An Act for the management of the Public Service of New South Wales
and of other public sector employment; and for other
purposes.
Part 1 Preliminary
1 Name of Act
This Act may be cited as the Public Sector Management Act
1988.
2 Commencement
This Act commences on a day or days to be appointed by
proclamation.
3 Definitions
(1979 Act, s 4)
(1) In this Act:appropriate Department
Head means:
(a) where the expression is used in connection with a
Department—the Head of the Department, or
(b) where the expression is used in connection with an officer or
temporary employee—the Head of the Department to which the officer or
employee belongs.
appropriate
Minister means:
(a) where the expression is used in connection with a
Department—the Minister responsible for the Department,
or
(b) where the expression is used in connection with an officer or
temporary employee—the Minister responsible for the Department to which
the officer or employee belongs.
chief
executive officer means a person holding a position referred to in
Schedule 3A.
chief
executive position means a position referred to in Schedule
3A.
Council means
the Council on the Cost of Government established by this Act.
declared
authority means an authority for the time being specified in
Schedule 3.
Department means a department
of the Public Service specified in Schedule 1 (being the group of staff with
the title so specified or the group of staff attached to the body or
organisation so specified).
Department
Head or Head means
a Department Head referred to in section 10.
disciplinary inquiry
means an inquiry conducted in accordance with the regulations in connection
with a breach of discipline alleged to have been committed by an officer other
than a chief executive officer in the Public Service.
management
review means an examination of any functions and activities of a
Department or declared authority for the purpose of assessing the extent to
which any such functions and activities are being carried on in an effective,
efficient and economical manner.
notional
salary, in relation to a chief executive officer or a senior
executive officer, means:
(a) for the purposes of calculating the amount of an entitlement paid
on or before 31 August 1996—72.5 per cent of the amount of the
remuneration package for the officer as last determined before the time of
payment, or
(b) for the purposes of calculating the amount of an entitlement paid
between 1 September 1996 and 30 June 1998 (inclusive)—94.3 per cent of
the amount of the remuneration package for the officer as last determined
before the time of payment, or
(c) for the purposes of calculating the amount of an entitlement paid
on or after 1 July 1998—the total amount of the remuneration package for
the officer as last determined before the time of payment, less the
superannuation guarantee amount payable in respect of the
officer.
NSW Health
Service has the same meaning as it has in section 16 of the Health Services Act
1997.
officer means
a person employed in any capacity under Part 2, and includes:
(a) a chief executive officer or a senior executive officer appointed
under that Part, and
(b) an officer on probation,
but does not include a temporary employee.position
means a position in the Public Service.
Public
Service means the Public Service of New South Wales, as referred to
in section 5.
Public
Service Notices means any document titled “Public Service
Notices” published under the authority of the Government.
senior
executive officer means a person holding a position referred to in
Schedule 3B.
senior
executive position means a position referred to in Schedule
3B.
special
inquiry means a special inquiry under section 82.
staff or
members of the
staff means officers or temporary employees or both.
superannuation
guarantee amount means the minimum amount payable to a
superannuation fund or scheme in respect of an officer that is sufficient to
avoid an individual superannuation guarantee shortfall, within the meaning of
the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act
1992 of the Commonwealth, in respect of the
officer.
temporary
employee means a departmental temporary employee employed under
Division 5 of Part 2 or a special temporary employee employed under Division
5A of Part 2.
Tribunal
means the Government and Related Employees Appeal Tribunal established under
the Government and Related Employees Appeal
Tribunal Act 1980.
(2) In this Act:(a) a reference to a function includes a reference to a power,
authority and duty, and
(b) a reference to the exercise of a function includes, where the
function is a duty, a reference to the performance of the
duty.
4 Act not to apply to certain positions
(1979 Act, s 9)
(1) This Act does not apply to any of the following positions or to
any person holding such a position (except to the extent that a provision of
this Act otherwise expressly provides):(a) any position of a judicial officer within the meaning of the
Judicial Officers Act
1986,
(b) any position in the Police Service,
(c) any position of officer of either House of Parliament or any
position under the separate control of the President or Speaker, or under
their joint control.
(d) (Repealed)
(2) (Repealed)
(3) Subsection (1) does not prevent a person holding a position
referred to in that subsection from having or exercising any functions of a
Department Head.
Part 2 Public Service of New South Wales
Division 1 Structure
5 The Public Service
(1979 Act, s 36)
The Public Service of New South Wales consists of the persons who
are for the time being employed under this Part.
6 (Repealed)
7 Maximum number of staff of a Department
(1979 Act, s 37)
(1) The Treasurer may, after obtaining a report from the appropriate
Department Head on the matter, determine from time to time the maximum number
of staff to be employed in a Department (being the number which the Treasurer
considers necessary for the effective, efficient and economical management of
the functions and activities of the Department).
(2) The number of staff employed in a Department shall not exceed the
maximum number so determined in respect of the
Department.
8 Staff positions in a Department
(1979 Act, s 38)
(1) The staff positions in a Department consist of:(a) the position (if any) created under section 9 in relation to the
Department, and
(b) such other positions as the appropriate Department Head from time
to time determines in accordance with this Act.
(2) Subject to subsection (3), a Department Head may create, abolish
or otherwise deal with any staff position in the Department, other than the
position created under section 9 in relation to the
Department.
(3) A Department Head must classify and grade each position created
under subsection (2), but may only do so:(a) in the case of a senior executive position—with the approval
of the Minister, or
(b) in any other case—in accordance with such guidelines as may
be issued from time to time by the Public Employment
Office.
(4) A Department Head may establish, or abolish, or change the name
of, any branch of the Department.
(5) If the Governor removes a branch from any Department and adds it
to another Department under section 55A (Creation and change in relation to
departments):(a) so much of the staff of the first-mentioned Department as relates
to the branch becomes correspondingly part of the staff of the other
Department, and
(b) the staff of the branch continue to occupy their positions in the
branch but as members of the staff of that other
Department.
(6) In this section, branch means a branch or
other part of a Department.
Division 2 Department Heads
9 Creation of Department Head positions
(1979 Act, s 45)
(1) Each position specified in column 2 of Schedule 1 shall be deemed
to be created by virtue of this Act if it is not created by some other
Act.
(2) If the title or other description of a position created by virtue
of this Act is omitted from column 2 of Schedule 1, the position shall be
taken to be abolished by virtue of this Act.
(3) If this Act is amended by amending the title or other description
of a position appearing in column 2 of Schedule 1, being a position created by
virtue of this Act, the title or other description of the position shall be
taken to be correspondingly amended by virtue of this
Act.
10 Department Heads
(1979 Act, s 46)
(1) The person holding the position specified in Column 2 of Schedule
1 opposite the title or other description of a department, body, organisation
or group is, for the purposes of this Act, the Department Head in relation to
the Department concerned.
(2) (Repealed)
(3) For the purposes of this Act, a reference in Schedule 1 to a
department, body, organisation or group shall be taken not to include a
reference to any part of the department, body, organisation or group specified
separately in that Schedule.
(4) (Repealed)
(5) A provision contained in any Act enacted before the date of assent
to this Act does not have any effect to the extent that it would, but for this
subsection, operate:(a) to make a person a Department Head, or
(b) to authorise or require a person to exercise any functions
conferred or imposed by or under this Act on a Department
Head.
(6) If a person is duly authorised or required to exercise functions
attaching to a position specified in Schedule 1, but is not himself or herself
the holder of the position, nothing in subsection (5) prevents the person from
exercising any functions that are referred to in subsection (5) (b) and
exercisable by the holder (if any) of the position.
(7) (Repealed)
10A Appointments to Public Service Department Head
positions
(1) Appointments to vacant Department Head positions in the Public
Service are to be made by the Governor.
(2) It does not matter whether the person appointed is or is not
already an officer of the Public Service.
(3) The employment under this Part of the Department Head is subject
to Part 2A (Public Sector Executives).
(4) (Repealed)
10B Acting appointments to Department Head
positions
(1) The Governor may appoint an officer of the Public Service to act
in a Department Head position in the Public Service which is vacant or the
holder of which is suspended, sick or absent.
(2) An officer, while acting in a Department Head position, has all
the functions of the holder of the position (but is not to be taken to be a
chief executive officer for the purposes of Part
2A).
(3) The Governor may, at any time, terminate the appointment of an
officer to act in a Department Head position.
11 General responsibility of Department Heads
(1979 Act, s 47)
(1) A Department Head is responsible to the appropriate Minister for
the general conduct and the effective, efficient and economical management of
the functions and activities of the Department.
(2) For the purpose of exercising the responsibility imposed by
subsection (1), a Department Head may take such action as the Department Head
considers appropriate in the circumstances, but may not take action that is
inconsistent with the functions of the Minister or the Public Employment
Office specified in this Act.
(3) A Department Head is responsible for the equitable management of
staff of the Department.
12 Delegation by Department Head
(1979 Act, s 48)
(1) A Department Head may delegate to an officer of the Department any
of the Department Head’s functions under this Act, other than this power
of delegation.
(2) If:(a) a function of a Department Head is delegated to an officer of the
Department in accordance with subsection (1), and
(b) the instrument of delegation authorises the sub-delegation of the
function,
then, subject to any conditions to which the delegation is subject, the
officer may sub-delegate the function to another officer of the
Department.
(3) In this section:(a) a reference to the functions of a Department Head includes a
reference to any functions delegated to the Department Head under this Act,
and
(b) a reference to an officer of a Department includes:(i) a reference to a person holding an appointment to or in the
Department, and
(ii) where the Department is the group of staff attached to a body,
organisation or group specified in Schedule 1—a reference to a person
holding an appointment to or in that body, organisation or group,
and
(iii) a reference to a temporary employee.
Division 3 Senior executive officers
13 Appointments to senior executive positions
(1) Appointments to vacant senior executive positions in the Public
Service are to be made by the Governor on the recommendation of the
appropriate Department Head.
(2) It does not matter whether the person appointed is or is not
already an officer of the Public Service.
(3) The employment under this Part of the senior executive officer is
subject to Part 2A (Public Sector Executives).
(4) Subsection (1) is subject to any express provision to the contrary
in this or any other Act.
14 Acting appointments to senior executive
positions
(1) The appropriate Department Head may appoint an officer of the
Public Service to act in a senior executive position in the Public Service
which is vacant or the holder of which is suspended, sick or
absent.
(2) An officer, while acting in any such senior executive position,
has all the functions of the holder of the position (but is not to be taken to
be a senior executive officer for the purposes of Part
2A).
(3) The appropriate Department Head may, at any time, terminate the
appointment of an officer to act in any such senior executive
position.
15 Merit appointments
(1) Sections 26 (Selection for appointment to be on merit), 26A
(Eligibility lists) and 31 (Advertising vacancies) apply to and in respect of
appointments to senior executive positions in the Public
Service.
(2) A Department for the purposes of the application of section 26 (3)
includes all senior executive positions in the Public Service or the Education
Teaching Service and all notional executive positions referred to in section
42Q (3) (c) in the Public Service or the Education Teaching
Service.
16–21 (Repealed)
Division 4 Officers (other than Department Heads and senior
executive officers)
22 Officers to whom Division applies
(1) This Division applies to and in respect of appointments to
positions in the Public Service, but does not apply to or in respect of
appointments to:(a) chief executive positions, and
(b) except in the case of sections 26, 26A and 31—senior
executive positions.
(2) Sections 35–37 do not apply to officers holding positions
referred to in subsection (1) (a) or (b).
23 (Repealed)
24 Filling of vacant positions
(1979 Act, s 60)
If a vacancy exists in a position in a Department and the
appropriate Department Head decides that it is expedient to fill the vacancy,
the position may, subject to and in accordance with this Division, be
filled:(a) by the appointment, by way of transfer or promotion, of an
officer, or
(b) by the appointment of a person who, immediately before his or her
appointment, was not an officer.
25 Method of appointment
(1979 Act, s 61)
(1) An appointment (whether by way of transfer or promotion or
otherwise) to a position in the Public Service shall be made by the Governor
on the recommendation of the appropriate Department
Head.
(2) Subsection (1) is subject to any express provision to the contrary
in this or any other Act.
26 Selection for appointment to be on merit
(1979 Act, s 62)
(1) A Department Head shall, for the purpose of determining the merit
of the persons eligible for appointment to a vacant position under this
section, have regard to:(a) the nature of the duties of the position, and
(b) the abilities, qualifications, experience, standard of work
performance and personal qualities of those persons that are relevant to the
performance of those duties.
(2) In deciding to make a recommendation for the appointment of a
person to a vacant position which has been advertised in accordance with this
Act:(a) the appropriate Department Head may only select a person who has
duly applied for appointment to the vacant position, and
(b) the appropriate Department Head must, from among the applicants
eligible for appointment to the vacant position, select the applicant who has,
in the opinion of the Department Head, the greatest
merit.
(3) In deciding to make a recommendation for the appointment of a
person to a vacant position which has not been advertised in accordance with
this Act:(a) the appropriate Department Head may only select an officer holding
a position in the Department in which the vacant position exists at the time
the decision of the Department Head is made, and
(b) the appropriate Department Head must, from among the officers
holding positions in that Department, select the officer who has, in the
opinion of the Department Head, the greatest merit.
(4) If the person recommended for appointment to a position under this
section is an officer and some other officer has a right of appeal to the
Tribunal against the recommendation, the recommendation must not be acted on
(except by way of temporary appointment under section 33):(a) until the expiration of the time for lodging a notice of such an
appeal under the Government and Related
Employees Appeal Tribunal Act 1980 against the Department
Head’s decision to make the recommendation, or
(b) if such a notice of appeal is lodged within that time, until the
Tribunal has determined the appeal or the appeal is
withdrawn.
(5) Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this section, the
appropriate Department Head may decide to make a recommendation for the
appointment of a person (whether or not an officer) to a vacant position which
has not been advertised if the person has, in accordance with the regulations,
passed a competitive examination prescribed for appointment to vacant
positions of the class to which that vacant position
belongs.
26A Eligibility lists
(1) When a vacant position is advertised in accordance with this Act,
the appropriate Department Head may, in connection with a determination of the
merit of the persons eligible for appointment to the position, create an
eligibility list for the position.
(2) An eligibility list for a position is a list of eligible
applicants (namely the persons who duly applied for appointment to the
position and are eligible for appointment) arranged in order of merit (with
merit determined by the appropriate Department Head in accordance with section
26 (1)). An eligibility list for a position remains current:(a) in the case of a list prepared in relation to a base grade or
entry level position, for 12 months after the list was created,
or
(b) in the case of a list prepared in relation to a position that is
not a base grade or entry level position, for 6 months after the list was
created.
(3) An eligibility list need not comprise all the eligible applicants
so long as the applicants on the list are those of greatest merit. An
eligibility list may even comprise only one eligible applicant so long as that
applicant is the applicant of greatest merit.
(4) An eligibility list is applicable not only to the position in
relation to which it was created but also to any other position that the
appropriate Department Head determines it should be applicable to on the basis
that the position is substantially the same as the position in relation to
which the list was created.
(5) In deciding to make a recommendation for the appointment of a
person to a vacant position that has not been advertised in accordance with
this Act, the appropriate Department Head may (despite section 26 (3)) select
from among the persons who are on an eligibility list that is current and
applicable to the position (and who are available for appointment) the person
with the greatest merit according to the order of merit in the eligibility
list.
(6) In this section:base grade or
entry level position, in relation to a Department, means a position
to which no officer in the Department, employed in the same classification of
work as that to which the position relates, could be
promoted.
27 Legal proceedings not to be brought in respect of
appointments etc
(1979 Act, s 65A (1)–(3), (6))
(1) The appointment or failure to appoint a person to a vacant
position in the Public Service, or any matter, question or dispute relating to
such an appointment or failure, is not an industrial matter for the purposes
of the Industrial Relations Act
1996.
(2) Subsection (1) applies whether or not any person has been
appointed to the vacant position.
(3) No proceedings, whether for an order in the nature of prohibition,
certiorari or mandamus or for a declaration or injunction or for any other
relief, lie in respect of the appointment or failure to appoint a person to a
position in the Public Service, the entitlement or non-entitlement of a person
to be so appointed or the validity or invalidity of any such
appointment.
(4) Subsection (3) does not affect the operation of the Government and Related Employees Appeal Tribunal Act
1980.
28 Appointments on probation
(1979 Act, s 68)
(1) Subject to this Division, every person admitted to the Public
Service as an officer shall, in the first instance, be appointed to a position
on probation for a period of 6 months or such longer period as the appropriate
Department Head directs.
(2) A person may be appointed to a position in the Public Service
without being required to serve such a period of probation if the Department
Head thinks it appropriate in the particular case.
(3) The period for which a person is appointed on probation may not
exceed 2 years without the approval of the Public Employment
Office.
29 Confirmation or annulment of appointments on
probation
(1979 Act, s 69)
(1) If a person is appointed to a position on probation under section
28, the Governor may, on the recommendation of the appropriate Department Head
based on inquiry and report:(a) after the period of probation—confirm the appointment,
or
(b) during or after the period of probation—annul the
appointment.
(2) If a person’s appointment is annulled under subsection (1),
the person ceases to be an officer, unless appointed to another position as an
officer.
(3) Section 75 does not prevent the Governor from exercising at any
time the power to annul an appointment under subsection
(1).
30 Appointment of retired officers
(1979 Act, s 70)
(1) An officer who has been retired from the Public Service or whose
services have been dispensed with under section 51 may be appointed to a
vacant position.
(2) An appointment under this section shall be made by the Governor on
the recommendation of the appropriate Department
Head.
(3) An appointment under this section may be made without examination
or probation.
(4) (Repealed)
31 Advertising vacancies
(1979 Act, s 71)
(1) If it is proposed to make an appointment under this Division to a
vacant position in a Department, the Department Head shall advertise the
vacancy in the Public Service Notices and in such other publication (if any)
as the Department Head determines.
(2) The Department Head need not advertise a vacant position if the
Public Employment Office so approves.
32 Publication of decisions to make recommendations for
in-service appointments
(1979 Act, s 72)
(1) The appropriate Department Head shall cause to be published in the
Public Service Notices in accordance with section 19 of the Government and Related Employees Appeal Tribunal Act
1980 particulars of any decision of the Department Head to
make a recommendation to the Governor to appoint an officer to fill a vacant
position.
(2) An officer who:(a) is proceeding on duty outside the State for a period exceeding 6
weeks or on leave for a period exceeding 6 weeks, and
(b) has made application to the appropriate Department
Head,
is entitled to have sent to the officer during that period by the
Department Head, by post addressed to the officer at the address specified in
that application, a copy of all Public Service Notices published during that
period.
33 Temporary appointments
(1979 Act, s 75)
If:(a) a position in a Department is vacant, or
(b) the holder of such a position is suspended from duty, sick or
absent,
the Department Head may appoint an officer to the position
temporarily.
34 Restriction on temporary appointment
(1979 Act, s 76)
(1) An officer who is appointed to a position temporarily may not
continue in that position for a period of more than 6 months except with the
approval of the Public Employment Office.
(2) The Public Employment Office shall not give an approval for the
purpose of subsection (1) unless satisfied that it should be given having
regard to the exigencies of the Public Service.
35 (Repealed)
36 Incapable officer may be retired
(1979 Act, s 78)
If:(a) an officer employed in a Department is found to be unfit to
discharge or incapable of discharging the duties of the officer’s
position, and
(b) the officer’s unfitness or incapacity:(i) appears likely to be of a permanent nature,
and
(ii) has not arisen from actual misconduct on the part of the officer,
or from causes within the officer’s control,
the Governor may, on the recommendation of the appropriate Department
Head, cause the officer to be retired.
37 Vacation of position
(1979 Act, s 79)
(1) An officer’s position becomes vacant if the officer:(a) dies, or
(b) is removed, or retires or is retired, from the position in
accordance with this Division, or
(c) resigns the position in writing addressed and delivered to the
appropriate Department Head and that Department Head accepts the
resignation.
(2) This section does not affect any other provision by or under which
an officer’s position becomes vacant.
Division 5 Departmental temporary employees
38 Appointment of departmental temporary employees
(1979 Act, s 80)
(1) The appropriate Department Head may, if of the opinion that it is
necessary to do so, employ temporarily a person who has appropriate
qualifications to carry out work in the Department.
(1A) Persons employed under this section are departmental temporary
employees.
(2) The employment of a person under subsection (1) is subject to the
regulations (if any) concerning the employment of departmental temporary
employees.
(3) The appropriate Department Head:(a) may employ a person under this section for a period not exceeding
4 months, and
(b) subject to the regulations, may from time to time employ the
person at the end of that period, or at the end of any subsequent period, for
a further period not exceeding 4 months.
(4) A person may not be employed under this section for:(a) a continuous period in excess of 12 months, or
(b) 2 or more periods that together are in excess of 12 months in any
period of 2 years,
except with the approval of the Public Employment
Office.
(5) The appropriate Department Head may dispense with the services of
a departmental temporary employee at any time, but may not dispense with the
services of a person employed as referred to in subsection (4) without the
approval of the Public Employment Office.
38A Appointment of long-term departmental temporary employees
to officer positions
(1) For the purposes of this section, a long-term
departmental temporary employee is a departmental temporary employee
whose employment as such an employee falls within a continuous employment
period of at least 2 years.
(2) A long-term departmental temporary employee may, with the approval
of the Public Employment Office, be appointed to an officer’s position
(other than a senior executive position) in a Department if the appropriate
Department Head has made a recommendation in accordance with this section for
the appointment of the employee to the position.
(3) A recommendation for the appointment of a long-term departmental
temporary employee to an officer’s position may be made only if each of
the following requirements is satisfied:(a) the duties of the position concerned must be substantially the
same as the duties performed by the employee at the time of the
employee’s initial employment on merit (that is, the employment referred
to in paragraph (e)),
(b) the rate of salary or wages proposed to be payable to the holder
of the position concerned at the time of appointment must not exceed the
maximum rate payable for Grade 12, Administrative and Clerical Division, of
the Public Service,
(c) the appropriate Department Head must be satisfied that on-going
work is available in respect of the employee in the
Department,
(d) the appropriate Department Head must be satisfied that the
employee has the relevant skills, qualifications, experience, work performance
standards and personal qualities to enable the employee to perform the duties
of the position concerned,
(e) the employee must (initially or at some later stage) have been
employed as a temporary employee in some form of open competition involving
the selection of the employee as the person who, in the opinion of the then
relevant Department Head, had the greatest merit among candidates for
appointment.
(4) An appointment under this section is not an appointment to which
section 26 (Selection for appointment to be on merit)
applies.
(5) Section 28 (Appointments on probation) does not apply to an
appointment under this section unless the Department Head otherwise directs in
a particular case.
Division 5A Special temporary employees
38B Meaning of “political office
holder”
In this Division:political office
holder means:
(a) a Minister, or
(b) a Parliamentary Secretary, or
(c) the Leader of the Opposition in the Legislative
Assembly.
38C Employment of special temporary employees
(1) The Director-General of the Premier’s Department may, if of
the opinion that it is necessary to do so, employ temporarily a person who has
appropriate qualifications to carry out work for a political office
holder.
(2) Persons employed under this section are special temporary
employees.
(3) The instrument of employment of a special temporary employee must
specify the name of the political office holder
concerned.
(4) This section does not prevent the appointment or employment of
staff to or in an office of a political office holder in any other
manner.
38D Period of employment of special temporary
employees
(1) A person may be employed as a special temporary employee for an
indefinite term or for a term specified in the instrument of
employment.
(2) However, the employment of a special temporary employee
terminates:(a) if the political office holder concerned dies,
or
(b) if the political office holder concerned ceases to hold the office
by reason of which he or she was a political office holder (even if he or she
immediately or subsequently becomes a political office holder after ceasing to
hold that office), or
(c) on the day appointed for the taking of the poll for the next
general election, or
(d) if the employee resigns by letter addressed to the
Director-General of the Premier’s Department, or
(e) if the services of the employee are dispensed
with.
(3) The Director-General of the Premier’s Department may direct
in a particular case that the employment of a special temporary employee that
would otherwise terminate because of the operation of subsection (2) (a), (b)
or (c) does not terminate.
(4) The Director-General of the Premier’s Department may
dispense with the services of a special temporary employee at any
time.
38E Industrial arbitration or legal proceedings
excluded
(1) In this section, a reference to the employment of a special
temporary employee is a reference to:(a) the employment of, or failure to employ, a person as a special
temporary employee, or
(b) dispensing with the services of, or other termination of the
employment of, a special temporary employee, or
(c) any disciplinary proceedings or disciplinary action taken against
a special temporary employee, or
(d) the remuneration or conditions of employment of a special
temporary employee.
(2) The employment of a special temporary employee, or any matter,
question or dispute relating to any such employment, is not an industrial
matter for the purposes of the Industrial
Relations Act 1996. This subsection applies whether or not any
person has been appointed to a vacant position of special temporary
employee.
(3) Part 6 (Unfair dismissals) of Chapter 2 of the Industrial Relations Act 1996 does
not apply to the employment of a special temporary
employee.
(4) Any State industrial instrument (whether made before or after the
commencement of this section) does not have effect in so far as it relates to
the employment of special temporary employees.
(5) Subsection (4) does not prevent the regulations or other statutory
instruments under this Act from applying the provisions of a State industrial
instrument to the employment of a special temporary
employee.
(6) This section does not affect the operation of any determination
under section 63 or agreement under section 64, in its application to special
temporary employees.
(7) An appeal does not lie to the Tribunal in relation to the
employment of a special temporary employee.
(8) No proceedings for an order in the nature of prohibition,
certiorari or mandamus or for a declaration or injunction or for any other
relief, lie in respect of the employment of or failure to employ a person as a
special temporary employee, the entitlement or non-entitlement of a person to
be so employed or the validity or invalidity of any such
employment.
38F Delegation by Director-General
(1) The Director-General of the Premier’s Department may
delegate any function of the Director-General under this Division (other than
this power of delegation) to any other Department
Head.
(2) The power of delegation conferred by this section is in addition
to and does not limit the power conferred by section 12 (Delegation by
Department Head).
38G Status of special temporary employees
(1) All special temporary employees are taken to constitute a branch
of the Premier’s Department, except any who are employed by a Department
Head as delegate of the Director-General of the Premier’s
Department.
(2) Special temporary employees employed by a Department Head as
delegate of the Director-General of the Premier’s Department are taken
to constitute a branch of the Department concerned.
(3) Accordingly, the Director-General of the Premier’s
Department has the functions of Department Head in relation to those special
temporary employees who constitute a branch of the Premier’s Department,
and the relevant Department Head has the functions of Department Head in
relation to those special temporary employees who constitute a branch of the
Department concerned.
38H Regulations
The employment of a person under this Division is subject to the
regulations (if any) concerning the employment of special temporary
employees.
Division 6 Miscellaneous matters
39 Requirements as to citizenship etc
(1979 Act, s 111)
(1) A person is eligible to be appointed as an officer only if the
person is:(a) an Australian citizen, or
(b) a person resident in Australia whose continued presence in
Australia is not subject to any limitation as to time imposed by or in
accordance with law.
(2) A person who is seeking appointment as an officer must, if so
required by or under the regulations, produce such evidence with respect to
the person’s Australian citizenship or entitlement to reside in
Australia as the regulations require.
(3) An officer who is not an Australian citizen and who ceases to
satisfy or does not satisfy the requirements of subsection (1) (b) is no
longer eligible to continue in employment as an officer in the Public
Service.
(4) The Governor shall dismiss from the Public Service an officer who
is no longer eligible to continue in employment as an officer by virtue of
subsection (3).
40 Notification of appointments etc in special
Gazette
(1979 Act, s 110)
(1) Notice of all appointments, promotions, transfers, resignations,
retirements and removals of officers under this Act must be published in a
special Gazette to be issued, as far as practicable,
weekly.
(2) A notice so published is conclusive evidence of the appointment,
promotion, transfer, resignation, retirement or removal specified in the
notice.
41 Arrangements for use of Education Teaching Service
staff
(1979 Act, s 112A)
(1) The appropriate Department Head may, with the approval of the
Director-General of the Department of School Education, on such terms and
conditions as may be arranged, make use of the services of any member of the
Education Teaching Service.
(2) The services of a person may not be made use of under subsection
(1) for:(a) a continuous period exceeding 12 months, or
(b) 2 or more periods that together exceed 12 months in any period of
2 years,
except with the approval of the Public Employment
Office.
42 Officers refusing promotion or appointment
(1979 Act, s 115 (1))
An officer who has been offered a promotion or appointment in the
Public Service may decline the promotion or appointment without prejudice to
any rights that the officer would, if the promotion or appointment had not
been declined, have had to any future promotion or
appointment.
Part 2A Public sector executives
Division 1 Preliminary
42A Definitions
(1) In this Part:contract of
employment means a contract of employment under this Part between an
executive officer and the officer’s employer.
executive
officer means a chief executive officer or a senior executive
officer.
executive
position means a chief executive position or a senior executive
position.
public
authority means a declared authority or an authority which is
established by or under an Act and which is (or whose governing body is)
constituted by persons appointed by the Governor or a Minister, but does not
include a Teaching Service or the Police Service.
remuneration
package means the remuneration package for an executive officer
determined for the time being under the Statutory and Other Offices Remuneration Act
1975.
(2) In this Part, a reference to the employer of an executive officer
is a reference to:(a) in the case of a chief executive officer—the Minister,
or
(b) in the case of a senior executive officer in the Public
Service—the appropriate Department Head, or
(c) in the case of a senior executive officer in a Teaching
Service—the appropriate Director-General within the meaning of the
Teaching Services Act 1980,
or
(d) in the case of a senior executive officer in the service of a
public authority—the public authority or a person nominated by the
public authority, or
(e) in any other case—the Minister or a person nominated for the
time being by the Minister.
(3) In this Part, a reference to the remuneration package for an
executive officer is, if a range of amounts has been determined by the
Statutory and Other Offices Remuneration Tribunal, a reference to:(a) the amount within that range nominated in the officer’s
contract of employment, or
(b) in any other case—the minimum amount within that
range.
Division 2 Composition of executive services
42B Composition of Chief Executive Service
The Chief Executive Service comprises the persons holding the
positions referred to in Schedule 3A.
42C Composition of Senior Executive Service
The Senior Executive Service comprises the persons holding the
positions referred to in Schedule 3B.
42D Amendment or substitution of Schedule 3A or 3B
(1) The Governor may, by proclamation, amend Schedule 3A or 3B by
inserting the description of any position, or by omitting or amending any such
description.
(2) The Governor may, by proclamation, omit Schedule 3A or 3B and
insert instead a Schedule containing descriptions of
positions.
42E Positions which may be included in Schedule 3A or
3B
The description of a position may be included in Schedule 3A or 3B
by proclamation under this Division only if the position is:(a) a position in the Public Service, or
(b) a statutory office (being an office that is established by or
under an Act and to which appointments are made by the Governor or a
Minister), but only if the employment of a person in the office is declared by
or under that Act to be subject to this Part, or
(c) a position on the staff of a public authority,
or
(d) a position in the Education Teaching Service or the Technical and
Further Education Teaching Service.
Division 3 Employment of executive officers
42F Term appointments
Subject to this Act, an executive officer holds office for such
period (not exceeding 5 years) as is specified in the officer’s
instrument of appointment, but is eligible (if otherwise qualified) for
re-appointment.
42G Employment of executive officers to be governed by
contract of employment
(1) The employment of an executive officer shall be governed by a
contract of employment between the officer and his or her
employer.
(2) A contract of employment may be made before or after the
appointment of the executive officer concerned.
(3) An executive officer is not appointed by, nor is an executive
officer’s term of office fixed by, the contract of
employment.
(4) However, a contract of employment may constitute the instrument of
appointment if the person authorised to make the appointment is also the
person who signs the contract with the executive
officer.
(5) A contract of employment may be varied at any time by a further
contract between the parties.
(6) A contract of employment may not vary or exclude a provision of
this Act or of any other Act under which the executive officer concerned is
appointed or a provision of the regulations under this Act or any such other
Act.
(7) The employer of an executive officer (being an officer in the
service of the Crown) acts for and on behalf of the Crown in any contract of
employment between the officer and the employer.
42H Matters regulated by contract of employment
(1) The matters to be dealt with in a contract of employment between
an executive officer and his or her employer include the following:(a) the duties of the executive officer’s position (including
performance criteria for the purpose of reviews of the officer’s
performance),
(b) the monetary remuneration and employment benefits for the
executive officer as referred to in Division 4 (including the nomination of
the amount of the remuneration package if a range of amounts has been
determined for the remuneration package),
(c) any election by the executive officer to retain a right of return
to the public sector under section 42R.
(2) A contract of employment may provide for any matter to be
determined:(a) by further agreement between the parties, or
(b) by further agreement between the executive officer and some other
person specified in the contract, or
(c) by the Minister or other person or body specified in the
contract.
42I Performance reviews
(1) An executive officer’s performance must be reviewed, at
least annually, by the officer’s employer or by some other person
nominated by that employer.
(2) Any such review is to have regard to the agreed performance
criteria for the position and any other relevant
matter.
42J Industrial arbitration or legal proceedings
excluded
(1) In this section, a reference to the employment of an executive
officer is a reference to:(a) the appointment of, or failure to appoint, a person to a vacant
executive position, or
(b) the removal, retirement, termination of employment or other
cessation of office of an executive officer, or
(c) any disciplinary proceedings or disciplinary action taken against
an executive officer, or
(d) the remuneration or conditions of employment of an executive
officer.
(2) The employment of an executive officer, or any matter, question or
dispute relating to any such employment, is not an industrial matter for the
purposes of the Industrial Relations Act
1996.
(3) Subsection (2) applies whether or not any person has been
appointed to a vacant executive position.
(4) Any award or industrial agreement (whether made before or after
the commencement of this section) does not have effect in so far as it relates
to the employment of executive officers.
(5) Subsection (4) does not prevent the regulations or other statutory
instruments under this Act (or any other Act under which the executive officer
concerned is appointed) from applying the provisions of an award or industrial
agreement to the employment of an executive
officer.
(6) An appeal does not lie to the Government and Related Employees
Appeal Tribunal in relation to the employment of an executive
officer.
(7) No proceedings for an order in the nature of prohibition,
certiorari or mandamus or for a declaration or injunction or for any other
relief, lie in respect of the appointment of or failure to appoint a person to
an executive position, the entitlement or non-entitlement of a person to be so
appointed or the validity or invalidity of any such
appointment.
(8) In this section, industrial
agreement includes any agreement under section 64 and any
determination under section 63.
Division 4 Remuneration of executive officers
42K Definitions
(1) In this Division:approved means approved
for the time being for the purposes of this Division by the Minister in
writing, either generally or in relation to any executive officer or class of
executive officers.
employment
benefit means:
(a) contributions payable to a superannuation scheme by an executive
officer’s employer in respect of the officer, including any liability of
that employer to make any such contributions or to pay approved costs
associated with that scheme, or
(b) the provision by an executive officer’s employer of a motor
vehicle for private use by the officer, or
(c) the right of return to the public sector under section 42R by an
executive officer who elects to retain that right, or
(d) the entitlement of an executive officer to approved leave with
pay, or
(e) any other approved benefit provided to an executive officer at the
cost of the officer’s employer (being a benefit of a private
nature).
monetary
remuneration includes allowances paid in money, but does not
include:
(a) travelling or subsistence allowances, or
(b) allowances in relation to relocation expenses,
or
(c) any other allowances in relation to expenses incurred in the
discharge of an executive officer’s duties.
superannuation
scheme means a superannuation scheme established by or under an Act
or approved for the purposes of this definition.
(2) A reference in the definition of employment
benefit to an executive officer’s employer is a reference to
the person in whose service the officer is
employed.
42L Monetary remuneration and employment benefits for
executive officers
(1) Executive officers are entitled to monetary remuneration at such
rate, and employment benefits of such kinds, as are provided in their contract
of employment.
(1A) Contributions payable to a superannuation scheme by an executive
officer’s employer in respect of the officer that are required to be
made by the employer under a law of the State relating to superannuation are,
until provided for by the officer’s contract of employment, taken to be
an employment benefit provided in the contract.
(2) The total amount of:(a) the annual rate of monetary remuneration for an executive officer,
and
(b) the annual cost of employment benefits provided for the executive
officer under the contract of employment,
is to be equal to the amount of the remuneration package for the
executive officer.
(3) The cost of an employment benefit is the approved amount or an
amount calculated in the approved manner.
(4) This section does not affect:(a) any approved performance-related incentive payments made to an
executive officer, or
(b) any remuneration or benefits to which an executive officer is
otherwise entitled by law (such as statutory or agreed fees for attendance at
meetings or the like).
(5) A contract of employment may provide for the payment of part of
the monetary remuneration under the contract to be made in the form of a
periodic leave loading.
(6) An executive officer is entitled to be paid an amount equivalent
to the cost of a part of any entitlement to take annual or extended leave with
pay if:(a) the officer forgoes (with the approval of the officer’s
employer) the right to take that part of that leave, and
(b) the cost of that part of that leave has been included in the
officer’s contract of employment as an employment
benefit.
(7) Subsection (6) has effect despite anything to the contrary in the
Annual Holidays Act 1944 or
any other Act.
(8) During any period when the monetary remuneration and employment
benefits for an executive officer cannot be determined under subsection (1),
the officer is entitled to monetary remuneration at the rate of the amount of
the remuneration package for the officer, subject to any subsequent adjustment
of payments in accordance with the officer’s contract of
employment.
(9) If the remuneration package for an executive officer is varied,
the officer is entitled to monetary remuneration and employment benefits in
accordance with the officer’s contract of employment pending any
necessary variation of the contract and adjustment of payments to comply with
this section with effect from the date of the
variation.
(10) The cost of an executive officer’s entitlement to take
annual or extended leave with pay is to be determined on the basis of the
officer’s notional salary.
42M Travelling and subsistence allowances etc
(1) An executive officer is entitled to be paid:(a) such travelling and subsistence allowances,
and
(b) such allowances in relation to relocation expenses,
and
(c) such other allowances in relation to expenses incurred in the
discharge of the officer’s duties,
as the officer’s employer may from time to time determine in
respect of the officer.
(2) An executive officer’s contract of employment:(a) may provide for the payment to the officer of allowances of the
kind referred to in this section, and
(b) may regulate the payment of allowances to the officer under this
section.
Division 5 Removal, retirement etc of executive
officers
42N Definitions
A reference in this Division to:(a) employment in the public sector is a reference to employment as an
officer in the Public Service, the NSW Health Service or a Teaching Service,
as a member of the Police Service or as an officer in the service of a public
authority, and
(b) engagement in the public sector is a reference to employment in
the public sector or to the holding of a statutory
office.
42O Vacation of executive positions
(1) The position of an executive officer becomes vacant if the
officer:(a) dies, or
(b) completes a term of office and is not re-appointed,
or
(c) is removed from office, or retires from office, under this or any
other Act, or
(d) resigns his or her position in writing addressed to the
officer’s employer and that employer accepts the
resignation.
(2) This section does not affect any other provision by or under which
an executive officer vacates his or her position.
42P (Repealed)
42Q Removal of executive officers from office
(1) The Governor may remove an executive officer from an executive
position at any time.
(2) The Governor:(a) may declare an executive officer who is removed from an executive
position under subsection (1) to be an unattached officer in the Public
Service, the NSW Health Service, a Teaching Service or another service of the
Crown, as the case requires, and
(b) may revoke any such declaration.
(3) While a declaration under subsection (2) remains in force, the
person to whom the declaration relates:(a) is to be regarded as an executive officer, although not holding an
executive position, and
(b) is entitled to monetary remuneration and employment benefits as if
the person had not been removed from his or her position,
and
(c) is, for the purposes of sections 15 (2), 26, 53A and 100A, to be
regarded as holding an equivalent (though notional) executive position in the
Department or organisation from which he or she was
removed.
(3A) If the person referred to in subsection (3) was removed from a
chief executive position, then for the purposes of sections 15 (2), 26, 53A
and 100A:(a) the person is to be regarded as a senior executive officer,
and
(b) the person’s notional executive position referred to in
subsection (3) (c) is to be regarded as a senior executive
position.
(4) If:(a) an executive officer is removed from an executive position under
subsection (1) and a declaration is not made in relation to the officer under
subsection (2), or
(b) a declaration under subsection (2) made in relation to an
executive officer is revoked,
the officer ceases to be an executive officer, unless appointed to an
executive position.
(5) An officer in the Public Service, the NSW Health Service, a
Teaching Service or another service of the Crown who ceases to be an executive
officer because of subsection (4) ceases to be an officer in that service,
unless appointed to a position in that service.
(6) The making of a declaration under subsection (2) in relation to an
executive officer does not prevent the officer from ceasing to be an executive
officer because of the completion of the officer’s term of
office.
(7) In the case of an executive officer in the service of a public
authority (other than an authority to which subsection (7A) applies), a
reference in this section to:(a) the Governor is to be read as a reference to the public authority,
and
(b) the Public Service, a Teaching Service or another service of the
Crown is to be read as a reference to the service of the public
authority.
(7A) In the case of an executive officer in the service of a public
health organisation within the meaning of the Health Services Act 1997:(a) in the case of a chief executive officer of such an
organisation—a reference in this section to the Governor is to be read
(except in subsection (1)) as a reference to the Health Administration
Corporation constituted by the Health
Administration Act 1982, and
(b) in the case of an executive officer (other than a chief executive
officer) of such an organisation—a reference in this section to the
Governor is to be read as a reference to the Health Administration Corporation
constituted by the Health Administration
Act 1982, and
(c) a reference in this section to the NSW Health Service is to be
read as a reference to the service of the public health
organisation.
(8) This section does not prevent an executive officer being removed
from office apart from this section.
42R Right to return to public sector for certain executive
officers
(1) An executive officer may elect to retain a right of return to the
public sector if:(a) the officer was engaged in the public sector on a full-time basis
when he or she first became an executive officer, and
(b) for at least some part of that engagement the person was an
employee in the public sector.
(2) Any such election:(a) may be made in the first contract of employment entered into by
the executive officer, but (unless made in that first contract) may not be
made in any subsequent contract for the same or another executive position,
and
(b) is revoked if the election is not made by the executive officer in
a subsequent contract of employment, and
(c) may be revoked by the executive officer by notice in writing to
the officer’s employer, and
(d) if revoked, may not be made again.
(2A) Despite any other provision of this section, an executive officer
may not make an election under this section after the commencement of this
subsection (as inserted by the Public Sector Management
Amendment Act 1995) unless an election by the executive
officer under this section was in force immediately before the commencement of
this subsection.
(3) If an executive officer has elected to retain a right of return to
the public sector, the officer’s contract of employment must provide for
the cost of that right as part of the officer’s remuneration package
under Division 4.
(4) An executive officer who has elected to retain a right of return
to the public sector is entitled to an engagement in the public sector if the
person ceases to be an executive officer and:(a) in the case of a chief executive officer—is not re-appointed
to the same or another chief executive position, or
(b) in the case of a senior executive officer—is not
re-appointed to the same or another senior executive
position.
(5) A person is not entitled to an engagement in the public sector
under this section if the person ceased to be an executive officer because the
person resigned or was (after due inquiry) removed from office for
misbehaviour.
(6) The engagement in the public sector to which a person is entitled
under this section is to be an engagement:(a) in the case of a chief executive officer—as a senior
executive officer in any part of the public sector, or
(b) in the case of a senior executive officer—in any part of the
public sector at a salary not lower than the current maximum salary
for:(i) the previous engagement of the person as such an employee within
the public sector, or
(ii) a clerk (grade 12) in the Public
Service,
whichever is the lesser.
(7) A person who is entitled to such an engagement is not entitled to
any compensation for ceasing to hold office as an executive officer or to any
remuneration in respect of the office for any period afterwards (except
remuneration in respect of a subsequent re-appointment to the
office).
(8) Subsection (7) does not prevent the payment of additional
remuneration to a person who is engaged in the public sector under this
section in order to maintain, in accordance with the employer’s
redeployment policy, the level of the person’s previous remuneration
package for a period after the person ceases to be an executive
officer.
(9) If an executive officer has not entered into a contract of
employment and is eligible to make an election under this section:(a) the officer is (until the officer enters into a contract of
employment) to be taken to have made an election under this section, but may
revoke that election, and
(b) the cost (under Division 4) of the right of return to the public
sector in accordance with that election is to be deducted from the
officer’s remuneration.
(10) A reference in this section to an executive officer ceasing to be
an executive officer is, in the case of an executive officer removed from
office under section 42Q, a reference to an executive officer ceasing to be
such an officer as referred to in section 42Q (4).
42S Compensation etc where executive officer has no right to
return to public sector
(1) This section applies to:(a) an executive officer who is removed from office under section 42Q
and who ceases to be an executive officer as referred to in section 42Q (4),
or
(b) an executive officer who is otherwise removed from office (except
for misbehaviour after due inquiry), or
(c) (Repealed)
(d) an executive officer who was employed in the public sector when
first appointed as an executive officer, whose term of office as an executive
officer expires and who is not re-appointed,
being a person who is not entitled to be engaged in the public sector
under section 42R. However, this section does not apply to an executive
officer who consents to a transfer at a lower level of
remuneration.
(2) A person to whom this section applies is entitled to such
compensation (if any) as the Statutory and Other Offices Remuneration Tribunal
determines.
(3) The Statutory and Other Offices Remuneration Tribunal:(a) may determine that compensation is payable for the failure to
re-appoint an executive officer only if the Tribunal is satisfied that the
person had a reasonable expectation of being re-appointed,
and
(b) must have regard to any general directions given to the Tribunal
by the Minister as to the matters to be taken into consideration when it makes
determinations under this section.
(4) The maximum compensation payable is an amount equal to the
person’s remuneration package for the period of 38
weeks.
(5) The person is not entitled to any other compensation for the
removal or retirement from office or for the failure to re-appoint the person
or to any remuneration in respect of the office for any period afterwards
(except remuneration in respect of a subsequent re-appointment to the
office).
(6) An executive officer who is removed from office or not
re-appointed is not entitled to compensation under this section if:(a) the person is appointed on that removal or expiry of the term of
office to another executive position, and
(b) the remuneration package for the holder of that position is not
less than the remuneration package for the holder of the former
position.
(7) If the Statutory and Other Offices Remuneration Tribunal
determines that compensation is payable under this section, it must, in its
determination, specify the period to which the compensation
relates.
(8) The person may not be engaged in the public sector or employed in
the service of a State owned corporation established under the State Owned Corporations Act 1989
or a subsidiary of such a State owned corporation during the period so
specified, unless arrangements are made for a refund of the proportionate
amount of the compensation.
42T Election to take compensation
(1) An executive officer who is entitled to be engaged in the public
sector under section 42R may, before being so engaged, elect in writing to
take compensation referred to in section 42S.
(2) On the election taking effect, the person ceases to be entitled to
be engaged in the public sector under section 42R.
Division 6 General
42U Appointment of incumbent officers to senior executive
positions
(1) When a position becomes a senior executive position, the person
(if any) holding the position is to continue to hold that position until the
person or some other person is duly appointed to the
position.
(2) While the person continues to hold the position, the conditions of
employment (including remuneration) of the person are to be the same as those
which applied to the person immediately before the position became a senior
executive position.
(3) The person who continues to hold the position may be appointed to
the position without the vacancy being advertised.
(4) If the person who continues to hold the position is not appointed
to the position or to any other executive position, sections 42R–42T
apply to the person as if he or she had elected to retain a right of return to
the public sector.
(5) This section does not apply to a senior executive position
referred to in Part 2 of Schedule 3B (statutory
positions).
42V Incumbent officers—accrued leave
(1) A person who:(a) was engaged in the public sector when appointed to an executive
position, and
(b) had a right to accrued extended or annual leave with pay
immediately before that appointment, and
(c) has not taken that leave before taking up duties in the executive
position,
is entitled, on taking up those duties, to be paid instead of that leave
(or any part of that leave) the money value of that leave (or part) as a
gratuity if the person so elects.
(2) An election under this section is to be made within the time and
in the manner determined by the Minister.
(3) The money value of leave is to be calculated at the rate of pay of
the person immediately before appointment to the executive
position.
(4) A person who was engaged in the public sector when appointed to an
executive position retains any right to extended, annual, sick or other leave
accrued or accruing to the person immediately before the appointment (except
any accrued leave which is paid out by a gratuity under subsection
(1)).
(5) A reference in this section to an engagement in the public sector
has the same meaning as in Division 5.
42W Change in status of positions
(1) If a chief executive position becomes a senior executive position
or a senior executive position becomes a chief executive position, the
existing contract of employment continues in force until a new contract is
made under this Part.
(2) If a position ceases to be an executive position because of its
omission from Schedule 3A or 3B by a proclamation:(a) the position is not thereby abolished, and
(b) any person holding the position is to be taken to have been
appointed to the position in accordance with the relevant
provisions.
(3) However, the proclamation by which a position is omitted from
Schedule 3A or 3B may direct that the person holding the position is to cease
to hold the position, but only if the person was not employed in the public
sector (within the meaning of Division 5) immediately before last becoming an
executive officer.
(4) The person to whom any such direction relates ceases to hold the
position concerned and has the same rights and obligations as if the person
had ceased to be an executive officer as referred to in section 42Q
(4).
(5) A proclamation which amends Schedule 3A or 3B may contain other
provisions of a savings or transitional nature consequent on a position
becoming or ceasing to be an executive position or becoming a different kind
of executive position.
42X Change in title of positions
A position referred to in Schedule 3A or 3B does not cease to be
an executive position merely because of a change in the title of the
position.
42Y Approval to engage in other paid employment
An executive officer shall not engage in any paid employment
outside the duties of the executive position without the consent of the
officer’s employer.
42Z Operation of Part
(1) This Part prevails over any inconsistent provision of any other
Act or law or of the terms of appointment of or contract with a
person.
(2) The provisions of this Part apply to a person appointed to an
executive position under any Act even though the Act excludes the application
of this Act, unless it expressly excludes the application of those
provisions.
Part 3 Administration and management of the public
sector
Division 1 The Council on the Cost of Government
43 Establishment of Council
A Council on the Cost of Government is
established.
44 Composition and procedure of Council
(1) The Council is to consist of 7 members, as follows:(a) 3 Department Heads, being the Director-General of the
Premier’s Department, the Director-General of the Cabinet Office and the
Secretary of the Treasury,
(b) 4 persons appointed by the Governor on the recommendation of the
Minister, being persons who are not public sector employees (as defined in
subsection (3)).
(2) The Minister may from time to time nominate some other Department
Head in place of any of the Department Heads specified in subsection
(1).
(3) A public sector employee is a person who is an officer or
temporary employee under this Act, or an employee or member of staff of a
declared authority.
(4) One of the members appointed by the Governor is, by the instrument
of appointment as a member or by another instrument executed by the Governor,
to be appointed as Chairperson of the Council.
(5) Schedule 8 has effect with respect to the members and procedure of
the Council.
45 Functions of Council
The Council has the following functions and is to exercise those
functions with a view to achieving a cost effective and world class public
sector:(a) reviewing management and operational effectiveness and efficiency
in the public sector, including reporting and making recommendations to the
Government on its reviews,
(b) advising the Government on any changes that are necessary to
ensure that the public sector provides “value for money” and
quality services to its customers and the community within the framework of
the Government’s policies,
(c) developing and overseeing the implementation of reform initiatives
for the achievement in the longer term of improvements in performance in the
public sector and reduction in its costs and of such other public sector
initiatives as the Minister may direct,
(d) advising the Government on recommendations made by the Public
Accounts Committee or the Auditor-General, including advice as to whether and
how any such recommendations should be implemented, and monitoring the
implementation of any of those recommendations that are to be
implemented,
(e) such other functions with respect to the review of matters
concerning the public sector as the Minister may direct, including advising
and reporting and making recommendations to the Government on the results of
any such review and developing and overseeing the implementation of reform
initiatives,
(f) such other functions as are conferred or imposed on it by or under
this Act or any other law.
46 Ministerial control
The Council is subject to the control and direction of the
Minister, except in relation to the contents of any report or recommendation
made by it.
47 Requests to Departments and declared authorities for
information etc
(1) For the purpose of the exercise of the Council’s functions
under this Act, a member of the Council authorised by the Council or an
officer authorised by the Council may request a Department Head or declared
authority:(a) to produce any document in the custody of any member of staff of
the Department or declared authority, or
(b) to provide any information, or
(c) to provide a report into such matters as are specified in the
request.
(2) If the Department Head or declared authority does not comply with
the request, the Minister may require the Department Head or declared
authority to comply with the request or with any other direction regarding the
subject matter of the request.
47A Requests to Auditor-General for information
(1) For the purpose of the exercise of the Council’s functions
under this Act, a member of the Council authorised by the Council or an
officer authorised by the Council may request the Auditor-General to provide
any information.
(2) The Auditor-General may provide such information despite the
provisions of section 38 (Secrecy) of the Public Finance and Audit Act
1983.
47B Management assistance and advice
The Council may provide a Department or declared authority or the
Police Service with such assistance and advice as will foster improvement in
the efficiency or management and organisational performance of the Department
or declared authority or the Police Service.
47C Arrangements for use of staff of others
The Director-General of the Premier’s Department may arrange
for the use by the Council of the services of any staff (by secondment or
otherwise) or facilities of a Department or declared
authority.
47D Reports to the Minister
(1) The Council is to prepare and forward to the Minister a report of
the Council’s work and activities for each consecutive period of 6
months commencing on the commencement of this section. The report for a period
is to be prepared and forwarded to the Minister within 2 months after the end
of the period.
(2) The Minister is to lay each such report or cause it to be laid
before both Houses of Parliament as soon as practicable after receiving the
report.
47E Dissolution of Council
(1) The Council is dissolved on 1 May 1999.
(2) On the dissolution of the Council, a person who held office as a
member of the Council immediately before that dissolution:(a) ceases to hold office as such a member, and
(b) is not entitled to any remuneration or compensation because of the
loss of that office.
Division 2
48, 49 (Repealed)
Division 2A Public Employment Office
49A Public Employment Office
(1) There is constituted by this Act a body corporate with the
corporate name of the Public Employment Office.
(2) The Public Employment Office is, for the purposes of any Act, a
statutory body representing the Crown.
49B Commissioner for Public Employment
(1) The affairs of the Public Employment Office are to be managed by
the Commissioner for Public Employment.
(2) Any act, matter or thing done in the name of, or on behalf of, the
Public Employment Office by the Commissioner, or with the authority of the
Commissioner, is taken to have been done by the Public Employment
Office.
(3) In this section, Commissioner
for Public Employment means the Commissioner for Public Employment
holding office as such under Part 2 of this Act.
49C Ministerial control
The Public Employment Office is subject to the control and
direction of the Minister, except in relation to the following:(a) salaries, wages or other remuneration, and other conditions of
employment,
(b) a dispute relating to an industrial
matter.
49D Principal functions of the Public Employment
Office
The Public Employment Office has the following functions:(a) advising the Government on appropriate policies in relation to
personnel management and industrial relations in the public sector and, in
particular, appropriate policies in relation to the use of consultants by the
public sector, standards of conduct for public sector employees and
management-staff consultation,
(b) monitoring the implementation of Government policies in those
areas and assisting the implementation of those policies (including the
issuing of implementation guidelines),
(c) monitoring recruitment, appointment and promotion practices in the
public sector and, in particular, compliance with requirements relating to
appointment and promotion on merit,
(d) co-ordinating and assisting in the redeployment of excess staff in
the public sector,
(e) advising the Minister on the creation, classification and grading
of chief and senior executive officer positions within the public
sector,
(f) assisting in the recruitment, deployment and redeployment of
executive officers within the public sector,
(g) advising the Government on appropriate policies and practices in
relation to such other public sector matters as the Minister may direct from
time to time, and monitoring, co-ordinating and assisting the implementation
of Government policies and practices in such other areas as the Minister may
direct from time to time,
(h) such other functions as are conferred or imposed on it by or under
this Act or any other law.
49E Reports on personnel practices and policies
(1) The Public Employment Office may require the appropriate
Department Head or declared authority to provide the Public Employment Office
with a report on such matters relating to the personnel policies and practices
of a Department or declared authority as the Public Employment Office
requires.
(2) In particular, the Public Employment Office may require inclusion
in the report of information of a kind specified by the Public Employment
Office as to:(a) the personnel policies and practices concerning the recruitment,
selection, appointment, transfer, promotion or discipline of the staff of the
Department or declared authority and the means by which the job satisfaction
and opportunities for personal development of the staff are promoted,
and
(b) the application of any such policies and practices to different
groups of members of the staff.
(3) The Department Head or declared authority concerned must comply
with a requirement under this section within such time and in such manner as
the Public Employment Office directs.
(4) This section applies to the Police Service in the same way it
applies to a Department, and for that purpose a reference to the Department
Head is to be taken to be a reference to the Commissioner of
Police.
49F Delegation by Public Employment Office
(1) The Public Employment Office may delegate to a Department Head or
any other officer of a Department any of the functions of the Public
Employment Office, other than this power of
delegation.
(2) Any delegation of a function with respect to the making of a
determination fixing salaries, wages or other remuneration of officers or
temporary employees is subject to the condition that any such determination
must be at a level that is lower than the lowest amount of the remuneration
packages for executive officers determined for the time being under the
Statutory and Other Offices Remuneration Act
1975.
(3) In this section:(a) a reference to the functions of the Public Employment Office
includes a reference to any functions delegated to the Public Employment
Office under this Act, and
(b) a reference to an officer of a Department includes a reference to
a person holding an appointment to or in the Department and a reference to a
temporary employee, and (where the Department is the group of staff attached
to, but not comprising, a body, organisation or group specified in Schedule 1)
a reference to a person holding an appointment to or in that body,
organisation or group.
49G Regulations relating to functions of Public Employment
Office
(1) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the
principles, practices and procedures to be observed in connection with the
exercise of the functions of the Public Employment
Office.
(2) In particular, the regulations may:(a) prescribe the circumstances in which an approval by the Public
Employment Office under this or any other Act may be regarded as having been
given, or
(b) prescribe the procedure for obtaining any such
approval.
49H Approvals or directions given by the Public Employment
Office
An approval or direction given by the Public Employment Office
under this Act may be given so as to apply to a particular case, or to all
cases within a class of cases or generally.
Division 3 Miscellaneous matters relating to administration
and management of the Public Service
50 Transfers within Department or between
Departments
(1979 Act, s 112)
(1) If the Department Head considers it to be in the interests of the
Department to do so, the Department Head may direct the transfer of an officer
from one position in the Department to another position in the Department at
the officer’s existing salary, provided the officer possesses the
qualifications required for the other position and the work assigned to the
other position is appropriate to that salary.
(2) If the appropriate Department Head considers it to be in the
interests of the Public Service to do so, that Department Head may, with the
approval of the Department Head of the other Department concerned, transfer an
officer from a position in the Department to a position in another Department
at the officer’s existing salary, provided the officer has the
qualifications required for the other position and the work assigned to the
other position is appropriate to that salary.
51 Excess staff
(1979 Act, s 113)
(1) If the Minister, after consideration of the report of a relevant
management review or special inquiry, is satisfied that the number of persons
who are employed in a Department exceeds the number that appears to be
necessary for the effective, efficient and economical management of its
functions and activities, then, subject to subsection (3), the appropriate
Department Head, as directed by the Minister shall take such steps as are
practicable to secure the transfer of the excess persons to vacant positions
in other Departments at their existing salaries.
(2) If the appropriate Department Head is satisfied that the number of
persons who are employed in the Department exceeds the number that appears to
be necessary for the effective, efficient and economical management of its
functions and activities, then, subject to subsection (3), that Department
Head shall take such steps as are practicable to secure the transfer of the
excess persons to vacant positions in other Departments at their existing
salaries.
(3) If any such excess person cannot be usefully employed in any other
Department in accordance with this section, the Governor may, on the
recommendation of the appropriate Department Head made with the approval of
the Public Employment Office, dispense with the person’s
services.
(4) A transfer of a person under this section may be made only by the
appropriate Department Head with the approval of the Department Head of the
Department to which the person is being
transferred.
52 Excessive salaries
(1979 Act, s 114)
(1) If:(a) the Minister, after consideration of the report of a relevant
management review or special inquiry, or
(b) the appropriate Department Head,
is satisfied that an officer employed in a Department is in receipt of a
greater salary than the maximum fairly appropriate to the work performed by
the officer, then, subject to subsection (2), the Department Head shall take
such steps as are practicable to assign the officer work of a class
appropriate to the officer’s salary.
(2) If:(a) the officer cannot be assigned sufficient work of the kind
referred to in subsection (1), or
(b) the officer is unfitted for or incapable of performing work
appropriate to the officer’s salary,
the appropriate Department Head shall take such steps as are practicable
to secure the officer’s transfer to a vacant position in any other
Department at the officer’s existing salary.
(3) If a transfer cannot be made in accordance with subsection (2) or
the officer is unfitted for or incapable of performing the work attached to a
position referred to in that subsection, the appropriate Department Head, with
the approval of the Public Employment Office:(a) shall reduce the officer’s salary to the maximum determined
by that Department Head to be appropriate to the work performed by the
officer, and
(b) may take such steps as are practicable to secure the
officer’s transfer to a vacant position in the Department to which the
officer belongs or in any other Department at that
salary.
(4) If a reduction of salary of an officer under this section is
certified by the appropriate Department Head to have been made on the ground
only that appropriate work or an appropriate position is not available, the
officer:(a) remains eligible for promotion as if the officer’s salary
had not been reduced, and
(b) is entitled to employment in the class of work to which the
officer’s previous salary was appropriate, or transfer to a position to
which that class of work is attached, as soon as the appropriate work or an
appropriate position becomes available, in preference to any other officer
whose salary has not been reduced.
(5) A transfer of an officer under this section may be made only by
the appropriate Department Head with the approval of the Department Head of
the Department to which the officer is being
transferred.
53 Officer refusing transfer
(1979 Act, s 115 (2))
(1) If an officer refuses a transfer under section 50, 51, 52 or 100A,
the Governor may, on the recommendation of the appropriate Department Head
made with the approval of the Public Employment Office, dismiss the officer
from the Public Service, but only if that Department Head has certified that
the officer had no valid reason for so refusing.
(2) If the appropriate Department Head considers that an officer had a
valid reason for refusing the transfer, the Department Head may allow the
officer to decline the transfer without prejudice to any rights that the
officer would, if the transfer had not been declined, have had to any future
promotion or appointment.
53A Provisions applying to senior executive officers in the
Public Service
(1) Sections 50–53 do not apply to senior executive officers in
the Public Service.
(2) If the Department Head considers it to be in the interests of the
Department to do so, the Department Head may transfer a senior executive
officer from one position in the Department to another position in the
Department at the officer’s existing level of
remuneration.
(3) If the appropriate Department Head considers it to be in the
interests of the Public Service to do so, the Department Head may, with the
approval of the Public Employment Office and the Department Head of the other
Department concerned, transfer a senior executive officer from a position in
the Department to a position in another Department at the officer’s
existing level of remuneration.
(4) A transfer under this section may be made only if the senior
executive officer possesses the qualifications required for the other
position.
(5) However, a senior executive officer may be transferred under this
section to a position (whether or not an executive position within the meaning
of Part 2A) at a level of remuneration that is lower than the officer’s
existing level of remuneration, with the consent of the
officer.
54 Right of the Crown to dispense with an officer’s
services not affected by the Act
(1979 Act, s 118)
The right or power of the Crown to dispense with the services of
any person employed in the Public Service, as it existed immediately before
the commencement of this section, is not abrogated or restricted by any of the
provisions of this Act.
55 No compensation to be paid where officer’s services
dispensed with or salary reduced
(1979 Act, s 119)
An officer or temporary employee is not, except as provided by
this or any other Act, entitled to any compensation as a result of the
officer’s services being dispensed with or the officer’s salary
being reduced.
Part 3A Administrative changes
Division 1 Orders concerning departments of the Public
Service
55A Creation and change in relation to departments
(1) The Governor may by order:(a) establish, abolish or change the name or other description of any
department of the Public Service or any branch of any department of the Public
Service, or
(b) remove a branch from any department of the Public Service,
or
(c) add a branch to any department of the Public
Service.
(2) Any other Act may establish, abolish or change the name or other
description of a department of the Public Service by amendment of Schedule 1
to insert, omit or change the name or other description of the Department,
respectively.
55B Orders amending or replacing Schedule 1
The Governor may by order:(a) amend Column 1 of Schedule 1 by inserting, omitting or changing
the name or other description of a department of the Public Service,
or
(b) amend Column 2 of Schedule 1 by inserting the title or other
description of an office or position opposite an entry in Column 1 of that
Schedule, or by omitting or amending a title or other description in Column 2
of that Schedule, or
(c) omit Schedule 1 and insert in its place a Schedule containing in
Column 1 the names or other descriptions of departments of the Public Service
and containing in Column 2 the titles or other descriptions of offices or
positions.
55C Orders specifying responsible Minister
The Governor may by order specify the Minister who is to be
responsible for a department of the Public Service.
Division 2 Other administrative changes orders
55D Definitions
In this Division:administrative
change means:
(a) the fact of there ceasing to be a Minister, Department or officer
of a particular description, or
(b) the transfer of the administration of an Act, or a part of an Act,
from a Minister to another Minister, or
(c) the transfer of a function from a Minister, Department or officer
to another Minister, Department or officer,
respectively.
Department includes any
branch or other part of a Department.
description includes
title.
Minister
means a Minister of the Crown.
officer
means a member of staff of a Department.
reference, in relation to a
Minister, Department or officer, includes a reference that (whether by or
under this or any other Act) is to be read or construed as, or taken to be, or
deemed to be, or otherwise treated as, a reference to that Minister,
Department or officer.
statutory
instrument means an instrument made under an Act or under an
instrument made under an Act, and includes a regulation, rule, by-law or
ordinance made under an Act.
55E Orders to change references in Acts
(1) The Governor may make orders containing provisions requiring a
reference in any Act or statutory instrument, or in any other instrument, or
in any contract or agreement, to a Minister, Department or officer by a
specified description to be construed as a reference to a Minister, Department
or officer, respectively, by another specified
description.
(2) Such a provision does not apply to or in respect of any Act or
statutory instrument, or any other instrument, or any contract or agreement,
enacted, made or entered into after the date of publication in the Gazette of
the order in which the provision is contained, or the date on which the
provision takes effect, whichever is the later.
(3) An order under this section need not be consequential on or
incidental to administrative change.
55F Orders re administrative change and other
matters
(1) The Governor may make orders containing such provisions as in the
opinion of the Governor are necessary or convenient to be made for the purpose
of dealing with matters that are incidental to or consequential on
administrative change, the making of an order under this Division or a
requirement imposed by an order under this
Division.
(2) The provisions that may be made by an order under this section
include provisions for the transfer of any property, rights and liabilities
held, enjoyed or incurred by a superseded authority, and provisions of a
transitional or savings nature, including any of the following
provisions:(a) provisions for the carrying on or completion of anything commenced
by, or under the authority of, or in relation to, a superseded
authority,
(b) provisions for the continuity of any body constituted by, or
having amongst its members, a superseded authority,
(c) provisions for the substitution, in any legal proceedings, of a
Minister or officer for a superseded authority.
(3) In this section:superseded
authority means a Minister, Department or officer who is, or whose
description is, the subject of an order under this
Division.
Division 3 Requirements concerning orders
55G Publication and commencement of orders
(1) An order under this Part is to be published in the
Gazette.
(2) The order takes effect on the date of its publication in the
Gazette, or on such other date as may be specified in the order. The
commencement date can be a date that is earlier than the date of publication
of the order in the Gazette (including earlier than the commencement of this
Part).
55H Limited, general and differential application of
orders
An order under this Part may be made so as:(a) to apply generally or be limited in its application by reference
to specified exceptions or factors, or
(b) to apply differently according to different factors of a specified
kind.
55I Operation of orders
(1) An order under this Part does not invalidate anything done or
omitted to be done before the date of its publication in the
Gazette.
(2) To the extent to which an order under this Part takes effect from
a date that is earlier than the date of its publication in the Gazette, the
order 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.
55J Combination orders
An order may be made under this Part combining any 2 or more of
the provisions authorised by this Part, including provisions authorised under
different sections.
Part 4 Industrial matters
Division 1
56–61 (Repealed)
Division 2 Responsibilities of the Public Employment Office
with respect to industrial matters
62 Role of the Public Employment Office in industrial
proceedings
(1979 Act, s 81)
The Public Employment Office shall, for the purposes of any
proceedings relating to officers or temporary employees held before a
competent tribunal having jurisdiction to deal with industrial matters, be
taken to be the employer of the staff of the Public
Service.
63 Public Employment Office may determine employment
conditions
(1979 Act, s 82)
(1) The Public Employment Office may from time to time make
determinations fixing the conditions and benefits of employment of officers
and temporary employees (or any group or class of officers or temporary
employees) and their salary, wages and other remuneration. Such a
determination can provide for redundancy and severance payments and for
remuneration packaging.
(2) The conditions, benefits, salary, wages and other remuneration of
an officer or temporary employee is, except in so far as provision is
otherwise made by law, such as may be fixed by a determination made under this
section.
(2A) This section does not prevent the relevant Department Head from
determining conditions of employment of officers and temporary employees under
section 11 or under any other law. However, a determination by the Public
Employment Office under this section prevails to the extent of any
inconsistency with a determination of a Department Head, unless the Public
Employment Office approves of the Department Head’s
determination.
(3) An officer or temporary employee may sue for and recover the
amount of remuneration of the officer or employee that is determined under
this section.
(4) This section does not apply in relation to remuneration or
allowances fixed under Part 2A or under the Statutory and Other Offices Remuneration Act
1975.
64 Public Employment Office may enter into
agreements
(1979 Act, s 83)
(1) The Public Employment Office may enter into an agreement with any
association or organisation representing a group or class of officers or
temporary employees with respect to industrial
matters.
(2) Any such agreement binds all officers and temporary employees in
the class or group affected by the agreement, and no such officer or employee
(whether a member of the association or organisation with which the agreement
was entered into or not) has any right of appeal against the terms of the
agreement.
(3) This section does not apply in relation to remuneration or
allowances fixed under Part 2A or under the Statutory and Other Offices Remuneration Act
1975.
(4) An agreement under this section is not an enterprise agreement
within the meaning of the Industrial
Relations Act 1996. However, the Public Employment Office (or
any delegate of that Office) may enter into such an enterprise agreement as
the employer of the officers or temporary employees
concerned.
65 Power of Public Employment Office to enter
Department’s premises etc
(1979 Act, s 84)
The Public Employment Office may, by its authorised officers or
delegates:(a) enter the premises of any Department, and
(b) require the production of and examine any documents in the custody
of any member of the staff of any Department, and
(c) require any member of the staff of any Department to answer
questions,
for the purposes of enabling the Public Employment Office to exercise its
functions.
Part 5 Discipline and conduct of officers of the Public
Service
Division 1 Application and interpretation
65A Part applies to public servants (except chief executive
officers)
This Part applies to officers in the Public Service but (unless
otherwise expressly provided by this Act) does not apply to chief executive
officers in the Public Service.
66 Breaches of discipline
(1979 Act, s 85)
(1) An officer is guilty of a breach of discipline if the
officer:(a) contravenes this Act or the regulations, or
(b) engages in any misconduct, or
(c) consumes or uses alcohol or drugs to excess,
or
(d) intentionally disobeys, or intentionally disregards, any lawful
order made or given by a person having authority to make or give the order,
or
(e) is negligent, careless, inefficient or incompetent in the
discharge of his or her duties, or
(f) engages in any disgraceful or improper conduct,
or
(g) takes any detrimental action (within the meaning of the Protected Disclosures Act 1994)
against a person that is substantially in reprisal for the person making a
protected disclosure within the meaning of that Act, or
(h) takes any disciplinary proceedings or disciplinary action against
another officer that is substantially in reprisal for an internal disclosure
made by that officer.
(2) In this section, internal
disclosure means a disclosure made by an officer regarding an
alleged breach of discipline by another officer belonging to the same
Department as that to which the officer belongs.
Division 2
67–72 (Repealed)
Division 3 Officers (other than chief executive
officers)
73 (Repealed)
74 Procedure for dealing with breaches of
discipline
(1979 Act, s 93)
(1) A breach of discipline alleged to have been committed by an
officer shall be dealt with by the appropriate Department
Head.
(2) Subject to this Division, the regulations may:(a) make provision for or with respect to the manner of dealing with
alleged breaches of discipline, and
(b) prescribe all matters that are necessary or convenient to be
prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this
Division.
(3) Section 83 (Powers of persons conducting special inquiries)
applies to a disciplinary inquiry in the same way as it applies to a special
inquiry.
75 Punishment of officers for breaches of
discipline
(1979 Act, ss 94, 100)
(1) If:(a) an alleged breach of discipline is dealt with in accordance with
the regulations, and
(b) the officer concerned is found to have committed the breach or
admits to the person or persons dealing with the breach that the officer
committed the breach,
the appropriate Department Head may decide to:(c) impose on the officer one or more of the punishments specified in
subsection (2), or
(d) dismiss the officer from the Public Service or direct that the
officer resign, or be allowed to resign, from the Public Service within such
period as the direction specifies, or
(e) in the case of an officer on probation—annul the
officer’s appointment.
(2) For the purpose of subsection (1) (c), the following punishments
are specified:(a) a caution,
(b) a reprimand,
(c) a fine,
(d) except in the case of a senior executive officer, reduction of
salary or demotion to a lower position in the Public
Service.
(3) If:(a) the appropriate Department Head, in the exercise of powers
conferred by this section, decides to direct an officer to resign, or be
allowed to resign, from the Public Service within a period specified in the
direction, and
(b) the officer does not resign within that
period,
the Department Head may decide to dismiss the officer from the Public
Service.
(4) A decision of a Department Head under subsection (1) or (3) may be
implemented at any time, but a decision of a Department Head under subsection
(1) (d) or (e) or subsection (3) to dismiss an officer from the Public Service
or to annul an officer’s appointment must not be implemented without the
approval of the Governor.
(5) Subsection (4) is subject to Part 3 of the Government and Related Employees Appeal Tribunal Act
1980.
(6) If a Department Head decides to dismiss an officer from the Public
Service in accordance with subsection (1) (d) or (3), the decision shall be
treated as a decision of the kind referred to in section 23 (1) (f) of the
Government and Related Employees Appeal
Tribunal Act 1980 even though the decision has not been
approved by the Governor.
(7) Any appointment required by a punishment specified in subsection
(2) (d) shall be made by the appropriate Department
Head.
(8) If a fine is imposed under this section on an officer, the person
responsible for paying the officer’s salary must, on receiving notice of
the imposition of the fine, deduct the amount of the fine from the salary
payable to the officer, in such manner as the appropriate Department Head
directs.
76 Punishment where officer is guilty of a serious
offence
(1979 Act, s 95)
If an officer:(a) is convicted in New South Wales of an offence that is punishable
by imprisonment for 12 months or more, or
(b) is convicted elsewhere than in New South Wales of an offence that,
if it were committed in New South Wales, would be an offence so
punishable,
the appropriate Department Head may decide to impose on the officer any
one or more of the punishments that may be imposed under section 75 (1) as if
the officer had, in accordance with that provision, been dealt with for a
breach of discipline and were liable to those
punishments.
77 Suspension of officers from duty in certain
cases
(1979 Act, s 96)
(1) In this section:the
senior officer, in relation to an officer charged as referred to in
subsection (2), means the senior officer in the branch or section of the
Department in which the officer is employed.
(2) If an officer:(a) is, in accordance with the regulations, charged with a breach of
discipline, or
(b) is charged with having committed an offence referred to in section
76,
either the appropriate Department Head or the senior officer may suspend
the officer from duty, until the charge has been dealt
with.
(3) Any salary payable to a person as an officer while the person is
suspended from duty under this section shall (if the appropriate Department
Head so directs) be withheld.
(4) If such a person:(a) is found, as referred to in section 75 (1), to have committed a
breach of discipline or admits, as referred to in that provision, to having
committed the breach, or
(b) is convicted of an offence referred to in section
76,
then the salary withheld under subsection (3) is forfeited to the Crown,
unless:(c) the appropriate Department Head otherwise directs,
or
(d) that salary was due to the person in respect of a period before
the suspension was imposed.
(5) Subsections (3) and (4) are subject to the Government and Related Employees Appeal Tribunal Act
1980.
(6) If the appropriate Department Head has suspended an officer from
duty under this section, that Department Head may at any time remove the
suspension.
(7) If a senior officer has suspended an officer from duty under this
section, either the appropriate Department Head or the senior officer may at
any time remove the suspension.
(8) The regulations may:(a) restrict the power of a senior officer to suspend an officer from
duty under this section, and
(b) require a senior officer who has suspended an officer from duty
under this section to report the suspension to such officer and in such manner
as may be prescribed.
77A Effect of dismissal of senior executive
officers
If a senior executive officer is dismissed from the Public Service
under this Division:(a) the term for which the officer was appointed is to be regarded as
having come to an end, and
(b) no compensation is payable in respect of the
dismissal.
78 Posting of notices to an officer whose address is
unknown
(1979 Act, s 97)
(1) If:(a) a charge is pending against an officer, and
(b) the appropriate Department Head does not know the address of the
officer,
the Department Head shall post notices, orders or communications relating
to the charge to the address of the officer last known to the Department
Head.
(2) Compliance with subsection (1) shall be regarded as sufficient
service on the officer of any such notices, orders or
communications.
(3) If, within the period (if any) specified in any such notice, order
or communication, the appropriate Department Head does not receive an answer
to an inquiry asking whether the officer admits or denies the truth of the
charge against the officer:(a) the officer shall be taken to have denied the truth of the charge,
and
(b) that Department Head may inquire into and deal with the charge in
the officer’s absence.
Division 4 Miscellaneous matters relating to conduct of
officers
79 Officer to report bankruptcy etc
(1979 Act, s 98)
(1) If an officer becomes bankrupt or makes a composition, arrangement
or assignment for the benefit of the officer’s creditors, the officer
shall:(a) immediately give to the appropriate Department Head notice of the
bankruptcy, composition, arrangement or assignment, and
(b) within such period as the Department Head specifies, provide that
Department Head with such further information with respect to the cause of the
bankruptcy or of the making of the composition, arrangement or assignment as
that Department Head requires.
(2) If any such officer is the Department Head, subsection (1) applies
as if references to the appropriate Department Head were references to the
appropriate Minister.
80 Officer not to engage in other employment without
permission
(1979 Act, s 99)
(1) An officer shall not:(a) accept or continue to hold or discharge the duties of or be
employed in any paid office in connection with any banking, insurance, mining,
mercantile or other commercial business, whether it is carried on by a
corporation, company, firm or individual, or
(b) engage in or undertake any such business, whether as principal or
agent, or
(c) engage in or continue in the private practice of any profession,
occupation or trade, or enter into any employment, whether remunerative or
not, with any corporation, company, firm or individual so
engaged,
except with the permission of the appropriate Department
Head.
(2) The appropriate Department Head may withdraw any such permission
at any time.
(3) Subsections (1) and (2) are subject to any other Act that
expressly applies to officers.
(4) If an officer:(a) is the holder of an office or position, or
(b) is engaged in any employment whatever,
otherwise than in connection with the duties of the officer’s
position under the Crown, the officer must at once notify the fact to the
appropriate Department Head.
(5) If an officer has given a notification to the appropriate
Department Head under subsection (4), that Department Head may require the
officer to resign the office or position or to abstain from engaging in the
employment.
(6) Nothing in this section prevents an officer from accepting and
continuing to hold office in any friendly society established for the benefit
of public servants only.
(7) This section does not apply to chief executive officers or senior
executive officers.
81 Officers retiring or resigning before breach of discipline
dealt with
(1) If an officer who has been charged with a breach of discipline, or
who has been informed that such a charge is about to be laid, retires or
resigns from the Public Service, a disciplinary inquiry may be commenced or
continued even though the officer has retired or resigned, and:(a) the person shall, for the purposes only of the inquiry, be taken
to be an officer suspended from duty without pay, and
(b) a decision may be made as to the punishment (if any) that would
have been imposed under this Part if the officer had not retired or
resigned.
(2) Any such decision (other than a fine) does not affect the former
officer’s retirement or resignation or the benefits, rights and
liabilities arising from the retirement or
resignation.
(3) A fine imposed under any such decision may be recovered from the
former officer as a debt due to the Crown in any court of competent
jurisdiction, or out of any money payable to or in respect of the former
officer by the Crown, or both.
(4) Nothing in this section affects any power under this Act to refuse
to accept the resignation of an officer.
(5) (Repealed)
Part 6 Special inquiries
82 Minister may direct holding of special inquiry
(1979 Act, s 101)
(1) The Minister may, in the case of any matter relating to a
Department or declared authority, direct such person as the Minister specifies
in the direction to conduct a special inquiry into the
matter.
(2) A special inquiry may be conducted under this section into a
matter involving an alleged breach of discipline by a chief executive officer
or a senior executive officer (whether or not the person has ceased to be such
an officer).
(3) If a special inquiry is conducted under this section into a matter
involving an alleged breach of discipline by a senior executive officer in the
Public Service, a disciplinary inquiry is not required to be held under Part
5.
83 Powers of persons conducting special inquiries
(1979 Act, s 102)
(1) A person conducting a special inquiry may enter the premises of
any Department or declared authority in connection with the
inquiry.
(2) A person conducting a special inquiry has, for the purposes of the
inquiry, the functions, protections and immunities conferred on a commissioner
by Division 1 of Part 2 of the Royal
Commissions Act 1923.
(3) If 2 or more persons are conducting a special inquiry, the person
appointed to preside at the inquiry has, for the purposes of the inquiry, the
functions conferred on the chairman of a commission by the Royal Commissions Act
1923.
(4) The provisions of the Royal
Commissions Act 1923 (except section 13 and Division 2 of Part
2) with necessary modifications apply:(a) to a special inquiry, and
(b) to any witness or person summoned by or appearing before the
inquiry.
84 Procedure and evidence at a special inquiry
(1979 Act, s 103)
(1) If the person conducting a special inquiry agrees, an agent
(including a legal practitioner) may represent a person, Department or other
body at the inquiry.
(2) The person conducting a special inquiry is not bound by the rules
of evidence and may be informed on any matter in issue at the inquiry in such
manner as the person considers appropriate.
(3) The person conducting a special inquiry may, in respect of a
matter not dealt with by or under this Act, give directions as to the
procedure to be followed at or in connection with the
inquiry.
85 Reports of special inquiries
(1979 Act, s 104)
(1) The person conducting a special inquiry must:(a) within such period as the Minister requires, prepare a report on
the conduct and findings, and any recommendations, of the inquiry,
and
(b) immediately after preparing the report, provide the Minister and
the appropriate Minister each with a copy of the
report.
(2) The appropriate Minister must cause a copy of the report, together
with information as to any action taken or proposed to be taken in relation to
the subject of the report, to be laid before each House of Parliament within
30 sitting days of that House after the day on which that Minister was
provided with a copy of the report.
Part 7 Application of provisions to declared
authorities
86 Power to amend Schedule 3 relating to declared
authorities
(1979 Act, s 124)
(1) The Governor may, by proclamation, amend Schedule 3 by inserting,
omitting or amending the name of any authority (whether incorporated or
not).
(2) The Governor may, by proclamation, amend Schedule 3 by inserting
(in parentheses after the name of an authority), omitting or amending
references to any of the provisions of this Act relating to declared
authorities which are not to apply to an authority.
(3) The Governor may, by proclamation, omit Schedule 3 and insert
instead a Schedule containing the names of authorities, with or without
references as referred to in subsection (2).
(4) The name of an authority may be included in Schedule 3 only if the
authority is established by or under an Act and it is, or its governing body
is, constituted by one or more persons appointed by the Governor or a
Minister.
87 Certain provisions not to apply
A provision of this Act relating to declared authorities does not
apply to a particular declared authority if the provision is specified after
the name of that authority in Schedule 3 as not applying to that
authority.
88 Declared authorities to comply with directions of Public
Employment Office on industrial matters
(1) The Public Employment Office may, with the approval of the
Minister and by notice in writing to a declared authority, require the
declared authority:(a) to notify the Public Employment Office of such industrial matters
affecting the declared authority as may be specified in the notice,
and
(b) to exercise the declared authority’s functions in respect of
any such industrial matter in such manner as may be specified in the
notice.
(2) A notice may specify the manner and the time within which
industrial matters must be notified.
(3) A declared authority must comply with a requirement under this
section.
(4) This section is subject to section 87
(1).
Part 8 Removal and retirement of certain statutory office
holders
89 Definitions
(1) In this Part:term
appointee means a person appointed by the Governor or a Minister to
a statutory office where the Act concerned provides that the holder of the
office holds it for a term specified in the Act, in the instrument of
appointment or in another instrument.
(2) For the purposes of this Part, a person is not a term appointee
merely because an Act provides that the person ceases to hold office on
reaching a particular age.
(3) A reference in this Part to:(a) employment in the public sector is a reference to employment as an
officer of the Public Service or a Teaching Service, as a member of the Police
Service or as an officer in the service of a public authority established by
or under an Act, and
(b) engagement in the public sector is a reference to employment in
the public sector or to holding a statutory office.
(4) (Repealed)
(5) The positions of director or chief executive officer of a
statutory State owned corporation as defined in the State Owned Corporations Act 1989
are statutory offices for the purposes of this
Part.
89A Part not to apply to executive officers
This Part does not apply to a person in the person’s
capacity as a chief executive officer or a senior executive
officer.
90 Removal of term appointee from office
(1) The Governor may remove a term appointee from office at any
time.
(2) This section does not prevent a term appointee from being removed
from office apart from this Act.
(3) This section applies whether the term appointee holds office on a
full-time or part-time basis.
(4) This section does not apply to a person in the person’s
capacity as:(a) (Repealed)
(b) the holder of an office under an Act that provides that the holder
may or must be removed from office following an address, declaration,
resolution or other involvement of either or both of the Houses of Parliament,
or
(c) the Crown Advocate, or
(d) an Assistant Commissioner for the Independent Commission Against
Corruption or any other officer of the Commission.
91 Re-appointment to public sector following removal of term
appointee
(1) This section applies to a person who is removed from office under
section 90.
(2) A person to whom this section applies is entitled to engagement in
the public sector, if:(a) for a continuous period ending immediately before appointment to
the office the person was at all times engaged in the public sector on a
full-time basis, and
(b) for at least some part of that engagement the person was an
employee in the public sector.
(3) The engagement to which the person is entitled under this section
is to be an engagement:(a) at a salary not lower than the current salary for the previous
engagement of the person as such an employee, and
(b) with duties appropriate to that salary.
(4) The person is not entitled to any compensation for the removal
from office or to any remuneration in respect of the office for any period
afterwards.
92 Compensation for office holder following
removal
(1) This section applies to a person who (being a term
appointee):(a) is removed from an office under section 90,
and
(b) is not entitled to be engaged in the public sector under section
91,
but does not apply to a person who held the office concerned on a
part-time basis.
(2) A person to whom this section applies is entitled to such
compensation (if any) for loss of remuneration as the Statutory and Other
Offices Remuneration Tribunal determines.
(3) The maximum compensation payable is an amount equal to the
person’s gross remuneration for:(a) the period of 38 weeks, or
(b) if the person was appointed for a term—the period starting
from the person’s removal from office and ending when the person’s
term of office would have expired,
(c) (Repealed)
at the rate at which it was payable immediately before the person’s
removal from office.
(4) If more than one such period is applicable, the maximum
compensation is to be calculated by reference to the shorter or shortest
period.
(5) The person is not entitled to any other compensation for the
removal from office or to any other remuneration in respect of the office for
any period afterwards.
(6) If the Statutory and Other Offices Remuneration Tribunal
determines that compensation is payable under this section, it must, in its
determination, specify the period to which the compensation for loss of
remuneration relates.
(7) The person may not be engaged in the public sector or employed in
the service of a State owned corporation established under the State Owned Corporations Act 1989
or a subsidiary of such a State owned corporation during the period so
specified, unless arrangements are made for a refund of the proportionate
amount of the compensation.
93 Election by term officer to take compensation
A person to whom section 91 applies may, before being engaged in
the public sector under that section, elect in writing to take compensation
referred to in section 92, and on the election taking effect the person ceases
to be entitled to engagement in the public sector under section
91.
94 Operation of this Part
(1) This Part prevails over any inconsistent provision of any other
Act or law or of the terms of appointment of or contract with a
person.
(2) This Part applies to a person appointed to a statutory office even
though the Act concerned excludes the application of this Act, unless it
expressly excludes the application of this Part.
(3) This Part applies to persons holding office at the commencement of
this Part, as well as to persons appointed to an office
afterwards.
(4) Disentitlement under this Part to salary of an office does not
apply as regards a subsequent re-appointment to the
office.
(5) This Part does not apply to a person in the person’s
capacity as:(a) the Governor, the Lieutenant-Governor or other officer
administering the Government, or
(b) a member of the Executive Council, a Minister of the Crown, a
member of either House of Parliament or the holder of any other political
office, or
(c) the holder of a judicial office, or
(d) the Parliamentary Remuneration Tribunal, or
(e) a member of the Police Service.
Part 9 Supplementary provisions
95 Certain other Acts not to be affected
(1979 Act, ss 8, 126)
(1) The Superannuation Act
1916, the Industrial
Relations Act 1996, the State Public Service Superannuation Act
1985, the State Authorities
Superannuation Act 1987 and the First State Superannuation Act
1992 are not affected by anything in this
Act.
(2) Subsection (1) does not limit section 27 or
42J.
96 Minister’s powers to control staff and work of
Department not affected
(1979 Act, s 128)
The ordinary and necessary departmental authority of a Minister
with respect to the direction and control of staff and work is not limited by
anything in this Act.
96A Delegation by Minister
The Minister may delegate to any person any of the
Minister’s functions under this Act, other than this power of
delegation.
97 Construction of certain references
(1979 Act, s 129)
(1) In any other Act, in any instrument made under any Act or in any
other instrument of any kind (enacted, made or executed whether before or
after the commencement of this section), except in so far as the context or
subject-matter otherwise indicates or requires:(a) a reference to the “Public Service” or the
“public service” shall be read as a reference to the Public
Service within the meaning of this Act, and
(b) a reference to a “Public Servant” or a “public
servant” shall be read as a reference to an officer or temporary
employee within the meaning of this Act, and
(c) a reference to a Department Head shall be read as including a
reference to a person who has the functions of a Department
Head.
(2) (Repealed)
(3) Subsection (1) does not apply to particular references specified
for the purposes of this subsection by the Governor by order published in the
Gazette.
98 Evidence as to Public Service Notices
(1979 Act, s 132)
A document purporting to be an issue of the Public Service
Notices:(a) is admissible in evidence in any proceedings, including
proceedings before the Tribunal, and
(b) shall, until the contrary is proved, be presumed to be a copy of
an issue of the Public Service Notices.
99 Deductions for rent etc in certain cases
(1979 Act, s 130)
(1) Except as provided in subsection (3), if any officer or temporary
employee is allowed to use, for residential purposes, any premises belonging
to the Government, the Public Employment Office may direct that a fair and
reasonable sum as rent for the premises be deducted from the salary of the
officer or employee.
(2) When giving a direction under subsection (1), the Public
Employment Office shall either fix the amount of rent to be deducted or
specify a person by whom the amount of rent to be deducted is to be
fixed.
(3) If an officer or temporary employee is allowed to use, for
residential purposes, any premises or any land vested in or managed by the
Teacher Housing Authority of New South Wales, an amount fixed by that
Authority in respect of rent shall be deducted from the salary of that officer
or employee and paid to that Authority.
(4) In this section, rent includes payment for board and
lodging.
(5) This section is subject, in the case of a chief executive officer
or senior executive officer, to the contract of employment entered into by the
officer under Part 2A.
100 Extended leave for officers etc
(1979 Act, ss 120–122)
Schedule 5 has effect in relation to officers and temporary
employees.
100A Employer-sponsored transfers involving public
authorities
(1) The Head of a Department may transfer an officer of the Department
to a position in the service of a public authority at the officer’s
existing level of remuneration, following consultation with the officer, and
with the approval of the Head of the public authority and of the Public
Employment Office.
(2) The Head of a public authority may transfer an officer of the
public authority to a position in a Department at the officer’s existing
level of remuneration, following consultation with the officer, and with the
approval of the appropriate Department Head and of the Public Employment
Office.
(3) The Head of a public authority may transfer an officer of the
public authority to a position in the service of another public authority at
the officer’s existing level of remuneration, following consultation
with the officer, and with the approval of the Head of the other public
authority and of the Public Employment Office.
(4) However, a senior executive officer may be transferred under this
section to a position (whether or not an executive position within the meaning
of Part 2A) at a level of remuneration that is lower than the officer’s
existing level of remuneration, with the consent of the
officer.
(5) A transfer under this section may be made only if the officer
possesses the qualifications required for the position to which the officer is
being transferred.
(6) An officer of a public authority who refuses a transfer under this
section may be dismissed from the service of the public authority in
accordance with any dismissal procedures applicable to the public authority,
but only if the Head of the public authority has certified that the officer
had no valid reason for so refusing. This subsection does not affect the power
of removal under section 42Q.
(7) This section does not affect any other method (statutory or
otherwise) by which officers of Departments or public authorities can transfer
or be transferred.
(8) This section does not affect any provisions of any other Act to
the extent that they specifically deal with the transfer of any officers from
a Department or a public authority.
(9) The approval of the Public Employment Office under this section
may be given unconditionally or subject to conditions. Without limitation,
such a condition may provide for the retention of accrued or accruing rights
or benefits where they are not covered by Schedule 5A or where that Schedule
is not applicable.
(10) The approval of the Head of a Department or public authority to
the transfer of an officer to a protected position in or with the Department
or public authority (that is, a position that is subject to the requirements
of some other Act or law with respect to appointments to such a position) is
effective only after substantial compliance with:(a) such of those requirements as relate to probity or integrity,
and
(b) such of those requirements as are specified in any conditions
subject to which the approval of the Public Employment Office is given,
and
(c) such of those requirements as are prescribed by the
regulations.
For the purposes of this subsection, the relevant provisions of
the other Act or law imposing any such requirement apply with any necessary
modifications.
(11) In this section:Head of a
public authority means:
(a) (subject to paragraph (b)) the person who is or exercises the
functions of chief executive officer of the authority, or
(b) the person prescribed by the
regulations.
officer
of a Department means an officer, as defined in section 3 (1), of the
Department.
officer of a public
authority means an officer or employee of the public authority.
public
authority means:
(a) the whole or a part of a public sector service or an employer
constituting, or within, or for the purposes of, a public sector service,
or
(b) (without limiting paragraph (a)) a State owned
corporation,
but does not include a Department.public
sector service has the same meaning as in Schedule
5A.
100B Provisions relating to mobility of public sector
employees
Schedule 5A has effect.
100C Variations in remuneration on transfer
(1) A reference in this Act to an officer’s existing salary or
an officer’s existing level of remuneration includes a reference to that
salary or level of remuneration as varied in accordance with general
guidelines issued from time to time by the Public Employment Office in
connection with the transfer of officers.
(2) A person is not entitled to appeal under section 20 of the Government and Related Employees Appeal Tribunal Act
1980 in respect of a decision relating to a vacant office,
where the maximum salary applicable to the vacant office is greater than the
salary paid to an employee, because of the application of the
guidelines.
(3) An officer is not entitled to any compensation in respect of any
reduction of remuneration because of the application of the
guidelines.
(4) A reference in this Act to the transfer of a senior executive
officer at a level of remuneration that is lower than the officer’s
existing level of remuneration includes a reference to the transfer of the
officer to a position without a remuneration package (within the meaning of
Part 2A) and with a salary and other benefits that are lower in value than the
officer’s existing remuneration package (within the meaning of that
Part). The relative values are to be determined in accordance with any
relevant principles in the guidelines.
(5) This section extends to officers referred to in section
100A.
100D Departmental or organisational changes affecting
notional executive positions
If a Department or organisation referred to in section 42Q (3) (c)
ceases to exist or to be identifiable, the Public Employment Office may
determine that the executive position concerned is to be regarded for the
purposes of that paragraph as being in some other specified Department or
organisation.
101 Attachment of wages or salary of officers etc
(1979 Act, s 131)
Schedule 6 has effect in relation to officers and temporary
employees.
102 Regulations
(1979 Act, s 133)
(1) The Governor may make regulations, not inconsistent with this Act,
for or with respect to any matter that by this Act is required or permitted to
be prescribed or that is necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying
out or giving effect to this Act.
(2) In particular, the regulations may make provision for or with
respect to the following:(a) providing for the medical examination and standards of medical
fitness for the appointment of persons to positions in the Public
Service,
(b) prescribing the educational qualifications for appointments to
positions in the Public Service,
(c) providing for the conduct of examinations in connection with any
such appointments,
(d) prescribing the procedure to be adopted for selecting an appointee
from among candidates for a vacant position (other than a chief executive
position), but not so as to limit the power of the appropriate Department Head
to make a recommendation in relation to the filling of the
vacancy,
(e) determining the eligibility of persons for appointment as
temporary employees,
(f) providing for the transfer of staff between
Departments,
(g) providing for the hours of attendance of
staff,
(h) prescribing the leave which may be granted to
staff,
(i) providing for the payment of travelling and subsistence allowances
for staff, allowances for the increased cost of living in remote areas, and
other allowances for staff,
(j) prescribing the procedures to be adopted consequent on the
appointment of a person to a position,
(k) providing for the exercise of the functions of suspended, sick or
absent staff by other staff, and the exercise by staff of the functions
attaching to vacant positions,
(l) providing for the acquisition of stores, equipment, materials and
services for the Public Service,
(m) providing for entry to positions in the Public Service in special
cases.
(3) A regulation may:(a) create an offence for a breach of the regulations punishable by,
or
(b) prescribe for a minor offence against
discipline,
a penalty not exceeding 1 penalty unit.
(4) The regulations are not capable of altering or affecting any duty
that is required to be performed by or under any
Act.
(5) The Governor may determine and implement methods for acquiring
stores, equipment, materials and services for the Public Service, whether or
not by means of public tender.
(6) The power conferred by subsection (5) is not affected by
subsection (2) or anything in the regulations.
103, 104 (Repealed)
105 Repeal
The Public Service Act 1979 is
repealed.
106 Savings, transitional and other provisions
Schedule 7 has effect.
Part 10 Competitive neutrality in tendering
Division 1 Preliminary
107 Purpose and application of Part
(1) The purpose of this Part is to provide the State Contracts Control
Board with a role under the State’s complaints mechanism, in connection
with competitive neutrality principles, as contemplated by the Competition
Principles Agreement, so far as they are applicable to public authorities.
Other bodies (including the Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal and
the Department of Local Government) may also have roles under the complaints
mechanism.
(2) This Part applies only to a complaint that a public authority has
failed to comply with competitive neutrality principles in relation to a
tender bid made by the authority in response to an invitation for
tenders.
(3) However, this Part does not apply to a complaint so far as it is
the subject of a direction under section 24G (3) of the Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal Act
1992.
108 Definitions
In this Part:Board means
the State Contracts Control Board established by the
regulations.
Chairperson means the
Chairperson of the Board.
Competition
Principles Agreement means the Competition Principles Agreement made
on 11 April 1995 by the Commonwealth, the Territories and the States, as in
force for the time being.
competitive
neutrality principles means:
(a) the competitive neutrality principles referred to in the
Competition Principles Agreement, and
(b) any policies adopted by the State for the purpose of complying
with or giving effect to those principles.
complaint includes any part
or aspect of a complaint.
portfolio
Minister has the same meaning as in the Independent Pricing and Regulatory Tribunal Act
1992.
public
authority means a public authority of the State.
public trading
activities of a public authority means significant business
activities relating to goods or services in which the authority is
engaged.
public
trading agency means a public authority that is engaged in public
trading activities, and includes a public authority prescribed by the
regulations as a public trading agency, but does not include a local council
or any other local authority or a public authority prescribed by the
regulations as not being a public trading agency.
State
includes the Government or a Minister.
Division 2 Complaints
109 Complaints about competitive neutrality
(1) The Minister may refer to the Board, for investigation and report,
a complaint about a public trading agency with respect to:(a) a failure of the agency to comply with competitive neutrality
principles in relation to any or all of its public trading activities,
or
(b) the inappropriate manner in which competitive neutrality
principles are applied by or to the agency in relation to any or all of its
public trading activities,
so far as the complaint relates to a tender bid made by the agency in
response to an invitation for tenders.
(2) The Minister is not to refer a complaint to the Board unless
satisfied:(a) that the complaint relates to any or all of the public trading
activities of the agency, and
(b) that the complainant is able to demonstrate that a person (the
competitor)
competes, or seeks to compete, in a particular market with the agency and is
hindered or is likely to be hindered from or in doing so by the matters
complained of, and
(c) that the competitor is materially affected by the matters
complained of or is likely to be so affected, and
(d) that the complaint has been made by the competitor or by a person
or body authorised by the competitor to make the complaint on behalf of the
competitor, and
(e) that the subject-matter of the complaint has been raised with the
agency and the complainant has reasonable grounds for not being satisfied with
the response to the complaint.
(3) The Board is required to notify the complainant, the agency, the
agency’s portfolio Minister and the Treasurer of the reference and that
an investigation will be conducted into the
complaint.
(4) If the Minister has referred a complaint to the Board for
investigation and report, the Minister may withdraw or amend the reference at
any time before the Minister has received the report from the
Board.
(5) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the
manner of making complaints for the purposes of this
Part.
110 Investigation and report
(1) The Board is to conduct an investigation into and make a report on
any complaint referred to it and not withdrawn by the
Minister.
(2) The Board is, as far as possible, to use its best endeavours to
complete the investigation and report within 10 weeks after receiving the
complaint or such other period as the Minister may approve from time to
time.
111 Reports
(1) The report of the Board with respect to a complaint is to contain
a statement of its findings and recommendations about the
complaint.
(2) If the Board finds that the complaint has been wholly or partly
substantiated, the report is to contain a statement about:(a) any need for changes to the conduct of the public trading agency
to ensure future compliance with competitive neutrality principles with regard
to tendering bids made by it in response to invitations for tenders,
and
(b) any policy changes that should be considered by the
State.
(3) Copies of the report are to be furnished to the complainant, the
agency, the agency’s portfolio Minister, the Treasurer, and the
Minister.
(4) The Board is to arrange for the report to be publicly
available.
112 Portfolio Minister’s response to report
(1) Within 8 weeks after a report about a public trading agency has
been furnished to the agency’s portfolio Minister, the portfolio
Minister is to prepare a written response to the report. This requirement does
not apply where the report states that the investigation concerned was
terminated because the complainant did not comply or did not fully comply with
a request under section 116.
(2) The response must include a statement as to whether or not the
recommendations have been adopted or are proposed to be adopted and must
include a statement of the reasons why any recommendation will not be adopted
(whether wholly or partly).
(3) Copies of the response are to be furnished to the complainant, the
agency, the Treasurer, the Minister, and the Board.
(4) The Board is to arrange for the response to be publicly
available.
Division 3 Investigations
113 Definition
In this Division:investigation means an
investigation by the Board for the purposes of this
Part.
114 Conduct of investigations
(1) Subject to this Part, in an investigation, the Board:(a) is to act with as little formality as possible,
and
(b) may inform itself on any matter in any way it thinks fit and is
not bound by the rules of evidence, and
(c) may receive information or submissions in the form of oral or
written statements, and
(d) may consult with such persons as it thinks
fit.
(2) The investigation is to be conducted in private as far as
possible, and accordingly the Board is not to conduct public hearings, public
seminars and public workshops except with the approval of the
Minister.
(3) Nothing in this section prevents the Board from holding one or
more meetings for the purposes of the investigation, but all such meetings are
to be held privately.
(4) The Board is required to seek and consider submissions from the
public trading agency that is the subject of the complaint to which the
investigation relates and the Treasurer, but is not required to seek or
consider submissions from any other person.
(5) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the
conduct of investigations.
115 Public trading agency to provide information, documents
and evidence
(1) For the purposes of an investigation, the Chairperson may, by
notice in writing served on an officer of the public trading agency that is
the subject of the complaint to which the investigation relates, require the
officer to do any one or more of the following:(a) to send to the Board, on or before a day specified in the notice,
a statement setting out such information as is so
specified,
(b) to send to the Board, on or before a day specified in the notice,
such documents as are so specified,
(c) to attend a meeting of the Board to give
evidence.
(2) If documents are given to the Board under this section, the
Board:(a) may take possession of, and make copies of or take extracts from,
the documents, and
(b) may keep possession of the documents for such period as is
necessary for the purposes of the investigation to which they relate,
and
(c) during that period must permit them to be inspected at all
reasonable times by persons who would be entitled to inspect them if they were
not in the possession of the Board.
116 Complainant may be requested to provide information,
documents and evidence
(1) For the purposes of an investigation, the Chairperson may, by
notice in writing served on the complainant, request the complainant to do any
one or more of the following:(a) to send to the Board, on or before a day specified in the notice,
a statement setting out such information as is so
specified,
(b) to send to the Board, on or before a day specified in the notice,
such documents as are so specified,
(c) to attend a meeting of the Board to give
evidence.
(2) If documents are given to the Board under this section, the
Board:(a) may take possession of, and make copies of or take extracts from,
the documents, and
(b) may keep possession of the documents for such period as is
necessary for the purposes of the investigation to which they relate,
and
(c) during that period must permit them to be inspected at all
reasonable times by persons who would be entitled to inspect them if they were
not in the possession of the Board.
(3) If the complainant does not comply or fully comply with a request
under this section, the Board may terminate the investigation, and the
Board’s report may be limited to a statement that the investigation was
terminated for that reason.
117 Confidential information
(1) If a person provides information (protected
information) to the Board on the understanding that the information
is confidential and will not be divulged, the Board is required to ensure that
the information is not divulged by it to any person, except:(a) with the consent of the person who provided the information,
or
(b) to the extent that the Board is satisfied that the information is
not confidential in nature, or
(c) to a member of the Board or an officer working for the
Board.
(2) If:(a) the Board is satisfied that protected information provided to the
Board by a complainant needs to be divulged to a person in order that the
complaint can be properly dealt with, and
(b) the exceptions in subsection (1) (a)–(c) are not
applicable,
the Board may notify the complainant that the Board proposes to divulge
the information to a specified person, or in its report, after a specified
period.
(3) After the specified period, and despite subsection (1), the Board
may divulge the information to the specified person or in its report, unless
the complainant withdraws the complaint.
(4) If the Board is satisfied that it is desirable to do so because of
the confidential nature of any information provided to the Board for the
purposes of an investigation, it may give directions prohibiting or
restricting the divulging of the information.
(5) A person must not contravene a direction given under subsection
(4).Maximum penalty: 100 penalty units or imprisonment for 6 months,
or both.
(6) A reference in this section to information includes information
contained in any evidence given at a meeting of or hearing before the Board
and information contained in any documents given to the
Board.
118 Offences
(1) A person must not, without reasonable excuse:(a) refuse or fail to comply with a notice served under this Division,
or
(b) refuse or fail to answer a question that the person is required to
answer by the Chairperson at any meeting of or hearing before the Board under
this Division.
(2) It is a reasonable excuse for the purposes of subsection (1) that
to comply with the notice or to answer the question might tend to incriminate
the person or make the person liable to any forfeiture or
penalty.
(3) A person must not:(a) give to the Board, whether orally or in writing, information that
the person knows to be false or misleading in a material particular (unless
the person informs the Board of that fact), or
(b) at a meeting of or hearing before the Board, give evidence that
the person knows to be false or misleading in a material
particular.
(4) A person must not hinder, obstruct or interfere with the
Chairperson or any other member of the Board in the exercise of functions for
the purposes of this Division as Chairperson or other
member.
(5) A person must not take any action that detrimentally affects the
employment of another person, or threaten to do so, because that other person
has assisted the Board in any investigation.
(6) Subsection (1) does not apply to a complainant in relation to a
notice served on the complainant under section 116.
Maximum penalty: 100 penalty units or imprisonment for 6 months,
or both.
119 Proceedings for offences
Proceedings for an offence under this Division may be dealt with
summarily before a Local Court constituted by a Magistrate sitting
alone.
120 Cabinet documents and proceedings
(1) This Part does not enable the Board:(a) to require any person to give any statement of information or
answer any question that relates to confidential proceedings of Cabinet,
or
(b) to require any person to produce a Cabinet document,
or
(c) to inspect a Cabinet document.
(2) For the purposes of this section, a certificate of the head of The
Cabinet Office that any information or question relates to the confidential
proceedings of Cabinet or that a document is a Cabinet document is conclusive
of the matter certified.
(3) In this section:Cabinet includes a
committee of Cabinet or a subcommittee of such a committee.
Cabinet document
means a document that is a restricted document by virtue of clause 1 of Part 1
of Schedule 1 to the Freedom of Information
Act 1989.
121 Report of complaints
The Board, or the Department whose annual report covers the Board,
is required to include in its annual report a statistical summary of
complaints received by the Board, investigations conducted by the Board, and
complaints disposed of by the Board, during the period covered by the annual
report.
Schedule 1 Departments
(Sections 3, 9, 55B)
Column 1 | Column 2 |
Department | Department Head |
Department of Aboriginal Affairs | Director-General of the
Department |
Aboriginal Housing Office | Chief Executive Officer of the
Office |
Department of Ageing, Disability and Home
Care | Director-General of the
Department |
Department of Agriculture | Director-General of the
Department |
Ministry for the Arts | Director-General of the
Ministry |
Attorney General’s Department | Director-General of the
Department |
The Audit Office of New South Wales | * Auditor-General |
Office of the Board of Studies | General Manager of the Office |
Cabinet Office | Director-General of the Office |
Commission for Children and Young
People | Commissioner for the Commission for Children and
Young People |
Office of the Children’s
Guardian | * Children’s Guardian |
Community Services Commission | * Commissioner for Community
Services |
Office of Co-ordinator General of
Rail | Co-ordinator General of Rail |
Department of Corrective Services | Commissioner of Corrective
Services |
New South Wales Crime Commission | Commissioner of the New South Wales Crime
Commission |
Department of Community Services | Director-General of the
Department |
Office of the Director of Public
Prosecutions | * Director of Public
Prosecutions |
Department of Education and Training | Director-General of the
Department |
Ministry of Energy and Utilities | Director-General of the
Ministry |
Environment Protection Authority | Director-General of the
Authority |
Community Relations Commission | Chairperson of the Commission |
Department of Fair Trading | Director-General of the
Department |
NSW Fisheries | Director of NSW Fisheries |
Forestry Commission (except State
Forests) | * Commissioner constituting the Forestry
Commission |
Department of Gaming and Racing | Director-General of the
Department |
Department of Health | Director-General of the
Department |
Health Care Complaints Commission | * Commissioner of the Health Care Complaints
Commission |
Heritage Office | Director of the Office |
Department of Housing | Director-General of the
Department |
Department of Industrial Relations | Director-General of the
Department |
Department of Information Technology and
Management | Director-General of the
Department |
Department of Juvenile Justice | Director-General of the
Department |
Department of Land and Water
Conservation | Director-General of the
Department |
Legal Aid Commission | * Chief Executive Officer of the
Commission |
Department of Local Government | Director-General of the
Department |
Department of Mineral Resources | Director-General of the
Department |
Motor Accidents Authority | General Manager of the
Authority |
Motor Vehicle Repair Industry
Authority | General Manager of the
Authority |
National Parks and Wildlife Service | Director-General of National Parks and
Wildlife |
New South Wales Fire Brigades | Commissioner of New South Wales Fire
Brigades |
Ombudsman’s Office | * Ombudsman |
Parliamentary Counsel’s Office | Director-General of the Cabinet
Office |
Department of Planning | Director-General of the
Department |
Ministry for Police | Director-General of the
Ministry |
Police Integrity Commission | * Commissioner for the Police Integrity
Commission |
Premier’s Department | Director-General of the
Department |
Public Trust Office | * Public Trustee |
Department of Public Works and
Services | Director-General of the
Department |
Resource NSW | Chief Executive of Resource
NSW |
Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain
Trust | Director of the Royal Botanic Gardens and
Domain |
Rural Assistance Authority | * Chief Executive of the
Authority |
Department of Rural Fire Service | Commissioner of the NSW Rural Fire
Service |
Safe Food Production NSW | Chief Executive Officer of Safe Food Production
NSW |
Department of Sport and Recreation | Director-General of the
Department |
Department of State and Regional
Development | Director-General of the
Department |
State Electoral Office | * Electoral Commissioner |
State Emergency Service | Director-General of the
Service |
State Forests, Forestry Commission | Managing Director of State
Forests |
Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority | Chief Executive Officer of the
Authority |
Sydney Olympic Park Authority | Chief Executive Officer of the
Authority |
Tourism New South Wales | * General Manager |
Department of Transport | Director-General of the
Department |
The Treasury | Secretary of the Treasury |
Department for Women | Director-General of the
Department |
WorkCover Authority | General Manager of the
Authority |
Note. The positions above marked with an asterisk are positions that are
created by another Act and are not Public Service positions. The other
positions are created by this Act (see section 9) and are Public Service
positions. This note is an explanatory note and does not form part of this
Schedule.
Schedule 2 (Repealed)
Schedule 3 Declared authorities
(Sections 3, 86)
Cobar Water Board
FSS Trustee Corporation
Greyhound Racing Authority (NSW)
Harness Racing New South Wales
Home Care Service of New South Wales
Pacific Power
Roads and Traffic Authority of New South Wales
SAS Trustee Corporation
State Rail Authority of New South Wales
State Transit Authority of New South Wales
Sustainable Energy Development Authority
Sydney Organising Committee for the Olympic Games
TAFE Commission
Waterways Authority
Zoological Parks Board of New South Wales
Schedule 3A Chief executive positions
(Section 42B)
Part 1 Heads of Government Departments
Positions specified in Column 2 of Schedule 1, except the
following positions:
Auditor-General
Director of Public Prosecutions
Ombudsman
Public Trustee
Chairperson of the State Crime Commission
Electoral Commissioner
Part 2
(Repealed)
Part 3 Heads of public authorities
Chief Executive of the Casino Control Authority
Chief Executive of the FSS Trustee Corporation
Chief Executive of the Greyhound Racing Authority (NSW)
General Manager of Harness Racing New South Wales
Chief Executive of the Internal Audit Bureau of New South Wales
Chief Executive of Pacific Power
Chief Executive of the Roads and Traffic Authority
Chief Executive of the SAS Trustee Corporation
Chief Executive of the State Rail Authority
Chief Executive of the State Transit Authority
Chief Executive of the Sydney Catchment Authority
Managing Director of the TAFE Commission
Director of the Zoological Parks Board
Full-time member of a Water Supply Authority
Schedule 3B Senior executive positions
(Section 42C)
Part 1 Positions (other than statutory positions)
Department of Aboriginal Affairs
Deputy Director-General
Aboriginal Housing Office
Director, Housing Strategy Division
Department of Ageing, Disability and Home
Care
Chief Executive Officer, Hunter Residences
Chief Executive Officer, Metropolitan West Residences
Chief Financial Officer
Chief Information Officer
Deputy Director-General, Operations
Deputy Director-General, Strategic Policy
Director, Operational Support
Director, Program Performance
Director, Strategic Policy and Planning
Executive Director, Human Resources
Executive Director, Business Improvement
Department of Agriculture
Chief, Division of Corporate Services
Chief, Division of Animal Industries
Chief, Division of Plant Industries
Deputy Chief, Division of Animal Industries and Director, Elizabeth
MacArthur Agricultural Institute
Deputy Chief, Division of Plant Industries
Deputy Director-General
Executive Director, Administration
Executive Director, Policy and Corporate Planning
Executive Director, Regulatory
Executive Director, Research, Advisory and Education
General Manager, Economic Services Unit
General Manager, Strategic Review
Regional Director of Agriculture: North Coast
Ambulance Service of New South Wales
General Manager, Corporate and Business
Services
Ministry for the Arts
Deputy Director-General
Director, State Records Authority
Director, Art Gallery of New South Wales
Director, Australian Museum
Director, Historic Houses Trust
Director, Museum of Applied Arts and Sciences
Director of New South Wales Library Services and State Librarian
General Manager, Sydney Opera House
Director, Film and Television Office
Director, Library and Information Services
Director, Information Technology
Mitchell Librarian and Director, Collection Management
Deputy Director, Australian Museum
Director, Organisational Performance
Director, Commercial Performance
Director, Facilities and Precinct Performance
Director, Programming and Venue Performance
Deputy Director, Collections and Exhibitions
Associate Director, Corporate Services
Associate Director, Knowledge and Information Management
Associate Director, Programs and Commercial Services
Head, Corporate and Commercial Services, Australian
Museum
Attorney General’s Department
Assistant Director-General, Community and Regulatory
Services
Assistant Director-General, Court and Tribunal Services
Assistant Director-General, Policy and Crime Prevention
Chief Executive Officer (Supreme Court)
Crown Solicitor
Deputy Crown Solicitor
Deputy Director, Local Courts
Deputy Protective Commissioner/Director Client Services
Director, Legislation and Policy Division
Director, Bureau of Crime Statistics and Research
Director, Children’s Court Clinic
Director, Community Relations Division
Director, Crime Prevention Division
Director, Executive and Strategic Services
Director, Financial Services
Director, Information Technology
Director, Local Courts
Director, Management Services
Director, Office of the Public Guardian
Director, Reporting Services
Director, Victims Services
Executive Director, Law Reform Commission
Practice Manager, Crown Solicitor’s Office
Principal Courts Administrator (Compensation Court)
Principal Courts Administrator (District Court)
Principal Courts Administrator (Industrial Relations Commission) and
Industrial Registrar
Protective Commissioner and Public Guardian
Regional Co-ordinator, Northern Region
Registrar of Births, Deaths and Marriages
Sheriff
The Audit Office of New South Wales
Assistant Auditor General (4 positions)
Deputy Auditor General
Director (Performance Audit) (2 positions)
Director of Audit (14 positions)
Director, Corporate Services
Principal Performance Auditor
Office of the Board of Studies
Director, Finance and Administration
Director, Curriculum
Director, Examinations and Certification
Director, Information Services
Cabinet Office
Branch Manager, Cabinet Secretariat
Deputy Director-General (3 positions)
Policy Manager, Economic Development Branch
Policy Manager, Intergovernmental and Regulatory Reform Branch
Policy Manager, Justice and Drug Policy
Policy Manager, Legal Branch
Policy Manager, Natural Resources Branch
Policy Manager, Social Policy
Casino Control Authority
Director, Major Projects and
Investigations
Commission for Children and Young People
Director, Commission for Children and Young
People
Department of Community Services
Area Director (8 positions)
Deputy Director-General
Director, Finance and Property
Director, Information Technology
Executive Director, Business Services and Communications
Executive Director, Child and Family Services
Executive Director, Corporate Strategy and Governance
Executive Director, Partnerships and Communities
Operations Manager—DoCS HELPLINE
Office of Co-ordinator General of Rail
Director, Business Services
Executive Director, Office of the Co-ordinator-General of Rail
General Manager, Asset Management
Department of Corrective Services
Assistant Commissioner, Inmate Management
Assistant Commissioner, Probation and Parole
Commander, Metropolitan Regional
Commander, North West Regional
Commander, Remand Facilities
Commander, Security and Investigations
Commander, South West Regional
Commander, Women’s Remand Facilities
Corporate Counsel
Director, Corrective Services Industries
Executive Director, Finance and Asset Management
Executive Director, Human Resources Management
Executive Director, Information Management
Executive Director, Office of the Commissioner
Executive Director, Probity and Performance and Chief Ethical
Strategist
Regional Director, Probation and Parole, Northern
Regional Director, Probation and Parole, Southern
Regional Director, Probation and Parole, Western
Senior Assistant Commissioner, Inmate and Custodial
Services
New South Wales Crime Commission
Director, Investigation Division
Director, Confiscation Division
Office of the Director of Public Prosecutions
Deputy Solicitor for Public Prosecutions (Legal)
Deputy Solicitor for Public Prosecutions (Operations)
Assistant Solicitor for Public Prosecutions (Country)
Assistant Solicitor for Public Prosecutions (Sydney)
Assistant Solicitor for Public Prosecutions (Sydney West)
Manager, Corporate Services
Department of Education and Training
Assistant Director of Audit
Assistant Director-General, Primary Education
Assistant Director-General, Secondary Education
Assistant Director-General, State Training Services
Assistant Director-General, Student Services and Equity Programs
Assistant Director-General, TAFE Educational Services
Assistant Director-General, School Educational Services
Convener, Teacher Education Review
Deputy Director, Corporate Services, Sydney Institute
Deputy Director, Hunter Institute
Deputy Director, Northern Sydney Institute
Deputy Director, South Western Sydney Institute
Deputy Director, Southern Sydney Institute
Deputy Director, Sydney Institute and College Director, Ultimo
Deputy Director, Western Sydney Institute
Deputy Director-General, Corporate Services
Deputy Director-General, Schools
Deputy Director-General, Strategic Planning and Regulation
Deputy Director-General, Technical and Further Education
Director of Administrative Services
Director of Adult and Community Education
Director of Audit
Director of Financial Accounting
Director of Higher Education
Director of National Art School
Director of Personnel Programs
Director of Properties Services
Director of Properties Support
Director of Public Affairs
Director of Recognition Services
Director of Specialist Units
Director of Training and Development
Director, Adult Migrant English Service
Director, Child Protection Investigation
Director, Corporate Applications
Director, Corporate and Management Accounting
Director, Disability Programs
Director, External Relations Policy
Director, Hunter Institute
Director, Illawarra Institute
Director, Industry Programs and Services
Director, Legal Services
Director, TAFE Marketing
Director, New England Institute
Director, North Coast Institute
Director, Northern Sydney Institute
Director, Office of the Director-General
Director, OTEN—Distance Education
Director, Personnel Services
Director, Professional Support and Curriculum
Director, Quality Initiatives
Director, Riverina Institute
Director, Safety and Security
Director, Student Assessment and School Accountability
Director, School Operations
Director, Skills Development and Workforce Policy
Director, South Western Sydney Institute
Director, Southern Sydney Institute
Director, Staffing Services
Director, Strategic Information and Planning
Director, Strategic Projects
Director, Strategic Research
Director, Sydney Institute
Director, TAFE Division (7 positions)
Director, Technology Services
Director, Vocational Education and Training (VET) in Schools
Director, Western Institute
Director, Western Sydney Institute
District Superintendent (40 positions)
Executive Director of Early Childhood, Primary and Rural Education
Executive Director of Secondary Education
Executive Director of Student Services and Equity Programs
Executive Director for the Interim Committee for a NSW Institute of
Teachers
Executive Director, Technical and Further Education
General Manager, Finance
General Manager, Information Technology and Chief Information
Officer
General Manager, Personnel
General Manager, Properties
Ministry of Energy and Utilities
Executive Director, Strategy
Executive Director, Energy and Utilities Policy
Executive Director, Industry Performance
Environment Protection Authority
Director, Special Operations Project
Director, Western Regions
Director, Coastal Region
Director, Litigation
Assistant Director-General (Operations)
Assistant Director-General (Water and Air)
Assistant Director-General (Chemicals and Waste)
Executive Director Finance and Administration
Executive Director Strategic Services
Executive Director Legal Services
Executive Director Education and Community Programs
Executive Director Economics and Environmental Reporting
Executive Director Environmental Science
Executive Director Sydney Region
Department of Fair Trading
Assistant Director-General, Operations
Assistant Director-General, Policy and Strategy
Assistant Director-General, Property and Licensing
Director, Licensing and Registration Services Division
Director, Legal Services
Director, Projects, Funding and Equity
New South Wales Fire Brigades
Regional Commander, North
Regional Commander, West
Regional Commander, South
Director, Risk Management
Director, Logistics Support
Director, State Operations
Director, Capability Development
Director, Corporate Strategy
Director, Human Resources
Director, Finance and Administration
NSW Fisheries
Director, Fisheries Services
Director, Aquaculture
Deputy Director and Director of Conservation
Forestry Commission
Executive General Manager, Forest Management
General Manager, Financial and Related Services
General Manager, Investment Services
General Manager, Marketing
General Manager, Performance Improvement Group
General Manager, Planted Forests
General Manager, Strategy
General Manager, Technology and Services Group
Manager, Forest Planning
Manager, Public Affairs
Department of Gaming and Racing
Deputy Director-General
Director, Policy and Development
Director, Revenue and Resource Management
Department of Health
Assistant Director, Drug Programs Bureau
Assistant Director, Employee Relations (2 positions)
Assistant Director, Food Safety
Associate Director, Areas and Financial Planning
Associate Director, Financial Management
Chief Dental Officer
Chief Financial Officer
Chief Information Officer
Chief Nursing Officer
Clinical Director, Drug Dependency
Deputy Director, Legal and Legislative Services
Deputy Director-General, Operations
Deputy Director-General, Policy
Deputy Director-General, Public Health, and Chief Health Officer
Director, Aboriginal Health
Director, AIDS and Infectious Diseases
Director, Asset Management and Strategic Procurement
Director, Asset Management Services
Director, Audit
Director, Capital and Asset Management
Director, Centre for Mental Health
Director, Change Management
Director, Communications
Director, Consumer and Community Development
Director, Counter Disaster Planning and Response
Director, Drug Programs Bureau
Director, Employee Relations
Director, Enterprise Information and Technology
Director, Executive and Corporate Support
Director, Executive Support
Director, Finance
Director, Government Relations
Director, Health Protection
Director, Health System Performance
Director, Information and Business Solutions
Director, Information Management and Support
Director, Legal and Legislative Services and General Counsel
Director, Primary Health and Community Care
Director, Research and Clinical Policy Development
Director, Statewide Services Development
Director, Structural and Funding Policy
Manager, Communicable Diseases Surveillance and Control
Manager, Environmental Health
Manager, Human Resources Policy and Programs
Program Manager, Health Executive Service
Area Health Services
Central Coast Area Health Service
Director, Nursing
Central Sydney Area Health Service
Deputy Chief Executive Officer
Director, Finance and Budget
Director, Corporate Services
Director, Health Services Development
Director, Nursing
Illawarra Area Health Service
Director, Health Services Development
Director, Nursing
Director, Finance and Administration
Northern Sydney Area Health Service
Director, Nursing, Community and Extended Care
Director, Finance, Corporate Services and
Performance
South Eastern Sydney Area Health
Service
Deputy Chief Executive and Director, Operational Services
Director, Finance and Information Technology
South Western Sydney Area Health
Service
Deputy Chief Executive Officer
Director, Division of Planning
General Manager, Liverpool Health Services
Wentworth Area Health Service
Executive Director, Finance and Administration
Executive Director, Services Development and Population Health
Director, Nursing
Western Sydney Area Health Service
Director, Health Services Development
Director, Analytical Laboratories
Area Director, Finance and Corporate Services
Home Care Service of New South Wales
General Manager
Director, Operations
Chief Information Officer
Department of Housing
Chief Financial Officer
Director Business Development and Marketing, Residential
Technologies
Director Operations Home Purchase Assistance Division
Director Operations, Residential Technologies
Director Resources, Residential Technologies
Executive Director to the Human Resources CEOs Group
Executive Director, Business Management
Executive Director, Business Performance
Executive Director, Community Housing
Executive Director, Corporate and Support Services
Executive Director, Home Purchase Assistance Division
Executive Director, Housing Service (4 positions)
Executive Director, Housing Systems
Executive Director, Organisational Change and Development
Executive Director, Strategic Asset Management
General Manager, Human Services Shared Service Network
General Manager, Residential Technologies
General Manager, Shared Services Network and Human Resources
Strategy
Manager, Finance Centre of Expertise
Manager, Human Resource Centre of Expertise
Manager, Information Technology Centre of Expertise
Manager, Specialist Services Centre of Expertise
Manager, Transaction Processing
Regional Director, Hunter Region
Regional Director, Western Sydney
Department of Industrial Relations
Assistant Director-General (Business Development and
Support)
Assistant Director-General (Compliance Services)
Assistant Director-General (Workplace Services)
Deputy Director-General
Director, Building and Construction Industry Long Service Payments
Corporation
Department of Information Technology and
Management
Surveyor-General
Registrar-General
General Manager, Land and Property Information NSW
Division Manager, Information Systems
Division Manager, Information Sourcing
Division Manager, Production and Business Development
Manager, Information Management and Technology Services
Manager, Legal Services
Executive Director, Corporate Governance
Executive Director, Office of Information Technology
Director, Strategy and Policy
Chief Valuer
Executive Director, Office of Western Sydney
Director, Corporate Strategy and Reform
Director, Operations
Director, Electronic Services
Division Manager, Titling and Registry Services
Program Manager, Human Services Better Service Delivery
Program
New South Wales Institute of Sport
Director
Department of Juvenile Justice
Director, Operations
Director, Management Services
Department of Land and Water Conservation
Deputy Director-General (4 positions)
General Manager, Centre for Natural Resources
General Manager, Ecosystems
General Manager, Environmental Services
General Manager, Finance and Administration
General Manager, Human Resources
General Manager, Information Technology
General Manager, Land NSW
General Manager, Legal and Compliance
General Manager, Native Title and Aboriginal Land Claims
General Manager, Regional and Commercial Services
General Manager, Resources Policy
General Manager, Soil Services
General Manager, State Water
General Manager, Town Water Treatment and Recycling
General Manager, Water Management Act Implementation
General Manager, Water Management Systems
Group General Manager, Landscape Investment
Group General Manager, Natural Resources Products
Manager, Corporate Analysis
Regional Director, Barwon
Regional Director, Central West
Regional Director, Far West and Western Lands Commissioner
Regional Director, Hunter
Regional Director, Murray
Regional Director, Murrumbidgee
Regional Director, North Coast
Regional Director, Sydney South Coast
Legal Aid Commission
Director, Business Services
Director, Criminal Law
Director, Family and Civil Law
Director, Grants
Director, Regional and Community Services
Department of Local Government
Deputy Director-General
Department of Mineral Resources
Executive Director
Director, Geological Survey of New South Wales
Chief Executive Officer, Coal Compensation Board
Chief Executive Officer, Mine Subsidence Board
Director, Mine Safety and Environment
Director, Information and Corporate Services
Director, Resource Planning and Development
Director, Strategic Planning and Policy
Assistant Director, Environment Unit
Assistant Director, Performance Improvement
Assistant Director, Safety Operations
Motor Accidents Authority
Manager, Insurance Division
Manager, Motor Accident Assessment Services
Division
National Parks and Wildlife Service
Regional Director, Southern
Regional Director, Central
Regional Director, Northern
Regional Director, Western
Director, Legal Services
Director, Education and Community Programs
Director, Corporate Services
Director, Policy and Science
Director, Cultural Heritage
Director, Parramatta Park
Pacific Power
Manager, Power Plant Engineering
Treasurer
General Manager, Contracts
Manager, Information Systems
Commercial Manager/Pacific Power International
Manager, Maintenance
Manager, Central Coast Coal and Environment
Manager, Energy Trading and Development
Production Manager, Eraring
Manager, Property and Survey
Manager, Environmental Services
Manager, Hydro and Gas Turbines
Chief Manager, Commercial
Chief Manager, Engineering
Manager, Environment Fuel and Technology Development
Manager, Business Development
Manager, Organisation Development
Manager, Western Engineering Services
Engineering Manager, Boilers, Fuel and Water Systems
Engineering Manager/Turbines Generator Systems
Engineering Manager, Controls and Instrumentation
Manager, Technical Services
Corporate Solicitor
Manager, Eraring
Manager, Pacific Power Energy Services
Manager, Demand Planning
Manager, Management and Financial Accounting
General Manager, Marketing, Pacific Power International
Manager, Project Services
General Manager, Development
General Manager, Commercial
Chief General Manager, Pacific Power
International
Parliamentary Counsel’s Office
Parliamentary Counsel
Deputy Parliamentary Counsel (2 positions)
Assistant Parliamentary Counsel (4 positions)
Senior Legislative Drafting Officer (4
positions)
Department of Planning
Director, Sydney Strategy
Executive Director, Sustainable Development
Executive Director, Corporate and Business Management
Executive Director, Metropolitan Planning
Executive Director, Planning System
Executive Director, Regional NSW Planning
Executive Director, Resources and Conservation
General Manager, Festival Development Corporation
General Manager, Honeysuckle Development Corporation
Harbour Manager
Operations Manager, Honeysuckle Development
Corporation
Premier’s Department
Assistant Director-General (5 positions)
Assistant Government Actuary (2 positions)
Deputy Director-General
Deputy Government Actuary
Director of Centennial Park and Moore Park
Director, Community Projects and Management Services
Director, Community Solutions
Director, Employee Relations
Director, Office of Special Assistance
Director, Performance Improvement
Director, Performance Measurement
Director, Performance Review
Director, Strategic Policy and Reform
Director, Strategic Projects (3 positions)
Director, Workforce Policy
Executive Director and Chief of Staff, Office of the
Director-General
Executive Director, Development Projects
Executive Director, Infrastructure Co-ordination Unit
Government Actuary
Manager, Business Strategy
Project Director, Community Drug Strategies
Public Trust Office
General Manager, Operations
Corporate Counsel
General Manager, Business Development
Department of Public Works and Services
Assistant Manager, Building Design Services
Business Development Executive, Business Development Division
Chief Information Officer
Client Executive, Healthcare
Client Executive, Local Government Portfolio
Client Manager, Policies Relationship Management e-Marketplace
Commercial Business Manager
Corporate Marketing Manager
Corporate Solicitor
Design Manager, Building Design Services and Assistant Government
Architect
Director, Construction, ACA
Director, Executive Services
Director, Policy Services Division
General Manager, Asset Management Services
General Manager, Building Design Services and Government Architect
General Manager, Central Corporate Services Unit
General Manager, Communication Management Solutions and Government
Printer
General Manager, Corporate Development
General Manager, Heritage and Building Services
General Manager, Infrastructure and Environmental Services
General Manager, Major Developments Branch
General Manager, NSW Supply
General Manager, Procurement Consultancy Services
General Manager, Procurement Management, Strategic Procurement Services
Group
General Manager, Q Stores
General Manager, State Fleet Services
General Manager, State Valuation Office
Group General Manager, Asset and Environmental Services
Group General Manager, Corporate and Business Services Group
Group General Manager, Project Management Group
Group General Manager, Strategic Procurement Services
Manager, Contracts Branch, Strategic Procurement Services
Manager, Corporate Finance, Executive Services Division
Manager, Corporate Strategy
Manager, Executive Projects
Manager, Financial Services, CCSU
Manager, HR, Executive Services Division
Manager, Information Services and Technology
Manager, Information Technology Services, CCSU
Manager, Procurement and Industry Policy
Manager, Programs Branch, Project Management Group
Manager, Project Services Branch, Project Management Group
Manager, Water Technologies, Infrastructure and Environmental
Services
Operations Director, Project Management Group
Regional Manager, Hunter/New England Region
Regional Manager, North Coast Region
Regional Manager, Riverina/Western Region
Regional Manager, South Coast Region
Regional Manager, Sydney Region
Technical Director, Infrastructure and Environmental Services, Asset and
Environmental Services Group
Roads and Traffic Authority
Chief Information Officer
Corporate Counsel
Director Finance
Director, Client Services
Director, Communications and Corporate Relations
Director, Corporate Services
Director, Operations
Director, Road Network Infrastructure
Director, Road Safety and Road User Management
Director, Strategic Projects
Director, Traffic and Transport
General Manager, Asset Management
General Manager, Bicycle and Pedestrians
General Manager, Control Management Services
General Manager, Corporate Development
General Manager, Driver and Vehicle Services
General Manager, Environmental and Community Policy
General Manager, Financial and Management Accounting
General Manager, Human Resources
General Manager, Infrastructure Contracts
General Manager, Infrastructure Maintenance
General Manager, Motorway Services
General Manager, Network Development
General Manager, Pavements
General Manager, Private Infrastructure
General Manager, Project Management Services (Sydney)
General Manager, Property Services
General Manager, Road Safety and Road User Management
General Manager, Road Safety Strategy
General Manager, Road User Policy and Procedure
General Manager, Sydney Client Services
General Manager, Technical Services
General Manager, Traffic Management
General Manager, Traffic Systems
General Manager, Transport Management Centre
General Manager, Treasury
Group General Manager, Business Services
Manager, Pacific Highway
Regional Manager, Hunter
Regional Manager, Northern
Regional Manager, South Western
Regional Manager, Southern
Regional Manager, Western
Royal Botanic Gardens and Domain Trust
Director, Botanic Gardens and Public Programs
Director, Plant Sciences
Rural Assistance Authority
General Manager
Department of Rural Fire Service
Director, Office for Emergency
Services
Safe Food Production NSW
Executive Director, Horticulture Division
Executive Director, Seafood Division
Executive Director, Development, Strategy and IT
Executive Director, Operations
Executive Director, Science Policy, Human Resources and
Administration
Department of Sport and Recreation
Deputy Director-General (Operations)
Director, Properties and Grants
Department of State and Regional Development
Director, Technology and Post-Olympic Business
Executive Director, Regional Development
Executive Director, Industry
Executive Director, Investment
Executive Director, Policy and Resources
Executive Director, Small Business Development
Director, Communications
State Emergency Service
Deputy Director-General, State Emergency
Service
State Rail Authority
Chief Operations Manager
Corporate Counsel
Deputy Chief Executive (2 positions)
Director Business Development
Director, Capital Works
Executive Director, Communications and Marketing
Executive Director, Finance
Executive Director, Safety
Executive Manager, Safeworking
General Manager Rural Services
General Manager, Audit and Investigations
General Manager, Passenger Fleet Maintenance
General Manager, Rail Development
General Manager, Station Operations
Manager Capital Works
Manager Finance, Passenger Fleet Maintenance
Manager, CityRail Marketing and Business Development
Manager, Corporate Finance
Manager, Information Technology
Manager, IT&T Program Delivery
Manager, Railcover and Injury Management
Manager, Security and Revenue Protection
Manager, Station Operations
Manager, Train Crewing
Manager, Train Operations
Project Director, Strategic Projects
Project Manager, Millenium Train
State Transit Authority
Corporate Counsel
Financial Controller, Finance and Business Services
General Manager, Bus Operations
General Manager, Eastern Suburbs Services
General Manager, Finance and Business Services
General Manager, Human Resources
General Manager, Marketing and Communications
General Manager, North Western Services
General Manager, Planning and Development
General Manager, South Western Services
General Manager, Sydney Ferries
General Manager, Warringah Services
Manager, Computer Systems and Technology
Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority
Executive Director, Business and Financial Services
Executive Director, Development and Planning
Executive Director, Marketing and Communications
Executive Director, Place Management
Sydney Olympic Park Authority
Executive Director, Business Development
Executive Director, Marketing and Corporate Communications
Executive Director, Planning and Urban Design
Executive Director, Property
Tourism New South Wales
Director, Commercial and Marketing Operations
Director, Government Planning and Communications
Director, Industry Strategy and Development
Director, Marketing Services and Brand Management
Director, Visitor Services Agencies Shared Services
International Sales and Operations Director
New South Wales Holidays Director
Department of Transport
Corporate Counsel
Deputy Director-General and Executive Director, Industry Reform
Director, Bus and Ferry Reform
Director, Metropolitan Strategic Planning
Director, Ministerial and Cabinet
Director, Rail
Director, Transport Communications
Executive Director, Taxi, Hire Car and Vehicle Recovery
Executive Director, Transport Finance and Asset Management
Executive Director, Transport Master Planning and Infrastructure
Executive Director, Transport Safety and Rail Safety Regulator
Project Director, Parramatta Rail Link
The Treasury
Deputy Director, Compliance
Deputy Director, Revenue Advisory Services
Director, Client Services
Director, Compliance
Director, Corporate Management
Director, Economic Strategy
Director, Financial Management
Director, Financial Management Policy
Director, Fiscal Strategy
Director, Information Services
Director, Management Services
Director, Private Projects Branch
Director, Reporting and Coordination
Director, Resource Allocation (8 positions)
Director, Revenue Advisory Services
Director, Revenue Strategy
Director, State Debt Recovery Office
Executive Director, Economic and Fiscal
Executive Director, Financial Management
Executive Director, Office of State Revenue
Executive Director, Resource Allocation (2 positions)
Executive Director, Structural Reform
Senior Director, Financial Management Improvement
Senior Director, Unfunded Salaries Project
Waterways Authority
Director, Maritime Assets Strategy
General Manager, Corporate and Business Services
General Manager, Maritime Property and Assets
General Manager, Operations
General Manager, Policy and Research
Department for Women
Deputy Director-General
WorkCover Authority
Assistant General Manager, Corporate Governance Division
Assistant General Manager, Insurance Division
Assistant General Manager, Occupational Health and Safety Division
Director of Finance
Director, Information Management
Director, Insurance Service Delivery Group
Director, Insurance Strategic Management Group
Director, Legal Group
Director, Service Delivery Group
Director, Strategic Operations Group
Director, Strategy and Policy
Manager, Londonderry Occupational Safety
Centre
Zoological Parks Board of New South Wales
Deputy Director
Director, Scientific Policy and Research
Director, Western Plains Zoo
Director, Marketing Division
General Manager, Marketing and Sales
Part 2 Statutory positions
Chief executive officer of an area health board
President of the Board of Studies
Chairman of Commissioners of Inquiry (under the
Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979)
Deputy Chairman of Commissioners of Inquiry (under the
Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979)
Commissioner of Inquiry (under the
Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979) (2 positions)
Commissioner for Corporate Affairs
Director of Equal Opportunity in Public Employment
Assistant Commissioner under the
Forestry Act 1916Deputy Managing Director of the Hunter Water Board
Managing Director of the New South Wales Government Telecommunications
Authority
Commissioner of the Soil Conservation Service
Deputy Ombudsman
An Assistant Ombudsman
Chief Executive Officer of the Ambulance Service Board
Legal Services Commissioner
Executive Director of the Sustainable Energy Development Authority
Valuer-General
Schedule 4 (Repealed)
Schedule 5 Extended leave for officers etc of Public
Service
(Section 100)
1 Officer to be entitled to extended leave after a certain
period of service
(1979 Act, s 120)
(1) Subject to this Schedule, an officer is entitled:(a) after service for 10 years, to leave for 2 months on full pay or 4
months on half pay, and
(b) after service in excess of 10 years, to:(i) leave as provided by paragraph (a), and
(ii) in addition, an amount of leave proportionate to the
officer’s length of service after 10 years, calculated on the basis of 5
months on full pay, or 10 months on half pay, for 10 years served after
service for 10 years.
(2) For the purpose of calculating the entitlement of a person to
extended leave under this clause at any time:(a) service referred to in this clause includes service before the
commencement of this Schedule, and
(b) there must be deducted from the amount of extended leave to which,
but for this paragraph, that person would be entitled:(i) any extended leave, or leave in the nature of extended leave,
and
(ii) the equivalent, in extended leave, of any benefit instead of
extended leave or leave in the nature of extended
leave,
taken or received by that person before that time, including any such
leave taken, or benefit received, by that person in accordance with the
Public Service (Amendment) Act 1919 as in force
at any time, and
(c) the provisions of the Transferred Officers Extended Leave Act
1961 have effect.
(3) Nothing in subclause (2) shall be regarded as authorising, in
respect of the same period of leave taken or the same benefit received, a
deduction under both subclause (2) (b) and section 3 (7) of the Transferred Officers Extended Leave Act
1961.
(4) If the services of an officer with at least 5 years’ service
and less than 10 years’ service are terminated:(a) by the Crown, the Governor or the appropriate Department Head for
any reason other than the officer’s serious and intentional misconduct,
or
(b) by the officer on account of illness, incapacity or domestic or
other pressing necessity,
the officer is entitled:(c) for 5 years’ service, to 1 month’s leave on full pay,
and
(d) for service after 5 years, to a proportionate amount of leave on
full pay calculated on the basis of 3 months’ leave for 15 years’
service.
(5) (Repealed)
(6) For the purposes of subclause (1), service includes:(a) service under the Teaching
Services Act 1980, and
(a1) service as an administrative officer under the Police Service Act 1990,
and
(b) any period of leave without pay taken before the commencement of
the Public Service and Other Statutory Bodies (Extended Leave)
Amendment Act 1963, and
(c) in the case of an officer who has completed at least 10
years’ service—any period of leave without pay, not exceeding 6
months, taken after that commencement.
(7) In subclause (6) (c), for the purpose of determining whether or
not an officer has completed at least 10 years’ service, the
officer’s period of service shall be taken:(a) to include any period of leave without pay taken before the
commencement of the Public Service and Other Statutory Bodies
(Extended Leave) Amendment Act 1963, and
(b) to exclude any period of leave without pay taken after that
commencement.
(8) For the purposes of subclause (4), service does not include any
period of leave without pay whether taken before or after the commencement of
the Public Service and Other Statutory Bodies (Extended Leave)
Amendment Act 1963.
2 Certain officers to be entitled to be paid a gratuity
instead of extended leave
(1979 Act, s 121)
(1) An officer who has acquired a right to extended leave with pay
under clause 1 is entitled, immediately on the termination of the
officer’s services, to be paid instead of that leave the money value of
the extended leave as a gratuity in addition to any gratuity to which the
officer may be otherwise entitled.
(2) Any pension to which any such officer is entitled under the
Superannuation Act 1916
commences from and including the date on which the officer’s extended
leave, if taken, would have commenced.
(3) Any officer may elect, on termination of the officer’s
services, to be paid the money value of extended leave under subclause (1) or
may elect to have the Transferred Officers
Extended Leave Act 1961 apply to the periods of service for
which the leave has accrued.
3 Payment to be made where an officer entitled to extended
leave has died
(1979 Act, s 122)
(1) If an officer has acquired a right under clause 1 to extended
leave with pay and dies before starting it, or after starting it dies before
completing it:(a) the widow or widower of the officer, or
(b) if there is no such widow or widower, the children of the officer,
or
(c) if there is no such widow, widower or children, the person who, in
the opinion of the appropriate Department Head, was, at the time of the
officer’s death, a dependent relative of the
officer,
is entitled to receive the money value of the leave not taken, or not
completed, computed at the rate of salary that the officer received at the
time of his or her death, less any amount paid to the officer in respect of
the leave not taken, or not completed.
(2) If an officer with at least 5 years’ service and less than
10 years’ service as referred to in clause 1 (4) dies:(a) the widow or widower of the officer, or
(b) if there is no such widow or widower, the children of the officer,
or
(c) if there is no such widow, widower or children, the person who, in
the opinion of the appropriate Department Head, was, at the time of the death
of the officer, a dependent relative of the
officer,
is entitled to receive the money value of the leave which would have
accrued to the officer had his or her services terminated as referred to in
clause 1 (4), computed at the rate of salary that the officer was receiving at
the time of his or her death.
(3) If there is a guardian of any children entitled under subclause
(1) or (2), the payment to which those children are entitled may be made to
that guardian for their maintenance, education and
advancement.
(4) If there is no person entitled under subclause (1) or (2) to
receive the money value of any leave not taken or not completed by an officer
or which would have accrued to an officer, payment in respect of that leave
must be made to the officer’s personal
representatives.
(5) Any payment under this clause is in addition to any payment due
under any Act under which superannuation benefits are
paid.
(6) If payment of the money value of leave has been made under this
Act, the Crown ceases to be liable for payment of any amount in respect of
that leave.
4 Extended leave for temporary employees
(1) In this Schedule, a reference to an officer includes a reference
to a temporary employee.
(2) If the period of leave to which a temporary employee is entitled
under this Schedule exceeds the period for which the temporary employee is
employed under this Act, the balance of that period of leave may be granted
during subsequent periods of employment in the Public Service if each
subsequent period of employment commences on the termination of a previous
period of employment in the Public Service.
5 Calculation of money value of extended leave
For the purpose of calculating the amount of an entitlement under
clause 2 or 3, the money value of extended leave accrued or payable to a chief
executive officer or senior executive officer is to be determined on the basis
of the officer’s notional salary.
Schedule 5A Provisions relating to mobility of public sector
employees
(Section 100B)
1 Definitions
(1) In this Schedule:employee
means a person who is:
(a) a member of the Public Service, or
(b) a member of the Education Teaching Service, or
(c) a member of the Police Service, or
(d) employed in the service of a declared authority or other statutory
body representing the Crown, or
(e) employed in a position referred to in section 4 (1) (c),
or
(f) employed in any other public sector
service.
public
sector service means:
(a) the Public Service, or
(b) the Education Teaching Service, or
(c) the Police Service, or
(d) the service of a declared authority or of a statutory body
representing the Crown, or
(e) the service of either House of Parliament, or the President or
Speaker, or the President and the Speaker jointly, or
(f) any other service of the Crown, or
(g) the service of a public health organisation within the meaning of
the Health Services Act
1997, or
(h) (Repealed)
(i) the service of any other person or body constituted by or under an
Act or exercising public functions (such as a State owned corporation), being
a person or body that is prescribed, or that is of a class prescribed, for the
purposes of this paragraph.
(2) A reference in this Schedule to cessation of employment is a
reference to the cessation of employment by resignation, retirement or
otherwise.
2 Schedule applies despite awards and agreements
This Schedule has effect despite any provision of any award or
agreement.
3 Extended (long service) leave
(1) Each public sector service that is not covered by the Transferred Officers Extended Leave Act
1961 is declared to be a State authority for the purposes of
that Act.
(2) A public sector service is regarded as “not covered”
by the Transferred Officers Extended Leave
Act 1961 if service in or with that public sector service
would not (in the absence of this clause) be Governmental service under that
Act.
4 Annual leave
(1) This clause is taken to have commenced on 3 May
1993.
(2) An employee who ceases to be employed in a public sector service
and immediately commences employment in another public sector service may
elect to be paid the money value of the employee’s accrued annual leave
or to retain the entitlement to that accrued annual
leave.
(3) An employee who elects to retain the entitlement to accrued annual
leave is taken to have, on commencing employment in the other public sector
service, the amount of accrued annual leave to which the employee was entitled
immediately before the end of his or her previous employment. This leave is in
addition to any annual leave which accrues after that
commencement.
(3A) For the purpose of calculating an entitlement under this clause,
the money value of accrued annual leave owing to a chief executive officer or
senior executive officer is to be determined on the basis of the
officer’s notional salary.
(4) In this clause:accrued
annual leave means annual leave owing to an employee (but not
taken), and includes any such leave accrued because of the operation of this
clause.
5 Sick leave
(1) This clause is taken to have commenced on 3 May
1993.
(2) An employee who ceases to be employed in a public sector service
and immediately commences employment in another public sector service is taken
to have, on commencing that employment, the amount of accrued sick leave to
which the employee was entitled before that commencement. This leave is in
addition to any sick leave which accrues after that
commencement.
(3) The eligibility of an employee for sick leave that includes any
period of accrued sick leave is to be determined in accordance with the
conditions relating to the granting of sick leave in the employee’s
current employment.
(4) In this clause:accrued sick
leave means the amount of sick leave to which the employee would
have been entitled in the event of illness, and includes any such leave
accrued because of the operation of this clause.
6 Maternity leave etc
(1) This clause is taken to have commenced on 3 May
1993.
(2) This clause applies for the purposes of determining whether an
employee who ceases to be employed in a public sector service and immediately
commences employment in another public sector service is entitled to maternity
leave, paternity leave, adoption leave or any other leave (other than extended
leave) for which a condition of eligibility is a minimum period of
service.
(3) For the purposes of determining an employee’s entitlement to
leave referred to in this clause:(a) service with the employee’s previous employer is taken to be
service with the employee’s current employer, if the previous employment
was in another public sector service and if that period of service was
continuous with the employee’s current employment,
and
(b) service with any other former employers is taken to be service
with the person’s current employer, if the service was in other public
sector services and the periods of service with those bodies were continuous
with each other and the employee’s previous employment in a public
sector service.
(4) Except as provided by this clause, the eligibility of an employee
for leave referred to in this clause is to be determined in accordance with
the conditions applying to that leave in the employee’s current
employment.
(5) A reference in this clause to service with a previous or former
employer extends to include a reference to any such service before the
commencement of this clause.
7 Access to forfeited sick leave—transitional
arrangements
(1) If an employee is eligible for sick leave for any absence from
duty but has exhausted his or her sick leave entitlement, the employee’s
employer may grant to the employee any of the employee’s forfeited sick
leave as sick leave for the absence.
(2) An employee’s “forfeited sick leave” is the
total amount of sick leave that the employee ceased to be entitled to up to
the commencement of this clause, being sick leave that he or she would
presently be entitled to had clause 5 been in force from when the employee was
first employed in a public sector service.
(3) Once any period of an employee’s forfeited sick leave has
been granted as sick leave under this clause, it is no longer regarded as
forfeited sick leave for the purposes of any further grant of sick leave to
the employee under this clause (whether by the same or a different
employer).
(4) For the purposes of this clause, the employer of an employee is
the person who exercises the functions of chief executive officer in relation
to the public sector service in which the employee is employed (being the
appropriate Department Head in the case of a member of the Public Service for
example).
(5) In determining whether or not an employee is entitled to sick
leave, all the employee’s entitlements to sick leave are to be taken
into account, including special sick leave and sick leave to which the
employee is entitled by operation of clause 5.
(6) The Public Employment Office may issue guidelines to employers of
employees as to the circumstances in which, and the matters to be taken into
account in determining whether, forfeited sick leave should or should not be
granted as sick leave under this clause.
8 Funding of leave entitlements
The Treasurer may give directions and issue guidelines requiring
the transfer of funds between public sector employers for the purpose of
making due allowance and appropriate adjustments for liabilities incurred by
reason of the operation of this Schedule and Schedule 5, or liabilities with
respect to extended or long service leave.
Schedule 6 Attachment of wages or salary of officers etc of
Public Service
(Section 101)
1 Definition etc
(1979 Act, s 131 (9), (13))
(1) In this Schedule:judgment
includes a judgment against joint defendants.
(2) This Schedule does not apply in relation to an officer or
temporary employee who is an undischarged bankrupt.
2 Salary or wages of officers and temporary employees may be
attached
(1979 Act, s 131 (1)–(6))
(1) If judgment has been entered in a court against an officer or
temporary employee for the payment of a sum of money, the person in whose
favour the judgment is entered may serve on the Head of the Department to
which the officer or temporary employee belongs:(a) a copy of the judgment certified under the hand of the registrar
or other proper officer of the court in which the judgment is entered,
and
(b) a statutory declaration stating that the judgment has not been
satisfied by the judgment debtor, and setting out the amount due by the
judgment debtor under the judgment.
(2) As soon as practicable after the service on a Department Head of a
copy of a judgment and a statutory declaration in accordance with this clause,
the Department Head must:(a) notify the judgment debtor in writing of the service of the copy
of the judgment and statutory declaration, and
(b) require the judgment debtor:(i) to state in writing within a time to be specified by the
Department Head whether the judgment has been satisfied,
and
(ii) if so, to provide evidence that the judgment has been satisfied,
and
(iii) if the judgment has not been satisfied, to state the amount then
due under the judgment.
(3) If the officer or temporary employee fails to prove to the
satisfaction of the Department Head that the judgment has been satisfied, the
Department Head may:(a) from time to time cause to be deducted from any money due to the
officer or temporary employee such sums as are, in the Department Head’s
opinion, necessary to enable the judgment to be satisfied,
and
(b) apply those sums in the manner provided by clause
4.
(4) A deduction must not be made under this clause if it would reduce
the amount to be received by the officer or temporary employee to less than a
sum per week equivalent to the amount ascertained in accordance with subclause
(5).
(5) The amount that is to be ascertained in accordance with this
subclause is to be ascertained by deducting $8 from the basic wage in force
under clause 15 of Schedule 4 to the Industrial Relations Act 1996
immediately before the deduction under subclause (3) is
made.
(6) If copies of more than one judgment and statutory declaration are
served on the Department Head in respect of a single judgment debtor, the
judgment must be dealt with under this clause in the order in which copies of
the judgments are served on the Department Head.
(7) Any deductions made under subclause (3) from money due to an
officer or temporary employee shall, as between the Crown and the officer or
employee, be regarded as a payment by the Crown to the officer or
employee.
3 Offence for a person to fail to notify certain
payments
(1979 Act, s 131 (7))
If a person to whom a payment has been made in accordance with
clause 2 fails to notify the Department Head as soon as the judgment debt in
respect of which the payment was made is satisfied, or is deemed to be
satisfied, the person is liable on conviction by a Local Court to a penalty
not exceeding 1 penalty unit.
4 How deductions under clause 2 are to be disposed
of
(1979 Act, s 131 (8), (10)–(12))
(1) If any deduction made in accordance with clause 2 from money due
to a judgment debtor exceeds the amount due under the judgment against the
judgment debtor:(a) the Department Head concerned must repay the amount of the excess,
and
(b) in default of payment, the judgment debtor may recover that amount
from the Crown in any court of competent
jurisdiction.
(2) A Department Head who has deducted sums in accordance with clause
2:(a) must retain out of those sums an amount equal to the prescribed
percentage of those sums and pay that amount to the Treasurer for crediting to
the Consolidated Fund, and
(b) must pay the balance of those sums to the judgment creditor
concerned.
(3) Whenever a payment is made to a judgment creditor under subclause
(2), the Department Head must forward to the judgment creditor a statement
showing:(a) the sums deducted under clause 2 in respect of the judgment from
money due to the officer or temporary employee concerned,
and
(b) the amount retained by the Department Head under subclause (2) out
of those sums, and
(c) the balance of those sums paid to the judgment creditor under
subclause (2).
(4) On payment being made to the judgment creditor under subclause
(2):(a) the judgment creditor must credit the officer or temporary
employee concerned with the sums referred to in subclause (3) (a), as shown in
the statement forwarded to the judgment creditor, and
(b) the judgment in respect of which the payment was made shall for
all purposes be taken to be satisfied to the extent of those sums, as shown in
that statement.
Schedule 7 Savings, transitional and other
provisions
(Section 106)
Part 1 General
1 Definitions
In this Schedule:former Act
means the Public Service Act
1979.
Public
Service Board means the Public Service Board of New South Wales
constituted under the former Act.
2 Savings and transitional regulations
(1) The regulations may contain provisions of a savings and
transitional nature consequent on the enactment of the following Acts:This Act
Miscellaneous Acts (Public Sector Management)
Amendment Act 1988
Public Sector Management (Executives) Amendment Act
1989
Statutory and Other Offices Remuneration
(Executives) Amendment Act 1989
Miscellaneous Acts (Public Sector Executives
Employment) Amendment Act 1989
Anti-Discrimination (Compulsory Retirement)
Amendment Act 1990
Public Sector Management Amendment Act
1995
Public Sector Management Amendment (Mobility) Act
1996.
(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 before the date of its
publication.
Part 2 Provisions consequent on enactment of this
Act
3 Abolition of Public Service Board
The Public Service Board is abolished.
4 Members of Public Service Board
(1) A person who, immediately before the commencement of this clause,
held office as a member of the Public Service Board:(a) ceases to hold office as such on that commencement,
and
(b) is not entitled to any remuneration or compensation because of the
loss of that office.
(2) Nothing in this Act affects any arrangement made by or on behalf
of the Government for the appointment of any such person to a position in the
service of the Government or for the payment of any
compensation.
5 Transfer of assets, liabilities etc of Public Service
Board
Any assets, rights, liabilities or obligations of the Public
Service Board shall be assets, rights, liabilities or obligations of the
Crown.
6 Superseded references
In any other Act, or in any instrument made under any Act or in
any other instrument of any kind:(a) a reference to the Public Service Board (or the Chairman or a
member of that Board) shall be read as a reference to:(i) subject to subparagraph (ii)—the Public Employment
Industrial Relations Authority, or
(ii) in the case of any particular reference—such person or body
as is prescribed by the regulations in respect of that reference,
and
(b) a reference to the Public Service Act
1902 or the Public Service Act
1979 shall be read as a reference to this
Act.
7 Existing public service staff
(1) Any officers and temporary employees employed under the former Act
shall be taken to be officers and temporary employees respectively employed
under this Act.
(2) If any procedures have been commenced before the commencement of
this clause in relation to the filling of a vacancy in the Public Service or
the appointment of a person to any position in the Public Service, the
procedures must be completed in accordance with this Act (unless the
regulations otherwise provide).
8 Divisions
(1) For the purposes of any Act, statutory instrument, award,
industrial agreement or other instrument, a reference to a Division of the
Public Service is a reference to such class of officers as the regulations
prescribe.
(2) Until the regulations otherwise provide, the officers included in
any such Division shall be determined by the Industrial
Authority.
9 Staff positions
The staff establishments of the Departments and Administrative
Offices determined by the Public Service Board under section 38 of the former
Act and in force immediately before the commencement of this clause shall, on
that commencement, be taken to have been determined by the appropriate
Department Heads under section 8 of this Act as the staff positions of those
Departments and Administrative Offices.
10 Administrative units
A list and declaration in force under section 59 of the former Act
immediately before the commencement of this clause shall be taken to be in
force under section 23 of this Act.
11 Public Service Notices
A reference in this Act to Public Service Notices includes a
reference to Public Service Notices issued under the former
Act.
12 Agreements
Any agreement between the Public Service Board and an association
or organisation (under section 83 of the former Act or under any other law
relating to industrial matters) and in force immediately before the
commencement of this clause shall be taken to be, after that commencement, an
agreement between the Industrial Authority and the association or organisation
made under section 64 of this Act or under that other
law.
13 Determinations of remuneration
Any determination by the Public Service Board of remuneration of
officers and temporary employees under section 82 of the former Act, and in
force immediately before the commencement of this clause, shall be taken to
be, after that commencement, a determination made by the Industrial Authority
under section 63 of this Act.
14 Discipline and conduct
(1) Part 5 of this Act applies to and in respect of acts and omissions
committed or alleged to have been committed before as well as after the
commencement of that Part.
(2) Any disciplinary proceedings pending under the former Act
immediately before the relevant commencement shall be taken to be pending
under this Act and may continue to be heard and disposed of by the persons
delegated under the former Act to do so, unless replaced by such persons as
the appropriate Department Head may delegate under this Act to do
so.
(3) Any suspension in force under section 96 of the former Act
immediately before the commencement of this clause shall be taken to have been
imposed under section 77 of this Act.
15 Special inquiries
A special inquiry pending under section 101 of the former Act
immediately before the commencement of this clause shall be taken to be
pending under this Act and may continue to be conducted by the persons
delegated under the former Act to conduct the inquiry, unless replaced by such
persons as the Minister may delegate under this Act to conduct the
inquiry.
16 Appeals to Public Service Board
(1) Any appeal pending under section 116 of the former Act immediately
before the commencement of this clause may continue to be heard by the persons
delegated under the former Act to hear the appeal, unless replaced by persons
nominated by the Industrial Authority.
(2) The Industrial Authority may decide any such appeal and, for that
purpose, exercise the functions of the Public Service Board under the former
Act.
17 Appeals to Government and Related Employees Appeal
Tribunal etc
(1) Notwithstanding the amendment made to section 21 (1) (g) of the
Government and Related Employees Appeal
Tribunal Act 1980 by the Miscellaneous Acts
(Public Sector Management) Amendment Act 1988, that paragraph,
as in force immediately before the commencement of that amendment continues to
apply to decisions against which an appeal has been lodged under section 20 of
that Act before the commencement of that amendment.
(2) An appeal to the Tribunal against a decision of the Public Service
Board which is pending on the commencement of this clause, shall, for the
purposes of the appeal, be taken to be a decision of the appropriate
Department Head.
(3) A person nominated by the Public Service Board in accordance with
Schedule 2 to the Government and Related
Employees Appeal Tribunal Act 1980 as an employer’s
representative does not cease to be so nominated because of this Act or the
Miscellaneous Acts (Public Sector Management) Amendment Act
1988, but may be removed as an employer’s representative
by the Industrial Authority.
18 Industrial Arbitration Act
1940
(1) A person who is a member of a committee under the
Industrial Arbitration Act 1940 immediately
before the commencement of this clause and who was nominated by the Public
Service Board as an employer’s representative does not cease to be so
nominated because of this Act or the Miscellaneous Acts (Public
Sector Management) Amendment Act
1988.
(2) The Industrial Authority may, in accordance with the
Industrial Arbitration Act 1940, withdraw the
nomination of any such person.
19 Judgments
Anything done or omitted under section 131 of the former Act shall
be taken to have been done or omitted under Schedule 6 to this
Act.
20 Deductions for residence
Any directions made under section 130 (1) of the former Act and in
force immediately before the commencement of this Act shall be taken to be
directions under section 99 (1) and (2).
21 Repeal of regulations under former Act
(1) The Public Service (General)
Regulation 1984 is repealed.
(2) The Public Service (Stores and
Services) Regulation 1984 is
repealed.
(3) The Public Service (Savings and
Transitional Provisions) Regulation 1980 is
repealed.
Part 3 Provisions consequent on enactment of
Public Sector Management (Executives) Amendment Act
1989 and cognate Acts
22 Existing chief executive and other statutory office
holders
(1) A person who, immediately before the commencement of Part 2A of
this Act:(a) was holding a position referred to in Schedule 3A or Part 2 of
Schedule 3B, and
(b) was appointed to that position for a
term,
shall, on that commencement, be taken to have been appointed to that
position for the balance of the person’s term of
office.
(2) A person who, immediately before the commencement of Part 2A of
this Act:(a) was holding a position referred to in Schedule 3A or Part 2 of
Schedule 3B, and
(b) was not appointed to that position for a
term,
shall, on that commencement, be taken to have been appointed to that
position for a term ending on the date on which the person reaches the age of
60 years or the fifth anniversary of that commencement, whichever is the
earlier.
(3) Until otherwise determined under Part 2A of this Act, the
conditions of employment (including remuneration) of a person continued in
office under this clause shall be the same as those which applied to the
person immediately before the commencement of Part
2A.
(4) A person who:(a) is continued in office under this clause, and
(b) immediately before the commencement of Part 2A of this Act, held a
special division position and was not holding office for a term,
and
(c) resigns or is removed from office (except for misbehaviour) during
the term for which the person is continued in office under this clause or
completes that term and is not re-appointed to the same position,
and
(d) has not reached the age of 60 years,
is entitled to be appointed to a position in the Public Service:(e) not lower in salary than the current salary for the position in
the Public Service which the person held immediately before becoming a special
division officer (or a similar position), and
(f) with duties appropriate to that salary.
(5) In subclause (4), special division
position and special division
officer have the same meanings they had in the Public
Service Act 1979 (before its repeal) and in this Act (before
the commencement of Part 2A of this Act).
(6) A person who:(a) is continued in office under this clause, and
(b) immediately before the commencement of Part 2A of this Act, held a
statutory office, and
(c) had an entitlement by law to an appointment in the service of the
Government on ceasing to hold that office, and
(d) resigns or is removed from office (except for misbehaviour) during
the term for which the person is continued in office under this clause or
completes that term and is not re-appointed to the same position,
and
(e) has not reached the age of 60 years,
retains the entitlement to that appointment in the service of the
Government.
23 Progressive commencement of Schedules 3A and 3B
A position:(a) which is referred to in Schedule 3A or 3B on the commencement of
that Schedule, and
(b) which is established by or under an Act (other than this
Act),
does not become a chief executive position or a senior executive position
until the employment of a person in that position is declared by or under that
Act to be subject to Part 2A of this Act.
24 Saving for officers on unattached list
An officer who was, immediately before the repeal of section 16,
an unattached officer in the special division because of that section or
section 52 of the Public Service Act 1979 shall,
on that repeal, be taken to be an unattached officer in the Public Service
under section 42Q.
25 Anti-Discrimination (Compulsory Retirement)
Amendment Act 1990
The amendments made by Schedule 2 to the
Anti-Discrimination (Compulsory Retirement) Amendment Act
1990 do not apply to a person referred to in section 49ZU (1)
(c) of that Act before 1 January 1993.
Part 5 Provisions consequent on enactment of
Public Sector Management Amendment Act
1995
27 Definitions
In this Part:Industrial
Authority means the Public Employment Industrial Relations Authority
as constituted under this Act before its abolition by the 1995
Act.
the 1995
Act means the Public Sector Management Amendment Act
1995.
28 Abolition of Industrial Authority
The Public Employment Industrial Relations Authority is abolished
on the commencement of section 49A of this Act. The assets, rights and
liabilities of that Authority immediately before its abolition become assets,
right and liabilities of the Public Employment Office.
29 References to Industrial Authority
After the abolition of the Industrial Authority, a reference to
that Authority in any other Act, or in any instrument made under any Act or in
any other instrument of any kind, is taken to be a reference to the Public
Employment Office.
30 Agreements
Any agreement between the Industrial Authority and any
association, organisation or person with respect to industrial matters
(including any enterprise agreement) that is in force immediately before the
abolition of the Industrial Authority is taken on and from that abolition to
have been entered into between the Public Employment Office and the
association, organisation or person.
31 Determinations of remuneration by Industrial
Authority
Any determination by the Industrial Authority under this Act of
the salary, wages or other remuneration of officers and temporary employees
that is in force immediately before the abolition of the Industrial Authority
is taken on and from that abolition to have been made by the Public Employment
Office.
32 Approvals, delegations, directions and notifications given
by the Industrial Authority
Any approval, delegation, direction or notification given by the
Industrial Authority under this Act that is in force immediately before the
abolition of the Industrial Authority is taken on and from that abolition to
have been given by the Public Employment Office.
33 Transitional arrangements for compensation entitlements of
executive officers and term appointees
The amendment made to section 42S or 92 by the 1995 Act does not
apply in respect of a person during a term of office as an executive officer
(even as an unattached officer) or term appointee that commenced before the
commencement of the amendment.
34 Saving of Constitution Act proclamations
A proclamation under section 49 of the Constitution Act 1902 is taken to
have been made as an order under Division 1 of Part 3A of this Act (and may be
amended or repealed accordingly).
35 Saving of Administrative Changes Act orders
An order under the Administrative Changes Act
1976 is taken to have been made under Division 2 of Part 3A of
this Act (and may be amended or repealed accordingly).
36 Existing appointments under Darling Harbour Authority Act
not affected
The amendments to the Darling Harbour Authority Act
1984 made by the 1995 Act do not affect the appointment or
term of office of any part-time member of the Authority under that
Act.
37 Saving of existing Department Head appointments
(1) A position specified in Column 1 of the Table to this clause is
referred to in this clause as an abolished position and the position specified
opposite that position in Column 2 of that Table is referred to in this clause
as the equivalent Department Head position for the abolished
position.
(2) The person holding office in an abolished position immediately
before its abolition by the 1995 Act is taken to have been appointed under
this Act to the equivalent Department Head position for the abolished
position. Such an appointment is for the remainder of the period of
appointment to the abolished position.
(3) Appointment by virtue of this clause to an equivalent Department
Head position does not change the contract of employment under Part 2A between
the person as an executive officer and the executive officer’s employer.
The contract is taken to be with the executive officer’s employer in the
equivalent Department Head position.
(4) A person holding an appointment (whether as deputy or otherwise)
to act in the office of the holder of an abolished position immediately before
its abolition by the 1995 Act is taken to have been appointed by the Governor
under section 10B to act in the equivalent Department Head position (even if
the person appointed is not an officer of the Public Service). This subclause
only applies to an appointment for 6 months after the commencement of this
clause (unless the appointment is sooner terminated by the Governor under
section 10B).
Table
Column 1 | Column 2 |
Abolished position | New public service position |
Director of Planning under the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979. | Director-General of the Department of Urban Affairs
and Planning. |
Director-General of National Parks and Wildlife
under the National Parks and Wildlife Act
1974. | Director-General of National Parks and
Wildlife. |
Commissioner of Corrective Services under the
Prisons Act 1952. | Commissioner of Corrective
Services. |
Deputy Commissioner of Corrective Services under
the Prisons Act 1952. | Deputy Commissioner of Corrective
Services. |
General Manager of the Motor Accidents Authority
under the Motor Accidents Act
1988. | General Manager of the Motor Accidents
Authority. |
Deputy General Manager of the Motor Accidents
Authority under the Motor Accidents Act
1988. | Deputy General Manager of the Motor Accidents
Authority. |
General Manager of the Darling Harbour Authority
under the Darling Harbour Authority Act
1984. | General Manager of the Darling Harbour
Authority. |
Chief Executive Officer of the Home Purchase
Assistance Authority under the Home Purchase Assistance
Authority Act 1993. | Chief Executive Officer of the Home Purchase
Assistance Authority. |
Chairperson of the Ethnic Affairs Commission under
the Ethnic Affairs Commission Act
1979. | Chairperson of the Ethnic Affairs
Commission. |
General Manager of the WorkCover Authority under
the WorkCover Administration Act
1989. | General Manager of the WorkCover
Authority. |
Director-General of the Environment Protection
Authority under the Protection of the
Environment Administration Act 1991. | Director-General of the Environment Protection
Authority. |
Part 6 Provisions consequent on enactment of
Public Sector Management Amendment Act
1998
38 Meaning of “1998 amending Act”
In this Part:1998 amending
Act means the Public Sector Management Amendment Act
1998.
39 Saving of existing appointment of temporary
employees
(1) An amendment made by the 1998 amending Act does not affect the
employment of a person as a temporary employee that commenced before the
commencement of the amendment, except as provided by this
clause.
(2) The employee becomes a departmental temporary employee unless a
determination is made under subclause (3) in relation to the
employee.
(3) The Director-General of the Premier’s Department can make a
determination that the employee was, immediately before the commencement of
section 38B, employed to do work for a political office holder as defined in
that section, and such a determination has the following effect:(a) the employee becomes a special temporary
employee,
(b) the employee is to be issued with an instrument of employment
specifying the name of the political office holder concerned and specifying an
indefinite term as the term of that employment.
40 Appointment of long-term departmental temporary
employees
Section 38A extends to periods of employment that occurred before
the commencement of that section.
41 Determinations of PEO
A determination in force under section 63 immediately before the
commencement of the amendment of that section by the 1998 amending Act is
taken to have been made under that section as so
amended.
Part 7 Provisions consequent on enactment of
Public Sector Management Amendment (Council on the Cost of
Government) Act 1998
42 Definitions
In this Part:amending
Act means the Public Sector Management Amendment
(Council on the Cost of Government) Act 1998.
appointed
member means a member referred to in section 44 (1)
(b).
43 Saving of Council
The Council is taken not to have been dissolved by the operation
of section 47E (1) merely because the amending Act is assented to on or after
13 October 1998.
44 Members
(1) A member of the Council is taken not to have ceased to hold office
as a member of the Council merely because the amending Act is assented to on
or after 13 October 1998.
(2) Despite clause 3 of Schedule 8, the term of office of a person who
is or was an appointed member immediately before 13 October 1998 expires on 31
December 1998.
45 Validation
Anything done or omitted to be done in the name of the
Council:(a) on or after 13 October 1998, and
(b) before the date of assent to the amending
Act,
is as valid as it would have been had this Act, as amended by the
amending Act, been in force when the thing was done or omitted to be
done.
Schedule 8 Provisions relating to members and procedure of
the Council
(Section 44)
1 Definitions
In this Schedule:appointed
member means a member referred to in section 44 (1)
(b).
member means a
member of the Council.
2 Deputy members
(1) The Minister may, from time to time, appoint a person to be the
deputy of a member, and may at any time revoke any such
appointment.
(2) In the absence of a member, the member’s deputy:(a) may, if available, act in the place of the member,
and
(b) while so acting, has all the functions of the member and is taken
to be the member.
(3) A person while acting in the place of an appointed member is
entitled to be paid such fees and allowances as the Minister may from time to
time determine in respect of the person.
3 Terms of office of appointed members
Subject to this Schedule, an appointed member holds office for
such term (not exceeding 3 years) as is specified in the instrument of
appointment, but is eligible (if otherwise qualified) for
re-appointment.
4 Fees and allowances for appointed members
An appointed member is entitled to be paid such fees and
allowances as the Minister from time to time determines in respect of the
member.
5 Vacancy in office of appointed member
(1) The office of an appointed member becomes vacant if the
member:(a) dies, or
(b) completes a term of office and is not re-appointed,
or
(c) resigns the office by instrument in writing addressed to the
Minister, or
(d) is removed from office by the Minister under this clause,
or
(e) becomes a public sector employee (as defined in subclause (3)),
or
(f) is absent from 3 consecutive meetings of the Council of which
reasonable notice has been given to the member personally or in the ordinary
course of post, except on leave granted by the Minister or unless, before the
expiration of 4 weeks after the last of those meetings, the member is excused
by the Minister for having been absent from those meetings,
or
(g) becomes bankrupt, applies to take the benefit of any law for the
relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors, compounds with his or her creditors
or makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for their benefit,
or
(h) becomes a mentally incapacitated person, or
(i) is convicted in New South Wales of an offence that is punishable
by imprisonment for 12 months or more or is convicted elsewhere than in New
South Wales of an offence that, if committed in New South Wales, would be an
offence so punishable.
(2) The Minister may remove an appointed member from office at any
time.
(3) A public sector employee is a person who is an officer or
temporary employee under this Act, or an employee or member of staff of a
declared authority.
6 Filling of vacancy in office of appointed member
If the office of an appointed member becomes vacant, a person is,
subject to this Act, required to be appointed to fill the
vacancy.
7 Personal liability
A matter or thing done by the Council, a member of the Council or
any person acting under the direction of the Council does not, if the matter
or thing was done in good faith for the purposes of executing this or any
other Act, subject the member or a person so acting personally to any action,
liability, claim or demand.
8 General procedure for calling and holding meetings of
Council
The procedure for the calling and holding of meetings of the
Council is to be determined by the Council.
9 Quorum
The quorum for a meeting of the Council is 4 of its
members.
10 Presiding member and voting rights
(1) The Chairperson of the Council or, in the absence of the
Chairperson, another member elected to chair the meeting by the members
present is to preside at a meeting of the Council.
(2) The person presiding at a meeting of the Council has a
deliberative vote and, in the event of an equality of votes, has a second or
casting vote.
11 Voting
A decision supported by a majority of the votes cast at a meeting
of the Council at which a quorum is present is the decision of the
Council.
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
Public Sector Management Act
1988 No 33. Assented to 6.7.1988. Date of commencement,
2.9.1988, sec 2 and GG No 140 of 2.9.1988, p 4557. This Act has been amended
as follows:
1988 | No 114 | Transport Legislation (Repeal and Amendment) Act
1988. Assented to 21.12.1988. Date of commencement, 16.1.1989, sec 2 (1) and GG No 3 of 16.1.1989, p
277.
|
| | No 132 | Workers Compensation (Amendment) Act
1988. Assented to 30.12.1988. Date of commencement of Sch 2, except as provided by sec 2 (2) (b),
1.7.1989, sec 2 (1) and GG No 81 of 30.6.1989, p
3822.
|
1989 | No 30 | Waste Disposal (Amendment) Act 1989.
Assented to 21.4.1989. Date of commencement, 30.6.1989, sec 2 and GG No 81 of 30.6.1989, p
3811.
|
| | No 103 | Public Sector Management (Executives) Amendment Act
1989. Assented to 15.8.1989. Date of commencement, 1.10.1989, sec 2 and GG No 98 of 29.9.1989, p
7740.
|
| | No 121 | WorkCover Legislation (Amendment) Act
1989. Assented to 24.8.1989. Date of commencement, 1.1.1990, sec 2 and GG No 124 of 22.12.1989, p
11040.
|
| | No 135 | Grain Handling Authority (Corporatisation) Act
1989. Assented to 27.9.1989. Date of commencement, 1.10.1989, sec 2 and GG No 98 of 29.9.1989, p
7764.
|
| | No 164 | State Emergency Service Act
1989. Assented to 14.12.1989. Date of commencement, 3.8.1990, sec 2 and GG No 97 of 3.8.1990, p
7102.
|
| | No 192 | Fire Brigades Act
1989. Assented to 19.12.1989. Date of commencement, 1.1.1990, sec 2 and GG No 124 of 22.12.1989, p
11025.
|
1990 | No 8 | Education Reform Act
1990. Assented to 1.6.1990. Date of commencement of sec 132, 8.6.1990, sec 2 (1) and GG No 74 of
8.6.1990, p 4587.
|
| | 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 78 | New South Wales Lotteries Act 1990.
Assented to 4.12.1990. Date of commencement, 2.3.1991, sec 2 and GG No 37 of 1.3.1991, p
1694.
|
| | No 99 | Anti-Discrimination (Compulsory Retirement)
Amendment Act 1990. Assented to 13.12.1990. Date of commencement, 1.1.1991, sec 2.
|
| | No 108 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2)
1990. Assented to 13.12.1990. Date of commencement of items (1), (2) and (3) (a) of the provisions of
Sch 1 relating to the Public Sector
Management Act 1988, assent, sec 2; date of commencement of
item (3) (b) of those provisions, 2.8.1991, Sch 1 and GG No 112 of 2.8.1991, p
6263.
|
| | No 117 | Sydney Electricity Act 1990.
Assented to 18.12.1990. Date of commencement, 2.1.1991, sec 2 and GG No 174 of 21.12.1990, p
11207.
|
| | No 118 | Technical and Further Education
Commission Act 1990. Assented to 18.12.1990. Date of commencement, 1.2.1991, sec 2 and GG No 20 of 1.2.1991, p
868.
|
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.
|
| | No 45 | Homebush Abattoir Corporation (Dissolution and
Transfer) Act 1991. Assented to 27.11.1991. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 1.1.1992, sec 2
(1).
|
| | No 53 | Hunter Water Board
(Corporatisation) Act 1991. Assented to 11.12.1991. Date of commencement of Sch 1, 1.1.1992, sec 2 and GG No 180 of
20.12.1991, p 10554.
|
| | No 60 | Protection of the Environment
Administration Act 1991. Assented to 12.12.1991. Date of commencement of item (4) (a) of the provisions of Sch 3 relating
to the Public Sector Management Act
1988, 16.12.1991, sec 2 and GG No 176 of 13.12.1991, p 10528;
date of commencement of the remainder of those provisions, 1.3.1992, sec 2 and
GG No 26 of 21.2.1992, p 1043.
|
| | No 77 | Government Telecommunications
Act 1991. Assented to 17.12.1991. Date of commencement, 2.3.1992, sec 2 and GG No 30 of 28.2.1992, p
1233.
|
| | No 88 | Public Finance and Audit (Auditor-General) Amendment
Act 1991. Assented to 17.12.1991. Date of commencement of Sch 5, 1.3.1992, sec 2 (1) and GG No 30 of
28.2.1992, p 1243.
|
| | No 94 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2)
1991. Assented to 17.12.1991. Date of commencement of the provisions of Sch 1 relating to the Public Sector Management Act 1988,
assent, Sch 1.
|
| | No 96 | Superannuation Administration Act
1991. Assented to 17.12.1991. Date of commencement of Sch 6, 2.3.1992, sec 2 (1) and GG No 20 of
14.2.1992, p 848.
|
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 20 | Internal Audit Bureau Act
1992. Assented to 14.5.1992. Date of commencement, 2.2.1996, sec 2 and GG No 15 of 2.2.1996, p
436.
|
| | No 34 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act
1992. Assented to 18.5.1992. Date of commencement of the provision of Sch 1 relating to the Public Sector Management Act 1988,
19.6.1992, Sch 1 and GG No 72 of 19.6.1992, p
4067.
|
| | No 47 | Financial Institutions Commission Act
1992. Assented to 30.6.1992. Date of commencement, 30.6.1992, sec 2 and GG No 80 of 30.6.1992, p
4482.
|
| | No 105 | Community Welfare (Amendment) Act
1992. Assented to 8.12.1992. Date of commencement, 1.1.1993, sec 2 and GG No 150 of 31.12.1992, p
9113.
|
| | No 111 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 3)
1992. Assented to 8.12.1992. Date of commencement of the provisions of Sch 2 relating to the Public Sector Management Act 1988,
assent, Sch 2.
|
1993 | No 2 | Community Services (Complaints,
Appeals and Monitoring) Act 1993. Assented to 8.4.1993. The provision of Sch 2 relating to the Public Sector Management Act 1988
was not commenced and was repealed by the Statute Law
(Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2) 1993 No
108.
|
| | 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 15 | Home Purchase Assistance Authority Act
1993. Assented to 12.5.1993. Date of commencement, 2.7.1993, sec 2 and GG No 76 of 2.7.1993, p 3707.
The proclamation appointed 1.7.1993 as the date of commencement. Pursuant to
section 23 (5) of the Interpretation Act
1987, the proclamation does not fail merely because it was not
published in the Gazette until after the day appointed in the proclamation,
but section 23 (5) provides, in that event, for that provision of the Act to
commence on the day on which the proclamation was published in the
Gazette.
|
| | No 39 | Police Service (Management) 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
3771.
|
| | No 42 | Superannuation Legislation (Miscellaneous
Amendments) Act 1993. Assented to 8.6.1993. Date of commencement of the provision of Sch 4 relating to the Public Sector Management Act 1988,
1.7.1992, Sch 4.
|
| | No 46 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act
1993. Assented to 15.6.1993. Date of commencement of the provision of Sch 2 relating to the Public Sector Management Act 1988,
assent, Sch 2.
|
| | No 54 | Homebush Bay Ministerial Corporation (Dissolution)
Act 1993. Assented to 24.9.1993. Date of commencement of Sch 1, assent, sec 2
(1).
|
| | No 98 | Bush Fires (Amendment) Act 1993.
Assented to 2.12.1993. Date of commencement of sec 4, 17.12.1993, sec 2 (2) and GG No 138 of
17.12.1993, p 7274.
|
| | No 105 | Health Care Complaints Act
1993. Assented to 2.12.1993. Date of commencement of the provisions of Sch 3 relating to the Public Sector Management Act 1988,
4.5.1994, sec 2 and GG No 64 of 4.5.1994, p 2001.
|
1994 | No 36 | Fire Brigades (Amendment) Act 1994.
Assented to 2.6.1994. Date of commencement, 10.6.1994, sec 2 and GG No 78 of 10.6.1994, p
2756.
|
| | No 37 | Fish Marketing Act
1994. Assented to 2.6.1994. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 31.10.1994, secs 2, 6, 11 and 12 and GG No
145 of 28.10.1994, p 6450.
|
| | No 64 | Electricity Transmission Authority Act
1994. Assented to 23.11.1994. Date of commencement, 1.2.1995, sec 2 and GG No 10 of 1.2.1995, p
573.
|
| | No 88 | Water Board (Corporatisation)
Act 1994. Assented to 12.12.1994. Date of commencement of Sch 7, 1.1.1995, sec 2 and GG No 170 of
16.12.1994, p 7400.
|
| | No 92 | Protected Disclosures Act
1994. Assented to 12.12.1994. Date of commencement, 1.3.1995, sec 2 and GG No 18 of 24.2.1995, p
915.
|
1995 | No 10 | Olympic Co-ordination Authority
Act 1995. Assented to 9.6.1995. Date of commencement, 30.6.1995, sec 2. Amended by Statute
Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2) 1995 No 99. Assented
to 21.12.1995. Date of commencement of the provision of Sch 2 relating to the
Olympic Co-ordination Authority Act
1995, assent, sec 2 (2).
|
| | No 13 | Ports Corporatisation and
Waterways Management Act 1995. Assented to 15.6.1995. Date of commencement, 1.7.1995, sec 2 and GG No 79 of 30.6.1995, p
3435.
|
| | No 18 | Electricity Legislation Amendment Act
1995. Assented to 19.6.1995. Date of commencement of Sch 5, 30.6.1995, sec 2 and GG No 79 of
30.6.1995, p 3434.
|
| | No 32 | State Owned Corporations Amendment Act
1995. Assented to 23.6.1995. Date of commencement, 1.7.1995, sec 2 and GG No 79 of 30.6.1995, p
3437.
|
| | No 36 | Public Sector Management Amendment Act
1995. Assented to 25.9.1995. Date of commencement, 13.10.1995, sec 2. Amended by Statute
Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2) 1995 No 99. Assented
to 21.12.1995. Date of commencement of the provision of Sch 2 relating to the
Public Sector Management Amendment Act 1995,
assent, sec 2 (2).
|
| | No 57 | Conveyancers Licensing Act
1995. Assented to 30.11.1995. Date of commencement of the provision of Sch 1 relating to the Public Sector Management Act 1988,
1.2.1996, sec 2 and GG No 8 of 25.1.1996, p 258. The amendment to the matter
relating to the Department of Housing in Sch 3B is without effect as that
matter has been omitted by GG No 160 of 29.12.1995, p
8842.
|
| | No 62 | Births, Deaths and Marriages
Registration Act 1995. Assented to 12.12.1995. Date of commencement, 1.1.1996, sec 2 and GG No 156 of 22.12.1995, p
8682.
|
| | No 95 | Energy Services Corporations Act
1995. Assented to 21.12.1995. Date of commencement of the provisions of Sch 4 relating to the Public Sector Management Act 1988,
1.3.1996, sec 2 and GG No 26 of 1.3.1996, p 832.
|
| | No 96 | Sustainable Energy Development
Act 1995. Assented to 21.12.1995. Date of commencement, 9.2.1996, sec 2 and GG No 17 of 9.2.1996, p
569.
|
1996 | No 14 | Public Servant Housing Authority
(Dissolution) Act 1996. Assented to 5.6.1996. Date of commencement, 28.6.1996, sec 2 and GG No 77 of 28.6.1996, p
3287.
|
| | No 17 | Industrial Relations Act
1996. Assented to 13.6.1996. Date of commencement of the provisions of Sch 5 relating to the Public Sector Management Act 1988,
2.9.1996, sec 2 and GG No 99 of 30.8.1996, p
4983.
|
| | No 29 | Police Legislation Amendment Act
1996. Assented to 21.6.1996. Date of commencement of the provision of Sch 6 relating to the Public Sector Management Act 1988,
1.7.1996, sec 2 and GG No 77 of 28.6.1996, p
3285.
|
| | No 30 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act
1996. Assented to 21.6.1996. Date of commencement of Sch 2, assent, sec 2
(1).
|
| | No 39 | Superannuation Administration
Act 1996. Assented to 25.6.1996. Date of commencement, 1.7.1996, sec 2 and GG No 77 of 28.6.1996, p
3290.
|
| | No 56 | Transport Administration Amendment (Rail
Corporatisation and Restructuring) Act 1996. Assented to
28.6.1996. Date of commencement, 1.7.1996, sec 2 and GG No 80 of 1.7.1996, p
3795.
|
| | No 85 | New South Wales Lotteries
Corporatisation Act 1996. Assented to 6.11.1996. Date of commencement, 1.1.1997, sec 2 and GG No 150 of 20.12.1996, p
8528.
|
| | No 90 | Harness Racing Legislation Amendment Act
1996. Assented to 25.11.1996. Date of commencement, 1.1.1997, sec 2 and GG No 150 of 20.12.1996, p
8527.
|
| | No 104 | New South Wales Crime Commission Amendment Act
1996. Assented to 26.11.1996. Date of commencement, 6.12.1996, sec 2 and GG No 143 of 6.12.1996, p
7870.
|
| | No 121 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2)
1996. Assented to 3.12.1996. Date of commencement of Sch 2, assent, sec 2 (1); date of commencement of
Sch 4.42, 4 months after assent, sec 2 (4).
|
| | No 127 | Public Sector Management Amendment (Mobility) Act
1996. Assented to 3.12.1996. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
1997 | No 11 | Friendly Societies (New South Wales) Act
1997. Assented to 21.5.1997. Date of commencement, 1.10.1997, sec 2 and GG No 104 of 26.9.1997, p
8179.
|
| | No 62 | Sydney Market Authority
(Dissolution) Act 1997. Assented to 2.7.1997. Date of commencement, 31.10.1997, sec 2 and GG No 117 of 31.10.1997, p
8802.
|
| | No 65 | Rural Fires Act
1997. Assented to 10.7.1997. Date of commencement, 1.9.1997, sec 2 and GG No 95 of 29.8.1997, p
6644.
|
| | No 154 | Health Services Act
1997. Assented to 19.12.1997. Date of commencement, 1.7.1998, sec 2 and GG No 97 of 26.6.1998, p
4423.
|
1998 | No 8 | Transport Administration Amendment (Railway Services
Authority Corporatisation) Act 1998. Assented to
12.5.1998. Date of commencement, 1.7.1998, sec 2 and GG No 101 of 1.7.1998, p
5203.
|
| | No 17 | State Records Act
1998. Assented to 2.6.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 4, 1.1.1999, sec 2 and GG No 171 of
11.12.1998, p 9457.
|
| | No 29 | Darling Harbour Authority Amendment and Repeal Act
1998. Assented to 15.6.1998. The amendments made by Sch 3.10 were not commenced and were repealed by
the Sydney Harbour Foreshore Authority Act
1998 No 170.
|
| | No 47 | Aboriginal Housing Act
1998. Assented to 26.6.1998. Date of commencement, 24.7.1998, sec 2 and GG No 112 of 24.7.1998, p
5601.
|
| | No 65 | Public Sector Management Amendment Act
1998. Assented to 30.6.1998. Date of commencement, 17.7.1998, sec 2 and GG No 108 of 17.7.1998, p
5484.
|
| | No 68 | Energy Services Corporations Amendment (TransGrid
Corporatisation) Act 1998. Assented to 2.7.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 2.13, 14.12.1998, sec 2 and GG No 171 of
11.12.1998, p 9459.
|
| | No 110 | Olympic Roads and Transport Authority Act
1998. Assented to 9.11.1998. Date of commencement, 31.12.1998, sec 2 and GG No 176 of 18.12.1998, p
9724.
|
| | No 118 | Public Sector Management Amendment (Council on the
Cost of Government) Act 1998. Assented to 9.11.1998. Date of commencement, 12.10.1998, sec 2.
|
| | No 120 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2)
1998. Assented to 26.11.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 1.37, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 128 | Food Production (Safety) Act
1998. Assented to 26.11.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 4.4 [1], 18.12.1998, sec 2 and GG No 176 of
18.12.1998, p 9720; date of commencement of Sch 4.4 [2], 1.7.1999, sec 2 and
GG No 72 of 25.6.1999, p 4076; date of commencement of Sch 4.4 [3], 4.8.2000,
sec 2 and GG No 101 of 4.8.2000, p 7169.
|
| | No 146 | Commission for Children and
Young People Act 1998. Assented to 8.12.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 2.3, 31.5.1999, sec 2 and GG No 61 of
21.5.1999, p 3471.
|
| | No 170 | Sydney Harbour Foreshore
Authority Act 1998. Assented to 14.12.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 3, 1.2.1999, sec 2 (1) and GG No 12 of
29.1.1999, p 285; date of commencement of Sch 4, 1.1.2001, sec 2 and GG No 170
of 29.12.2000, p 13950.
|
| | No 171 | Sydney Water Catchment
Management Act 1998. Assented to 14.12.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 5.3, 2.7.1999, sec 2 and GG No 76 of
2.7.1999, p 4608.
|
1999 | No 5 | Superannuation Administration
Authority Corporatisation Act 1999. Assented to
7.6.1999. Date of commencement, 26.7.1999, sec 2 and GG No 84 of 23.7.1999, p
5146.
|
| | No 86 | Superannuation Legislation Further Amendment Act
1999. Assented to 3.12.1999. Date of commencement of Sch 1.5, 1.3.2000, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 94 | Crimes Legislation Amendment (Sentencing) Act
1999. Assented to 8.12.1999. Date of commencement of sec 7, Schs 4.156 and 5, 1.1.2000, sec 2 (1) and
GG No 144 of 24.12.1999, p 12184.
|
2000 | No 60 | Independent Pricing and
Regulatory Tribunal and Other Legislation Amendment Act 2000.
Assented to 5.7.2000. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 17.7.2000, sec 2 and GG No 88 of
14.7.2000, p 6231.
|
| | No 77 | Community Relations Commission
and Principles of Multiculturalism Act 2000. Assented to
9.11.2000. Date of commencement, 13.3.2001, sec 2 and GG No 41 of 23.2.2001, p
777.
|
| | No 81 | Sydney 2000 Games Administration
Act 2000. Assented to 29.11.2000. Date of commencement of Sch 2.1, 1.6.2001, sec 2 (3) and GG No 89 of
25.5.2001, p 2869.
|
| | No 93 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2000. Assented to 8.12.2000. Date of commencement of Sch 2.40, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
| | No 98 | Legal Aid Commission Amendment
Act 2000. Assented to 13.12.2000. Date of commencement, 15.1.2001, sec 2 and GG No 10 of 12.1.2001, p
60.
|
| | No 102 | Australian Inland Energy Water
Infrastructure Act 2000. Assented to 13.12.2000. Date of commencement, 15.12.2000, sec 2 and GG No 162 of 15.12.2000, p
13169.
|
2001 | No 26 | Long Service Leave Legislation
Amendment Act 2001. Assented to 27.6.2001. Date of commencement, 1.8.2001, sec 2 and GG No 117 of 27.7.2001, p
5617.
|
| | No 27 | Casino Control Amendment Act
2001. Assented to 27.6.2001. Date of commencement, 1.7.2001, sec 2 and GG No 103 of 29.6.2001, p
4436.
|
| | No 52 | Housing Act
2001. Assented to 17.7.2001. Date of commencement, 1.7.2001, sec 2.
|
| | No 57 | Sydney Olympic Park Authority
Act 2001. Assented to 17.7.2001. Date of commencement, 1.7.2001, sec 2.
|
| | No 58 | Waste Avoidance and Resource
Recovery Act 2001. Assented to 17.7.2001. Date of commencement of Sch 3.8, 25.7.2001, sec 2 and GG No 116 of
25.7.2001, p 5613.
|
| | No 59 | Waste Recycling and Processing
Corporation Act 2001. Assented to 17.7.2001. Date of commencement, 1.9.2001, sec 2 and GG No 132 of 31.8.2001, p
6566.
|
| | No 129 | Landcom Corporation Act
2001. Assented to 19.12.2001. Date of commencement, 1.1.2002, sec 2 and GG No 196 of 21.12.2001, p
10443.
|
2002 | No 55 | Olympic Co-ordination Authority
Dissolution Act 2002. Assented to 8.7.2002. Date of commencement, 1.7.2002, sec 2.
|
This Act has also been amended:
(a) by proclamations under secs 42D, 86, 103 and 104,
and
(b) by orders under sec 55B.
Table of amendments
Sec 3 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (1); 1995 No 36, Schs 1 (1),
2 (1), 4 (1)–(3); 1997 No 154, Sch 6.41 [1]; 1998 No 65, Sch 1 [1]; 1998
No 120, Sch 1.37 [1]. |
Sec 4 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (2); 1990 No 48, Sch
1. |
Sec 6 | Rep 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (3). |
Sec 8 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (4); 1995 No 36, Schs 2 (2),
4 (4) (5). |
Sec 9 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 4
(6)–(8). |
Sec 10 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 4
(9)–(13). |
Sec 10A | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (5). Am 1995 No 36, Sch 4
(14) (15). |
Sec 10B | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (5). Am 1995 No 36, Sch 4
(16). |
Sec 11 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (3); 1998 No 65, Sch 1
[2]. |
Sec 12 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 4 (17). |
Part 2, Div 3, heading | Subst 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (6). |
Secs 13, 14 | Subst 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (6). |
Sec 15 | Subst 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (6). Am 1995 No 36, Sch 4
(18) (19); 1996 No 127, Sch 1 (1). |
Secs 16–21 | Rep 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (6). |
Part 2, Div 4, heading | Subst 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (7). |
Sec 22 | Subst 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (8). Am 2000 No 93, Sch
2.40. |
Sec 23 | Rep 1995 No 36, Sch 4 (20). |
Sec 26 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 4 (21). |
Sec 26A | Ins 1995 No 36, Sch 5 (1). Am 1998 No 120, Sch 1.37
[2] [3]. |
Sec 27 | Am 1996 No 17, Sch 5. |
Sec 28 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (4) (5). |
Sec 30 | Am 1990 No 99, Sch 2 (1). |
Sec 31 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (6). |
Sec 34 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (7). |
Sec 35 | Rep 1990 No 99, Sch 2 (2). |
Part 2, Div 5, heading | Subst 1998 No 65, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 38 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (8); 1998 No 65, Sch 1
[4]–[6]. |
Sec 38A | Ins 1998 No 65, Sch 1 [7]. |
Part 2, Div 5A (secs 38B–38H) | Ins 1998 No 65, Sch 1 [8]. |
Sec 41 | Am 1995 No 36, Schs 2 (9), 4
(22). |
Part 2A | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (9). |
Sec 42A | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (9). Am 1990 No 48, Sch
1. |
Secs 42B–42I | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (9). |
Sec 42J | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (9). Am 1996 No 17, Sch
5. |
Sec 42K | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (9). |
Sec 42L | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (9). Am 1993 No 42, Sch 4;
1998 No 120, Sch 1.37 [4]. |
Sec 42M | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (9). |
Sec 42N | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (9). Am 1990 No 48, Sch 1;
1997 No 154, Sch 6.41 [2]. |
Sec 42O | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (9). Am 1990 No 99, Sch 2
(3). |
Sec 42P | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (9). Rep 1990 No 99, Sch 2
(4). |
Sec 42Q | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (9). Am 1996 No 127, Sch 1
(2)–(5); 1997 No 154, Sch 6.41 [3]–[5]. |
Sec 42R | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (9). Am 1990 No 99, Sch 2
(5); 1995 No 36, Sch 3 (1). |
Sec 42S | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (9). Am 1989 No 135, Sch 1;
1990 No 99, Sch 2 (6); 1995 No 36, Sch 3 (2); 1996 No 127, Sch 1
(6). |
Secs 42T–42Z | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (9). |
Part 3, heading | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (10). |
Part 3, Div 1 | Subst 1995 No 36, Sch 1 (2). |
Sec 43 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (11). Subst 1995 No 36, Sch 1
(2). |
Sec 44 | Subst 1995 No 36, Sch 1 (2). |
Sec 45 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (12). Subst 1995 No 36, Sch 1
(2). |
Secs 46, 47 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (12); 1990 No 48, Sch 1.
Subst 1995 No 36, Sch 1 (2). |
Secs 47A–47D | Ins 1995 No 36, Sch 1 (2). |
Sec 47E | Ins 1995 No 36, Sch 1 (2). Am 1998 No 118, Sch 1
[1]. |
Part 3, Div 2 | Rep 1995 No 36, Sch 1 (3). |
Sec 48 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (12); 1990 No 48, Sch 1. Rep
1995 No 36, Sch 1 (3). |
Sec 49 | Rep 1995 No 36, Sch 1 (3). |
Part 3, Div 2A (secs 49A–49H) | Ins 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (10). |
Part 3, Div 3, heading | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (13). |
Sec 50 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (11). |
Sec 51 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (12)
(13). |
Sec 52 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (14)
(15). |
Sec 53 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (16); 1996 No 127, Sch 1
(7). |
Sec 53A | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (14). Am 1995 No 36, Sch 2
(17); 1996 No 127, Sch 1 (8) (9). |
Part 3A, Divs 1–3 (secs
55A–55J) | Ins 1995 No 36, Sch 4 (23). |
Part 4, Div 1 (secs 56–61) | Rep 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (18). |
Part 4, Div 2, heading | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (19). |
Sec 62 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (19). |
Sec 63 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (15); 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (19);
1998 No 65, Sch 1 [9]. |
Sec 64 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (16); 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (19);
1996 No 17, Sch 5. |
Sec 65 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (19). |
Part 5, Div 1, heading | Subst 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (17). |
Sec 65A | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (18). |
Sec 66 | Am 1994 No 92, Sch 1. |
Part 5, Div 2 (secs 67–72) | Rep 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (19). |
Part 5, Div 3, heading | Subst 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (20). |
Sec 73 | Rep 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (21). |
Sec 75 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (22). |
Sec 76 | Am 1999 No 94, Sch 4.156. |
Sec 77A | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (23). |
Sec 80 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (24); 1997 No 11, Sch
1.14. |
Sec 81 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (25). |
Sec 82 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (26)
(27). |
Sec 83 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (27). |
Sec 86 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (28). |
Sec 87 | Subst 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (29). |
Sec 88 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (20). |
Sec 89 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (30); 1990 No 48, Sch 1; 1993
No 46, Sch 2; 1995 No 32, Sch 3. |
Sec 89A | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (31). |
Sec 90 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (32). |
Sec 91 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (33); 1990 No 99, Sch 2
(7). |
Sec 92 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (34); 1989 No 135, Sch 1;
1990 No 99, Sch 2 (8); 1995 No 36, Sch 3 (3). |
Sec 94 | Am 1990 No 48, Sch 1. |
Sec 95 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (35); 1996 No 17, Sch 5; 1999
No 86, Sch 1.5. |
Sec 96A | Ins 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (21). |
Sec 97 | Am 1995 No 36, Sch 4 (24). |
Sec 99 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (36); 1995 No 36, Sch 2 (22);
1996 No 14, Sch 1. |
Sec 100 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (37). |
Sec 100A | Ins 1995 No 36, Sch 5 (2). Subst 1996 No 127, Sch 1
(10). |
Secs 100B–100D | Ins 1996 No 127, Sch 1 (10). |
Sec 101 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (37). |
Sec 102 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (38). |
Secs 103, 104 | Rep 1995 No 36, Sch 4 (25). |
Part 10, Divs 1–3 (secs
107–121) | Ins 2000 No 60, Sch 2.2. |
Sch 1 | Am GG No 145 of 16.9.1988, p 4833; GG No 158 of
19.10.1988, p 5482; GG No 180 of 9.12.1988, p 6282; GG No 81 of 30.6.1989, p
3804; GG No 97 of 22.9.1989, p 7314; GG No 111 of 17.11.1989, p 9661; GG No
121 of 15.12.1989, pp 10768, 10769; 1989 No 192, Sch 3; GG No 14 of 25.1.1990,
p 551; GG No 31 of 2.3.1990, p 1745; GG No 62 of 11.5.1990, p 3731; GG No 92
of 24.7.1990, p 6861; GG No 104 of 17.8.1990, p 7512; GG No 106 of 24.8.1990,
p 7709; GG No 20 of 1.2.1991, p 866; GG No 62 of 26.4.1991, p 3173; GG No 101
of 28.6.1991, p 5330; 1991 No 60, Sch 3; GG No 30 of 28.2.1992, p 1247; GG No
72 of 19.6.1992, p 4066; GG No 118 of 23.9.1992, p 6992; GG No 119 of
25.9.1992, p 6996; GG No 146 of 18.12.1992, p 8805; GG No 148 of 24.12.1992, p
8950; GG No 63 of 24.6.1993, p 3062; GG No 100 of 10.9.1993, p 5622; GG No 102
of 17.9.1993, p 5791; GG No 136 of 10.12.1993, p 7174; 1993 No 98, sec 4; 1994
No 36, sec 4 (a); GG No 39 of 5.4.1995, p 1863; GG No 46 of 13.4.1995, p 2022;
GG No 54 of 5.5.1995, p 2286; 1995 No 10, Sch 1; GG No 86 of 14.7.1995, p
3680; GG No 105 of 1.9.1995, pp 5045, 5046; GG No 121 of 4.10.1995, p 7034.
Subst 1995 No 36, Sch 4 (26). Am GG No 125 of 13.10.1995, p 7238; GG No 128 of
18.10.1995, p 7333; GG No 154 of 15.12.1995, p 8673; GG No 8 of 25.1.1996, p
261; 1996 No 29, Sch 6; GG No 77 of 28.6.1996, p 3473; GG No 113 of 4.10.1996,
p 6791; 1996 No 104, Sch 2.3; GG No 150 of 20.12.1996, pp 8623, 8626; GG No 40
of 18.4.1997, p 2006; GG No 51 of 9.5.1997, p 2659; 1997 No 65, Sch 4.22 [1];
GG No 88 of 8.8.1997, p 6113; GG No 134 of 3.12.1997, pp 9749, 9753; GG No 148
of 17.12.1997, p 10079; GG No 92 of 12.6.1998, p 4234; 1998 No 47, Sch 2.7;
1998 No 110, Sch 1.5 [1]; 1998 No 128, Sch 4.4 [1]–[3]; 1998 No 146, Sch
2.3; 1998 No 170, Schs 3.16 [1], 4.9; GG No 42 of 8.4.1999, p 2685; GG No 55
of 5.5.2000, p 3732; GG No 70 of 9.6.2000, p 4932; GG No 105 of 18.8.2000, p
7804; GG No 143 of 3.11.2000, p 11529; 2000 No 77, Sch 3.7; 2000 No 98, Sch
2.3; GG No 162 of 15.12.2000, p 13207; GG No 20 of 19.1.2001, p 159; GG No 71
of 20.4.2001, p 1959; 2001 No 57, Sch 7.6; 2001 No 58, Sch 3.8; GG No 184 of
30.11.2001, p 9512; 2002 No 55, Sch 1.8 [1]; GG No 116 of 12.7.2002, p
5245. |
Sch 2 | Am GG No 140 of 2.9.1988, p 4558; 1988 No 132, Sch
2; GG No 48 of 21.4.1989, pp 2223, 2224; GG No 81 of 30.6.1989, p 3813; 1989
No 121, Sch 1; GG No 97 of 22.9.1989, p 7314; GG No 98 of 29.9.1989, p 7738;
1989 No 164, sec 32; GG No 62 of 11.5.1990, p 3731; 1990 No 48, Sch 1; 1990 No
78, Sch 2; 1990 No 108, Sch 1; GG No 101 of 28.6.1991, p 5330; GG No 142 of
11.10.1991, p 8749; GG No 153 of 1.11.1991, p 9213; GG No 180 of 20.12.1991,
pp 10560, 10561; 1991 No 60, Sch 3; 1991 No 88, Sch 5; GG No 30 of 28.2.1992,
p 1247; GG No 60 of 15.5.1992, p 3295; GG No 119 of 25.9.1992, p 6996; 1992 No
111, Sch 2; GG No 146 of 18.12.1992, p 8805; 1993 No 9, Sch 2; 1993 No 15, Sch
2; GG No 63 of 24.6.1993, pp 3062, 3064; GG No 94 of 27.8.1993, pp 4864, 4865,
4866; GG No 100 of 10.9.1993, p 5622; GG No 110 of 8.10.1993, p 6130; GG No 19
of 14.1.1994, p 134; GG No 88 of 1.7.1994, p 3244; GG No 115 of 9.9.1994, p
5634; GG No 139 of 14.10.1994, p 6249; GG No 150 of 11.11.1994, p 6660; GG No
162 of 2.12.1994, p 7066; GG No 39 of 5.4.1995, p 1863; GG No 46 of 13.4.1995,
p 2022; 1995 No 10, Sch 1; GG No 86 of 14.7.1995, p 3680. Rep 1995 No 36, Sch
4 (27). |
Sch 3 | Am GG No 140 of 2.9.1988, p 4558; 1988 No 114, Sch
4; 1989 No 30, Sch 3; GG No 81 of 30.6.1989, p 3813; 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (39);
GG No 114 of 24.11.1989, p 9924; 1989 No 192, Sch 3; 1990 No 78, Sch 2; 1990
No 117, Sch 4; 1990 No 118, Sch 3; 1991 No 45, Sch 2; 1991 No 53, Sch 1; 1991
No 60, Sch 3; 1991 No 88, Sch 5; 1991 No 96, Sch 6; GG No 60 of 15.5.1992, p
3295; 1992 No 105, Sch 2; 1993 No 54, Sch 1; 1994 No 37, Sch 2; 1994 No 64,
Sch 3; 1994 No 88, Sch 7; 1995 No 13, Sch 4; 1995 No 18, Sch 5; 1995 No 95,
Sch 4; 1995 No 96, Sch 2; 1996 No 39, Sch 4; 1996 No 56, Sch 2; 1996 No 85,
Sch 3.6 (1); 1996 No 90, Sch 2.10 (1); 1996 No 121, Sch 2.23 (1); 1996 No 127,
Sch 1 (11); 1997 No 62, Sch 1.9 [1]; 1998 No 8, Sch 2.9 [1]; 1998 No 68, Sch
2.13 [1]; GG No 132 of 11.9.1998, p 7357; 1998 No 110, Sch 1.5 [2]; 1998 No
170, Sch 3.16 [2]; 1999 No 5, Sch 5.7 [1]; 2000 No 81, Sch 2.1 [1]; 2000 No
102, Sch 3.11 [1]; 2001 No 59, Sch 3.6 [1]. |
Sch 3A | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (40). Am 1989 No 121, Sch 1;
GG No 98 of 29.9.1989, p 7743; GG No 111 of 17.11.1989, p 9663; 1989 No 164,
sec 32; 1989 No 192, Sch 3; 1990 No 78, Sch 2; 1990 No 108, Sch 1; 1990 No
118, Sch 3; GG No 79 of 17.5.1991, p 3722; GG No 101 of 28.6.1991, p 5330; GG
No 142 of 11.10.1991, p 8749; GG No 174 of 13.12.1991, p 10310; GG No 180 of
20.12.1991, pp 10560, 10561; 1991 No 53, Sch 1; 1991 No 60, Sch 3; 1991 No 96,
Sch 6; GG No 30 of 28.2.1992, p 1247; 1992 No 15, Sch 4; 1992 No 20, Sch 2;
1992 No 47, Sch 2; GG No 119 of 25.9.1992, p 6996; 1992 No 111, Sch 2; GG No
146 of 18.12.1992, p 8805; 1993 No 15, Sch 2; GG No 63 of 24.6.1993, pp 3062,
3064; GG No 65 of 25.6.1993, p 3075; GG No 94 of 27.8.1993, pp 4864, 4865,
4866; GG No 100 of 10.9.1993, p 5622; GG No 110 of 8.10.1993, p 6130; GG No 27
of 28.1.1994, p 338; 1994 No 37, Sch 2; GG No 97 of 22.7.1994, p 3749; GG No
139 of 14.10.1994, p 6249; 1994 No 64, Sch 3; GG No 162 of 2.12.1994, p 7066;
1994 No 88, Sch 7; GG No 39 of 5.4.1995, p 1863; GG No 46 of 13.4.1995, p
2022; 1995 No 10, Sch 1; 1995 No 13, Sch 4; 1995 No 18, Sch 5; GG No 86 of
14.7.1995, p 3680; 1995 No 36, Sch 4 (28); 1995 No 95, Sch 4; 1996 No 39, Sch
4; 1996 No 56, Sch 2; 1996 No 85, Sch 3.6 (2); 1996 No 90, Sch 2.10 (2); 1996
No 121, Sch 2.23 (2); GG No 22 of 28.2.1997, p 1000; 1997 No 62, Sch 1.9 [2];
GG No 86 of 1.8.1997, p 5827; 1998 No 8, Sch 2.9 [2]; GG No 92 of 12.6.1998, p
4147; 1998 No 68, Sch 2.13 [2]; GG No 132 of 11.9.1998, p 7357; 1998 No 110,
Sch 1.5 [3]; 1998 No 170, Sch 3.16 [3]; 1998 No 171, Sch 5.3; 1999 No 5, Sch
5.7 [2]; GG No 55 of 5.5.2000, p 3701; 2000 No 81, Sch 2.1 [2]; 2000 No 102,
Sch 3.11 [2] [3]; 2001 No 59, Sch 3.6 [2]; GG No 48 of 22.2.2002, p
903. |
Sch 3B | Ins 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (40). Am 1989 No 121, Sch 1.
Subst GG No 98 of 29.9.1989, p 7743. Am GG No 99 of 6.10.1989, p 7999; GG No
102 of 20.10.1989, p 8581; GG No 105 of 27.10.1989, p 8849; GG No 107 of
3.11.1989, p 9027; GG No 111 of 17.11.1989, p 9663; GG No 114 of 24.11.1989, p
9925; 1989 No 164, sec 32; GG No 121 of 15.12.1989, pp 10770, 10772; GG No 14
of 25.1.1990, pp 551, 552; GG No 21 of 9.2.1990, p 1051; GG No 39 of
16.3.1990, p 2209; GG No 44 of 3.3.1990, p 2583; GG No 51 of 20.4.1990, p
3198; GG No 65 of 18.5.1990, p 3898; GG No 68 of 25.5.1990, p 4068; 1990 No 8,
sec 132; GG No 74 of 8.6.1990, p 4589; GG No 82 of 29.6.1990, p 5412; GG No 97
of 3.8.1990, p 7100; GG No 101 of 10.8.1990, p 7305; GG No 104 of 17.8.1990, p
7512; GG No 106 of 24.8.1990, p 7709; GG No 129 of 19.10.1990, p 9202; GG No
148 of 16.11.1990, p 9996 (as to commencement, see Gazette); 1990 No 78, Sch
2; 1990 No 108, Sch 1; GG No 8 of 11.1.1991, p 245; GG No 8 of 1.2.1991, p
866; GG No 41 of 8.3.1991, p 1903; GG No 62 of 26.4.1991, p 3171; 1991 No 3,
sec 4; GG No 79 of 17.5.1991, p 3722; GG No 96 of 21.6.1991, p 4818; GG No 101
of 28.6.1991, p 5330; GG No 106 of 12.7.1991, p 5523; GG No 125 of 6.9.1991, p
7748; GG No 139 of 4.10.1991, p 8505; GG No 142 of 11.10.1991, p 8749; GG No
159 of 15.11.1991, p 9521; GG No 174 of 13.12.1991, p 10310; GG No 180 of
20.12.1991, p 10561; 1991 No 53, Sch 1; 1991 No 60, Sch 3; 1991 No 77, Sch 2;
1991 No 94, Sch 1; 1991 No 96, Sch 6; GG No 26 of 21.2.1992, p 1044; GG No 30
of 28.2.1992, pp 1244, 1247; GG No 45 of 10.4.1992, p 2557; GG No 49 of
16.4.1992, pp 2681, 2682; GG No 60 of 15.5.1992, p 3295; 1992 No 15, Sch 4;
1992 No 20, Sch 2; 1992 No 34, Sch 1; GG No 72 of 19.6.1992, p 4066; GG No 87
of 10.7.1992, pp 4748–4751; GG No 119 of 25.9.1992, p 6996; GG No 121 of
2.10.1992, p 7177; GG No 146 of 18.12.1992, p 8805; GG No 148 of 24.12.1992, p
8950; GG No 7 of 22.1.1993, p 156; GG No 30 of 26.3.1993, p 1368; GG No 34 of
8.4.1993, p 1643; 1993 No 39, Sch 2; GG No 63 of 24.6.1993, pp 3062, 3064; GG
No 65 of 25.6.1993, p 3075; GG No 100 of 10.9.1993, pp 5622, 5623; GG No 110
of 8.10.1993, p 6130; GG No 115 of 15.10.1993, p 6219; GG No 130 of
26.11.1993, p 6965; 1993 No 105, Sch 3; GG No 136 of 10.12.1993, p 7174; GG No
19 of 14.1.1994, p 134; GG No 46 of 18.3.1994, p 1177; 1994 No 36, sec 4 (b);
1994 No 37, Sch 2; GG No 88 of 1.7.1994, p 3244; GG No 97 of 22.7.1994, pp
3749, 3750, 3753; GG No 115 of 9.9.1994, p 5634; GG No 139 of 14.10.1994, p
6249; GG No 162 of 2.12.1994, p 7066; 1994 No 88, Sch 7; GG No 5 of 20.1.1995,
p 375; GG No 16 of 17.2.1995, p 831; GG No 18 of 24.2.1995, p 916; 1995 No 13,
Sch 4; 1995 No 18, Sch 5; GG No 79 of 30.6.1995, p 3436; GG No 110 of
8.9.1995, p 6469; 1995 No 36, Sch 4 (29)–(31); GG No 128 of 18.10.1995,
p 7331; 1995 No 62, Sch 2; 1995 No 95, Sch 4; 1995 No 96, Sch 2; GG No 160 of
29.12.1995, p 8842; GG No 22 of 23.2.1996, p 705; GG No 46 of 12.4.1996, p
1665; 1996 No 39, Sch 4; GG No 95 of 16.8.1996, p 4599; 1996 No 85, Sch 3.6
(3); GG No 134 of 22.11.1996, p 7577; GG No 22 of 28.2.1997, p 1000; GG No 28
of 21.3.1997, p 1565; GG No 36 of 11.4.1997, p 1896; GG No 51 of 9.5.1997, pp
2651 (as to commencement, see Gazette), 2652 (as to commencement, see
Gazette); GG No 60 of 6.6.1997, p 3983; 1997 No 62, Sch 1.9 [3]; 1997 No 65,
Sch 4.22 [2]; GG No 86 of 1.8.1997, p 5827; GG No 88 of 8.8.1997, p 6089; GG
No 114 of 24.10.1997, p 8635; GG No 148 of 17.12.1997, p 10072; GG No 4 of
9.1.1998, p 141; GG No 56 of 20.3.1998, p 1582; GG No 71 of 24.4.1998, p 2842;
1998 No 8, Sch 2.9 [3]; 1998 No 17, Sch 4.4; 1998 No 68, Sch 2.13 [3]; GG No
132 of 11.9.1998, p 7357; GG No 135 of 18.9.1998, p 7519; GG No 169 of
4.12.1998, p 9345; 1998 No 170, Sch 3.16 [4] [5]; GG No 176 of 18.12.1998, p
9727; GG No 50 of 21.4.1999, p 2800; GG No 111 of 24.9.1999, p 9090; GG No 46
of 14.4.2000, p 3200; GG No 55 of 5.5.2000, p 3701; GG No 62 of 26.5.2000, p
4244; GG No 68 of 9.6.2000, p 4778; GG No 105 of 18.8.2000, p 7685; GG No 146
of 10.11.2000, p 11589; GG No 148 of 17.11.2000, p 11765; GG No 159 of
8.12.2000, p 12783; GG No 162 of 15.12.2000, p 13171; GG No 20 of 19.1.2001, p
131; GG No 34 of 2.2.2001, p 435; 2001 No 27, Sch 3.3; 2001 No 52, Sch 1.9;
2001 No 59, Sch 3.6 [3]; GG No 127 of 17.8.2001, p 6019; GG No 132 of
31.8.2001, p 6557; 2001 No 129, Sch 3.3; GG No 48 of 22.2.2002, p 903; GG No
67 of 28.3.2002, p 1835; 2002 No 55, Sch 1.8 [2]; GG No 141 of 5.9.2002, p
7863. |
Sch 4 | Rep 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (41). |
Sch 5 | Am 1990 No 48, Sch 1; 1995 No 36, Sch 5 (3) (4);
1996 No 121, Sch 4.42 (1) (2); 1998 No 120, Sch 1.37 [5]; 2001 No 26, Sch 3
[1]–[4]. |
Sch 5A | Ins 1995 No 36, Sch 5 (5). Am 1996 No 127, Sch 1
(12)–(15); 1997 No 154, Sch 6.41 [6]; 1998 No 120, Sch 1.37
[6]. |
Sch 6 | Am 1996 No 30, Sch 2; 1996 No 121, Sch 4.42
(3). |
Sch 7 | Am 1989 No 103, Sch 1 (42); 1990 No 99, Sch 2 (9);
1995 No 36, Sch 5 (6) (7); 1996 No 127, Sch 1 (16); 1998 No 65, Sch 1 [10];
1998 No 118, Sch 1 [2]. |
Sch 8 | Ins 1995 No 36, Sch 1 (4). Am 1999 No 94, sec 7 (2)
and Sch 5, Part 2. |