Veterinary Practice Act 2003 No 87
Current version for 11 January 2013 to date (accessed 19 May 2013 at 17:12)
18 Refusal of registration
The Board may refuse to register an applicant as a veterinary
practitioner on any of the following grounds:(a) the applicant is not of good character,
(b) the applicant has been found guilty of any of the following
offences:(i) an offence under this Act, the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals Act
1979, the Stock Medicines
Act 1989, the Stock Diseases
Act 1923, the Exotic
Diseases of Animals Act 1991, the Poisons and Therapeutic Goods Act
1966, or the Export Control Act
1982 of the Commonwealth, or any of the regulations under
those Acts,
(ii) any other offence under a law of this State or of the
Commonwealth, or another State or Territory, that imposes a requirement on a
veterinary practitioner in his or her capacity as a veterinary
practitioner,
(iii) any offence under a law of the Commonwealth, or another State or
Territory, or of a jurisdiction outside Australia, that in the opinion of the
Board is equivalent to an offence referred to in subparagraph (i) or
(ii),
(c) the applicant has been refused registration, licensing or other
authorisation as a veterinary practitioner in another State or Territory or
another jurisdiction prescribed by the regulations or has had his or her
authority to practise veterinary science suspended or cancelled in another
State or Territory or another jurisdiction prescribed by the
regulations,
(d) the Board is satisfied that the applicant is not fit to practise
veterinary science because the applicant suffers from an
impairment,
(e) the applicant has not made the declaration, prescribed by the
regulations, relating to the conduct to be observed by veterinary
practitioners.