disclosure of information is made under this Part, no
liability for defamation or other civil liability is incurred because of the
disclosure.
(3) Nothing in this Part affects any obligation or power to provide
information apart from this Part.
25I Extension of reporting and disclosure provisions to all
public authorities
The obligation to report under section 25C, and the authority to
disclose information under section 25D, with respect to designated government
agencies extend to public authorities that are not designated government
agencies if the reportable conduct concerned arises in the course of
employment with the public authority.
25J Application of other provisions of this Act
(1) The provisions of this Act apply in respect of a matter arising
under this Part even though the matter does not involve the conduct of a
public authority, subject to any modifications prescribed by the
regulations.
(2) For that purpose, a reference in those provisions to a public
authority includes a reference to a designated government or non-government
agency and its employees.
Part 4 Reports
25AA Application of Part 4
This Part, section 29 excepted, does not apply to or in respect of
the investigation under this Act of police conduct.
26 Report of investigation
(1) Where, in an investigation under this Act, the Ombudsman finds
that the conduct the subject of the investigation, or any part of the conduct,
is of any one or more of the following kinds:(a) contrary to law,
(b) unreasonable, unjust, oppressive or improperly
discriminatory,
(c) in accordance with any law or established practice but the law or
practice is, or may be, unreasonable, unjust, oppressive or improperly
discriminatory,
(d) based wholly or partly on improper motives, irrelevant grounds or
irrelevant consideration,
(e) based wholly or partly on a mistake of law or
fact,
(f) conduct for which reasons should be given but are not
given,
(g) otherwise wrong,
the Ombudsman is to make a report accordingly, giving his or her
reasons.
(2) In a report under this section, the Ombudsman may
recommend:(a) that the conduct be considered or reconsidered by the public
authority whose conduct it is, or by any person in a position to supervise or
direct the public authority in relation to the conduct, or to review, rectify,
mitigate or change the conduct or its consequences,
(b) that action be taken to rectify, mitigate or change the conduct or
its consequences,
(c) that reasons be given for the conduct,
(d) that any law or practice relating to the conduct be
changed,
(d1) that compensation be paid to any person, or
(e) that any other step be taken.
(3) The Ombudsman shall give a report under this section:(a) to the responsible Minister,
(b) to the head of the public authority whose conduct is the subject
of the report, and
(c) where the public authority is employed under the Public Sector Management Act 1988,
to the Premier’s Department.
(4) The Ombudsman may give a copy of a report under this
section:(a) where the investigation arises out of a complaint to the
Ombudsman, to the complainant,
(b) to the public authority to whose conduct the report
relates.
(5) The person to whom a report is given under subsection (3) (b) may,
and on request by the Ombudsman shall, notify the Ombudsman of any action
taken or proposed in consequence of a report under this
section.
26A Authority to pay compensation
(1) If the Ombudsman recommends in a report under section 26 that
compensation be paid to a person by a person other than a local government
authority, the responsible Minister:(a) at the request of the head of the public authority whose conduct
is the subject of the report, and
(b) with the concurrence of the Treasurer,
may authorise the payment of compensation to the person out of the
appropriate fund.
(2) If the payment of compensation authorised under this section is to
be made by a Department referred to in Schedule 3 to the Public Finance and Audit Act 1983,
the Treasurer may authorise payment out of the Consolidated Fund (but not
otherwise), which is accordingly appropriated to the necessary
extent.
(3) If the Ombudsman recommends in such a report that compensation be
paid to a person by a local government authority, the local government
authority may authorise the payment of compensation to that person out of its
funds.
(4) The functions that may be delegated under section 377 of the
Local Government Act 1993 by
a council do not include a function relating to the authorisation of the
payment of compensation under this section.
(5) Nothing in any other Act prevents the payment of compensation in
accordance with an authority given under this section, and the amount of
compensation paid may be the same as, or may be more or less than, any amount
recommended in the Ombudsman’s report.
27 Default in consequent action
(1) Where the Ombudsman is not satisfied that sufficient steps have
been taken in due time in consequence of a report under section 26, the
Ombudsman may make a report to the Presiding Officer of each House of
Parliament and must also provide the responsible Minister with a copy of the
report.
(2) The responsible Minister must make a statement to the House of
Parliament in which the Minister sits in response to the report not more than
12 sitting days after the report is made to the Presiding
Officer.
28 Serious misconduct
Where the Ombudsman is of the opinion that a public authority is
or may be guilty of misconduct in the course of his or her functions to such
an extent as, in the opinion of the Ombudsman, may warrant dismissal, removal
or punishment, the Ombudsman shall report the opinion:(a) to the responsible Minister,
(b) to the head of the public authority, and
(c) where the public authority is employed under the Public Sector Management Act 1988,
to the Premier’s Department,
giving reasons for the opinion.
29 Report to complainant or the relevant person
(1) Where the Ombudsman investigates the conduct of a public authority
pursuant to a complaint made under section 12 or investigates police conduct,
the Ombudsman:(a) may from time to time report to the complainant on the progress of
the investigation,
(b) shall report to the complainant on the results of the
investigation, and
(c) may make such comments to the complainant on the investigation and
its consequences as he or she thinks fit.
(2) Where the Ombudsman carries out any other kind of investigation,
the Ombudsman:(a) may from time to time report to the complainant, or the person who
made the disclosure or allegation that led to the investigation, on the
progress of the investigation, and
(b) may report to the complainant, or the person who made the
disclosure or allegation that led to the investigation, on the results of the
investigation, and
(c) may make any comments to the complainant, or the person who made
the disclosure or allegation that led to the investigation, on the
investigation and its consequences that the Ombudsman thinks
fit.
30 Annual reports
(1) The Ombudsman must, as soon as practicable after 30 June in each
year, prepare a report of the Ombudsman’s work and activities for the
preceding 12 months and furnish the report to the Presiding Officer of each
House of Parliament.
(2) The Annual Reports
(Departments) Act 1985 is, in its application to the annual
reports of the Ombudsman’s Office, modified as follows:(a) letters of submission under that Act are to be made to the
Presiding Officer of each House of Parliament and not to the appropriate
Minister,
(b) the annual report is to be submitted to the Presiding Officer of
each House of Parliament and not to the appropriate
Minister,
(c) provisions of that Act relating to the presentation of annual
reports to the appropriate Minister and to the public availability of annual
reports do not apply to the Ombudsman or the Ombudsman’s
Office.
(3) Section 31AA applies to the annual report of the Ombudsman’s
Office as if it were a report made or furnished under this
Part.
30A Public availability of annual reports
(1) The Ombudsman must, as soon as practicable after an annual report
has been tabled in each House of Parliament or made public by a Presiding
Officer, make copies of the report available for public sale or
distribution.
(2) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the
place or places at which the Ombudsman is to make copies of the report
available.
31 Special report to Parliament
(1) The Ombudsman may, at any time, make a special report to the
Presiding Officer of each House of Parliament and must also provide the
Minister with a copy of the report on any matter arising in connection with
the discharge of the Ombudsman’s functions.
(2) The Ombudsman may include in a report under subsection (1) or
under section 27 a recommendation that the report be made public
forthwith.
(3) (Repealed)
31AA Provisions relating to reports
(1) Tabling
A copy of a report made or furnished to the Presiding Officer of a
House of Parliament under this Part must be laid before that House on the next
sitting day of that House after it is received by the Presiding
Officer.
(2) Public reports
If a report includes a recommendation by the Ombudsman that the
report be made public forthwith, the Presiding Officer of a House of
Parliament may make it public whether or not that House is in session and
whether or not the report has been laid before that
House.
(3) Privileges and immunities
A report that is made public by the Presiding Officer of a House
of Parliament before it is laid before that House attracts the same privileges
and immunities as it would if it had been laid before that
House.
(4) Report procedures
A Presiding Officer need not inquire whether all or any conditions
precedent have been satisfied as regards a report purporting to have been made
or furnished in accordance with this Act.
31AB Ombudsman may furnish information to ICAC and
DPP
(1) The Ombudsman may, at any time, furnish information obtained by
the Ombudsman in discharging functions under this or any other Act to the
Director of Public Prosecutions or to the Independent Commission Against
Corruption.
(2) However, the Ombudsman must not disclose information that could
not otherwise be disclosed under this Act or could not:(a) in the case of the Director of Public Prosecutions—be
obtained by the Director under the Director
of Public Prosecutions Act 1986 or any other Act,
or
(b) in the case of the Independent Commission Against
Corruption—be obtained by the Commission under the Independent Commission Against Corruption Act
1988 or any other Act.
31AC Ombudsman may furnish information to public
authority
(1) The Ombudsman may, at any time:(a) furnish to a public authority information obtained by the
Ombudsman in discharging functions under this Act with respect to a complaint
against or relating to the public authority, and
(b) make such comments to the authority with respect to the complaint
as he or she thinks fit.
(2) The Ombudsman may also furnish any or all of the information
referred to in subsection (1) to any other public authority, and may make such
comments (if any) to that public authority as the Ombudsman considers
appropriate, if:(a) the Ombudsman is satisfied that the information concerned is
relevant to the functions, policies, procedures or practices of that other
public authority, and
(b) the information does not disclose any personal information (within
the meaning of the Privacy and Personal
Information Protection Act 1998 or the Health Records and Information Privacy Act
2002).
Part 4A Parliamentary Joint Committee
31A Constitution of Joint Committee
(1) As soon as practicable after the commencement of this Part and the
commencement of the first session of each Parliament, a joint committee of
members of Parliament, to be known as the Committee on the Ombudsman, the
Police Integrity Commission and the Crime Commission, is to be
appointed.
(2) The Joint Committee has and may exercise the functions conferred
or imposed on it by or under this Act, the Police Integrity Commission Act
1996, the Government
Information (Information Commissioner) Act 2009, the Privacy and Personal Information Protection Act
1998, the Crime Commission
Act 2012, or any other Act.
31B Functions
(1) The Joint Committee has the following functions under this
Act:(a) to monitor and to review the exercise by the Ombudsman of the
Ombudsman’s functions under this or any other Act,
(b) to report to both Houses of Parliament, with such comments as it
thinks fit, on any matter appertaining to the Ombudsman or connected with the
exercise of the Ombudsman’s functions to which, in the opinion of the
Joint Committee, the attention of Parliament should be
directed,
(c) to examine each annual and other report made by the Ombudsman, and
presented to Parliament, under this or any other Act and to report to both
Houses of Parliament on any matter appearing in, or arising out of, any such
report,
(d) to report to both Houses of Parliament any change that the Joint
Committee considers desirable to the functions, structures and procedures of
the Office of the Ombudsman,
(e) to inquire into any question in connection with the Joint
Committee’s functions which is referred to it by both Houses of
Parliament, and to report to both Houses on that
question.
(2) Nothing in this Part authorises the Joint Committee:(a) to investigate a matter relating to particular conduct,
or
(b) to reconsider a decision to investigate, not to investigate or to
discontinue investigation of a particular complaint, or
(c) to exercise any function referred to in subsection (1) in relation
to any report under section 27, or
(d) to reconsider the findings, recommendations, determinations or
other decisions of the Ombudsman, or of any other person, in relation to a
particular investigation or complaint or in relation to any particular conduct
the subject of a report under section 27, or
(e) to exercise any function referred to in subsection (1) in relation
to the Ombudsman’s functions under the Telecommunications (Interception) (New South Wales)
Act 1987.
(3) The functions of the Joint Committee may be exercised in respect
of matters occurring before or after the commencement of this
section.
31BA Power to veto proposed appointments
(1) The Minister is to refer a proposal to appoint a person as
Ombudsman, Director of Public Prosecutions, Information Commissioner, Privacy
Commissioner, Commissioner for the Police Integrity Commission or Inspector of
the Police Integrity Commission or the Commissioner for the New South Wales
Crime Commission or the Inspector of the New South Wales Crime Commission to
the Joint Committee and the Committee is empowered to veto the proposed
appointment as provided by this section. The Minister may withdraw a referral
at any time.
(2) The Joint Committee has 14 days after the proposed appointment is
referred to it to veto the proposal and has a further 30 days (after the
initial 14 days) to veto the proposal if it notifies the Minister within that
14 days that it requires more time to consider the
matter.
(3) The Joint Committee is to notify the Minister, within the time
that it has to veto a proposed appointment, whether or not it vetoes
it.
(4) A referral or notification under this section is to be in
writing.
(5) In this section, a reference to the Minister is:(a) in the context of an appointment of Ombudsman, a reference to the
Minister administering section 6A of this Act, and
(b) in the context of an appointment of Director of Public
Prosecutions, a reference to the Minister administering section 4A of the
Director of Public Prosecutions Act
1986, and
(b1) in the context of an appointment of Information Commissioner, a
reference to the Minister administering section 5 of the Government Information (Information Commissioner)
Act 2009, and
(b2) in the context of an appointment of Privacy Commissioner, a
reference to the Minister administering section 35 of the Privacy and Personal Information Protection Act
1998, and
(c) in the context of an appointment of Commissioner for the Police
Integrity Commission or Inspector of the Police Integrity Commission, a
reference to the Minister administering section 7 or 88 (as appropriate) of
the Police Integrity Commission Act
1996, and
(d) in the context of an appointment of Commissioner for the New South
Wales Crime Commission or Inspector of the New South Wales Crime Commission, a
reference to the Minister administering section 8 or 61 (as appropriate) of
the Crime Commission Act
2012.
31C Membership
(1) The Joint Committee is to consist of 7 members, of whom:(a) 3 are to be members of, and appointed by, the Legislative Council,
and
(b) 4 are to be members of, and appointed by, the Legislative
Assembly.
(2) The appointment of members of the Joint Committee is, as far as
practicable, to be in accordance with the practice of Parliament with
reference to the appointment of members to serve on joint committees of both
Houses of Parliament.
(3) A person is not eligible for appointment as a member of the Joint
Committee if the person is a Minister of the Crown or a Parliamentary
Secretary.
31D Vacancies
(1) A member of the Joint Committee ceases to hold office:(a) when the Legislative Assembly is dissolved or expires by the
effluxion of time, or
(b) if the member becomes a Minister of the Crown or a Parliamentary
Secretary, or
(c) if a member ceases to be a member of the Legislative Council or
Legislative Assembly, or
(d) if, being a member of the Legislative Council, the member resigns
the office by instrument in writing addressed to the President of the
Legislative Council, or
(e) if, being a member of the Legislative Assembly, the member resigns
the office by instrument in writing addressed to the Speaker of the
Legislative Assembly, or
(f) if the member is discharged from office by the House of Parliament
to which the member belongs.
(2) Either House of Parliament may appoint one of its members to fill
a vacancy among the members of the Joint Committee appointed by that
House.
31E Chair and Deputy Chair
(1) There is to be a Chair and a Deputy Chair of the Joint Committee,
who are to be elected by and from the members of the Joint
Committee.
(2) A member of the Joint Committee ceases to hold office as Chair or
Deputy Chair of the Joint Committee if:(a) the member ceases to be a member of the Committee,
or
(b) the member resigns the office by instrument in writing presented
to a meeting of the Committee, or
(c) the member is discharged from office by the
Committee.
(3) At any time when the Chair is absent from New South Wales or is,
for any reason, unable to perform the duties of Chair or there is a vacancy in
that office, the Deputy Chair may exercise the functions of the Chair under
this Act or under the Parliamentary Evidence
Act 1901.
31F Procedure
(1) The procedure for the calling of meetings of the Joint Committee
and for the conduct of business at those meetings is, subject to this Act, to
be as determined by the Committee.
(2) The Clerk of the Legislative Assembly is to call the first meeting
of the Joint Committee in each Parliament in such manner as the Clerk thinks
fit.
(3) At a meeting of the Joint Committee, 4 members constitute a
quorum, but the Committee must meet as a joint committee at all
times.
(4) The Chair or, in the absence of the Chair, the Deputy Chair (or,
in the absence of both the Chair and the Deputy Chair, a member of the Joint
Committee elected to chair the meeting by the members present) is to preside
at a meeting of the Joint Committee.
(5) The Deputy Chair or other member presiding at a meeting of the
Joint Committee has, in relation to the meeting, all the functions of the
Chair.
(6) The Chair, Deputy Chair or other member presiding at a meeting of
the Joint Committee has a deliberative vote and, in the event of an equality
of votes, also has a casting vote.
(7) A question arising at a meeting of the Joint Committee is to be
determined by a majority of the votes of the members present and
voting.
(8) The Joint Committee may sit and transact business despite any
prorogation of the Houses of Parliament or any adjournment of either House of
Parliament.
(9) The Joint Committee may sit and transact business on a sitting day
of a House of Parliament during the time of
sitting.
31FA Reporting when Parliament not in session
(1) If a House of Parliament is not sitting when the Joint Committee
seeks to furnish a report to it, the Committee may present copies of the
report to the Clerk of the House.
(2) The report:(a) on presentation and for all purposes is taken to have been laid
before the House, and
(b) may be printed by authority of the Clerk, and
(c) if printed by authority of the Clerk, is for all purposes taken to
be a document published by or under the authority of the House,
and
(d) is to be recorded in the Minutes, or Votes and Proceedings, of the
House on the first sitting day of the House after receipt of the report by the
Clerk.
31G Evidence
(1) The Joint Committee has power to send for persons, papers and
records.
(2) Subject to section 31H, the Joint Committee must take all evidence
in public.
(3) If the Joint Committee as constituted at any time has taken
evidence in relation to a matter but the Committee as so constituted has
ceased to exist before reporting on the matter, the Committee as constituted
at any subsequent time, whether during the same or another Parliament, may
consider that evidence as if it had taken the
evidence.
(4) The production of documents to the Joint Committee is to be in
accordance with the practice of the Legislative Assembly with respect to the
production of documents to select committees of the Legislative
Assembly.
31H Confidentiality
(1) If any evidence proposed to be given before, or the whole or a
part of a document produced or proposed to be produced to, the Joint Committee
relates to a secret or confidential matter, the Committee may, and at the
request of the witness giving the evidence or the person producing the
document must:(a) take the evidence in private, or
(b) direct that the document, or the part of the document, be treated
as confidential.
(1A) If any evidence proposed to be given before, or the whole or a
part of a document produced or proposed to be produced in evidence to, the
Joint Committee relates to the proposed appointment of a person as Ombudsman,
Director of Public Prosecutions, Information Commissioner, Privacy
Commissioner, Commissioner for the Police Integrity Commission or Inspector of
the Police Integrity Commission, the Committee must (despite any other
provision of this section):(a) take the evidence in private, or
(b) direct that the document, or the part of the document, be treated
as confidential.
(1B) Despite any other provision of this section except subsection (6),
the Joint Committee must not, and a person (including a member of the
Committee) must not, disclose any evidence or the contents of a document or
that part of a document to which subsection (1A) applies.Maximum penalty: 20 penalty units or imprisonment for 3 months, or
both.
(1C) Despite any other provision of this section except subsection (6),
the Joint Committee (including a member of the Committee) must not, and any
person assisting the Committee or present during the deliberations of the
Committee must not, except in accordance with section 31BA (3), disclose
whether or not the Joint Committee or any member of the Joint Committee has
vetoed, or proposes to veto, the proposed appointment of a person as
Ombudsman, Director of Public Prosecutions, Information Commissioner, Privacy
Commissioner, Commissioner for the Police Integrity Commission or Inspector of
the Police Integrity Commission.Maximum penalty: 20 penalty units or imprisonment for 3 months, or
both.
(2) If a direction under subsection (1) applies to a document or part
of a document produced to the Joint Committee:(a) the contents of the document or part are, for the purposes of this
section, to be regarded as evidence given by the person producing the document
or part and taken by the Committee in private, and
(b) the person producing the document or part is, for the purposes of
this section, to be regarded as a witness.
(3) If, at the request of a witness, evidence is taken by the Joint
Committee in private:(a) the Committee must not, without the consent in writing of the
witness, and
(b) a person (including a member of the Committee) must not, without
the consent in writing of the witness and the authority of the Committee under
subsection (5),
disclose or publish the whole or a part of that evidence.Maximum penalty: 20 penalty units or imprisonment for 3 months, or
both.
(4) If evidence is taken by the Joint Committee in private otherwise
than at the request of a witness, a person (including a member of the
Committee) must not, without the authority of the Committee under subsection
(5), disclose or publish the whole or a part of that evidence.Maximum penalty: 20 penalty units or imprisonment for 3 months, or
both.
(5) The Joint Committee may, in its discretion, disclose or publish
or, by writing under the hand of the Chair, authorise the disclosure or
publication of evidence taken in private by the Committee, but this subsection
does not operate so as to affect the necessity for the consent of a witness
under subsection (3).
(6) Nothing in this section prohibits:(a) the disclosure or publication of evidence that has already been
lawfully published, or
(b) the disclosure or publication by a person of a matter of which the
person has become aware otherwise than by reason, directly or indirectly, of
the giving of evidence before the Joint Committee.
(7) This section has effect despite section 4 of the Parliamentary Papers (Supplementary Provisions) Act
1975.
(8) If evidence taken by the Joint Committee in private is disclosed
or published in accordance with this section, sections 5 and 6 of the Parliamentary Papers (Supplementary Provisions) Act
1975 apply to and in relation to the disclosure or publication
as if it were a publication of that evidence under the authority of section 4
of that Act.Note. The Defamation Act
2005 makes provision for 2 defences in respect of the
publication of defamatory matter that is contained in evidence taken by, or
documents produced to, the Joint Committee in private, but only if the
evidence or documents have been disclosed or published in accordance with this
section.Section 28 of the Defamation Act
2005 (when read with clause 8 of Schedule 2 to that Act)
ensures that such documents attract the defence relating to public documents
in defamation proceedings.
Section 29 of the Defamation Act
2005 (when read with clause 17 of Schedule 3 to that Act)
ensures that proceedings in which such evidence is taken or documents produced
attract the defences relating to fair reports of proceedings of public concern
in defamation proceedings.
31I Application of certain Acts etc
For the purposes of the Parliamentary Evidence Act 1901 and
the Parliamentary Papers (Supplementary
Provisions) Act 1975 and for any other purposes:(a) the Joint Committee is to be regarded as a joint committee of the
Legislative Council and Legislative Assembly, and
(b) the proposal for the appointment of the Joint Committee is to be
regarded as having originated in the Legislative
Assembly.
31J Validity of certain acts or proceedings
Any act or proceeding of the Joint Committee is, even though at
the time when the act or proceeding was done, taken or commenced there
was:(a) a vacancy in the office of a member of the Committee,
or
(b) any defect in the appointment, or any disqualification, of a
member of the Committee,
as valid as if the vacancy, defect or disqualification did not exist and
the Committee were fully and properly constituted.
Part 5 General
32 Staff
(1) Such staff as may be necessary to enable the Ombudsman to exercise
the Ombudsman’s functions may be employed under and subject to the
Public Sector Management Act
1988.
(2) The Ombudsman may, with the approval of the responsible Minister,
make use of the services of any public authority.
(3) A person who is employed for the purposes of subsection (1), or
whose services are made use of under subsection (2), is, while the person is
so employed, or while his or her services are so used, an officer of the
Ombudsman.
(4) While a member of the Police Force is an officer of the Ombudsman
by reason of the services of the member being made use of under subsection
(2):(a) the member may, under section 9, be appointed to be a special
officer of the Ombudsman,
(b) where the member is a special officer of the Ombudsman, the
Ombudsman may, under and subject to section 10, delegate to the member the
exercise and performance of powers, authorities, duties and functions of the
Ombudsman in respect of the investigation under this Act of police conduct,
and
(c) the member shall retain rank, seniority and remuneration as such a
member and may continue to act as a constable.
(5) (Repealed)
33 Preservation of certain rights
(1) In this section superannuation
scheme means a scheme, fund or arrangement which is established by
or under an Act and which provides for superannuation or retirement
benefits.
(2) Subject to subsection (3) and to the terms of his or her
appointment, where the Ombudsman was, immediately before being appointed
Ombudsman, an officer of the Public Service or a contributor to a
superannuation scheme, the Ombudsman:(a) shall retain any rights accrued or accruing to the Ombudsman as
such an officer or contributor,
(b) may continue to contribute to any superannuation scheme to which
he or she was a contributor immediately before being appointed Ombudsman,
and
(c) shall be entitled to receive any deferred or extended leave and
any payment, pension or gratuity under the superannuation
scheme,
as if the Ombudsman had continued to be such an officer or contributor
during his or her service as Ombudsman and:(d) the Ombudsman’s service as Ombudsman shall be deemed to be
service as an officer or employee for the purpose of any law under which those
rights accrued or were accruing, under which the Ombudsman continues to
contribute or by which that entitlement is conferred,
(e) the Ombudsman shall be deemed to be an officer or employee, and
the Minister shall be deemed to be the Ombudsman’s employer, for the
purposes of the superannuation scheme to which the Ombudsman is entitled to
contribute under this subsection.
(3) Where, but for this subsection, the Ombudsman would be entitled
under subsection (2) to contribute to a superannuation scheme or to receive
any payment, pension or gratuity under that scheme, the Ombudsman shall not be
so entitled upon becoming (whether upon being appointed Ombudsman or at any
later time while holding office as Ombudsman) a contributor to any other
superannuation scheme and the provisions of subsection (2) (e) cease to apply
to or in respect of the Ombudsman and the Minister in any case where the
Ombudsman becomes a contributor to another superannuation
scheme.
(4) Subsection (3) does not prevent the payment to the Ombudsman upon
his or her ceasing to be a contributor to a superannuation scheme of such
amount as would have been payable to the Ombudsman had he or she ceased, by
reason of resignation, to be an officer or employee for the purposes of that
scheme.
(5) Subject to the terms of his or her appointment, where the
Ombudsman was, immediately before being appointed Ombudsman, an officer of the
Public Service, the Ombudsman shall:(a) if he or she ceases to hold office as Ombudsman otherwise than
pursuant to section 6 (5), and
(b) if he or she is under the age of sixty
years,
be appointed to some office in the Public Service not lower in
classification and salary than that which he or she held immediately before
being appointed Ombudsman.
(6) The Ombudsman is not, in respect of the same period of service,
entitled to claim a benefit under this Act and another
Act.
34 Disclosure by Ombudsman or officer
(1) The Ombudsman shall not, nor shall an officer of the Ombudsman,
disclose any information obtained by the Ombudsman or officer in the course of
the Ombudsman’s or officer’s office, unless the disclosure is
made:(a) where the information is obtained from a public authority, with
the consent of the head of that authority or of the responsible
Minister,
(b) where the information is obtained from any other person:(i) with the consent of that person, or
(ii) for the purpose of proceedings with respect to the discipline of
police officers before the Commissioner of Police or the Industrial Relations
Commission,
(b1) to a police officer, the Department of Community Services or any
other public authority that the Ombudsman considers appropriate in the
circumstances if the information relates to the safety, welfare or well-being
of a particular child or young person (or a class of children or young
persons),
(b2) to any person if the Ombudsman believes on reasonable grounds that
disclosure to that person is necessary to prevent or lessen the likelihood of
harm being done to any person (but only if the Ombudsman also believes on
reasonable grounds that there is a risk of harm (including self-harm) being
done to any person),
(b3) for the purpose of any proceedings under Part 5 of the Government Information (Public Access) Act
2009 arising as a consequence of a decision made by the
Ombudsman in respect of an access application under that
Act,
(b4) for the purpose of any proceedings under section 167A of the
Police Act
1990,
(c) for the purpose of any proceedings under section 37 or under Part
3 of the Royal Commissions Act
1923 or Part 4 of the Special Commissions of Inquiry Act
1983,
(c1) to a police officer (or any other investigative authority that the
Ombudsman considers appropriate) for the purpose of making any inquiry, or
carrying out any investigation, to determine whether any proceedings referred
to in paragraph (c) should be instituted, or
(d) for the purpose of discharging his or her functions under this or
any other Act.
Maximum penalty: 10 penalty
units.
(2) Subsection (1) does not prevent the Ombudsman from furnishing any
information relating to:(a) a matter arising under a law of another State, the Commonwealth or
a Territory of the Commonwealth, or
(b) an undertaking that is or was being carried out jointly by New
South Wales and another State, the Commonwealth or a Territory of the
Commonwealth,
to a person exercising under a law of that other State, the Commonwealth
or that Territory, as the case may be, functions similar to those exercised by
the Ombudsman under this Act.
(2A) Subsection (1) does not operate to render admissible in evidence
in any proceedings any document that would not have been so admissible if this
section had not been enacted.
(3) Without limiting the operation of subsection (1) (a), in the
application of subsection (1) to and in respect of information received in the
course of an investigation under this Act of police conduct, the reference in
that subsection:(a) to a public authority—shall be construed as a reference to a
police officer,
(b) to the head of that authority—shall be construed as a
reference to the Commissioner, and
(c) to the responsible Minister—shall be construed as a
reference to the Minister administering the Police Act
1990.
(4) If:(a) the Ombudsman, or an officer of the Ombudsman, is to give evidence
before, or to produce the whole or any part of a document to, the Joint
Committee, and
(b) the evidence proposed to be given, or the whole or any part of the
document proposed to be produced, would disclose information obtained by the
Ombudsman or officer, in the course of his or her office, from a public
authority or other person, and
(c) the public authority or other person has informed the Ombudsman or
officer that the information is confidential,
the Ombudsman or officer must make a request under section 31H (1) for
the evidence to be taken in private or for a direction to be given that the
document, or part of the document, be treated as
confidential.
(5) In the case of information obtained from a public authority or
other person as referred to in subsection (4), a reference in section 31H to
the consent in writing of a witness, in relation to the disclosure or
publication of evidence, is to be construed as a reference to the consent in
writing of the public authority or other person.
35 Ombudsman, officer or expert as witness
(1) The Ombudsman shall not, nor shall an officer of the Ombudsman who
is not a member of the Police Force, be competent or compellable to give
evidence or produce any document in any legal proceedings in respect of any
information obtained by the Ombudsman or officer in the course of the
Ombudsman’s or officer’s office.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to any legal proceedings:(a) under section 21A, 35A, 35B or 37,
(b) under Part 3 of the Royal
Commissions Act 1923,
(c) under Part 4 of the Special
Commissions of Inquiry Act 1983,
(d) under Part 5 of the Government
Information (Public Access) Act 2009 arising as a consequence
of a decision made by the Ombudsman in respect of an access application under
that Act,
(e) under section 167A of the Police
Act 1990.
(3) Subsection (1) applies to a person whose services are engaged
under section 23 in the same way as it applies to the Ombudsman and officers
of the Ombudsman.
35A Immunity of Ombudsman and others
(1) The Ombudsman shall not, nor shall an officer of the Ombudsman, be
liable, whether on the ground of want of jurisdiction or on any other ground,
to any civil or criminal proceedings in respect of any act, matter or thing
done or omitted to be done for the purpose of executing this or any other Act
unless the act, matter or thing was done, or omitted to be done, in bad
faith.
(2) Civil or criminal proceedings in respect of any act or omission
referred to in subsection (1) shall not be brought against the Ombudsman or an
officer of the Ombudsman without the leave of the Supreme
Court.
(3) The Supreme Court shall not grant leave under subsection (2)
unless it is satisfied that there is substantial ground for the contention
that the person to be proceeded against has acted, or omitted to act, in bad
faith.
(4) An Australian legal practitioner assisting the Ombudsman or
representing a person at an inquiry held by the Ombudsman has the same
protection and immunity as a barrister has in appearing for a party in
proceedings in the Supreme Court.
35B Application to Supreme Court
(1) Where any question arises as to the jurisdiction of the Ombudsman
to conduct an investigation or proposed investigation (whether under this or
any other Act), the Ombudsman, or any interested party, may apply to the
Supreme Court for a determination of that question.
(2) On an application made under subsection (1) the Supreme Court may
make such order as it considers appropriate.
(3) For the purposes of subsection (1), the following persons are
interested parties:(a) the public authority the conduct of which is the subject of the
investigation or proposed investigation,
(b) the head of that public authority,
(c) if the investigation arises from the making of a complaint under
section 12 (1), the complainant.
(3A) For the purposes of subsection (1), the following persons are
interested parties in relation to the investigation of a community services
complaint within the meaning of Part 4 of the Community Services (Complaints, Reviews and
Monitoring) Act 1993:(a) a service provider or a provider of a visitable service that is
the subject of the investigation or proposed
investigation,
(b) the chief executive or principal officer of that service provider
or service,
(c) if the investigation arises from the making of a complaint under
that Act, the complainant.
(4) This section has effect notwithstanding section
35A.
35C Referral of legal question to Administrative Decisions
Tribunal for advisory opinion
(1) The Ombudsman may refer to the Administrative Decisions Tribunal
for the opinion of the Tribunal any legal question arising out of any decision
made in the exercise of any of the functions of an agency that the Ombudsman
is investigating, but only if the exercise of the function is a reviewable
decision within the meaning of the Administrative Decisions Tribunal Act
1997.
(2) On any such referral (and despite any contrary provisions of the
Administrative Decisions Tribunal Act
1997), the Tribunal may hold such hearings (if any) and inform
itself in such manner as it thinks appropriate for the purpose of determining
the proceedings for an opinion.
(3) The decision of the Tribunal on any such referral does not operate
as a binding declaration of right.
(4) In this section:agency
includes a service provider or a provider of a visitable service within the
meaning of the Community Services
(Complaints, Reviews and Monitoring) Act
1993.
36 Incriminatory statement
(1) Where, under section 18, a person is required to give a statement
that tends to incriminate that person, neither the requirement nor the
statement may be used in any proceedings against that person except
proceedings under section 37 (1) (c).
(2) Subsection (1) applies whether the person required to give a
statement objects to giving it or not.
37 Offences
(1) A person shall not:(a) without lawful excuse, wilfully obstruct, hinder or resist the
Ombudsman or an officer of the Ombudsman in the exercise of the
Ombudsman’s or officer’s powers under this or any other
Act,
(b) without lawful excuse, refuse or wilfully fail to comply with any
lawful requirement of the Ombudsman or an officer of the Ombudsman under this
or any other Act, or
(c) wilfully make any false statement to or mislead, or attempt to
mislead, the Ombudsman or an officer of the Ombudsman in the exercise of the
Ombudsman’s or officer’s powers under this or any other
Act.
Maximum penalty: 10 penalty
units.
(2) A person shall not directly or indirectly:(a) where he or she is not the Ombudsman—represent that he or
she is the Ombudsman,
(b) where he or she has not been appointed under section 7 as acting
Ombudsman—represent that he or she has been so
appointed,
(c) where he or she is not a Deputy Ombudsman—represent that he
or she is a Deputy Ombudsman,
(c1) where he or she is not an Assistant Ombudsman—represent that
he or she is an Assistant Ombudsman,
(c2) where he or she has not been appointed under section 8B as an
acting Deputy Ombudsman or an Assistant Ombudsman—represent that he or
she has been so appointed,
(d) where he or she is not a special officer of the
Ombudsman—represent that he or she is a special officer of the
Ombudsman,
(d1) where he or she is not a person to whom a delegation has been made
pursuant to section 10A—represent that he or she is such a
person,
(e) where he or she is not an officer of the Ombudsman—represent
that he or she is an officer of the Ombudsman, or
(f) where he or she is not engaged in the administration or execution
of this Act or of any other Act in so far as it confers or imposes on the
Ombudsman or an officer or special officer of the Ombudsman any
function—represent that he or she is so
engaged.
Maximum penalty: 10 penalty
units.
(3) For the purposes of subsection (2), a person represents that a
state of affairs exists if the person does or says anything, or causes,
permits or suffers anything to be done or said, whereby it is represented, or
whereby a belief may be induced, that the state of affairs
exists.
(4) A person who uses, causes, inflicts or procures any violence,
punishment, damage, loss or disadvantage to any person for or on account
of:(a) his or her making a complaint to the Ombudsman,
or
(b) his or her assisting the Ombudsman, or
(c) any evidence given by him or her to the
Ombudsman,
is guilty of an indictable offence.Maximum penalty: 200 penalty units or imprisonment for 5 years, or
both.
(5) An employer who dismisses any employee from his or her employment,
or prejudices any employee in his or her employment, for or on account of the
employee assisting the Ombudsman is guilty of an indictable
offence.Maximum penalty: 200 penalty units or imprisonment for 5 years, or
both.
(6) In any proceedings for an offence against subsection (5), it lies
on the employer to prove that any employee shown to have been dismissed or
prejudiced in his or her employment was so dismissed or prejudiced for some
reason other than the reasons mentioned in subsection
(5).
(7) In this section, a reference to a person assisting the Ombudsman
is a reference to a person who:(a) has appeared, is appearing or is to appear as a witness before the
Ombudsman, or
(b) has complied with or proposes to comply with a requirement under
section 18, or
(c) has assisted, is assisting or is to assist the Ombudsman in some
other manner.
38 Proceedings for offences
(1) Except where otherwise expressly provided by this Act, proceedings
for an offence against this Act are to be dealt with summarily before the
Local Court.
(2) If an offence against this Act is an indictable offence, the Local
Court may nevertheless hear and determine the proceedings in respect of such
an offence if the court is satisfied that it is proper to do so and the
defendant and prosecutor consent.
(3) If, in accordance with subsection (2), the Local Court convicts a
person of such an offence, the maximum penalty that the court may impose
is:(a) in the case of an individual—the smaller of:(i) a fine of 50 penalty units or imprisonment for 2 years, or both,
or
(ii) the maximum penalty otherwise applicable to the offence when
committed by an individual, or
(b) in the case of a corporation—the smaller of:(i) a fine of 100 penalty units, or
(ii) the maximum penalty otherwise applicable to the offence when
committed by a corporation.
39 Regulations
The Governor may make regulations under this Act for or with
respect to prescribing all matters which by this Act are required or permitted
to be prescribed or which are necessary or convenient to be prescribed for the
purpose of carrying out or giving effect to this Act.
40 Savings and transitional provisions
Schedule 2 has effect.
Part 6 Complaint handling by relevant agencies
41 Definitions
(1) In this Part:complaint
means a complaint (however described) that is made to a relevant
agency.
consent
includes consent that is given orally.
relevant
agency means an agency specified in Schedule 1A.
relevant complaints
legislation, in relation to a complaint, means the Act or statutory
rule that governs the making of such a complaint.
sensitive personal
information, in relation to a complainant, means information
relating to the complainant’s ethnic or racial origin, political
opinions, religious or philosophical beliefs, trade union membership, health
or sexual activities.
(2) For the purposes of this Part:(a) a reference to a complaint having been made to a relevant agency
includes a reference to a complaint having been referred to the agency under
section 42, and
(b) a reference to a complaint being within a relevant agency’s
jurisdiction is a reference to a complaint that a person is authorised by law
to make to the agency or that the agency is authorised by law to deal
with.
(3) Schedule 1A may be amended or replaced by proclamation published
on the NSW legislation website.
42 Referral of complaints between relevant
agencies
(1) Two or more relevant agencies may enter into an arrangement for
the referral of complaints between them (a complaint referral
arrangement).
(2) Under a complaint referral arrangement:(a) any agency that is party to the arrangement may be authorised to
refer to any other such agency any complaint received by it that appears to be
within, or partly within, the other agency’s jurisdiction,
and
(b) a complaint that is within, or partly within, more than one
agency’s jurisdiction may be referred to one of them, some of them or
all of them.
(3) A complaint may be referred under a complaint referral arrangement
regardless of any action that has been taken in relation to the complaint by
the agency that received it.
(4) Despite subsection (2), a complaint may not be referred from one
agency to another except with the express consent of the
complainant.
(5) Subject to the terms of the complaint referral arrangement, the
referral of a complaint discharges the agency that received the complaint from
any further obligations with respect to the complaint to the extent to which
the complaint is not within its jurisdiction, but does not prevent that agency
from continuing to deal with the complaint to the extent to which the
complaint is within its jurisdiction.
(6) A complaint that is referred to an agency under this section is
taken to have been duly made to that agency under the relevant complaints
legislation.
(7) An agency has the same immunities with respect to a complaint that
it refers to another agency under this section as it has with respect to any
complaint that it deals with under the relevant complaints
legislation.
(8) Any report in relation to complaints dealt with by a relevant
agency that is prepared by the agency for the purposes of:(a) the relevant complaints legislation, or
(b) the Annual Reports
(Departments) Act 1985, or
(c) the Annual Reports (Statutory
Bodies) Act 1984,
must distinguish between those complaints that are made directly to the
agency and those that are referred to the agency, whether under this Part or
otherwise.
(9) This section does not limit the operation of any other Act under
which an agency is authorised or required to refer complaints to another
agency.
43 Sharing of information by relevant agencies
(1) Two or more relevant agencies may enter into an arrangement for
the sharing of information held by them (an information sharing
arrangement).
(2) Under an information sharing arrangement, any agency that is party
to the arrangement may be authorised to do either or both of the following
(but only to the extent that the activity concerned is reasonably necessary to
assist the agency to carry out its functions):(a) to receive information obtained by any other such agency with
respect to a complaint dealt with by that other agency,
(b) to be present during any investigation or hearing conducted by any
other such agency with respect to a complaint.
(3) An agency that, under an information sharing arrangement, is
authorised to receive information obtained by some other agency may do so, and
the agency by which the information was obtained may provide the information
to the agency so authorised, despite any other Act or
law.
(4) An agency that, under an information sharing arrangement, is
authorised to be present during an investigation or hearing conducted by some
other agency may do so, despite any other Act or
law.
(5) For the purpose of enabling an agency so authorised to be present
during such an investigation, the agency may exercise any power of entry
exercisable by the other agency, and has all the immunities of the other
agency with respect to the exercise of any such power, despite any other Act
or law.
(6) Despite any other provision of this section, an agency must not,
except with the complainant’s express consent:(a) disclose to any other agency any information obtained by it with
respect to a complaint, or
(b) permit any other agency to be present during any investigation or
hearing conducted by it with respect to a
complaint,
if the agency has (or should have) reason to suspect that the information
is or includes sensitive personal information about the
complainant.
(7) This section does not limit the operation of any other Act under
which an agency is authorised or required to disclose information to another
agency.
44 Delegation
Despite any other Act or law, a relevant agency may delegate any
of its functions under this Part to an officer of the
agency.
45 Inter-agency agreements to be publicly
available
A relevant agency that enters into a complaint referral
arrangement under section 42 or an information sharing arrangement under
section 43 must ensure that copies of the arrangement are made available for
public inspection at each of its offices.
Schedule 1 Excluded conduct of public authorities
(Section 12)
1 Conduct of:(a) the Governor, whether acting with or without the advice of the
Executive Council,
(b) a Minister of the Crown, including a Minister of the Crown acting
as a corporation sole, but not so as to preclude conduct of a public authority
relating to a recommendation made to a Minister of the
Crown,
(c) Parliament,
(d) the Houses of Parliament,
(e) a committee of either House, or both Houses, of
Parliament,
(f) either House of Parliament,
(g) a member of either House of Parliament, where acting as
such,
(h) an officer of Parliament or of either House of Parliament, where
acting as such.
2 Conduct of:(a) a court or a person associated with a court,
or
(b) a person or body (not being a court) before whom witnesses may be
compelled to appear and give evidence, and persons associated with such a
person or body, where the conduct relates to the carrying on and determination
of an inquiry or any other proceeding.
For the purposes of this item, neither the Sheriff nor a
sheriff’s officer or any security officer within the meaning of the
Court Security Act 2005 are
taken to be associated with a court referred to in paragraph (a) or a person
or body referred to in paragraph (b).
2A Conduct of the Sheriff, or of any sheriff’s officer or any
security officer within the meaning of the Court Security Act 2005, in relation
to:(a) the maintenance of court security, or
(b) the enforcement of a warrant of arrest or warrant of committal,
or
(c) the execution of a writ,
being conduct engaged in at the direction of a court, or of a Judge or
Magistrate presiding over proceedings before a court, but excluding conduct
engaged in otherwise than in accordance with such a
direction.
3 Conduct of a body of which one or more of the members is appointed
by the Governor or a Minister of the Crown where:(a) at least one member of the body may be appointed by virtue of his
or her being a Judge of the Supreme Court of New South Wales, a member of the
Industrial Relations Commission of New South Wales, a Judge of the Land and
Environment Court of New South Wales or a Judge of the District Court of New
South Wales, and
(b) such a person, if appointed as such a member, has a right or duty
to preside at a meeting of the body at which the person is
present.
4 Conduct of a public authority relating to a Bill for an Act or the
making of a rule, regulation or by-law.
5 (Repealed)
6 Conduct of a public authority where acting as a legal adviser to a
public authority or as legal representative of a public
authority.
7 Conduct of the Attorney General, or of the Solicitor General, or
of the Director of Public Prosecutions, relating to the commencement, carrying
on or termination of any proceedings before a court, including a coronial
inquiry and committal proceedings before a magistrate.
8 Conduct of a public authority relating to the carrying on of any
proceedings:(a) before any court, including a coronial inquiry and committal
proceedings before a magistrate, or
(b) before any other person or body before whom witnesses may be
compelled to appear and give evidence.
9 Conduct of a public authority relating to an exercise of the
prerogative of mercy.
10 Conduct of a public authority where acting as a commissioner under
the Royal Commissions Act
1923 or, by the authority of an Act, exercising the powers of
such a commissioner.
11 Conduct of a public authority where acting as a Commissioner under
the Special Commissions of Inquiry Act
1983.
12 Conduct of a public authority relating to:(a) the appointment or employment of a person as an officer or
employee, and
(b) matters affecting a person as an officer or
employee,
unless the conduct:(c) arises from the making of a public interest disclosure (within the
meaning of the Public Interest Disclosures
Act 1994), or
(d) relates to a reportable allegation or reportable conviction
(within the meaning of Part 3A of this Act), or to the inappropriate handling
or response to such an allegation or conviction.
13 Conduct of a police officer when exercising the functions of a
police officer with respect to crime and the preservation of the
peace.
14 Conduct of a public authority relating to the investment of any
funds.
15 Conduct of a public authority where the conduct is a decision made
by the public authority in the course of the administration of an estate or a
trust, being a decision as to the payment or investment of money or the
transfer of property.
16 (Repealed)
17 Conduct of a public authority relating to alleged violations of
the privacy of persons.
18 Conduct of a mediator at a mediation session under the Community Justice Centres Act
1983.
19 Conduct of a public authority where acting as an executive officer
of the New South Wales Crime Commission, or as a member of the New South Wales
Crime Commission Management Committee, under the Crime Commission Act 2012 (unless
the conduct relates to a matter referred to the Ombudsman by the Inspector of
the New South Wales Crime Commission under the Crime Commission Act 2012 or by the
Inspector of the Police Integrity Commission under the Police Integrity Commission Act
1996).
20 Conduct of the Independent Commission Against Corruption, the
Commissioner or an Assistant Commissioner or an officer of the Commission,
where exercising functions under the Independent Commission Against Corruption Act
1988.
21 (Repealed)
22 Conduct of the Hen Quota Committee where exercising functions
under the Egg Industry (Repeal and Deregulation) Act
1989.
23 (Repealed)
24 Conduct of the Casino Control Authority or any other public
authority when exercising functions under the Casino Control Act
1992.
25 Conduct of the HomeFund Commissioner or a member of the staff of
the HomeFund Commissioner, when exercising functions under the HomeFund Commissioner Act
1993.
26 Conduct of the Legal Services Commissioner or a member of staff of
the Commissioner, when exercising functions under Chapter 4 or 6 of the
Legal Profession Act
2004.
27 Conduct of a conciliator in relation to the conciliation of a
complaint under the Health Care Complaints
Act 1993.
28 (Repealed)
Schedule 1A Agencies
(Section 41)
Audit Office of New South Wales
Community Services Commission
Department of Local Government
Health Care Complaints Commission
Information Commissioner
Legal Services Commissioner
Ombudsman
President of the Anti-Discrimination Board
Privacy Commissioner
Schedule 2 Savings and transitional provisions
(Section 40)
1 Regulations
(1) The regulations may contain provisions of a savings or
transitional nature consequent on the enactment of the following Acts:Community Services Legislation
Amendment Act 2002 (but only to the extent that it amends this
Act)
Child Protection Legislation
Amendment Act 2003
Ombudsman Amendment (Removal of
Legal Professional Privilege) Act 2010
any other Act that amends this Act
(2) Any such provision may, if the regulations so provide, take effect
from the date of assent to the Act concerned or a later
date.
(3) To the extent to which any such provision takes effect from a date
that is earlier than the date of its publication in the Gazette, the provision
does not operate so as:(a) to affect, in a manner prejudicial to any person (other than the
State or an authority of the State), the rights of that person existing before
the date of its publication, or
(b) to impose liabilities on any person (other than the State or an
authority of the State) in respect of anything done or omitted to be done
before the date of its publication.
2 Existing Deputy Ombudsman and Assistant
Ombudsman
Nothing in the Community
Services Legislation Amendment Act 2002 affects the
appointment of a person who held office as a Deputy Ombudsman or an Assistant
Ombudsman immediately before the substitution of section 8 (1) by that
Act.
3 Child Protection
Legislation Amendment Act 2003
Subject to any regulations under clause 1, the amendments made to
this Act by the Child Protection Legislation
Amendment Act 2003 extend to matters arising before the
commencement of those amendments, but do not affect any action that is or has
been taken by the Ombudsman, or by the head or any employee of an agency, in
relation to a matter notified to the Ombudsman before that
commencement.
4 Joint Committee
The change to the name of the Joint Committee made by the
amendment to section 31A by the Crime
Commission Act 2012 does not affect the identity of that
Committee or the exercise by that Committee of its functions under this or any
other Act.
Historical notes
The following abbreviations are used in the Historical notes:
Am |
amended |
LW |
legislation website |
Sch |
Schedule |
Cl |
clause |
No |
number |
Schs |
Schedules |
Cll |
clauses |
p |
page |
Sec |
section |
Div |
Division |
pp |
pages |
Secs |
sections |
Divs |
Divisions |
Reg |
Regulation |
Subdiv |
Subdivision |
GG |
Government Gazette |
Regs |
Regulations |
Subdivs |
Subdivisions |
Ins |
inserted |
Rep |
repealed |
Subst |
substituted |
Table of amending instruments
Ombudsman Act 1974 No
68. Assented to 18.10.1974. Date of commencement of Part 3,
12.5.1975, sec 2 (2) and GG No 66 of 9.5.1975, p 1791. This Act has been
amended as follows:
1975 | No 37 | Privacy Committee Act 1975. Assented
to 16.4.1975. Date of commencement, 2.5.1975, sec 2 and GG No 63 of 2.5.1975, p
1752.
|
1976 | No 4 | Statutory and Other Offices
Remuneration Act 1975. Assented to 7.1.1976. Date of commencement of Sch 5, 2.2.1976, sec 2 (2) and GG No 15 of
30.1.1976, p 398.
|
| | No 39 | Ombudsman (Amendment) Act 1976.
Assented to 13.10.1976. Date of commencement, 1.12.1976, sec 2 and GG No 143 of 5.11.1976, p
4834.
|
1978 | No 81 | Ombudsman (Amendment) Act 1978.
Assented to 11.9.1978. Date of commencement, 19.2.1979, sec 2 and GG No 27 of 16.2.1979, p
705.
|
1983 | No 129 | Ombudsman (Community Justice Centres) Amendment Act
1983. Assented to 20.12.1983. Date of commencement of sec 3, 1.12.1983, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 189 | Ombudsman (Amendment) Act
1983. Assented to 31.12.1983. |
| | No 193 | Ombudsman (Police Regulation) Amendment Act
1983. Assented to 31.12.1983. Date of commencement of Sch 1, 17.2.1984, sec 2 (2) and GG No 24 of
17.2.1984, p 753.
|
1984 | No 153 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Amendments) Act 1984. Assented to
10.12.1984. |
1985 | No 118 | Miscellaneous Acts (State Drug Crime
Commission) Amendment Act 1985. Assented to
11.12.1985. |
| | No 213 | Ombudsman (Police Regulation)
Amendment Act 1985. Assented to
10.12.1985. |
1986 | No 212 | Miscellaneous Acts (Public Prosecutions) Amendment
Act 1986. Assented to 23.12.1986. Date of commencement of Sch 1, 13.7.1987, sec 2 (2) and GG No 117 of
10.7.1987, p 3860.
|
| | No 218 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 1986. Assented to
23.12.1986. |
1987 | No 136 | Ombudsman (Amendment) Act 1987.
Assented to 16.6.1987. Date of commencement of sec 3, 4.8.1987, sec 2 (2) and GG No 126 of
31.7.1987, p 4253.
|
| | No 172 | Ombudsman (Further Amendment) Act
1987. Assented to 26.11.1987. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
1988 | No 35 | Independent Commission Against
Corruption Act 1988. Assented to 6.7.1988. Date of commencement, 13.3.1989, sec 2 and GG No 30 of 10.3.1989, p
1332.
|
1989 | No 58 | Police Department (Transit
Police) Act 1989. Assented to 22.5.1989. Date of commencement, 1.10.1989, sec 2 and GG No 98 of 29.9.1989, p
7770.
|
| | No 99 | Egg Industry (Repeal and Deregulation) Act
1989. Assented to 8.8.1989. Date of commencement of sec 87, 12.8.1989, sec 2 and GG No 88 of
11.8.1989, p 5261.
|
| | No 226 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 3)
1989. Assented to 21.12.1989. Date of commencement of the provisions of Sch 1 relating to the Ombudsman Act 1974, 19.1.1990, Sch 1
and GG No 11 of 19.1.1990, p 378.
|
1990 | No 48 | Police and Superannuation Legislation (Amendment)
Act 1990. Assented to 26.6.1990. Date of commencement, 1.7.1990, sec 2 and GG No 82 of 29.6.1990, p
5409.
|
| | No 79 | Ombudsman (Amendment) Act 1990.
Assented to 4.12.1990. Date of commencement, 18.1.1991, sec 2 and GG No 16 of 18.1.1991, p
467.
|
1991 | No 3 | Ombudsman (Amendment) Act 1991.
Assented to 17.4.1991. Date of commencement, 3.5.1991, sec 2 and GG No 67 of 3.5.1991, p
3315.
|
1992 | No 15 | Casino Control Act
1992. Assented to 7.5.1992. Date of commencement, 15.5.1992, sec 2 and GG No 60 of 15.5.1992, p
3292.
|
| | No 43 | Statutory Appointments Legislation (Parliamentary
Veto) Amendment Act 1992. Assented to 19.5.1992. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 57 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2)
1992. Assented to 8.10.1992. Date of commencement of the provision of Sch 2 relating to the Ombudsman Act 1974, assent, Sch
2.
|
1993 | No 9 | HomeFund Commissioner Act
1993. Assented to 4.5.1993. Date of commencement, 10.5.1993, sec 2 and GG No 43 of 7.5.1993, p
2116.
|
| | No 37 | Ombudsman (Amendment) Act 1993.
Assented to 8.6.1993. Date of commencement, 12.7.1993, sec 2 and GG No 78 of 9.7.1993, p
3770.
|
| | No 38 | Police Service (Complaints, Discipline and Appeals)
Amendment Act 1993. Assented to 8.6.1993. Date of commencement of the provisions of Sch 4 relating to the Ombudsman Act 1974, 1.7.1993, sec 2
and GG No 65 of 25.6.1993, p 3074.
|
| | No 47 | Statute Law (Penalties) Act 1993.
Assented to 15.6.1993. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 87 | Legal Profession Reform Act 1993.
Assented to 29.11.1993. Date of commencement of Sch 6, 1.7.1994, sec 2 and GG No 78 of 10.6.1994,
p 2763.
|
| | No 105 | Health Care Complaints Act
1993. Assented to 2.12.1993. Date of commencement of the provision of Sch 3 relating to the Ombudsman Act 1974, 1.7.1994, sec 2
and GG No 88 of 1.7.1994, p 3239.
|
1994 | No 9 | Police Service (Complaints) Amendment Act
1994. Assented to 4.5.1994. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 73 | State Bank (Privatisation) Act
1994. Assented to 23.11.1994. Date of commencement of the provision of Sch 2 relating to the Ombudsman Act 1974, 31.12.1994, sec
21 and GG No 179 of 30.12.1994, p 7847.
|
| | No 95 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2)
1994. Assented to 12.12.1994. Date of commencement of the provisions of Sch 1 relating to the Ombudsman Act 1974, assent, Sch
1.
|
1995 | No 3 | Parliamentary Committees Legislation Amendment Act
1995. Assented to 30.5.1995. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 11 | Statute Law Revision (Local Government) Act
1995. Assented to 9.6.1995. Date of commencement of Sch 1.88, 23.6.1995, sec 2 (1) and GG No 77 of
23.6.1995, p 3279.
|
| | No 16 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act
1995. Assented to 15.6.1995. Date of commencement of Sch 3, assent, sec
2.
|
| | No 99 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2)
1995. Assented to 21.12.1995. Date of commencement of Sch 1.16, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
1996 | No 29 | Police Legislation Amendment Act
1996. Assented to 21.6.1996. Date of commencement of Sch 4, 1.7.1996, sec 2 and GG No 77 of 28.6.1996,
p 3285.
|
| | No 121 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2)
1996. Assented to 3.12.1996. Date of commencement of Sch 4.38, 4 months after assent, sec 2
(4).
|
1997 | No 77 | Administrative Decisions Legislation Amendment Act
1997. Assented to 10.7.1997. Date of commencement of Sch 6.4, 6.10.1998, sec 2 and GG No 143 of
2.10.1998, p 7889.
|
| | No 147 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2)
1997. Assented to 17.12.1997. Date of commencement of Sch 2.20, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 152 | Environmental Planning and Assessment Amendment Act
1997. Assented to 19.12.1997. Date of commencement, 1.7.1998, sec 2 and GG No 101 of 1.7.1998, p
5119.
|
1998 | No 54 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act
1998. Assented to 30.6.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 1.13, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 123 | Police Service Amendment
(Complaints and Management Reform) Act 1998. Assented to
26.11.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 2.1, 8.4.2001, sec 2 and GG No 64 of
6.4.2001, p 1764.
|
| | No 133 | Privacy and Personal
Information Protection Act 1998. Assented to
30.11.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 3.5, 1.6.1999, sec 2 and GG No 63 of
28.5.1999, p 3571.
|
| | No 148 | Ombudsman Amendment (Child Protection and Community
Services) Act 1998. Assented to 8.12.1998. Date of commencement, 7.5.1999, sec 2 and GG No 56 of 7.5.1999, p
3031.
|
| | No 158 | Children and Young Persons
Legislation (Repeal and Amendment) Act 1998. Assented to
14.12.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 2.23, 30.9.2004, sec 2 and GG No 87 of
21.5.2004, p 2922.
|
1999 | No 16 | Parliamentary Committees Legislation Amendment Act
1999. Assented to 9.6.1999. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 31 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 1999. Assented to 7.7.1999. Date of commencement of Sch 5, assent, sec 2
(1).
|
| | No 85 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 1999. Assented to 3.12.1999. Date of commencement of Sch 4, assent, sec 2
(1).
|
2000 | No 93 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2000. Assented to 8.12.2000. Date of commencement of Sch 1.13, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
2001 | No 56 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2001. Assented to 17.7.2001. Date of commencement of Sch 1.9, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 112 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2001. Assented to 14.12.2001. Date of commencement of Sch 2.26, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
2002 | No 42 | Community Services Legislation
Amendment Act 2002. Assented to 3.7.2002. Date of commencement, 1.12.2002, sec 2 and GG No 237 of 29.11.2002, p
10061.
|
| | No 51 | Police Service Amendment (NSW
Police) Act 2002. Assented to 4.7.2002. Date of commencement of Sch 2.8, 12.7.2002, sec 2 (1) and GG No 116 of
12.7.2002, p 5226.
|
| | No 112 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2002. Assented to 29.11.2002. Date of commencement of Sch 1.18, assent, sec 2
(3).
|
2003 | No 40 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2003. Assented to 22.7.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 1.34, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 90 | Child Protection Legislation
Amendment Act 2003. Assented to 10.12.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 1, 23.4.2004, sec 2 and GG No 75 of
23.4.2004, p 2135.
|
2004 | No 55 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2004. Assented to 6.7.2004. Date of commencement of Sch 1.15, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
2005 | No 6 | Sheriff Act 2005.
Assented to 10.3.2005. Date of commencement of Sch 1.3 [1] [3] and [5], 1.7.2005, sec 2 (1) and
GG No 77 of 24.6.2005, p 2954; date of commencement of Sch 1.3 [2], 9.1.2006,
sec 2 (2) and GG No 157 of 16.12.2005, p 10875; date of commencement of Sch
1.3 [4], 9.1.2006, sec 2 (3) and GG No 157 of 16.12.2005, p
10875.
|
| | No 46 | Legal Profession Amendment Act
2005. Assented to 23.6.2005. Date of commencement, 1.10.2005, sec 2 and GG No 105 of 19.8.2005, p
4571.
|
| | No 64 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2005. Assented to 1.7.2005. Date of commencement of Sch 1.23, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 77 | Defamation Act
2005. Assented to 26.10.2005. Date of commencement, 1.1.2006, sec 2.
|
2007 | No 27 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2007. Assented to 4.7.2007. Date of commencement of Sch 1.33, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 94 | Miscellaneous Acts (Local Court)
Amendment Act 2007. Assented to 13.12.2007. Date of commencement of Schs 2, 4, 6.7.2009, sec 2 and 2009 (314) LW
3.7.2009.
|
2008 | No 36 | Environmental Planning and
Assessment Amendment Act 2008. Assented to 25.6.2008. The amendment was not commenced and was repealed by the Planning Appeals Legislation Amendment Act
2010 No 120.
|
| | No 62 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2008. Assented to 1.7.2008. Date of commencement of Sch 1.20, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
2009 | No 53 | Government Information
(Information Commissioner) Act 2009. Assented to
26.6.2009. Date of commencement, 17.7.2009, sec 2 and 2009 (329) LW
17.7.2009.
|
| | No 54 | Government Information (Public
Access) (Consequential Amendments and Repeal) Act 2009.
Assented to 26.6.2009. Date of commencement, 1.7.2010, sec 2 and 2010 (248) LW 18.6.2010. Sch
2.33 [8] was without effect as the provision being amended was amended by the
Government Information (Information
Commissioner) Act 2009 No 53.
|
| | No 56 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2009. Assented to 1.7.2009. Date of commencement of Sch 4, 17.7.2009, sec 2
(1).
|
| | No 96 | Public Sector Restructure
(Miscellaneous Acts Amendments) Act 2009. Assented to
30.11.2009. Date of commencement of Sch 15, 1.9.2011, sec 2 (2) and 2011 (447) LW
26.8.2011.
|
2010 | No 9 | Crimes Amendment (Child
Pornography and Abuse Material) Act 2010. Assented to
28.4.2010. Date of commencement of Sch 3, 17.9.2010, sec 2 (1) and 2010 (517) LW
10.9.2010.
|
| | No 54 | Industrial Relations Amendment
(Public Sector Appeals) Act 2010. Assented to
28.6.2010. Date of commencement, 1.7.2010, sec 2.
|
| | No 59 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2010. Assented to 28.6.2010. Date of commencement of Sch 1.19, 9.7.2010, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 67 | Children and Young Persons (Care
and Protection) Amendment (Children’s Services) Act
2010. Assented to 15.9.2010. Date of commencement, 1.1.2011, sec 2 and 2010 (694) LW
16.12.2010.
|
| | No 71 | Privacy and Government
Information Legislation Amendment Act 2010. Assented to
28.9.2010. Date of commencement, 1.1.2011, sec 2 and 2010 (657) LW
3.12.2010.
|
| | No 80 | Ombudsman Amendment (Removal of
Legal Professional Privilege) Act 2010. Assented to
27.10.2010. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 84 | Protected Disclosures Amendment
(Public Interest Disclosures) Act 2010. Assented to
1.11.2010. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 3.3.2011, sec 2 and 2011 (121) LW
3.3.2011.
|
| | No 97 | Health Services Amendment (Local
Health Networks) Act 2010. Assented to 16.11.2010. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 1.1.2011, sec 2 (1) and 2010 (716) LW
17.12.2010.
|
2011 | No 4 | Health Services Amendment (Local
Health Districts and Boards) Act 2011. Assented to
16.5.2011. Date of commencement, 1.7.2011, sec 2 and 2011 (313) LW
1.7.2011.
|
| | No 37 | Public Interest Disclosures
Amendment Act 2011. Assented to 13.9.2011. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 1.11.2011, sec 2 (1) and 2011 (535) LW
7.10.2011.
|
| | (587) | Ombudsman Amendment (Audit Office
of New South Wales) Proclamation 2011. LW 18.11.2011. Date of commencement, on publication on LW, cl
2.
|
| | No 70 | Children (Education and Care
Services) Supplementary Provisions Act 2011. Assented to
28.11.2011. Date of commencement, 1.1.2012, sec 2 and 2011 (689) LW
23.12.2011.
|
2012 | No 66 | Crime Commission Act
2012. Assented to 24.9.2012. Date of commencement of Sch 5.10, 5.10.2012, sec 2 and 2012 (499) LW
5.10.2012.
|
| | (515) | Ombudsman Amendment (Crime
Commission) Proclamation 2012. LW 10.10.2012. Date of commencement, on publication on LW, cl
2.
|
| | No 100 | Ombudsman Amendment Act
2012. Assented to 26.11.2012. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
This Act has also been amended by proclamations pursuant to secs
14 and 41 (3). Amendments made by proclamations prior to 1.4.2005 are listed
only in the Table of amendments.
Table of amendments
No reference is made to certain amendments made by Schedule 3
(amendments replacing gender-specific language) to the Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act
1995.
Long title | Am 1983 No 189, Sch 2 (1). |
Sec 3 | Am 1976 No 39, Sch 1 (1); 1983 No 193, Sch 1 (1).
Rep 1999 No 31, Sch 5.79. |
Sec 5 | Am 1976 No 39, Sch 1 (2); 1978 No 81, Sch 1 (1);
1983 No 189, Schs 1 (1), 2 (2); 1983 No 193, Sch 1 (2); 1986 No 218, Sch 29;
1987 No 136, sec 3; 1989 No 226, Sch 1; 1990 No 79, Sch 1 (1); 1993 No 38, Sch
4; 1994 No 9, Sch 2 (1); 1995 No 11, Sch 1; 1996 No 29, Sch 4 [1]; 1997 No
147, Sch 2.20; 1997 No 152, Sch 4.27; 1998 No 54, Sch 1.13 [1]–[5]; 2005
No 77, Sch 6.12 [1]; 2009 No 96, Sch 15 [1]; 2012 No 66, Sch 5.10
[1]. |
Sec 5A | Ins 1993 No 37, Sch 1 (1). |
Sec 6 | Am 1976 No 4, Sch 5; 1983 No 189, Sch 2 (3); 1998
No 54, Sch 1.13 [6] [7]; 2002 No 42, Sch 3 [1]. |
Sec 6A | Ins 1992 No 43, Sch 1. |
Sec 7 | Am 1976 No 4, Sch 5; 1993 No 38, Sch
4. |
Sec 8 | Am 1983 No 189, Schs 1 (2), 2 (4); 1989 No 226, Sch
1. Subst 1991 No 3, sec 3. Am 2002 No 42, Sch 3
[2]–[4]. |
Sec 8A | Ins 1983 No 189, Sch 1 (3). Subst 1991 No 3, sec 3.
Am 2001 No 56, Sch 1.9 [1]; 2002 No 42, Sch 3 [5]. |
Sec 8B | Ins 2002 No 42, Sch 3 [6]. |
Sec 9 | Am 1990 No 79, Sch 1 (2). |
Sec 10 | Am 1975 No 37, sec 26 (a); 1983 No 189, Schs 1 (4),
2 (5); 1983 No 193, Sch 1 (3); 1985 No 213, Sch 1 (1); 1986 No 218, Sch 29;
1987 No 172, sec 3 (a), (b); 1989 No 226, Sch 1; 2001 No 56, Sch 1.9 [1]; 2008
No 62, Sch 1.20. |
Sec 10A | Ins 1983 No 189, Sch 1 (5). Am 1990 No 79, Sch 1
(3); 1994 No 95, Sch 1. |
Sec 10B | Ins 1983 No 189, Sch 1 (5). |
Sec 11 | Am 1978 No 81, Sch 1 (2); 1983 No 189, Sch 1 (6);
2002 No 42, Sch 3 [7]. |
Part 3, heading | Am 1994 No 95, Sch 1. |
Sec 12 | Am 1976 No 39, Sch 1 (3); 2001 No 56, Sch 1.9
[2]. |
Sec 13 | Am 1976 No 39, Sch 1 (4); 1983 No 193, Sch 1 (4);
1989 No 226, Sch 1; 1993 No 38, Sch 4. |
Sec 13AA | Ins 1995 No 99, Sch 1. Am 2001 No 56, Sch 1.9
[3]. |
Sec 13A | Ins 1994 No 95, Sch 1. |
Sec 14 | Am 1976 No 39, Sch 1 (5); 1994 No 95, Sch 1; 2009
No 56, Sch 4.48 [1]. |
Sec 15 | Am 1983 No 193, Sch 1 (5); 1993 No 38, Sch 4; 1994
No 95, Sch 1; 2000 No 93, Sch 1.13 [1]. |
Sec 16 | Am 1983 No 193, Sch 1 (6); 1993 No 38, Sch
4. |
Sec 18 | Am 1983 No 189, Sch 1 (7). |
Sec 19 | Am 1989 No 226, Sch 1; 2012 No 100, Sch 1
[1]. |
Secs 19A–19C | Ins 2012 No 100, Sch 1 [2]. |
Sec 21 | Subst 1993 No 37, Sch 1 (2). Am 2010 No 80, sec 3
(1). |
Sec 21A | Ins 1993 No 37, Sch 1 (2). Am 2010 No 80, sec 3
(1). |
Sec 21B | Ins 1993 No 37, Sch 1 (2). Rep 2009 No 54, Sch 2.33
[1]. |
Sec 21C (formerly sec 21A) | Ins 1983 No 189, Sch 1 (8). Am 1989 No 226, Sch 1.
Renumbered 1993 No 37, Sch 1 (3). |
Sec 22 | Am 1983 No 189, Sch 2 (6); 1989 No 226, Sch 1; 1993
No 37, Sch 1 (4); 2009 No 54, Sch 2.33 [2] [3]. |
Sec 23 | Am 1990 No 79, Sch 1 (4); 1994 No 95, Sch 1; 2002
No 42, Sch 3 [8]. |
Secs 24, 25 | Am 1983 No 193, Sch 1 (6); 1993 No 38, Sch
4. |
Part 3A | Ins 1998 No 148, Sch 1 [1]. |
Sec 25A | Ins 1998 No 148, Sch 1 [1]. Am 1998 No 158, Sch
2.23; 2000 No 93, Sch 1.13 [2]; 2003 No 90, Sch 1 [1]–[3]; 2009 No 96,
Sch 15 [2]; 2010 No 67, Sch 2.5; 2010 No 90, Sch 3.4; 2010 No 97, Sch 2.23;
2011 No 4, Sch 2.25; 2011 No 70, Sch 2.11. |
Sec 25B | Ins 1998 No 148, Sch 1 [1]. Am 2003 No 90, Sch 1
[3] [4]. |
Sec 25C | Ins 1998 No 148, Sch 1 [1]. Am 2003 No 90, Sch 1
[3] [5]. |
Sec 25CA | Ins 2003 No 90, Sch 1 [6]. |
Sec 25D | Ins 1998 No 148, Sch 1 [1]. Am 2003 No 40, Sch 1.34
[1]; 2003 No 90, Sch 1 [4]. |
Secs 25E–25G | Ins 1998 No 148, Sch 1 [1]. Am 2003 No 90, Sch 1
[3]. |
Sec 25H | Ins 1998 No 148, Sch 1 [1]. |
Sec 25I | Ins 1998 No 148, Sch 1 [1]. Am 2003 No 90, Sch 1
[4]. |
Sec 25J | Ins 1998 No 148, Sch 1 [1]. |
Sec 25AA (formerly sec 25A) | Ins 1983 No 193, Sch 1 (7). Am 1993 No 38, Sch 4.
Renumbered 1998 No 148, Sch 1 [2]. |
Sec 26 | Am 1983 No 189, Sch 2 (7); 1989 No 226, Sch
1. |
Sec 26A | Ins 1989 No 226, Sch 1. Am 1995 No 11, Sch
1. |
Sec 27 | Am 1993 No 37, Sch 1 (5). |
Sec 28 | Am 1983 No 189, Sch 2 (8); 1989 No 226, Sch
1. |
Sec 29 | Am 1983 No 193, Sch 1 (8); 1993 No 38, Sch 4; 2000
No 93, Sch 1.13 [3]. |
Sec 30 | Am 1983 No 189, Sch 2 (9). Subst 1993 No 37, Sch 1
(6). |
Sec 30A | Ins 1993 No 37, Sch 1 (6). |
Sec 31 | Am 1993 No 37, Sch 1 (7). |
Secs 31AA, 31AB | Ins 1993 No 37, Sch 1 (8). |
Sec 31AC | Ins 2001 No 56, Sch 1.9 [4]. Am 2003 No 40, Sch
1.34 [2]; 2009 No 54, Sch 2.33 [4]. |
Part 4A | Ins 1990 No 79, Sch 1 (5). |
Sec 31A | Ins 1990 No 79, Sch 1 (5). Am 1996 No 29, Sch 4 [2]
[3]; 2009 No 53, Sch 1.2 [1]; 2010 No 71, Sch 4.1 [1]; 2012 No 66, Sch 5.10
[2] [3]. |
Sec 31B | Ins 1990 No 79, Sch 1 (5). Am 1996 No 29, Sch 4
[4]. |
Sec 31BA | Ins 1992 No 43, Sch 1. Am 1996 No 29, Sch 4 [5]
[6]; 2009 No 53, Sch 1.2 [2] [3]; 2010 No 71, Sch 4.1 [2] [3]; 2012 No 66, Sch
5.10 [4] [5]. |
Sec 31C | Ins 1990 No 79, Sch 1 (5). Am 1995 No 3, Sch 3 [1]
[2]; 1999 No 16, Sch 1.2 [1] [2]. |
Sec 31D | Ins 1990 No 79, Sch 1 (5). |
Sec 31E | Ins 1990 No 79, Sch 1 (5). Am 2007 No 27, Sch 1.33
[1] [2]. |
Sec 31F | Ins 1990 No 79, Sch 1 (5). Am 1995 No 3, Sch 3 [3];
1999 No 16, Sch 1.2 [3]; 2007 No 27, Sch 1.33 [1] [2]. |
Sec 31FA | Ins 1994 No 95, Sch 1. |
Sec 31G | Ins 1990 No 79, Sch 1 (5). |
Sec 31H | Ins 1990 No 79, Sch 1 (5). Am 1992 No 43, Sch 1;
1993 No 47, Sch 1; 1996 No 29, Sch 4 [7]; 2005 No 77, Sch 6.12 [2]; 2007 No
27, Sch 1.33 [1]; 2010 No 59, Sch 1.19; 2010 No 71, Sch 4.1
[4]. |
Secs 31I, 31J | Ins 1990 No 79, Sch 1 (5). |
Sec 32 | Am 1983 No 189, Sch 2 (10); 1983 No 193, Sch 1 (9);
1985 No 213, Sch 1 (2); 1987 No 172, sec 3 (c); 1993 No 38, Sch 4; 1998 No 54,
Sch 1.13 [6]. |
Sec 34 | Am 1978 No 81, Sch 1 (3); 1983 No 189, Schs 1 (9),
2 (11); 1983 No 193, Sch 1 (10); 1984 No 153, Sch 16; 1990 No 48, Sch 1; 1990
No 79, Sch 1 (6); 1993 No 38, Sch 4; 1993 No 47, Sch 1; 1998 No 123, Sch 2.1
[1]; 2003 No 40, Sch 1.34 [3] [4]; 2004 No 55, Sch 1.15 [1] [2]; 2005 No 64,
Sch 1.23 [1] [2]; 2009 No 54, Sch 2.33 [5]; 2010 No 54, Sch
3.8. |
Sec 35 | Am 1983 No 189, Sch 1 (10); 1983 No 193, Sch 1
(11); 1990 No 79, Sch 1 (7); 1994 No 95, Sch 1; 1998 No 123, Sch 2.1 [2]; 2005
No 64, Sch 1.23 [3]; 2009 No 54, Sch 2.33 [6] [7]. |
Sec 35A | Ins 1983 No 189, Sch 1 (11). Am 1996 No 29, Sch 4
[8]; 2012 No 100, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 35B | Ins 1983 No 189, Sch 1 (11). Am 2002 No 42, Sch 3
[9] [10]. |
Sec 35C | Ins 1997 No 77, Sch 6.4. Am 2002 No 42, Sch 3
[11]. |
Sec 37 | Am 1978 No 81, Sch 1 (4); 1983 No 189, Schs 1 (12),
2 (11) (12); 1993 No 47, Sch 1; 1996 No 29, Sch 4 [9]; 2002 No 42, Sch 3
[12]–[14]. |
Sec 38 | Subst 1996 No 29, Sch 4 (10). Am 2007 No 94, Schs
2, 4. |
Sec 40 | Rep 1999 No 85, Sch 4. Ins 2002 No 42, Sch 3
[15]. |
Part 6 | Ins 2002 No 112, Sch 1.18 [1]. |
Sec 41 | Ins 2002 No 112, Sch 1.18 [1]. Am 2009 No 56, Sch
4.48 [2]. |
Secs 42–45 | Ins 2002 No 112, Sch 1.18 [1]. |
Sch 1 | Am 1975 No 37, sec 26 (b); 1976 No 39, Sch 1 (6);
GG No 14 of 26.1.1979, p 326; GG No 35 of 27.2.1981, p 1081; 1983 No 129, sec
3; 1983 No 189, Sch 1 (13); 1985 No 118, Sch 1; 1986 No 212, Sch 1; 1988 No
35, sec 118; 1989 No 58, sec 39; 1989 No 99, sec 87; GG No 134 of 27.9.1991, p
8326; 1992 No 15, Sch 4; 1992 No 57, Sch 2; 1993 No 9, Sch 2; 1993 No 87, Sch
6; 1993 No 105, Sch 3; 1994 No 9, Sch 2 (2); 1994 No 73, Sch 2; GG No 122 of
6.10.1995, p 7037; 1996 No 121, Sch 4.38; GG No 92 of 12.6.1998, p 4146; 1998
No 133, Sch 3.5; 1998 No 148, Sch 1 [3] [4]; 2001 No 112, Sch 2.26; 2002 No
42, Sch 3 [16]; 2003 No 90, Sch 1 [3]; 2005 No 6, Sch 1.3 [1]–[5]; 2005
No 46, Sch 11.5; 2005 No 64, Sch 1.23 [4]; 2010 No 84, Sch 2.8; 2011 No 37,
Sch 2.4; 2012 No 66, Sch 5.10 [6]; 2012 (515), cl 3. |
Sch 1A | Ins 2002 No 112, Sch 1.18 [2]. Am GG No 128 of
22.8.2003, p 8013; 2009 No 53, Sch 1.2 [4]; 2011 (587), cl
3. |
Sch 2 | Ins 2002 No 42, Sch 3 [17]. Am 2003 No 90, Sch 1
[7] [8]; 2010 No 80, sec 3 (2); 2012 No 66, Sch 5.10 [7]; 2012 No 100, Sch 1
[4]. |
The whole Act | Am 2002 No 51, Sch 2.8 (“the Police Service Act 1990”
omitted wherever occurring, “the Police Act 1990” inserted
instead). |