An Act to repeal the Aborigines Act
1969 and to make provisions with respect to the land rights of
Aborigines, including provisions for or with respect to the constitution of
Aboriginal Land Councils, the vesting of land in those Councils, the
acquisition of land by or for those Councils and the allocations of funds to
and by those Councils; to amend certain other Acts; and to make provisions for
certain other purposes.
WHEREAS:
(1) Land in the State of New South Wales was traditionally owned and
occupied by Aborigines:
(2) Land is of spiritual, social, cultural and economic importance to
Aborigines:
(3) It is fitting to acknowledge the importance which land has for
Aborigines and the need of Aborigines for land:
(4) It is accepted that as a result of past Government decisions the
amount of land set aside for Aborigines has been progressively reduced without
compensation:
BE it therefore enacted by the Queen’s Most Excellent
Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Legislative Council and
Legislative Assembly of New South Wales in Parliament assembled, and by the
authority of the same, as follows:
Part 1 Preliminary
1 Name of Act
This Act may be cited as the Aboriginal Land Rights Act
1983.
2 Commencement
(1) Sections 1 and 2 shall commence on the date of assent to this
Act.
(2) Except as provided by subsection (1), the several provisions of
this Act shall commence on such day or days as may be appointed by the
Governor in respect thereof and as may be notified by proclamation published
in the Gazette.
3 Purpose of Act
The purposes of this Act are as follows:(a) to provide land rights for Aboriginal persons in New South
Wales,
(b) to provide for representative Aboriginal Land Councils in New
South Wales,
(c) to vest land in those Councils,
(d) to provide for the acquisition of land, and the management of land
and other assets and investments, by or for those Councils and the allocation
of funds to and by those Councils,
(e) to provide for the provision of community benefit schemes by or on
behalf of those Councils.
4 Definitions
(1) In this Act, except in so far as the context or subject-matter
otherwise indicates or requires:Aboriginal Land
Council means the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council or a Local
Aboriginal Land Council.
Aboriginal
owners of land means the Aboriginal persons whose names are entered
on the Register of Aboriginal Owners because of the persons’ cultural
association with particular land.
Note. An Aboriginal person’s name and other relevant information
is entered in the Register of Aboriginal Owners.
Aboriginal
person means a person who:
(a) is a member of the Aboriginal race of Australia,
and
(b) identifies as an Aboriginal person, and
(c) is accepted by the Aboriginal community as an Aboriginal
person.
adult
Aboriginal person means an Aboriginal person who has attained the
age of 18 years.
authority,
in Division 5 of Part 10, means the Ombudsman, the Independent Commission
Against Corruption, the Commissioner of Police or the Director of Public
Prosecutions.
Board means a
Board of a Local Aboriginal Land Council.
Board
member means a member of a Board of a Local Aboriginal Land
Council.
code of
conduct means the code of conduct that applies to an Aboriginal Land
Council by the operation of this Act.
Commonwealth Native Title
Act or NTA means
the Native Title Act 1993 of the
Commonwealth.
community
benefit means a benefit or service provided for the benefit of
Aboriginal persons, and may include, but is not limited to, the
following:
(a) funeral funds,
(b) residential accommodation,
(c) education and training,
(d) scholarships and other assistance for education and
training,
(e) cultural activities,
(f) child care,
(g) aged care services.
community benefits
scheme means a scheme for the provision of community
benefits.
community development
levy means the levy payable under Division 4A of Part
2.
community, land and
business plan means a plan prepared and approved under Division 6 of
Part 5 or Division 5 of Part 7.
compliance
direction means a direction issued by the Registrar under Part
12.
councillor means a member of
the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council.
Court means the
Land and Environment Court.
Director-General means the
Director-General of the Department of Aboriginal Affairs.
land includes
any estate or interest in land, whether legal or equitable.
land claim
means a claim for land made under section 36.
Local Aboriginal Land
Council means a Local Aboriginal Land Council constituted under this
Act.
Local Aboriginal Land
Council area means a Local Aboriginal Land Council area constituted
under this Act.
native
title or native title rights
and interests has the same meaning as in the Commonwealth Native
Title Act.
New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council means the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council constituted under this Act.
non-voting
member, of a Local Aboriginal Land Council, means a member of that
Council who does not have voting rights in relation to that
Council.
NPW Act means
the National Parks and Wildlife Act
1974.
officer of an
Aboriginal Land Council means a Board member or the Chairperson or Deputy
Chairperson of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council.
Pecuniary
Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal means the Aboriginal Land
Councils Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal established under
Division 3 of Part 10.
records
includes any of the following (whether in a written or electronic
form):
(a) financial statements (including statements or lists of assets or
liabilities),
(b) bank statements or other authorised deposit-taking institution
statements,
(c) membership rolls,
(d) voting rolls,
(e) minutes of meetings,
(f) attendance lists of meetings,
(g) leases, contracts and other documents relating to arrangements to
which an Aboriginal Land Council is a party.
Region means a
Region specified in Schedule 5.
Register of
Aboriginal Land Claims means the Register of Aboriginal Land Claims
established under Division 2 of Part 9.
Register of Aboriginal
Owners means the Register of Aboriginal Owners established under
Division 3 of Part 9.
Registrar
means the Registrar appointed under this Act.
regulations means regulations
made under this Act.
relative, in
relation to a person, means any of the following:
(a) the parent, grandparent, brother, sister, uncle, aunt, nephew,
niece, lineal descendant or adopted child of the person or of the
person’s spouse or de facto partner,
(b) the spouse or de facto partner of the person or of a person
referred to in paragraph (a).
rules means the
rules of an Aboriginal Land Council that apply to the Council by the operation
of this Act.
satisfactory
audited financial statements and documents means audited financial
statements and documents furnished to the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council under Division 2 of Part 8 by a Local Aboriginal Land Council that are
determined by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council to be satisfactory
in accordance with the requirements prescribed by the regulations under
section 154.
voting
member, of a Local Aboriginal Land Council, means a member of that
Council who has voting rights in relation to that Council.
voting
rights, in relation to a Local Aboriginal Land Council, means the
right of a member of the Council to vote in the elections held by, and on any
matter to be decided by, the Council.
(2) A reference in this Act to:(a) a function includes a reference to a power, authority and duty,
and
(b) the exercise of a function includes, where the function is a duty,
a reference to the performance of the duty.
(3) The Chairperson of an Aboriginal Land Council may be referred to
as the Chairman or Chairwoman, as the case
requires.
(4) Notes included in this Act are explanatory notes and do not form
part of this Act.
5–34C (Repealed)
Part 2 Land rights
Division 1
35(Repealed)
Division 2 Claimable Crown lands
36 Claims to Crown lands
(1) In this section, except in so far as the context or subject-matter
otherwise indicates or requires:claimable Crown
lands means lands vested in Her Majesty that, when a claim is made
for the lands under this Division:
(a) are able to be lawfully sold or leased, or are reserved or
dedicated for any purpose, under the Crown Lands Consolidation
Act 1913 or the Western
Lands Act 1901,
(b) are not lawfully used or occupied,
(b1) do not comprise lands which, in the opinion of a Crown Lands
Minister, are needed or are likely to be needed as residential
lands,
(c) are not needed, nor likely to be needed, for an essential public
purpose, and
(d) do not comprise lands that are the subject of an application for a
determination of native title (other than a non-claimant application that is
an unopposed application) that has been registered in accordance with the
Commonwealth Native Title Act, and
(e) do not comprise lands that are the subject of an approved
determination of native title (within the meaning of the Commonwealth Native
Title Act) (other than an approved determination that no native title exists
in the lands).
Crown
Lands Minister means the Minister for the time being administering
any provisions of the Crown Lands Consolidation Act
1913 or the Western Lands
Act 1901 under which lands are able to be sold or
leased.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may make a claim for
land on its own behalf or on behalf of one or more Local Aboriginal Land
Councils.
(3) One or more Local Aboriginal Land Councils may make a claim for
land within its or their area or, with the approval of the Registrar, outside
its or their area.
(4) A claim under subsection (2) or (3):(a) shall be in writing and, if a form for making such a claim has
been prescribed, shall be in or to the effect of that
form,
(b) shall describe or specify the lands in respect of which it is
made,
(b1) (Repealed)
(c) shall be lodged with the Registrar, who shall refer a copy thereof
(together with a copy of any approval necessary under subsection (3)) to the
Crown Lands Minister or, if there is more than one Crown Lands Minister, to
each of them.
(5) A Crown Lands Minister to whom a claim for lands (being lands
which are, or, but for any restriction on their sale or lease, would be, able
to be sold or leased under a provision of an Act administered by the Crown
Lands Minister) has been referred under subsection (4) shall:(a) if the Crown Lands Minister is satisfied that:(i) the whole of the lands claimed is claimable Crown lands,
or
(ii) part only of the lands claimed is claimable Crown
lands,
grant the claim by transferring to the claimant Aboriginal Land Council
(or, where the claim is made by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council,
to a Local Aboriginal Land Council (if any) nominated by the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council) the whole or that part of the lands claimed, as the
case may be, or
(b) if the Crown Lands Minister is satisfied that:(i) the whole of the lands claimed is not claimable Crown lands,
or
(ii) part of the lands claimed is not claimable Crown
lands,
refuse the claim or refuse the claim to the extent that it applies to
that part, as the case may require.
(5A) Where, under subsection (5), a Crown Lands Minister is not
satisfied that the whole or part of the lands claimed is claimable Crown lands
because the lands are needed, or likely to be needed, for an essential public
purpose, but that the need for the lands for the public purpose would be met
if the claim were to be granted in whole or in part subject to the imposition
of a condition (whether by way of covenant or easement or in any other form)
relating to the use of the lands, the Crown Lands Minister may,
notwithstanding that subsection, where the condition is agreed to by the
Aboriginal Land Council making the claim, grant the claim under that
subsection subject to the imposition of the
condition.
(6) An Aboriginal Land Council may appeal to the Court against a
refusal under subsection (5) (b) of a claim made by
it.
(7) The Court shall hear and determine any appeal made to it under
subsection (6) in respect of any lands claimed and may, if the relevant Crown
Lands Minister fails to satisfy the Court that the lands or a part thereof are
not or is not claimable Crown lands, order that the lands or the part, as the
case may be, be transferred to the claimant Aboriginal Land Council or, where
the claim is made by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council, to a Local
Aboriginal Land Council (if any) nominated by the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council.
(8) A certificate being:(a) a certificate issued by a Crown Lands Minister stating that any
land the subject of a claim under this section and specified in the
certificate is needed or is likely to be needed as residential land,
or
(b) a certificate issued by a Crown Lands Minister, after consultation
with the Minister administering this Act, stating that any land the subject of
a claim under this section and specified in the certificate is needed or
likely to be needed for an essential public
purpose,
shall be accepted as final and conclusive evidence of the matters set out
in the certificate and shall not be called into question in any proceedings
nor liable to appeal or review on any grounds
whatever.
(9) Except as provided by subsection (9A), any transfer of lands to an
Aboriginal Land Council under this section shall be for an estate in fee
simple but shall be subject to any native title rights and interests existing
in relation to the lands immediately before the
transfer.
(9A) Where the transfer of lands to an Aboriginal Land Council under
this section is of land to which the Western
Lands Act 1901 applies but which is not within an area
determined by the Minister administering that Act as being the urban area of a
city, town or village, the transfer shall be effected by the granting to the
Council of a lease in perpetuity under that Act but shall be subject to any
native title rights and interests existing in relation to the lands
immediately before the transfer.
(9B) A lease referred to in subsection (9A):(a) may be granted without the necessity for the payment of any rent
under the lease or may require the payment of a nominal rent,
and
(b) notwithstanding the Western
Lands Act 1901, shall not be cancelled unless the Minister
administering that Act has consulted with the Minister administering this
Act.
(9C) Land transferred under this section to 2 or more Aboriginal Land
Councils may be transferred to those Councils as joint tenants or as tenants
in common.
(10) A transfer of lands pursuant to this section operates to revoke
any dedication or reservation under the Crown Lands
Consolidation Act 1913 to which the lands were subject
immediately before the transfer.
(11) Where, by reason of the existence of a forestry right (within the
meaning of section 87A of the Conveyancing
Act 1919) granted in respect of them or of an easement over
them, any lands claimed under this section could not, but for this subsection,
be regarded by a Crown Lands Minister as claimable Crown lands, the Crown
Lands Minister may, for the purposes of this section, treat the lands as
claimable Crown lands.
(12) A transfer of lands pursuant to this section is subject to the
following:(a) any easements affecting the lands immediately before the
transfer,
(b) any condition imposed under subsection (5A),
(c) any forestry right within the meaning of section 87A of the
Conveyancing Act 1919, and
any restriction on use or covenant imposed under Division 4 of Part 6 of that
Act in connection with that forestry right, in force in respect of the lands
immediately before the transfer.
(13) Where the transfer of lands in accordance with this section would
not, but for this subsection, be authorised by the Crown Lands
Consolidation Act 1913 or the Western Lands Act 1901, the transfer
of the lands in accordance with this section shall be deemed to have been
authorised by whichever of those Acts the lands were subject to immediately
before the transfer.
(14) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council or a Local Aboriginal
Land Council may request a Crown Lands Minister to supply or cause to be
supplied to it such information in relation to the Crown land or dealings in
Crown land as is specified in the request and the Crown Lands Minister shall,
so far as is reasonably practicable, comply with that
request.
(15) Duty under the Duties Act
1997 is not payable in respect of a transfer of lands in
accordance with this section.
(16) The definition of claimable Crown
lands in subsection (1) is taken to include land vested in the State
Property Authority that complies with paragraphs (a)–(e) of that
definition and that was, immediately before it vested in that Authority,
claimable Crown lands within the meaning of that
definition.
(17) The provisions of this section are modified as follows in relation
to its application to land vested in the State Property Authority:(a) subsection (4) (c) requires the Registrar to refer a copy of a
claim in relation to the land to the Minister administering the State Property Authority Act 2006 in
addition to the other Ministers referred to in that
paragraph,
(b) a reference in subsection (5) to the Crown Lands Minister granting
a claim by making a transfer referred to in that subsection is to be read as
the Crown Lands Minister granting a claim and requiring the State Property
Authority to transfer the relevant land as referred to in that
subsection,
(c) a reference in subsection (14) to a Crown Lands Minister is to be
read as a reference to the State Property Authority,
(d) a reference in subsection (14) to Crown land is a reference to
land vested in the State Property Authority that, immediately before it was
vested in that Authority, was Crown land.
(18) In accordance with a requirement by a Crown Lands Minister under
subsection (5) (as modified by subsection (17) (b)), the State Property
Authority is to transfer land vested in it in relation to which a claim has
been granted by that Minister, subject to the taking of any action required to
implement a condition imposed under subsection (5A) on the grant of the
claim.
36A Special provision concerning certain Crown lands having
nature conservation value
(1) This section applies in relation to lands that:(a) are the subject of a claim by one or more Aboriginal Land Councils
under section 36, and
(b) the Crown Lands Minister is satisfied would be claimable Crown
lands except for the fact that the lands are needed, or likely to be needed,
for the essential public purpose of nature
conservation.
(2) If the Aboriginal Land Council or Councils making the claim agree
to the imposition of the conditions that, before the grant of a claim to lands
to which this section applies, the Aboriginal Land Council or Councils:(a) must negotiate a lease of the lands, that complies with the
requirements of Part 4A of the NPW Act, with the Minister administering that
Act, and
(b) must agree:(i) to enter into a lease of the lands to the Minister administering
the NPW Act in the terms negotiated in accordance with paragraph (a),
and
(ii) to the simultaneous reservation or dedication of the lands under
the NPW Act, and
(iii) to hold the lands as lands reserved or dedicated under the NPW
Act, and
(iv) to comply with the requirements of the NPW Act and, in particular,
the requirements of Part 4A of that Act in relation to the
lands,
the Crown Lands Minister may, despite section 36 (5) (b), grant a claim
to lands to which this section applies.Note. Part 4A of the NPW Act deals with lands, reserved or dedicated
under that Act, that are vested in an Aboriginal Land Council or Councils and
are leased by that Council or those Councils to the Minister administering
that Act.
(3) The Crown Lands Minister must not grant a claim to lands to which
this section applies unless the Minister administering the NPW Act:(a) has agreed to the reservation or dedication of the lands under
Division 4 of Part 4A of that Act, and
(b) has notified the Crown Lands Minister in writing that a lease,
negotiated in pursuance of subsection (2) with the Aboriginal Land Council or
Councils concerned, is acceptable to the Minister and has been executed in
escrow by the proposed parties to it.
Note. Division 4 of Part 4A of the NPW Act deals with the reservation or
dedication and leasing under that Act of lands to which section 36A applies
that have been granted by the Crown Lands Minister to an Aboriginal Land
Council or Councils under this Act.
(4) If a claim by one or more Aboriginal Land Councils relates partly
to lands to which this section applies and partly to other lands, nothing in
this section prevents the Crown Lands Minister from granting the claim:(a) as to so much of the lands to which this section
applies—subject to and in accordance with this section,
and
(b) as to the balance of the lands—in accordance with the other
provisions of this Part.
(5) This section does not limit section 36 and the provisions of that
section (in so far as they are applicable) apply to the lands to which this
section applies, and to their transfer.
(6) Parts 3 and 4 do not apply to lands to which this section applies
on and from the date of their reservation or dedication under the NPW
Act.
(7) In this section, claimable Crown
lands and Crown Lands
Minister have the same meanings as in section
36.
37 Aboriginal lands in travelling stock reserves
(1) Where a claim by an Aboriginal Land Council is lodged under
section 36 in respect of land which is or is part of a travelling stock
reserve within the meaning of the Rural
Lands Protection Act 1998 (not being a travelling stock
reserve in the Western Division within the meaning of the Crown Lands Act 1989), the Registrar
shall, in addition to complying with section 36 (4) (c), refer a copy of the
claim to the Pastures Protection Board for the district in which that land is
situated.
(2) This section has effect notwithstanding the provisions of the
Rural Lands Protection Act
1998 or Crown Lands Act
1989.
(3) Subject to subsection (4), the Crown Lands Minister within the
meaning of section 36 may, in respect of the land referred to in subsection
(1), enter into an agreement with the claimant Aboriginal Land Council so
referred to, so as to achieve the following purposes:(a) the vesting of the freehold title to that land, subject to any
existing easements, in the claimant Aboriginal Land
Council,
(b) the leasing in perpetuity of that land to Her Majesty at a nominal
rent,
(c) the preparation of a plan of management in respect of that land
giving the claimant Aboriginal Land Council or Aborigines defined rights, or
conferring or imposing on the claimant Aboriginal Land Council or on
Aborigines defined functions, in respect of that
land.
(4) The Minister referred to in subsection (3) shall not enter into an
agreement under that subsection in respect of land unless the Minister is
satisfied that Aborigines have traditional rights to the land or that
Aborigines have had a long association with the
land.
(4A) The Minister referred to in subsection (3) shall not enter into an
agreement under that subsection in respect of land which is or is part of a
travelling stock reserve within the meaning of the Rural Lands Protection Act 1998
without the approval of the Minister administering that
Act.
(5) For the purposes of giving effect to an agreement referred to in
subsection (3):(a) the Minister so referred to may, by notification published in the
Gazette, vest the freehold title to land, subject to any existing easements,
in the claimant Aboriginal Land Council and that notification shall have
effect according to its tenor, and
(b) the Minister so referred to and the claimant Aboriginal Land
Council may execute any necessary instruments.
(6) Subject to any plan of management prepared as referred to in
subsection (3) in respect of the land, the vesting of the freehold title to
any land in an Aboriginal Land Council, and the holding of the land under
perpetual lease by Her Majesty, under this section shall not affect:(a) the application of the provisions of the Rural Lands Protection Act 1998, or
regulations under that Act, to the land, or
(b) the status of the land for the purposes of any other law, other
than a law relating to the registration of titles.
(7) There shall be no appeal against, or review of, a decision of the
Minister referred to in subsection (3) not to enter into an agreement under
this section.
(8) Duty under the Duties Act
1997 is not payable in respect of an agreement or other
instrument executed for the purposes of this
section.
Division 3 Acquisition of other lands
38 Purchase, lease etc of property
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council or a Local Aboriginal
Land Council may purchase, take on lease or hold any property or may acquire
property by gift inter vivos, devise or bequest.
(1A) Despite subsection (1), a Local Aboriginal Land Council may
purchase land only if:(a) the purchase price for the land is not more than 5% above the
assessed market value of the land, or
(b) the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council has given its written
approval to that purchase.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council or a Local Aboriginal
Land Council may agree to the condition of any gift, devise or bequest to it,
and the rule of law relating to perpetuities does not apply to any condition
to which the Council has agreed under this section.
(3) Property acquired by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
or a Local Aboriginal Land Council subject to a condition to which the Council
has agreed shall not be dealt with by the Council except in accordance with
the condition.
(4) Without limiting its functions under any other provision of this
Act or under any other Act, the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council or a
Local Aboriginal Land Council may exercise its power to purchase or take on
lease any property (other than land), as referred to in subsection (1), only
for or in connection with the use, development and improvement of
land.
(5) Nothing in this Act prevents the vesting of lands pursuant to
Division 3 of Part 4A of the NPW Act in more than one Local Aboriginal Land
Council as joint tenants (without the benefit of survivorship).Note. Division 3 of Part 4A of the NPW Act deals, among other matters,
with the vesting in an Aboriginal Land Council or Councils of lands, reserved
or dedicated under that Act, that are of cultural significance to Aboriginals
and that are listed in Schedule 14 to that Act.
(6) In this section, assessed market
value of land means the market value of the land as assessed by a
registered valuer (within the meaning of the Valuers Act 2003) appointed by the
Local Aboriginal Land Council concerned.
39 Acquisition of land
(1) The Minister may, for the purposes of this Act, acquire land
(including an interest in land) by agreement or by compulsory process in
accordance with the Land Acquisition (Just
Terms Compensation) Act 1991.
(2) The Minister may do so only if the Minister is of the opinion that
there are exceptional circumstances which warrant the acquisition of land for
the purpose of satisfying the objectives of this
Act.
(3) If so required by the Minister, the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council or the Local Aboriginal Land Council is to make provision to the
satisfaction of the Minister for the payment of the purchase price or of
compensation for compulsory acquisition (together with all necessary charges
and expenses incidental to the acquisition).
(4) The Minister may transfer land acquired under this section to an
Aboriginal Land Council or other organisation or body established for the
benefit of Aborigines.
(5) For the purposes of the Public
Works Act 1912, an acquisition of land under this section is
taken to be for an authorised work and the Minister is, in relation to that
authorised work, taken to be the Constructing
Authority.
(6) Part 3 of the Public Works Act
1912 does not apply in respect of works constructed under this
Act.
Division 4 Land dealings by Aboriginal Land
Councils
40 Interpretation
(1) In this Division and Division 4A:agreement includes an
arrangement.
deal with
land means:
(a) sell, exchange, lease, mortgage, dispose of, or otherwise create
or pass a legal or equitable interest in, land, or
(b) grant an easement or covenant over land or release an easement or
covenant benefiting land, or
(c) enter into a biobanking agreement relating to land under the
Threatened Species Conservation Act
1995 or a conservation agreement under the NPW Act,
or
(d) enter into a wilderness protection agreement relating to land
under the Wilderness Act
1987, or
(e) enter into a property vegetation plan under the Native Vegetation Act 2003,
or
(f) subdivide or consolidate land so as to affect, or consent to a
plan of subdivision or consolidation of land that affects, the interests of an
Aboriginal Land Council in that land, or
(g) make a development application in relation to land,
or
(h) any other action (including executing an instrument) relating to
land that is prescribed by the regulations.
Note. In this Act, a reference to land includes any estate or interest
in land, whether legal or equitable (see section 4 (1)).
dealing approval
certificate—see section 41.
development
application means:
(a) a development application within the meaning of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979, or
(b) an application for approval of a project under Part 3A of the
Environmental Planning and Assessment Act
1979.
General Register of
Deeds means the General Register of Deeds maintained under the
Conveyancing Act
1919.
land
dealing means an action in relation to land of a kind referred to in
paragraphs (a)–(h) of the definition of deal with
land.
land dealing
approval agreement means an agreement entered into under a condition
imposed under section 42G (6) (b).
Register means the
Register maintained under the Real Property
Act 1900.
registrable
instrument means:
(a) an instrument (other than a caveat or registration prohibition
notice) giving effect to or forming part of a land dealing (within the meaning
of this Division) that is registrable or capable of being made registrable
under the Real Property Act
1900 or in respect of which a recording is required or
permitted (under that or any other Act or Commonwealth Act) to be made in the
Register maintained under that Act, or
(b) a plan that is required or permitted to be registered under
Division 3 of Part 23 of the Conveyancing Act
1919 and that is or gives effect to or forms part of a land
dealing (within the meaning of this Division), or
(c) an instrument (other than a registration prohibition notice)
giving effect to or forming part of a land dealing (within the meaning of this
Division) that is registrable or in respect of which a recording is required
or permitted to be made in the General Register of
Deeds.
registration
approval certificate—see section 41.
registration
prohibition notice—see section 42O.
(2) For the purposes of this Division, land is vested in an Aboriginal Land
Council if:(a) the Council has a legal interest in the land,
or
(b) the land is the whole or part of land the subject of a claim under
section 36 and:(i) the Crown Lands Minister is satisfied that the land is claimable
Crown land under section 36, or
(ii) the Court has ordered under section 36 (7) that the land be
transferred to the Council,
and the land has not been transferred to the
Council.
(3) In this Division, an Aboriginal Land Council is taken to make a
development application for land vested in the Council if the
Council consents to such an application by another
person.
(4) For the purposes of this Division, land is of cultural
and heritage significance to Aborigines if the land is significant
in terms of the traditions, observances, customs, beliefs or history of
Aborigines.
40AA–40D (Repealed)
41 Certificates—land vested in Aboriginal Land
Councils
(1) A dealing approval
certificate:(a) for a land dealing relating to land vested in the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council, is a certificate in the prescribed form signed by the
Chief Executive Officer of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council that
the dealing complies with section 42D, or
(b) for a land dealing relating to land vested in a Local Aboriginal
Land Council, is a certificate in the prescribed form signed by the Chief
Executive Officer of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council that the
dealing has been approved by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
(2) A registration
approval certificate for a registrable instrument relating to land
vested in an Aboriginal Land Council is a certificate in the prescribed form
signed by the Chief Executive Officer of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council that:(a) the registration, under the Real
Property Act 1900, of the instrument is authorised under this
Act, or
(b) the registration, under Division 3 of Part 23 of the Conveyancing Act 1919, of the
instrument is authorised under this Act, or
(c) the making of a recording in respect of the instrument in the
Register or the General Register of Deeds is authorised under this
Act.
(3) A dealing approval certificate signed by the Chief Executive
Officer of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council is conclusive evidence
of the matters certified in the certificate in favour of any
person.
(4) Subsection (3) does not operate in favour of any person who had
knowledge that any of the matters certified in the certificate was incorrect
before the land dealing was completed (whether or not any subsequent
registration was required or has taken place).
(5) A dealing approval certificate must set out any conditions of the
relevant approval.
42 Restrictions on dealing with land subject to native
title
(1) An Aboriginal Land Council must not deal with land vested in it
subject to native title rights and interests under section 36 (9) or (9A)
unless the land is the subject of an approved determination of native title
(within the meaning of the Commonwealth Native Title
Act).
(2) This section does not apply to or in respect of:(a) the lease of land by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
or one or more Local Aboriginal Land Councils to the Minister administering
the NPW Act under Part 4A of that Act in accordance with a condition imposed
under section 36A (2), or
(b) a transfer of land to another Aboriginal Land Council,
or
(c) a lease of land referred to in section 37 (3)
(b).
42A Restrictions on dealing with land reserved or dedicated
under the NPW Act
(1) An Aboriginal Land Council must not deal with land that is vested
in it and that is reserved or dedicated under Part 4A of the NPW Act except in
accordance with that Act.
(2) This Division and Division 4A (other than sections 40, 42B and
this section) do not apply to land referred to in subsection
(1).
42B Appropriation or resumption of Aboriginal land
Despite anything in any Act, land vested in an Aboriginal Land
Council must not be appropriated or resumed except by an Act of
Parliament.
42C Land dealings by Aboriginal Land Councils
generally
(1) A land dealing by an Aboriginal Land Council in contravention of
section 42D or 42E is void.
(2) This Division is in addition to any requirements of or under any
other Act in relation to a land dealing.
(3) This section has effect despite any other Act or
law.
42D Land dealings by New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must not deal with
land vested in it unless:(a) it has notified the Local Aboriginal Land Council (if any) for the
area in which the land is situated in writing of the land affected and the
type of proposed dealing, and
(b) it has considered any comments made by that Council within 28 days
of that notice being given, and
(c) in the case of a land dealing with land transferred to the New
South Wales Aboriginal Land Council under section 36, both the Crown Lands
Minister referred to in that section and the Minister have been notified of
the proposed dealing, and
(d) it has had regard to its community, land and business plan and any
of its policies that are applicable, and
(e) if it is appropriate to do so in the circumstances, it has
considered the cultural and heritage significance of the land to Aborigines in
determining whether to deal with the land, and
(f) the land dealing complies with a resolution of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council approving the dealing.
(2) The Chief Executive Officer of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council must give a dealing approval certificate for a land dealing by the
Council if the Chief Executive Officer is satisfied that the Council has
complied with this Division in relation to the
dealing.
(3) The Chief Executive Officer of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council must give a registration approval certificate for an instrument if the
Chief Executive Officer is satisfied that the instrument is a registrable
instrument relating to a land dealing by the Council that complies with this
Division.
(4) This section does not apply to or in respect of the following land
dealings by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council:(a) a lease for a period of less than 3 years (including any option to
renew the lease),
(b) a land dealing prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of
this section.
42E Approval required for land dealings by Local Aboriginal
Land Councils
(1) A Local Aboriginal Land Council must not deal with land vested in
it except in accordance with an approval of the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council under section 42G.
(2) However, the approval of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council is not required for the following land dealings by a Local Aboriginal
Land Council:(a) a lease for a period of less than 3 years (including any option to
renew the lease), other than a social housing management
lease,
(b) a land dealing prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of
this section.
(3) A Local Aboriginal Land Council must not deal with land vested in
it that is land transferred to the Council under section 36 unless both the
Crown Lands Minister referred to in that section and the Minister have been
notified of the proposed dealing.
(4) An agreement to deal with land vested in a Local Aboriginal Land
Council that is made by the Council is, if the land dealing is not approved by
the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council and an approval is required,
unenforceable against the Local Aboriginal Land
Council.
(5) A person is not entitled to damages, or any other remedy, against
a Local Aboriginal Land Council in respect of a warranty or other promise
relating to an unenforceable agreement referred to in subsection
(4).
(6) In this section:social housing
management lease means a lease entered into for the purposes of the
provision of or management of a social housing scheme (other than a
residential tenancy agreement).
(7) This section has effect despite any other Act or
law.
Note. Approval of a land dealing by a Local Aboriginal Land Council must
be by resolution of the voting members (see section 52G
(e)).
42F Applications for approval of LALC land dealings by NSWALC
and assessment fees
(1) A Local Aboriginal Land Council may apply to the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council for the approval of a land dealing relating to land
vested in the Local Aboriginal Land Council.
(2) An application by a Local Aboriginal Land Council to the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council for approval of a dealing with land is:(a) to be made in accordance with the regulations,
and
(b) to contain the matters prescribed by the regulations,
and
(c) to be accompanied by any application fee, and any documents,
prescribed by the regulations.
(3) An application may also be accompanied by such additional
documents and other information as the Local Aboriginal Land Council thinks
fit.
(4) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may require the Local
Aboriginal Land Council to provide additional documents and other information
in relation to an application.
(5) Regulations may be made for or with respect to the
following:(a) the fees that may be charged by the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council for assessing and determining applications for approval of land
dealings,
(b) without limiting paragraph (a), the fees that may be charged by
the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council with respect to the costs of
appointing an expert advisory panel to assess an application for approval of a
land dealing,
(c) waiver of assessment fees,
(d) provision of securities in respect of the payment of assessment
fees,
(e) notice by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council to
applicants for approval of proposed assessment fees or security arrangements
and other matters relating to determination of the
application,
(f) the circumstances in which the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council may refuse to assess or determine an
application.
42G Approval of LALC land dealings by NSWALC
(1) Approval requirements
The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must (subject to
subsection (2) and any requirements of the regulations), on an application for
approval of a land dealing being made by a Local Aboriginal Land Council in
accordance with this Act, approve (with or without conditions) the land
dealing if the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council is satisfied
that:(a) the application is in accordance with this Act,
and
(b) the members of the Local Aboriginal Land Council have passed a
resolution in accordance with subsection (5) and that the dealing is in
accordance with that resolution.
(2) Refusal if contrary to LALC members’
interests
The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may refuse to approve
a land dealing if it considers that the dealing is, or is likely to be,
contrary to the interests of the members of the Local Aboriginal Land Council
or other Aboriginal persons within the area of that
Council.
(3) In considering whether a land dealing is contrary to any such
interests, the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may consider (and is
not limited to considering) the following:(a) the community, land and business plan of the Local Aboriginal Land
Council and whether, and to what extent, the land dealing is consistent with
that plan,
(b) the terms of the land dealing and whether those terms are fair and
equitable to the Local Aboriginal Land Council in all the
circumstances,
(c) whether the Local Aboriginal Land Council, in passing the
resolution, had proper regard to the cultural and heritage significance of the
land to Aborigines,
(d) any assessment of the application for approval of the land dealing
by an expert advisory panel under this Division,
(e) whether it is likely that the proceeds of the land dealing will be
managed and applied in the interests of the members of the Local Aboriginal
Land Council or other Aboriginal persons within the area of the
Council,
(f) any applicable policy of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council in relation to land dealings by Local Aboriginal Land
Councils.
(4) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council is not required to
consider any additional information or other material provided by a person
other than the Local Aboriginal Land Council in considering whether a land
dealing is, or is likely to be, contrary to the interests of the members of
the Local Aboriginal Land Council or other Aboriginal persons within the area
of that Council.
(5) Requirements for approval resolutions
A Local Aboriginal Land Council resolution approving a land
dealing must:(a) be passed at a meeting of which prior notice was given, in
accordance with the regulations, and at which a quorum was present,
and
(b) be passed by not less than 80 per cent of the voting members of
the Council present at the meeting, and
(c) contain the following matters:(i) the identity of the land,
(ii) a statement that the impact of the land dealing on the cultural
and heritage significance of the land to Aborigines has been considered in
determining whether to approve the dealing,
(iii) the manner in which the land is to be dealt
with,
(iv) any conditions to which the approval of the dealing is
subject.
(6) Conditions of approval
The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may only impose the
following kinds of conditions on an approval of a land dealing:(a) a condition that is to be satisfied before completion of the land
dealing,
(b) a condition that requires the Local Aboriginal Land Council or one
or more parties to the land dealing to enter into an agreement with the New
South Wales Aboriginal Land Council as to specified matters to be carried out
before or after the dealing is completed.
Note. Section 119 enables conditions to be imposed on approvals and also
enables approvals to be revoked.
(7) Without limiting any other action that may be taken, failure by a
Local Aboriginal Land Council to comply with a provision of a land dealing
approval agreement is taken to be a breach by the Council of this
Act.
(8) Approval may relate to more than one dealing
An approval under this section may relate to one or more land
dealings.
42H Reasons for refusal or conditions
If the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council refuses an
application for approval of a land dealing, or approves a land dealing subject
to conditions, it must give the Local Aboriginal Land Council concerned a
written statement of the reasons for the decision within 28 days after a
request by that Local Aboriginal Land Council for the
statement.
42I Assessment of dealings by expert advisory
panels
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may constitute expert
advisory panels to assess applications for approval of land dealings by Local
Aboriginal Land Councils.
(2) An expert advisory panel is to be constituted in accordance with
the regulations.
(3) Regulations may be made for or with respect to the
following:(a) a register of persons eligible to be appointed to expert advisory
panels,
(b) the addition of persons to, or removal of persons from, the
register,
(c) qualifications for inclusion on the register,
(d) the appointment and removal of members of
panels,
(e) the remuneration of members of panels,
(f) the circumstances in which an assessment by a panel is required or
may be requested,
(g) reports by panels,
(h) regulating the assessment of matters by panels in respect of
conflicts of interest and prohibiting persons from assessing matters if there
is a conflict of interest or a pecuniary interest in a
matter.
42J Amendment and revocation of land dealing
approvals
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must not amend or
revoke an approval of a land dealing if the land dealing has been completed or
a registrable instrument has been registered in reliance on that
approval.Note. This provision limits the power of the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council to amend or revoke an approval (see section 119
(4)).
(2) If an approval of a land dealing under this Division is revoked by
the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council, any dealing approval certificate
or registration approval certificate relating to the land dealing ceases to
have effect.
(3) A Local Aboriginal Land Council must return any dealing approval
certificate or registration approval certificate given to it that is revoked
to the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council within 14 days of notice of the
revocation being given.
42K Certificates for dealings by Local Aboriginal Land
Councils
(1) Dealing approval certificate
If the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council approves a land
dealing by a Local Aboriginal Land Council under this Division, the Chief
Executive Officer of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must give a
dealing approval certificate for the land dealing to the Local Aboriginal Land
Council within 14 days of approval being given.
(2) Registration approval certificates
The Chief Executive Officer of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council must give a registration approval certificate for an instrument
relating to a land dealing by a Local Aboriginal Land Council if the Chief
Executive Officer is satisfied as to the following:(a) that the instrument is a registrable instrument giving effect to
or forming part of a land dealing approved by the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council under this Division,
(b) that any conditions of the approval by the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council of the land dealing to which the instrument relates
have been met,
(c) that any community development levy payable in respect of that
land dealing has been paid.
(3) The Chief Executive Officer may refuse to give a dealing approval
certificate or a registration approval certificate under this section if any
assessment fee payable in relation to the application for approval of the land
dealing to which the certificate relates has not been paid or is not subject
to arrangements for payment that are satisfactory to the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council.
(4) For the purposes of any other Act or law, a dealing approval
certificate for a land dealing by a Local Aboriginal Land Council land is
taken to be a written consent by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
to the dealing.
42L Review of approval decisions
(1) Despite any other Act or law, the only person who has standing to
bring proceedings:(a) under the Land and Environment
Court Act 1979, or
(b) for judicial review in any other court,
in relation to a decision to approve or not to approve of a land dealing,
or an act or omission of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council in
connection with any such decision, is the Local Aboriginal Land Council
concerned.
(2) This section does not confer any standing on a Local Aboriginal
Land Council in respect of class 3 proceedings under the Land and Environment Court Act
1979 in connection with any such
decision.
42M Registration of dealings and instruments
(1) The Registrar-General must, if an Aboriginal Land Council is the
registered proprietor of an estate in fee simple in land, make a recording in
the Register to the following effect:(a) that the land is subject to this Division,
(b) that a registrable instrument may not be registered, or a
recording in respect of a registrable instrument may not be made, unless the
Registrar-General is satisfied that a registration approval certificate has
been obtained or is not required.
(2) The Registrar-General must not register a registrable instrument
in relation to land referred to in subsection (1) if the registered proprietor
of the land is an Aboriginal Land Council, unless the registrable instrument
is accompanied by:(a) a registration approval certificate, or
(b) a statement signed by the Chief Executive Officer of the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council that the instrument gives effect to or forms
part of a land dealing for which a registration approval certificate is not
required under this Division.
Note. If the registered proprietor of land is an Aboriginal Land
Council, an instrument or plan affecting the land that is accompanied by a
registration approval certificate or the signed statement referred to above
has on registration or recording all the protections afforded under the
Real Property Act
1900.
(3) Despite section 42 of the Real
Property Act 1900 or any other Act, the registration of a
registrable instrument, or the making of a recording, that is prohibited by
this section has no effect and does not create or pass or otherwise affect any
estate or interest in the land of any registered proprietor of the land, as
otherwise recorded under the Real Property
Act 1900.
(4) In this section, register a registrable
instrument means:(a) register the instrument in the Register or under the Conveyancing Act 1919,
or
(b) make a recording in the Register in respect of any such
instrument, or
(c) register a plan under Division 3 of Part 23 of the Conveyancing Act
1919.
(5) This section does not affect the operation of any other
prohibition or restriction relating to transfers or other dealings with land
under this or any other Act.
42N Certain land dealing approval agreements to run with
land
(1) This section applies to a land dealing approval agreement if it
imposes obligations as to the use, development or management of, or dealings
with, land vested in, or formerly vested in, an Aboriginal Land
Council.
(2) A land dealing approval agreement may be registered under this
section if the following persons agree to its registration:(a) the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council,
(b) if the agreement relates to land under the Real Property Act 1900, each person
who is the registered proprietor of an estate or interest in the
land,
(c) if the agreement relates to land not under the Real Property Act 1900, each person
who is a party to the agreement.
(3) On lodgment by an Aboriginal Land Council of an application for
registration in a form approved by the Registrar-General, the
Registrar-General is to register the land dealing approval agreement:(a) by making an entry in the relevant folio of the Register if the
agreement relates to land under the Real
Property Act 1900, or
(b) by registering the agreement in the General Register of Deeds if
the agreement relates to land not under the Real Property Act
1900.
(4) A land dealing approval agreement that has been registered by the
Registrar-General under this section is binding on, and is enforceable by and
against, the successors in title to the owner who entered into the agreement
and those successors in title are taken to have notice of the
agreement.
(5) The Registrar-General may, on the request in writing of the Chief
Executive Officer of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council, cancel the
registration of a land dealing approval agreement.
(6) A reference in this section to a land dealing approval agreement
includes a reference to any agreement amending a land dealing approval
agreement.
(7) In this section:successors in
title includes a mortgagee, chargee, covenant chargee or other
person in possession of land pursuant to a mortgage, charge, positive covenant
or other encumbrance entered into before or after the registration of the land
dealing approval agreement.
42O Enforcement of land dealing approval
agreements—registration prohibition notices
(1) This section applies to land under the Real Property Act 1900 if:(a) a land dealing approval agreement has been registered under
section 42N, or
(b) a current registered proprietor of an estate or interest in the
land is a party to a land dealing approval agreement in respect of the
land.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may lodge with the
Registrar-General a notice in writing prohibiting, except with the consent of
that Council, the registration or recording of any dealing affecting an estate
or interest in land to which this section applies (a registration
prohibition notice).
(3) A registration prohibition notice is to be in the form approved by
the Registrar-General and must contain the following:(a) the name and address of the person who is the registered
proprietor of an estate or interest in the land affected by the
notice,
(b) if the registration notice relates only to part of the land
described in a folio of the Register, a description of that
part,
(c) a statement that the prohibition notice relates to the land (or
part of the land) in respect of which a dealing approval agreement has been
entered into under this Division.
(4) On the lodgment of a registration prohibition notice, the
Registrar-General must give notice in writing of the lodgment to any
registered proprietor of an estate or interest in land affected by the notice,
at the address specified in the notice.
(5) Notice of lodgment is not required to be given to a registered
proprietor under subsection (4) if the consent of the registered proprietor to
the lodgment is endorsed on the registration prohibition
notice.
(6) The Registrar-General must, if satisfied that the notice complies
with any requirements made in respect of it under this Division or the Real Property Act 1900, record in
the Register such particulars of the notice as the Registrar-General thinks
appropriate.
(7) A caveat does not prevent the recording of a registration
prohibition notice under this section.
(8) A registration prohibition notice lodged under this section has
effect when particulars of the notice are recorded in the Register under this
section.
(9) A registration prohibition notice may be withdrawn by the New
South Wales Aboriginal Land Council, by notice in writing in the form approved
by the Registrar-General and on payment of the fee (if any) prescribed by the
regulations, and on being withdrawn, ceases to be in
force.
42P Effect of registration prohibition notices
(1) The Registrar-General must not, except with the consent in writing
of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council notified in writing by the
Chief Executive Officer of the Council, record or register in the Register any
dealing if it appears to the Registrar-General that the registration or
recording of the dealing is prohibited by a registration prohibition notice
that has effect under this Division.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must not refuse to
give consent under this section if:(a) the dealing or the registration or recording of the dealing is
permitted by the applicable land dealing approval agreement,
or
(b) the dealing or the registration or recording does not materially
affect the performance or enforcement of that
agreement.
(3) The regulations may provide that a registration prohibition notice
does not prevent the Registrar-General from registering or recording a dealing
of a class prescribed by the regulations.
(4) If in any legal proceedings a question arises as to the validity
of a registration prohibition notice, the court is to disregard any failure to
comply strictly with the requirements of this Division as to the form of the
notice.
(5) This section:(a) has effect despite the Real
Property Act 1900 or any other Act or law,
and
(b) does not affect the operation of any other prohibition or
restriction relating to transfers or other dealings with
land.
Division 4A Community development levy
42Q Interpretation
Words and expressions used in this Division, and in any
regulations made under this Division, have the same meaning as they have in
the Duties Act
1997.
42R Community development levy payable for certain
transactions
(1) A Local Aboriginal Land Council is liable to pay the community
development levy for any dutiable transaction to which the levy applies that
occurs in relation to a dealing with land vested in the Council (whether or
not the Council is liable to pay duty in respect of the transaction under the
Duties Act
1997).
(2) The community development levy applies to the following dutiable
transactions:(a) a transfer of land,
(b) an agreement for the sale or transfer of land,
(c) a declaration of trust over land,
(d) a lease of land in respect of which a premium is paid or agreed to
be paid,
(e) any other transaction prescribed by the
regulations.
(3) Except as provided by subsection (4), the community development
levy does not apply to the following dutiable transactions:(a) except as provided by the regulations, transactions that are
exempt from duty under the Duties Act
1997,
(b) transactions under a community benefit scheme providing home
ownership for Aboriginal persons,
(c) transactions prescribed by the
regulations.
(4) The community development levy is payable in respect of a dutiable
transaction even though duty is not chargeable on the transaction because of
section 280 of the Duties Act
1997.
(5) The regulations may provide that the community development levy is
payable for other transactions in relation to dealings with land vested in a
Local Aboriginal Land Council and may also provide for the amount of the levy
for those transactions.
(6) For the purposes of this Division, a dutiable transaction occurs
when it is taken to occur for the purposes of the Duties Act
1997.
42S Community development levy not payable on transactions
between Councils
The community development levy is not payable in respect of a
dutiable transaction between a Local Aboriginal Land Council and another
Aboriginal Land Council.
42T Amount of community development levy
The amount of the community development levy payable for a
dutiable transaction is the prescribed percentage (if any) of the amount of
duty payable for the dutiable transaction.
42U Payment of community development levy amounts
(1) Amounts of community development levy collected by the Chief
Commissioner of State Revenue are to be paid to the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council by the Chief Commissioner as agreed between the Council and the
Chief Commissioner.Note. The Taxation Administration Act
1996 (other than Part 4 of that Act), which includes
provisions relating to the collection, payment and non-payment of tax, applies
to the community development levy. The Chief Commissioner of State Revenue
will be responsible for the collection of the community development
levy.
(2) The Chief Commissioner of State Revenue may retain from the
community development levy collected by the Chief Commissioner amounts for
payment of the Chief Commissioner’s costs in relation to the Chief
Commissioner’s functions relating to the
levy.
(3) Any such costs are to be in accordance with an agreement between
the Chief Commissioner of State Revenue and the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council.
(4) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must pay to the New
South Wales Aboriginal Land Council Community Fund established under section
149A amounts of community development levy received from the Chief
Commissioner.
(5) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must also pay to that
Fund an additional amount equal to the amount of community development levy
paid by the Chief Commissioner of State Revenue to the Council under this
section.
(6) The additional amount payable by the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council under subsection (5) must be paid not later than 28 days after
receipt by the Council of a payment of levy under this
section.
(7) Amounts of community development levy are to be paid in accordance
with this section, despite any provision of the Taxation Administration Act
1996.
42V NSWALC payments may be waived
The Minister may waive payment of the whole or any part of an
amount payable by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council under section
42U (5), if the Minister is of the opinion that it is appropriate to do so,
having regard to the financial circumstances of the Council, its obligations
under this Act and any other matters the Minister considers
relevant.
42W Regulations
The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the
following:(a) the application of provisions of the Duties Act 1997 in respect of the
community development levy,
(b) the period within which the community development levy is
payable,
(c) interim assessments of community development
levy,
(d) without limiting paragraph (a), the stamping of
instruments.
42X Relationship with Taxation Administration Act
1996
This Division, and any regulations made under this Division, are
to be read together with the Taxation
Administration Act 1996 (other than Part 4 of that
Act).
Division 5 Rates
43 Exemption of Aboriginal lands from the payment of
rates
(1) The regulations may declare that specified land (being land vested
in an Aboriginal Land Council) is exempt from:(a) the payment of rates and charges, or from the payment of specified
rates and charges, under the Local
Government Act 1993, or
(b) the payment of rates, levies and charges, or from the payment of
specified rates, levies and charges, under the Hunter Water Act 1991,
or
(c) the payment of service charges, or the payment of specified
service charges, under the following Acts:(i) the Sydney Water Act
1994,
(ii) the Water Management Act
2000.
(2) A regulation made under subsection (1) may provide that the
exemption referred to in that subsection is to operate for a limited period of
time.
44 Proceedings for non-payment of certain rates for
Aboriginal lands barred
Notwithstanding the provisions of:(a) the Local Government Act
1993,
(b) the Water Board
(Corporatisation) Act 1994,
(c) the Hunter Water Board
(Corporatisation) Act 1991, or
(d) the Broken Hill Water and Sewerage Act
1938,
or any other rule of law, land vested in an Aboriginal Land Council shall
not be sold, whether by way of writ of execution or otherwise, for overdue
rates payable under any of those Acts nor shall action be taken to wind up any
such Council because of non-payment of any such rates.
44A Payment of rates by NSW Aboriginal Land
Council
(1) Where rates payable under an Act referred to in section 44 have
been unpaid for a period of not less than 12 months in respect of a rating
year commencing on 1 January 1985 or any subsequent date, the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council shall, within 30 days after receipt of a notice from
the appropriate rating authority specifying the total of the amount unpaid,
the amount of any interest accrued on that amount and any extra charges, pay
that total to that rating authority.
(2) A rating authority may recover an amount unpaid after the
expiration of the period of 30 days referred to in subsection (1) from the New
South Wales Aboriginal Land Council as a debt in a court of competent
jurisdiction.
(3) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may recover an amount
paid under this section from the Local Aboriginal Land Council in whose area
the land subject to the rate is situated.
Part 3 Mineral rights and mining
45 Mineral rights and mining on Aboriginal land
(1) In this section:(a) mining
operations means prospecting, exploring or mining for mineral
resources or other natural resources, and
(b) (Repealed)
(2) Notwithstanding any other Act, but subject to this section:(a) any transfer of lands to an Aboriginal Land Council under section
36 includes the transfer of the mineral resources or other natural resources
contained in those lands,
(b) any vesting of the title to lands in an Aboriginal Land Council
under section 37 includes, subject to that section, the vesting of the title
to the mineral resources or other natural resources contained in those lands,
and
(c) where:(i) an Aboriginal Land Council purchases lands under section 38,
or
(ii) lands are acquired under section 39 and vested in an Aboriginal
Land Council,
any mineral resources or other natural resources which were, immediately
before the purchase or vesting, vested in the Crown shall, on that purchase or
vesting, become vested in the Aboriginal Land
Council.
(3) To the extent to which an Act provides for a person to explore for
or exploit mineral resources, or other natural resources, vested in another
person, the Act does not apply to or in respect of mineral resources, or other
natural resources, vested in the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council or a
Local Aboriginal Land Council.
(4) Subject to this section, no person shall carry on mining
operations on the lands of an Aboriginal Land Council without the consent of
that Council.
(5) An Aboriginal Land Council may give a consent under subsection (4)
subject to such terms and conditions, including terms or conditions with
respect to payment of fees or royalties, as it thinks fit to
impose.
(6) A Local Aboriginal Land Council shall not give its consent under
subsection (4) unless either:(a) the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council,
or
(b) the Court, under subsection (8),
has approved of the consent being given and of any terms and conditions
proposed to be attached to the consent.
(7) Where a Local Aboriginal Land Council has submitted to the New
South Wales Aboriginal Land Council a proposal to give a consent under
subsection (4), and any terms and conditions proposed to be attached to the
consent, and the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council:(a) has refused to approve of the proposed consent being given or of
the proposed terms and conditions, or
(b) has not, within 1 month after the submission of the proposed
consent and of the proposed terms and conditions or such longer period as the
Local Aboriginal Land Council and the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
agree to, approved of the consent being given and of the proposed terms and
conditions (or those terms and conditions as altered with the consent of the
Local Aboriginal Land Council),
the Local Aboriginal Land Council or the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council may refer the proposal or the proposed terms and conditions, as the
case may require, to the Court to be dealt with under subsection
(8).
(8) Where a proposal to give a consent or the terms and conditions
proposed to be attached to a consent are referred to the Court under
subsection (7), the Court shall approve or refuse to approve of the giving of
the consent or of the proposed terms and conditions, with or without
alterations specified by the Court.
(9) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council or the Court shall
not, under this section, refuse to approve of the giving of a consent or of
the terms and conditions proposed to be attached to a consent except on the
ground that the giving of the consent is, or those terms and conditions are,
inequitable to the Local Aboriginal Land Council concerned or would be
detrimental to the interests of members of other Local Aboriginal Land
Councils.
(10) A consent given in contravention of this section is
void.
(11) Nothing in or done under this Act operates to abridge or control
the prerogative rights and powers of the Crown with respect to gold mines and
silver mines or affects the Crown’s ownership of coal and
petroleum.
(12) This section does not apply to or in relation to any mining
operations that are or may be carried on on any lands of an Aboriginal Land
Council:(a) in respect of gold, silver, coal or petroleum,
or
(b) in respect of any other mineral, pursuant to any right conferred
by or under the Mining Act
1992, the Offshore Minerals
Act 1999, or any other law, being a right in force at the time
the lands were vested in that Council or a mineral claim or authority referred
to in subsection (13) (b), or a renewal or extension of any such right,
mineral claim or authority.
(13) Nothing in this section prevents:(a) the renewal or extension of any right, mineral claim or authority
referred to in subsection (12) (b), or
(b) the granting of an authority or mineral claim in accordance with
an exclusive right conferred by the Mining
Act 1992 or of a licence in accordance with an exclusive right
conferred by the Offshore Minerals Act
1999,
under and subject to the provisions of the Mining Act 1992 or the Offshore Minerals Act 1999 as the
case requires.
46 Fees or royalties for mining on Aboriginal land
(1) All fees and royalties payable in respect of mining on land owned
by a Local Aboriginal Land Council are payable to the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council and not the Local Aboriginal Land
Council.
(2) Such fees and royalties together with the fees and royalties
payable to the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council in respect of mining on
its land must, when received by it, be paid into a separate account in a bank,
building society or credit union to be called the Mining Royalties
Account.
(3) Money to the credit of the Mining Royalties Account is to be
disbursed, in accordance with the regulations, as follows:(a) 40 per cent is to be paid to the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council,
(b) the balance, in so far as it is derived from the fees and
royalties payable in respect of mining on land owned by a Local Aboriginal
Land Council, is to be paid to the Local Aboriginal Land
Council.
(4) Money to the credit of the Mining Royalties Account may be
invested in any manner authorised by the regulations pending its disbursement
in accordance with this section.
Part 4 Hunting, fishing and gathering
47 Agreements to permit hunting, fishing or
gathering
Subject to the provisions of any other Act and any rule, by-law,
regulation, ordinance or like instrument, a Local Aboriginal Land Council may
negotiate agreements with the owner, occupier or person in control of any land
to permit any specified Aborigines or group of Aborigines to have access to
the land for the purpose of hunting, fishing or gathering on the
land.
48 Access permits may be issued by the Court
(1) Where a Local Aboriginal Land Council:(a) desires to obtain rights of access for any specified Aborigines or
group of Aborigines for the purpose of hunting or fishing for, or the
gathering of, traditional foods for domestic purposes, being access to land
traditionally used for those purposes or to land giving access to any land so
used, and
(b) has been unable to negotiate an agreement to obtain those
rights,
the Council may apply to the Court for a permit conferring those
rights.
(2) An application under subsection (1) shall be:(a) made as prescribed, and
(b) lodged with the Registrar.
(3) The Registrar shall refer an application lodged with the Registrar
under subsection (2) to the Court together with a statement as to who appears
to the Registrar to be the owner, occupier or person in control of the land to
which the application relates.
(4) The Court shall:(a) give notice of any application referred to it under subsection (3)
to any person who, in its opinion, is likely to be directly affected by the
issue of the permit applied for, or to the public generally if it considers it
appropriate, and
(b) by that notice, provide that objections against the application
may be lodged within the time specified in that
notice.
(5) The Court shall consider:(a) any application referred to it under subsection (3),
and
(b) any objections lodged against the
application,
and, subject to subsection (6), shall either:(c) issue a permit conferring such rights of access as it specifies in
the permit on Aborigines or any group of Aborigines so specified,
or
(d) refuse to issue the permit.
(6) The Court shall issue a permit under subsection (5) in pursuance
of an application under subsection (1) only if it is satisfied that the rights
applied for are rights of a kind referred to in subsection
(1).
(7) A permit issued under subsection (5) (c):(a) shall be subject to the provisions of any other Act and any rule,
by-law, regulation, ordinance or like instrument, and
(b) may be subject to such terms and conditions as the Court thinks
fit and are specified in the permit.
(8) Any person who fails to allow access to any person in accordance
with a permit issued under this section shall be guilty of an offence against
this Act.Maximum penalty: 10 penalty
units.
(9) The Court may, on the application of any person and on reasonable
cause being shown, revoke a permit issued under this
section.
Part 5 Local Aboriginal Land Councils
Division 1 Constitution of Local Aboriginal Land Councils and
Local Aboriginal Land Council areas
49 Constitution of Local Aboriginal Land Council
areas
(cf former section 5)
(1) The Minister may, in the manner prescribed by the regulations,
constitute an area as a Local Aboriginal Land Council
area.
(2) The Governor may make regulations for or with respect to the
constitution of Local Aboriginal Land Council
areas.
(3) Without affecting the generality of subsection (2), regulations
may be made under that subsection for or with respect to the following:(a) applications for the constitution of areas as Local Aboriginal
Land Council areas,
(b) the making of recommendations to the Minister with respect to
proposals to constitute Local Aboriginal Land Council
areas,
(c) the lodging of objections against:(i) the refusal of applications for the constitution of Local
Aboriginal Land Council areas or the failure to deal with any such
applications, and
(ii) proposals to constitute Local Aboriginal Land Council
areas,
(d) the reference to the Court of objections of the kind referred to
in paragraph (c) and the hearing and determination by the Court of any such
objections.
50 Constitution of Local Aboriginal Land Councils
(cf former section 6 (1) and (2))
(1) A Local Aboriginal Land Council is constituted by this Act for
each Local Aboriginal Land Council area.
(2) A Local Aboriginal Land Council is a body
corporate.
(3) The corporate name of a Local Aboriginal Land Council is
“Local Aboriginal Land Council” preceded by the name of the area
of the Council.
51 Objects of Local Aboriginal Land Councils
(cf clause 5 of Schedule 1 to 1996 Regulation)
The objects of each Local Aboriginal Land Council are to improve,
protect and foster the best interests of all Aboriginal persons within the
Council’s area and other persons who are members of the
Council.
Division 1A Functions of Local Aboriginal Land
Councils
52 Functions of Local Aboriginal Land Councils
(1) A Local Aboriginal Land Council has the functions conferred or
imposed on it by or under this or any other Act.
(2) Land acquisition
A Local Aboriginal Land Council has the following functions in
relation to the acquisition of land and related matters:(a) in accordance with this Act and the regulations, to acquire land
and to use, manage, control, hold or dispose of, or otherwise deal with, land
vested in or acquired by the Council,
(b) functions relating to the acquisition of land and any other
functions conferred on it by or under Part 4A of the NPW
Act,
(c) to submit proposals for the listing in Schedule 14 to the NPW Act
of lands of cultural significance to Aboriginal persons that are reserved
under the NPW Act,
(d) to negotiate the lease by the Council or by the Council and one or
more other Aboriginal Land Councils of lands to which section 36A applies to
the Minister administering the NPW Act,
(e) when exercising its functions with respect to land that is the
subject of a lease, or proposed lease, under Part 4A of the NPW Act, to act in
the best interests of the Aboriginal owners of the land
concerned,
(f) to make written applications to the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council for the acquisition by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council of land on behalf of, or to be vested in, the Local Aboriginal Land
Council,
(g) to make claims to Crown lands.
(3) Land use and management
A Local Aboriginal Land Council has the following functions in
relation to land use and management:(a) to consider applications to prospect or mine for minerals on the
Council’s land and to make recommendations to the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council in respect of such applications,
(b) to protect the interests of Aboriginal persons in its area in
relation to the acquisition, management, use, control and disposal of its
land.
(4) Aboriginal culture and heritage
A Local Aboriginal Land Council has the following functions in
relation to Aboriginal culture and heritage:(a) to take action to protect the culture and heritage of Aboriginal
persons in the Council’s area, subject to any other
law,
(b) to promote awareness in the community of the culture and heritage
of Aboriginal persons in the Council’s area.
(5) Financial stewardship
A Local Aboriginal Land Council has the following functions in
relation to financial management and business planning:(a) to prepare and implement, in accordance with this Act, a
community, land and business plan,
(b) to manage, in accordance with this Act and consistently with its
community, land and business plan, the investment of any assets of the
Council,
(c) to facilitate business enterprises, in accordance with this Act
and the regulations and consistently with its community, land and business
plan.
(6) Other functions prescribed by regulations
A Local Aboriginal Land Council has any other functions prescribed
by the regulations.
Note. Under section 50 of the Interpretation Act 1987, a Local
Aboriginal Land Council has certain functions as a statutory corporation,
including the power to purchase, exchange, take on lease, hold, dispose of and
otherwise deal with property. This provision is subject to the provisions of
this Act.
52A Community benefits schemes
(1) A Local Aboriginal Land Council may, in accordance with an
approval of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council:(a) directly or indirectly, provide community benefits under community
benefits schemes, and
(b) without limiting paragraph (a), provide, acquire, construct,
upgrade or extend residential accommodation for Aboriginal persons in its
area.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must not approve a
community benefits scheme of a Local Aboriginal Land Council unless it is
satisfied that:(a) the proposed scheme complies with this Act and the regulations,
and
(b) the proposed scheme is consistent with any applicable policy of
the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council, and
(c) the proposed scheme is consistent with the community, land and
business plan of the Local Aboriginal Land Council, and
(d) the proposed scheme is fair and equitable and will be administered
in a way that is responsible and transparent, and
(e) the proposed scheme is not likely to prevent the Local Aboriginal
Land Council from being able to meet its debts as and when they fall due,
and
(f) the need for the proposed benefits is not otherwise being
adequately met.
(3) A Local Aboriginal Land Council must ensure that any community
benefits scheme under which community benefits are provided by it or on its
behalf:(a) complies with this Act and the regulations,
and
(b) is consistent with any applicable policy of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council, and
(c) is consistent with the community, land and business plan of the
Local Aboriginal Land Council.
(4) A Local Aboriginal Land Council may provide community benefits
under a community benefits scheme to persons within the areas of other Local
Aboriginal Land Councils and may provide community benefits in conjunction
with one or more other Aboriginal Land Councils.
52AA Powers of Local Aboriginal Land Councils with respect to
property
(1) A Local Aboriginal Land Council may do or suffer in relation to
its property any act or thing that it could lawfully do or suffer if it were a
natural person having, in the case of land, the same estate or interest in the
property as the Council.
(2) In particular, without limiting the generality of subsection (1),
a Local Aboriginal Land Council may do or suffer any such act or thing to
enable it to:(a) improve, or cause to be improved, any land vested in it,
or
(b) explore for and exploit, or cause to be explored for or exploited,
mineral resources or other natural resources vested in
it.
(3) This section is subject to this Act.
52B Social housing schemes
(1) This section applies to a community benefits scheme in relation to
the acquisition and provision by or on behalf of a Local Aboriginal Land
Council of residential accommodation for Aboriginal persons in its area and to
the construction, upgrading and extension of any such accommodation (a
social housing
scheme).
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must not approve a
social housing scheme under section 52A unless:(a) it is satisfied that the income (including any subsidies and
grants) from any existing social housing scheme provided by or on behalf of
the Local Aboriginal Land Council or of the proposed scheme is or will be
sufficient to meet all the expenses of the scheme concerned, including long
term maintenance requirements, and
(b) it has considered the likely impact of the proposed scheme on the
overall financial situation of the Local Aboriginal Land
Council.
(3) A Local Aboriginal Land Council may provide a social housing
scheme by using the services of another body or agency, or with the assistance
of another body or agency, approved by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council either generally or in relation to a particular social housing
scheme.
(4) (Repealed)
52C Trusts
(1) A Local Aboriginal Land Council may, with the approval of the New
South Wales Aboriginal Land Council, establish, or participate in the
establishment of, a trust for the purpose of providing a community benefits
scheme.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must not give an
approval for the purposes of this section unless it is of the opinion that the
proposed action by the Local Aboriginal Land Council:(a) complies with this Act and the regulations,
and
(b) is consistent with any applicable policy of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council, and
(c) is consistent with the community, land and business plan of the
Local Aboriginal Land Council, and
(d) is not likely to prevent the Local Aboriginal Land Council from
being able to meet its debts as and when they fall
due.
(3) Regulations may be made for or with respect to financial and
reporting obligations for trusts established by Local Aboriginal Land
Councils.
52D Duty of Aboriginal Land Council not to transfer land or
other assets to Council members, Board members, staff or
consultants
(1) A Local Aboriginal Land Council must ensure that no part of the
income or property of the Council is transferred directly or indirectly by way
of dividend or bonus or otherwise by way of profit to members of the Council,
Board members or any member of staff of, or consultant to, the
Council.
(2) Nothing in this section prevents:(a) the provision of a benefit in good faith to a Council member,
Board member, member of staff or consultant in accordance with this Act,
or
(b) the payment in good faith of remuneration to any such member,
Board member, member of staff or consultant.
52E Delegation of functions by Local Aboriginal Land
Councils
(1) A Local Aboriginal Land Council may, by resolution, delegate to
any person or body the exercise of any of the functions of the Council, other
than the following:(a) the acquisition of land and the use, management, control, holding
or disposal of, or otherwise dealing with, land vested in or acquired by the
Council,
(b) any function under this or any other Act that is expressly
required to be exercised by resolution of the voting members of the
Council.
(2) Each Local Aboriginal Land Council must, once every year, review
all its delegations.
52F Rules of Local Aboriginal Land Councils
(1) The purpose of this section is to provide rules for Local
Aboriginal Land Councils relating to those Councils’ functions and
operations.
(2) The rules prescribed by the regulations as model rules are the
rules for a Local Aboriginal Land Council.
(3) However, a Local Aboriginal Land Council may prepare its own rules
and submit them to the Registrar for approval.
(4) On approval by the Registrar, the rules prepared by a Local
Aboriginal Land Council, to the extent that they are not inconsistent with
this Act or the regulations, become the rules of the Council to the exclusion
of the model rules.
(5) A Local Aboriginal Land Council’s rules may, with the
approval of the Registrar, be amended, repealed or replaced from time to
time.
(6) A Local Aboriginal Land Council may appeal to the Court against
the Registrar’s refusal to approve of rules or to approve of an
amendment, a repeal or a replacement of its rules.
(7) On the hearing of an appeal under subsection (6), the Court may
direct the Registrar to approve of rules, or an amendment, a repeal or a
replacement of rules, specified in the direction.
52G Functions to be exercised by Council
resolution
The following functions are to be exercised, in accordance with
this Act, by resolution of the voting members of a Local Aboriginal Land
Council:(a) acceptance of persons as qualified for
membership,
(b) delegation of functions of the Council,
(c) approval of the rules and code of conduct of the Council and any
amendment to or repeal or replacement of those rules or that
code,
(d) approval of the community, land and business plan of the Council
and any changes to the plan,
(e) approval of dealings with land and land dealing approval
agreements (within the meaning of Division 4 of Part 2),
(f) receipt of the annual budget and the financial statements of the
Council,
(g) election of Board members,
(h) suspension of members from attending or voting at meetings of the
Council,
(i) approval of requests to change the name of the Council’s
area or for the amalgamation or dissolution of the Council, or its
re-allocation to another Region.
52H Meetings of Local Aboriginal Land Councils
Part 1 of Schedule 3 has effect.
Division 2 Membership of Local Aboriginal Land
Councils
53 Membership of Local Aboriginal Land Councils
(cf former section 6 (3))
The members of the Local Aboriginal Land Council for a Local
Aboriginal Land Council area are the adult Aboriginal persons who are listed
on the Local Aboriginal Land Council membership roll for that
area.
54 Local Aboriginal Land Council membership rolls
(cf former section 7 (1) and (2))
(1) The chief executive officer of a Local Aboriginal Land Council
must, in respect of the Local Aboriginal Land Council area, prepare and
maintain a Local Aboriginal Land Council membership roll (the membership
roll).
(2) The chief executive officer of a Local Aboriginal Land Council
must list on the membership roll for the area of the Council the names and
addresses of those persons who are qualified for
membership.
(2A) A person is qualified for membership if:(a) the person is an adult Aboriginal person who resides within the
area of the Local Aboriginal Land Council concerned and is accepted as being
qualified on that basis to be a member by a meeting of the Council,
or
(b) the person is an adult Aboriginal person who has a sufficient
association with the area of the Local Aboriginal Land Council concerned (as
determined by the voting members of the Council at a meeting of the Council)
and is accepted as being qualified on that basis to be a member by a meeting
of the Council, or
(c) the person is an Aboriginal owner in relation to land within the
area of the Local Aboriginal Land Council concerned and has made a written
application for membership in accordance with subsection
(3).
(2B) The membership roll must indicate whether a member is a person who
is included on the roll because of residence or association, or as an
Aboriginal owner, and must indicate the basis for that
inclusion.
(3) A person seeking to be accepted as a member of a Local Aboriginal
Land Council must make and submit to that Council a written application for
that membership that:(a) declares that the person is eligible for inclusion on the
membership roll, and
(b) sets out the grounds (other than acceptance as being qualified at
a meeting) on which the person is qualified for inclusion on the membership
roll, and
(b1) sets out the basis on which the person asserts his or her
Aboriginal descent and, if the application declares that the person has a
sufficient association with that Council’s area, the basis of that
association, and
(c) if the person is seeking to be accepted as a voting member of the
Council—attaches a notice from the Registrar declaring that the person
is not a voting member of any other Local Aboriginal Land
Council.
Note. If a person is a voting member of one Local Aboriginal Land
Council and wishes to join and become a voting member of another Local
Aboriginal Land Council, the person must first be accepted as a non-voting
member of the second Local Aboriginal Land Council under this section. The
person must then make a nomination under section 56 to change the Council in
which the person intends to have voting rights.
(4) A person must not make an application for membership of an
Aboriginal Land Council that the persons knows, or ought reasonably to know,
is false or misleading in a material particular.Maximum penalty (subsection (4)): 10 penalty
units.
Note. An Aboriginal person may request that the Registrar issue a
compliance direction under Part 12 if the person believes a Local Aboriginal
Land Council has, in contravention of this Act:(a) failed or refused to list the person’s name on the
membership roll of the Council, or
(b) removed the person’s name from that
roll.
55 Aboriginal persons may be member of more than one Local
Aboriginal Land Council
(1) An Aboriginal person may be a member of more than one Local
Aboriginal Land Council.
(2) However, a person is entitled to voting rights in relation to one
Local Aboriginal Land Council only at any one time.
(3) The Local Aboriginal Land Council in relation to which the person
has voting rights is to be the Council nominated by the person or, if the
person has not made a nomination, the Council for the area within which the
person resides.
(4) A non-voting member of a Local Aboriginal Land Council is not
entitled to vote:(a) in elections for Board members, or
(b) on any matter to be determined by the
Council.
(4A) A voting member of a Local Aboriginal Land Council is not entitled
to vote in elections for Board members if:(a) the member has not attended at least 2 meetings of the Council in
the preceding 12 months as a voting member, or
(b) the member is suspended from membership of the Council or
Board.
(5) A vote by a non-voting member of a Local Aboriginal Land Council
or a member referred to in subsection (4A) in such an election or on such a
matter is void.
56 Nomination of voting area
(1) A person who is a member of more than one Local Aboriginal Land
Council may, by notice in writing given to the Registrar, make a nomination to
change the Council in relation to which the person has voting rights (being a
Council of which the person is a member).
(2) A person must not make more than one nomination under subsection
(1) in any 12 month period.
(3) The Registrar may at any time, by notice in writing to a person
who the Registrar believes is a member of 2 or more Local Aboriginal Land
Councils, require the person to make a nomination under this section within
the time specified in the notice.
(4) If a nomination is not made within the time required under
subsection (3), the Local Aboriginal Land Council in relation to which the
person has voting rights is to be the Council for the area within which the
person resides.
(5) The Registrar is, as soon as practicable, to give notice of the
receipt of a nomination or of a failure to make a nomination under this
section to the person concerned and to the Registrar and the chief executive
officer of each Local Aboriginal Land Council of which the person is a
member.
(6) The chief executive officer of each such Council must record on
the membership roll for the Local Aboriginal Land Council the Council in
relation to which the person has voting rights.
57 Suspension of members from attending Council
meetings
(cf clause 10 of Schedule 1 to 1996 Regulation)
(1) A member of a Local Aboriginal Land Council (other than a Board
member of that Council) whose conduct the Council decides is detrimental to
the best interests of the Council may be suspended by the Council from
attending Council meetings for a period of time specified by the Council, but
such a period must not be greater than 3 years.
(2) During any period of suspension, the member is not
entitled:(a) to attend meetings of that Council, or
(b) to vote:(i) in elections for officers of the Council, or
(ii) on any matter to be determined by the Council,
or
(c) if the member is also a member of another Local Aboriginal Land
Council—to make a nomination to change the Council in relation to which
the person has voting rights.
(3) A Local Aboriginal Land Council that has suspended a member under
this section may at any time revoke the suspension.
(4) The chief executive officer of a Local Aboriginal Land Council
that has suspended a member under this section must notify the Registrar of
the suspension, and the details of the suspension, and of any revocation of
that suspension.
(5) At the end of the period of suspension, the member is entitled to
attend Council meetings, vote and make a nomination in relation to voting
rights unless the Council, by a further vote, held in accordance with this
section, sets another period of suspension.
58 Removal of person’s name from membership
roll
(cf clause 8 (2) of Schedule 1 to 1996 Regulation)
The chief executive officer of a Local Aboriginal Land Council
must remove the name of a person from the Council’s membership roll if,
and only if:(a) the person dies, or
(b) the person resigns in writing, or
(c) if the person is a member because the person resided in the
Council area—the person no longer resides in the Council area and the
Council at a meeting decides that the person does not have a sufficient
association with the area to continue as a member, or
(d) the chief executive officer is satisfied, after making reasonable
inquiries, that the residential address of the person is
unknown.
59 Updating and consolidation of membership rolls
(1) The chief executive officer of each Local Aboriginal Land Council
must:(a) within such period as may be prescribed by the regulations, send a
copy of the Council’s membership roll, certified as correct by the chief
executive officer, to the Registrar, and
(b) advise the Registrar in writing of any changes to the membership
roll that have occurred since a copy was last sent to the
Registrar.
(2) The chief executive officer of a Local Aboriginal Land Council is
to ensure, so far as practicable, that the membership roll of the Council is
kept up to date.
(3) The Registrar is to compile and maintain a consolidated roll of
all members of Local Aboriginal Land Councils.
(4) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must, at the request
of the Registrar, pay to the Registrar a contribution, of an amount approved
by the Minister, for the cost of the exercise of the Registrar’s
functions under this section.
60 Regulations concerning membership of Local Aboriginal Land
Council and membership rolls
(cf former section 7 (3))
The Governor may make regulations for or with respect to:(a) the preparation and maintenance of Local Aboriginal Land Council
membership rolls, and
(b) the particulars to be recorded in Local Aboriginal Land Council
membership rolls, and
(c) the removal of particulars from Local Aboriginal Land Council
membership rolls, and
(d) the procedure to be followed by Local Aboriginal Land Councils
when deciding whether to suspend a member from attending Council meetings and
voting.
Division 3 Boards of Local Aboriginal Land
Councils
61 Local Aboriginal Land Councils to have Boards
(1) Each Local Aboriginal Land Council is to have a Board consisting
of not less than 5, and not more than 10, members.
(2) The number of Board members for each Local Aboriginal Land Council
is to be determined in accordance with the
regulations.
(3) Part 2 of Schedule 3 has effect with respect to the procedure of
Boards of Local Aboriginal Land Councils.
(4) The regulations may prescribe additional requirements with respect
to meetings.
62 Functions of Boards of Local Aboriginal Land
Councils
A Board of a Local Aboriginal Land Council has the following
functions:(a) to direct and control the affairs of the Council, in accordance
with this Act and the regulations and consistently with the community, land
and business plan of the Council,
(b) to facilitate communication between the Council’s members
and the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council,
(c) to review the performance of the Council in the exercise of its
functions and the achievement of its objectives,
(d) any other functions conferred on the Board by or under this
Act.
63 Board members
(1) The Board members are to be elected at every second annual meeting
of a Local Aboriginal Land Council.
(2) A person is not qualified to stand and be elected as a Board
member of a Local Aboriginal Land Council:(a) unless the person is a voting member of the Council,
or
(b) if the person is suspended or disqualified from holding office as
a Board member or is suspended or disqualified from membership of the
Council.
(3) The term of office of a Board member commences on the Board
member’s election and ends on the election of the next Board at the
second annual meeting of the Council following the member’s
election.
(4) A Board member is entitled to be paid such travelling and other
allowances as the Minister may from time to time determine in respect of the
member.
(5) A Board member is eligible for re-election, subject to this
Act.
(6) The Registrar is to be the returning officer for an
election.
(7) Elections for Board members are to be conducted in accordance with
the regulations.
64 Chairperson and Deputy Chairperson
(1) A Chairperson and Deputy Chairperson of the Board of a Local
Aboriginal Land Council are to be elected from among the Board members at the
first meeting of the Board after its election.
(2) The Chairperson and Deputy Chairperson of a Board have the
functions conferred on the Chairperson or Deputy Chairperson by or under this
Act.
(3) In the absence of the Chairperson of a Board, the Deputy
Chairperson:(a) is, if available, to act in the place of the Chairperson,
and
(b) while so acting, has all the functions of the Chairperson and is
taken to be the Chairperson of the Board.
(4) If a Chairperson of a Board becomes a councillor, the person
ceases to be the Chairperson and a new Chairperson is to be
elected.
(5) Elections for Chairperson and Deputy Chairperson are to be
conducted in accordance with the regulations.
65 Training for Board members
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must arrange training
in relation to the matters prescribed by the regulations for each member
elected for the first time to a Board of a Local Aboriginal Land
Council.
(2) The training is to be provided not later than 6 months after the
date of election of a Board member.
(3) A Board member must not refuse or fail to undergo training
provided under this section when required to do so by the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council.
(4) If a Board member refuses or fails to undergo training provided
under this section when required to do so by the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council, the Board member is, on written notice being given to the Board
member by the Council, suspended from office as a Board member until the
person undergoes the training.
(5) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may:(a) exempt a Board member wholly or partly from the requirement to
undergo training provided under this section, if the Council is satisfied that
the Board member already has sufficient expertise, skills and experience to
carry out his or her functions as a Board member, or
(b) extend the period within which training is to be provided to a
Board member under this section.
66 Grounds for disqualification from office
(1) A person is disqualified from holding office as a Board member of
a Local Aboriginal Land Council if the person:(a) has a conviction in New South Wales or elsewhere for an offence
relating to the management of a corporation, that was recorded within the last
5 years, or
(b) has a conviction for an offence under this Act that was recorded
within the last 5 years, or
(c) has a conviction in New South Wales for any other 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 that was recorded within the last 5 years,
or
(d) ceases to be a voting member of the Council,
or
(e) becomes a councillor of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council, or
(f) is a mentally incapacitated person, or
(g) is or 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) is or was a director or person concerned in the management of a
body corporate that is the subject of a winding up order or for which a
controller or administrator has been appointed under the Corporations Act 2001 of the Commonwealth
during the last 3 years, or
(i) is disqualified from holding office in or being concerned in the
management of a corporation under any law of this or any other State or
Territory or the Commonwealth, or
(j) is an employee of, or a consultant to, the Council,
or
(k) was, on 2 or more occasions before an administrator was appointed
to the Council, an officer of the Council, or
(l) fails, without a reasonable excuse, for a period of 3 months or
more to comply with a written requirement by the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council to undergo training under section 65, or
(m) is disqualified from holding office as a
councillor.
(2) The Registrar may determine that an offence committed by a person
should be ignored for the purposes of this section because of the time that
has passed since the offence was committed or because of the triviality of the
acts or omissions giving rise to the offence.
(3) The Registrar may determine that a person is not disqualified on
the ground set out in subsection (1) (k) if the Registrar is satisfied that it
is appropriate in the circumstances that the person not be disqualified on
that ground.
67 Vacancy in office
A person who is a Board member of a Local Aboriginal Land Council
vacates office if the person:(a) dies, or
(b) is absent from 2 consecutive meetings of the Board or the Council
of which reasonable notice has been given to the person personally or by post,
except on leave granted by the Board or unless the person is excused by the
Board for having been absent from those meetings, or
(c) completes a term of office and is not re-elected,
or
(d) resigns the office by instrument in writing addressed to the
Council, or
(e) becomes disqualified from holding office as a Board member under
this Act.
68 Casual vacancy
A person is to be appointed in accordance with the regulations to
fill a casual vacancy in the office of a Board member for the remainder of the
term of office.
69 ADT may declare particular offices of Local Aboriginal
Land Council vacant
(cf section 329 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) Any person may apply to the Administrative Decisions Tribunal for
an order declaring that a particular office of a Board member of a Local
Aboriginal Land Council has become vacant under this
Act.
(2) The Tribunal may award costs under section 88 of the Administrative Decisions Tribunal Act
1997 in respect of proceedings commenced by an application
made under this section.
70 Appeals to Supreme Court against order
(cf section 330 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) A person whose office has been declared vacant by order of the
Administrative Decisions Tribunal may appeal against the order, on a question
of law, to the Supreme Court.
(2) Such an appeal may not be made more than 28 days after the date on
which the order is made.
71 Effect of order declaring vacancy
(cf section 331 of Local Government
Act 1993)
An order declaring a vacancy in an office made by the
Administrative Decisions Tribunal under this Division takes effect:(a) if no appeal to the Supreme Court is made against the order, at
the end of the period during which such an appeal may be made,
or
(b) if such an appeal is made within that period and the order is
confirmed on appeal, when the order is confirmed, or
(c) if, within that period, the person against whom the order is made
serves on the Chief Executive Officer of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council written notice of intention not to appeal against the order, when the
notice is lodged.
72 Delegation by Boards
(1) A Board may delegate to any person or body any of the functions of
the Board other than this power of delegation and any matter under this Act or
the regulations that also requires the approval of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council.
(2) A Board must, once every year and immediately after an election of
the Board, review all its delegations.
Division 4
73–77(Repealed)
Division 5 Staff of Local Aboriginal Land Councils
78 Staff
(cf former section 12A)
A Local Aboriginal Land Council may employ such staff, and engage
such consultants, as are necessary to enable the Council to exercise its
functions.
78A Chief executive officer
(1) A Local Aboriginal Land Council must employ a member of staff to
exercise the functions of the chief executive officer of the Council for the
purposes of this Act.
(2) The chief executive officer has the following particular
functions:(a) the day-to-day management of the Council’s
affairs,
(b) the exercise of such functions of the Board as are delegated by
the Board to the chief executive officer,
(c) the appointment of staff in accordance with the approval of the
Board,
(d) the direction and dismissal of members of
staff,
(e) such other functions as may be conferred or imposed on the chief
executive officer by or under this or any other
Act.
78B Certain persons must not be employed as chief executive
officers
(1) The following persons must not be or continue to be employed as
the chief executive officer of a Local Aboriginal Land Council:(a) a person who is a Board member of the Council or a
councillor,
(b) a person who has a conviction in New South Wales or elsewhere for
an offence relating to the management of a corporation that was recorded
within the last 5 years,
(c) a person who has a conviction in New South Wales for 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, that was recorded within the
last 5 years,
(d) a person who is disqualified from holding office in or being
concerned in the management of a corporation under any law of this or any
other State or Territory or the Commonwealth,
(e) a person who has an interest in, or is an employee of or concerned
in the management of, a corporation that receives a benefit from the
Council,
(f) a person who is already engaged as a consultant to the
Council,
(g) a person who is a member of staff of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council,
(h) a person who has been dismissed on the recommendation of the
Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal within the last 5
years,
(i) a person who is disqualified under this Act from being a Board
member or a councillor (other than on the grounds of employment by the Council
or ceasing to be a voting member of a Local Aboriginal Land
Council).
(2) The Registrar may determine that an offence committed by a person
should be ignored for the purposes of this section because of the time that
has passed since the offence was committed or because of the triviality of the
acts or omissions giving rise to the offence.
78C Filling of vacancy in position of chief executive
officer
(1) If a vacancy occurs in the position of chief executive officer,
the Local Aboriginal Land Council must immediately appoint a person under
section 78A to the vacant position or appoint a person to act in the vacant
position.
(2) A vacancy occurs in the position of chief executive officer if the
chief executive officer:(a) dies, or
(b) completes the term of his or her contract and is not re-appointed,
or
(c) resigns from the position, or
(d) becomes a mentally incapacitated person and is removed from the
position by the Council because of that mental incapacity,
or
(e) is removed from the position on a ground set out in section 78B or
for any other reason.
79 Certain persons must not be employed
(1) A person who is convicted of an offence under Part 3 (except
section 61), 4, 4A or 5 of the Crimes Act
1900 must not be employed as a staff member of, or a
consultant to, a Local Aboriginal Land Council for 5 years from the date of
conviction.
(2) A person who is a councillor or an officer of a Local or Regional
Aboriginal Land Council must not be employed as a member of staff of a Local
Aboriginal Land Council while the person is such a councillor or
officer.
(3) A person who is a consultant to a Local Aboriginal Land Council
must not be employed as a member of staff of that Council while the person is
such a consultant.
(4) A member of staff of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
must not be employed as a member of staff of a Local Aboriginal Land Council
while the person is such a member of staff.
79A Advertising vacancies
(1) If it is proposed to make an appointment to a vacant position in
the staff of a Local Aboriginal Land Council, the chief executive officer must
advertise the vacancy in the manner prescribed by the
regulations.
(2) The chief executive officer need not advertise a vacant position
in the circumstances prescribed by the regulations.
80 Appointments and promotion to be on merit
(1) Appointments to the staff of a Local Aboriginal Land Council and
promotions for members of that staff are to be made on the basis of the merit
of the applicants for appointment or promotion.
(2) The merit of persons eligible for appointment or promotion to a
vacant position is to be determined having 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.
81 Consultants to be engaged on merit
(1) A decision by a Local Aboriginal Land Council to engage a
consultant is to be made on the basis of merit.
(2) The merit of persons eligible to be engaged as a consultant is to
be determined having regard to:(a) the nature of the duties of the work required to be done,
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.
Division 6 Community, land and business plans
82 Community, land and business plans
(1) A Local Aboriginal Land Council must prepare and implement a
community, land and business plan.
(2) A Local Aboriginal Land Council preparing a community, land and
business plan must consult with the following persons:(a) members of the Council,
(b) persons who have a cultural association with the land within the
Council’s area,
(c) any other persons required to be consulted by the regulations or a
policy of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
(3) A Local Aboriginal Land Council may amend a community, land and
business plan.
(4) The provisions of this Division apply to any proposed amendment in
the same way as they apply to the preparation and approval of a
plan.
(5) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may exempt a Local
Aboriginal Land Council wholly or partly from the requirement to prepare a
community, land and business plan, if the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council is satisfied that, having regard to the limited operations of the
Local Aboriginal Land Council, compliance is not
appropriate.
(6) For the purposes of this section, a person has a cultural
association with land if the person is an Aboriginal owner in relation to land
within the area of the Local Aboriginal Land Council concerned or is a person
of a class prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this
subsection.
83 Matters covered by plans
(1) A community, land and business plan of a Local Aboriginal Land
Council must contain the following matters:(a) the objectives and strategy of the Council for the acquisition,
management and development of land and other assets,
(b) the objectives and strategy of the Council for the provision and
management of community benefits schemes,
(c) the objectives and strategy of the Council for carrying out
business enterprises and investment,
(d) the objectives and strategy of the Council in relation to
Aboriginal culture and heritage,
(e) if the plan contains particular proposals related to the
strategies in paragraph (a), (b) or (c), strategies for the development or
acquisition of human resources and skills to implement the
proposals,
(f) timelines for the achievement of proposed strategies and proposals
in the plan,
(g) particulars of the assets and liabilities of the
Council,
(h) any matter required to be included by a policy of the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council,
(i) any other matter prescribed by the
regulations.
(2) A community, land and business plan must contain the following
matters in relation to land:(a) the identity of, and particulars of any encumbrance affecting, any
parcel of land of the Council,
(b) the particulars of any other interest in land of the
Council,
(c) whether, and what, land is subject to the restriction contained in
section 42 or to Part 4A of the NPW Act,
(d) any conditions affecting land of the Council under section 36 or
39,
(e) any other matters prescribed by the
regulations.
84 Approval of community, land and business plans
(1) A community, land and business plan is adopted by a Local
Aboriginal Land Council if it is approved by a meeting of the members of the
Council, of which not less than 14 days notice was
given.
(2) A Local Aboriginal Land Council must submit a proposed community,
land and business plan to the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council not less
than 28 days before any such meeting.
(3) A Local Aboriginal Land Council must make available to its
members, on request, for a period of not less than 14 days before any such
meeting and at the meeting, a summary of the proposed community, land and
business plan or a copy of the plan.
(4) The summary is to contain the matters prescribed by the
regulations.
(5) More than one meeting may be called to enable approval of a
community, land and business plan.
(6) A community, land and business plan approved by a Local Aboriginal
Land Council takes effect when it is approved by the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council.
(7) A community, land and business plan has effect for the period (not
exceeding 5 years) specified in the plan or until it is replaced, whichever
occurs first.
(8) Failure to comply with a requirement of this Division for the
preparation or approval of a community, land or business plan does not affect
the validity of the plan.
85 Approval of plan by New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must not approve a
community, land and business plan unless it is satisfied that the plan
complies with this Act and the regulations and is consistent with any
applicable policy of the Council.
(2) If a Local Aboriginal Land Council is not able to reach agreement
on a proposed community, land and business plan within 3 months after it is
first proposed for approval at a meeting of the Council, the Chairperson of
the Board may refer the proposed plan to the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
(3) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may amend or replace a
proposed community, land and business plan referred to it under subsection (2)
and may refer the amended or replaced plan to the Local Aboriginal Land
Council for approval.
86 Administration may follow plan failure
(1) A failure by a Local Aboriginal Land Council to approve the same
or another proposed community, land and business plan after a plan is referred
to it by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council under section 85 (3) is,
for the purposes of section 222 (1) (e), a substantial breach of the
requirements of this Act.
(2) A substantial failure by a Local Aboriginal Land Council to comply
with its community, land and business plan is, for the purposes of section 222
(1) (e), a substantial breach of the requirements of this
Act.
Note. The effect of a substantial breach is that an administrator may be
appointed for the Local Aboriginal Land Council.
Division 7 Changes to Local Aboriginal Land Councils and
areas of Local Aboriginal Land Councils
87 Changes to Local Aboriginal Land Council areas
(1) The Minister may, by order published in the Gazette, do any one or
more of the following:(a) change the name of a Local Aboriginal Land Council
area,
(b) change the boundaries of a Local Aboriginal Land Council
area,
(c) amalgamate 2 or more Local Aboriginal Land Council areas and
constitute the amalgamated area as a Local Aboriginal Land Council
area,
(d) without limiting paragraph (b) or (c), include the whole of the
area of a Local Aboriginal Land Council within the area of one or more other
Local Aboriginal Land Councils,
(e) dissolve a Local Aboriginal Land
Council.
(2) If the Minister makes an order under subsection (1) (b), (c), (d)
or (e), the Minister may, in the same order, specify the Councils to which
members of existing Councils affected by the order may (with the
members’ consent) be allocated, or a method of determining the
allocation of members (with the members’
consent).
(3) The Minister may make an order under subsection (1) only if the
order concerned is permitted or required by or under this Act or the
regulations.
(4) The regulations may make provision of a savings or transitional
nature consequent on the making of orders under this section, including (but
not limited to) construing references to Local Aboriginal Land Council areas
and Councils and elections for Boards of new Local Aboriginal Land
Councils.
88 Effect of dissolution
On the day an order dissolving a Local Aboriginal Land Council
takes effect, the Council ceases to exist and the Board members of the Council
cease to hold office.
89 Transfer of assets, rights and liabilities
(1) If the Minister makes an order under section 87 (1), the Minister
may, after consulting with the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council, by
order in writing, direct that all or part of the assets, rights and
liabilities be transferred to an Aboriginal Land Council specified in the
order.
(2) An order under this section may be subject to specified terms and
conditions.
(3) More than one order may be made in respect of the same assets,
rights and liabilities following the making of an order referred to in
subsection (1).
(4) Schedule 3A has effect with respect to the transfer of assets,
rights and liabilities under this section.
(5) Words and expressions used in this section have the same meanings
as they have in Schedule 3A.
(6) Despite any other provision of this section, lands vested in a
Local Aboriginal Land Council under Part 4A of the NPW Act vest in accordance
with that Part.Note. Part 4A of the NPW Act deals with lands reserved or dedicated
under that Act that are vested in an Aboriginal Land Council or Councils and
are leased by that Council or Councils to the Minister administering that
Act.
90 Voluntary changes
(1) The Minister may make an order under section 87 in relation to a
Local Aboriginal Land Council area or a Local Aboriginal Land Council on
application made by an Aboriginal Land Council or a person in accordance with
the regulations.
(2) For the purposes of this section, regulations may be made for or
with respect to the following matters:(a) the persons who may apply for an order under section
87,
(b) applications for the making of an order,
(c) procedures for approval of applications,
(d) the making of recommendations to the Minister with respect to
proposals to change Local Aboriginal Land Council areas,
(e) determination of applications,
(f) the functions of the Registrar in relation to
applications,
(g) the lodging of objections against the refusal of
applications,
(h) the reference to the Court of any such objections and the hearing
and determination of any such objections.
91 Changes on initiative of Minister
(1) The Minister may make an order under section 87 in relation to a
Local Aboriginal Land Council area or a Local Aboriginal Land Council if the
Minister is satisfied that the Council:(a) has less than 50 voting members, or
(b) has less than 3% of the potential members who reside in its area,
as determined from the most recent available Australian census data,
or
(c) has a membership that is in significant decline,
or
(d) has not, for a period of not less than 3 months, been able to
elect the required number of Board members, or
(e) cannot pay its debts as and when they fall due,
or
(f) has had qualified audits or has failed to provide complete
financial statements for any 3 of the last 5 years, or
(g) has had an administrator appointed under this Act for any 3 of the
last 5 years, or
(h) is the subject of a report by an investigator or administrator
under this Act, the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council or the Local
Aboriginal Land Council that has found that the Local Aboriginal Land Council
has ceased to function.
(2) The Minister may take action on a ground specified subsection (1)
(a)–(f) on the basis of a report by the
Registrar.
(3) The Minister may not make an order on a ground specified in
subsection (1):(a) in the case of an order amalgamating one or more Local Aboriginal
Land Councils—except with the consent of the Councils,
or
(b) in the case of an order including the area of a dissolved Local
Aboriginal Land Council in the area of one or more other Councils—except
with the consent of those other Councils.
92 Objections to Minister’s changes
(1) Before taking action on a ground under section 91, the Minister
must notify the following persons of the proposed action and of their rights
under this section:(a) the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council,
(b) the Board of any Local Aboriginal Land Council
affected,
(c) the members of any such Council,
(d) any investigator appointed to investigate the affairs of any such
Council,
(e) any administrator of any such Council.
(2) A person notified of a proposed action may make submissions,
within 21 days of being notified, to the Minister about the proposed
action.
(3) Before determining whether to take the action, the Minister must
consider any submissions received under this
section.
Part 6 Regions
93 Regions
(1) The Region for a Local Aboriginal Land Council is the Region
specified for the Council in Schedule 5.
(2) The Governor may, by order published on the NSW legislation
website, amend or substitute Schedule 5.
(3) An order that has the effect of changing the area of a Region may
not be made except on the recommendation of the
Minister.
(4) The Minister must not make a recommendation unless the Minister is
satisfied that any Local Aboriginal Land Council affected, and the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council, consent to the change of
Region.
(5) Subsection (4) does not apply if the change results from an order
made under section 87.
(6) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council or a Local Aboriginal
Land Council may at any time request the Minister to change the name of a
Region or the Council areas included in the Region.
(7) Regulations may be made for or with respect to elections for
councillors and other matters consequential on changes to
Regions.
94–103 (Repealed)
Part 7 New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
Division 1 Constitution of New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council
104 Constitution of NSW Aboriginal Land Council
(cf former section 22 (1))
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council is constituted by this
Act.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council is a body corporate
and has the corporate name of the “New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council”.
105 Objects of New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council
(cf clause 5 of Schedule 1 to 1996 Regulation)
The objects of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
are:(a) to improve, protect and foster the best interests of Aboriginal
persons within New South Wales, and
(b) to relieve poverty, sickness, suffering, distress, misfortune,
destitution and helplessness of Aboriginal persons within New South
Wales.
Division 2 Functions of New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council
106 Functions of New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council has the functions
conferred or imposed on it by or under this or any other
Act.
(2) Land acquisition
The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council has the following
functions in relation to the acquisition of land and related matters:(a) in accordance with this Act and the regulations, to acquire land
on its own behalf or on behalf of or to be vested in a Local Aboriginal Land
Council and to use, manage, control, hold, transfer to a Local Aboriginal Land
Council or dispose of, or otherwise deal with, land vested in or acquired by
the Council,
(b) functions relating to the acquisition of land and any other
functions conferred on it by or under Part 4A of the NPW
Act,
(c) to submit proposals for the listing in Schedule 14 to the NPW Act
of lands of cultural significance to Aboriginal persons that are reserved
under the NPW Act,
(d) to negotiate the lease by the Council or by the Council and one or
more other Aboriginal Land Councils of lands to which section 36A applies to
the Minister administering the NPW Act,
(e) when exercising its functions with respect to land that is the
subject of a lease, or proposed lease, under Part 4A of the NPW Act, to act in
the best interests of the Aboriginal owners of the land,
(f) to make claims to Crown lands, either on its own behalf or, if
requested by a Local Aboriginal Land Council, on behalf of that
Council,
(g) to compile and maintain a register of all land held by Local
Aboriginal Land Councils and to make the information available on request to
the members of the Council concerned.
(3) Oversight of Local Aboriginal Land Councils
The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council has the following
functions in relation to Local Aboriginal Land Councils:(a) with the agreement of a Local Aboriginal Land Council, to manage
any of the affairs of the Council,
(b) to assist Local Aboriginal Land Councils in complying with this
Act in respect of the establishment and keeping of accounts and the
preparation and submission of budgets and financial
reports,
(c) to assist Local Aboriginal Land Councils in the preparation and
implementation of community, land and business plans,
(d) to approve community, land and business plans of Local Aboriginal
Land Councils,
(e) to assist Local Aboriginal Land Councils in conducting elections
in accordance with this Act for Board members,
(f) to determine and approve or disapprove of the terms and conditions
of agreements proposed by Local Aboriginal Land Councils to allow mining or
mineral exploration on land,
(g) to mediate, conciliate and arbitrate disputes relating to the
operation of this Act or the regulations between Aboriginal Land Councils,
between those Councils and individuals and between individual members of those
Councils and to refer such disputes to the Registrar or independent mediators,
conciliators and arbitrators,
(h) to approve land dealings by Local Aboriginal Land
Councils.
(4) Policy and advice
The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council has the following
functions in relation to policy and advice:(a) to advise the Minister on matters relating to Aboriginal land
rights,
(b) to prepare and implement policies relating to its functions under
this Act and the functions of Local Aboriginal Land Councils under this
Act.
(5) Administration of statutory accounts
The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council is to administer the
New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council Account, the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council Community Fund and the Mining Royalties Account
established under this Act.
(6) Native title
The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council is to exercise the
functions conferred or imposed, by the Commonwealth Native Title Act, on a
representative Aboriginal/Torres Strait Islander body (within the meaning of
that Act) if the Council is determined to be such a body by the relevant
Commonwealth Minister under that Act.
(7) Aboriginal culture and heritage
The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council has the following
functions in relation to Aboriginal culture and heritage:(a) to take action to protect the culture and heritage of Aboriginal
persons in New South Wales, subject to any other law,
(b) to promote awareness in the community of the culture and heritage
of Aboriginal persons in New South Wales.
(8) Financial stewardship
The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council has the following
functions in relation to financial management and business planning:(a) to prepare and implement policies relating to community, land and
business plans required to be adopted by Aboriginal Land
Councils,
(b) to prepare and implement, in accordance with this Act, a
community, land and business plan,
(c) to manage, in accordance with this Act, the investment of any
assets of the Council,
(d) to facilitate business enterprises, in accordance with this
Act,
(e) to grant funds for the payment of the costs and expenses of Local
Aboriginal Land Councils (whether under funding agreements with Local
Aboriginal Land Councils or otherwise).
(9) Other functions prescribed by regulations
The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council has any other
functions prescribed by the regulations.
Note. Under section 50 of the Interpretation Act 1987, the New
South Wales Aboriginal Land Council has certain functions as a statutory
corporation, including the power to purchase, exchange, take on lease, hold,
dispose of and otherwise deal with property. That provision is subject to the
provisions of this Act.
106A Powers of New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council with
respect to property
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may do or suffer in
relation to its property any act or thing that it could lawfully do or suffer
if it were a natural person having, in the case of land, the same estate or
interest in the property as the Council.
(2) In particular, without limiting the generality of subsection (1),
the Council may do or suffer any such act or thing to enable it to:(a) improve, or cause to be improved, any land vested in it,
or
(b) explore for and exploit, or cause to be explored for or exploited,
mineral resources or other natural resources vested in
it.
(3) This section is subject to this Act.
107 Training
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council is to provide or
arrange training, in accordance with the regulations, for the purpose of
developing the capacity of the following persons to exercise functions under
this Act or the regulations:(a) councillors,
(b) Board members,
(c) members of staff of Aboriginal Land
Councils.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council is to prepare and
implement a capacity development plan for the purposes of carrying out its
functions under this section.
(3) Regulations may be made for or with respect to requirements for a
capacity development plan.
108 Community benefits schemes
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council has the following
functions in relation to community benefits schemes:(a) directly or indirectly, to provide community benefits under
community benefits schemes,
(b) to supervise the community benefits schemes of Local Aboriginal
Land Councils,
(c) to consider and approve the provision of community benefits
schemes by or on behalf of Local Aboriginal Land Councils,
(d) to make grants or lend money to, or invest money for or on behalf
of, Aboriginal persons,
(e) without limiting paragraph (a), to provide, acquire, construct,
upgrade or extend residential accommodation for Aboriginal persons in the
State,
(f) without limiting paragraph (a), with the approval of the Minister,
to make grants or lend money to a funeral benefits scheme established for the
benefit of Aboriginal persons,
(g) to maintain a register of approvals by the Council of community
benefits schemes and to notify the Minister of any such
approvals.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must ensure that any
community benefits scheme under which community benefits are provided by it or
on its behalf:(a) complies with this Act and the regulations,
and
(b) is consistent with any applicable policy of the Council,
and
(c) is consistent with the community, land and business plan of the
Council, and
(d) is fair and equitable and administered in a responsible and
transparent way, and
(e) will not prevent the Council from being able to meet its debts as
and when they fall due.
(3) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may provide community
benefits under a community benefits scheme to Aboriginal persons within the
area of one or more Local Aboriginal Land Councils and may provide community
benefits in conjunction with one or more Local Aboriginal Land
Councils.
109 Social housing schemes
(1) This section applies to a community benefits scheme in relation to
the acquisition and provision by or on behalf of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council of residential accommodation for Aboriginal persons
and to the construction, upgrading and extension of any such accommodation (a
social housing
scheme).
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may provide benefits
under a social housing scheme by using the services of another body or agency,
or with the assistance of another body or agency.
(3) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must not provide
benefits under a social housing scheme unless:(a) before the scheme commenced, it considered the likely impact of
the scheme on the Council’s overall financial position,
and
(b) it is satisfied that the Council will be able to meet all the
expenses of the scheme, including long term maintenance
requirements.
110 Increased membership of Local Aboriginal Land
Councils
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must use its best
endeavours to increase the total number of voting members of Local Aboriginal
Land Councils in the State by not less than 3% per annum, for the 5 year
period commencing at the beginning of the first financial year after the
commencement of this section.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council is to include in its
annual report a report on the steps taken to meet the target established under
this section.
111 Trusts
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may establish, or
participate in the establishment of, a trust for the purpose of providing a
community benefits scheme.
(2) Regulations may be made for or with respect to financial and
reporting obligations of trusts established by the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council.
112 Duty of New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council not to
transfer land or other assets to councillors, staff or consultants
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must ensure that no
part of the income or property of the Council is transferred directly or
indirectly by way of dividend or bonus or otherwise by way of profit to
councillors or any member of staff of, or consultant to, the
Council.
(2) Nothing in this section prevents:(a) the provision of a benefit in good faith to a councillor, member
of staff or consultant in accordance with this Act, or
(b) the payment in good faith of remuneration to any such councillor,
member of staff or consultant.
113 Policies relating to Aboriginal Land Council
functions
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may prepare and
implement policies about the following matters:(a) the contents, preparation and approval of community, land and
business plans of Local Aboriginal Land Councils,
(b) land dealings by Aboriginal Land Councils, including the
assessment and approval by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council of land
dealings by Local Aboriginal Land Councils,
(b1) the provision of amounts from the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council Community Fund to Local Aboriginal Land Councils on the basis of need
so as to increase resources and assets available for less advantaged Local
Aboriginal Land Councils,
(c) business enterprises and investments of Aboriginal Land Councils,
including assessment and approval of business enterprises and
investments,
(d) the provision of training to members of staff, Board members and
councillors,
(e) community benefits schemes,
(f) financial and reporting requirements for Aboriginal Land
Councils,
(g) fees for assessments conducted by the Council,
(h) any other matters prescribed by the
regulations.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), a policy relating to community
benefits schemes that provide residential accommodation is to include criteria
for determining applications for approval that have been determined after
consultation with the Aboriginal Housing Office.
(3) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must review all of its
policies every 5 years.
(4) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must make copies of
its policies publicly available.
114 Procedure for making policies
(1) Before the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council adopts a policy
it must:(a) refer the policy to each Local Aboriginal Land Council for
comment, and
(b) consider any submissions made by any Local Aboriginal Land Council
within 30 days of the referral of the policy, and
(c) obtain the approval of the Minister to the
policy.
(2) A policy takes effect on its publication in the Gazette or on a
later day specified in the policy.
(3) A policy may be amended or revoked in the same way as a policy may
be made.
115 New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may give other
Councils directions regarding certain matters
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may give directions to
Local Aboriginal Land Councils with respect to the following:(a) the form, contents and method of preparation of community, land
and business plans,
(b) the keeping of records (including records relating to land and
other assets),
(c) any other matters prescribed by the
regulations.
(2) A Local Aboriginal Land Council must comply with a direction given
under this section.
(3) A direction must not be inconsistent with this Act or the
regulations or any applicable policy of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
116 Delegation by New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may delegate to the
Chief Executive Officer or any other person or body (not including another
member of staff of the Council) any of the functions of the Council, other
than the following:(a) the administration of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
Account, the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council Community Fund and the
Mining Royalties Account established under this Act,
(b) the granting of funds for the payment of the costs and expenses of
Local Aboriginal Land Councils and advisory committees of the
Council,
(c) the acquisition of land on the Council’s behalf, or on
behalf of a Local Aboriginal Land Council, and the transfer of such land to a
Local Aboriginal Land Council and the use, management, control, holding or
disposal of, or otherwise dealing with, land vested in or acquired by the
Council,
(d) the negotiation of the acquisition by the Council, or by one or
more Local Aboriginal Land Councils, of land of cultural significance to
Aboriginal persons that is listed in Schedule 14 to the NPW Act and the lease
of that land to the Minister administering that Act,
(e) the negotiation of the lease by the Council, or by one or more
Local Aboriginal Land Councils, of land to which section 36A applies to the
Minister administering the NPW Act,
(f) the determination and approval of terms and conditions of
agreements proposed by Local Aboriginal Land Councils to allow mining or
mineral exploration on land,
(f1) approval under Division 4 of Part 2 of land dealings by Local
Aboriginal Land Councils,
(g) approval of community, land and business
plans,
(h) advising the Minister on matters relating to Aboriginal land
rights,
(i) this power of delegation,
(j) any function under this or any other Act that is expressly
required to be exercised by resolution of the
Council.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must, once every year,
review all of its delegations.
117 Rules of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council
(1) The purpose of this section is to provide rules for the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council relating to the Council’s functions and
operations.
(2) The rules prescribed by the regulations as model rules are the
rules for the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
(3) However, the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may prepare
its own rules and submit them to the Registrar for
approval.
(4) On approval by the Registrar, the rules prepared by the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council, to the extent that they are not inconsistent
with this Act or the regulations, become the rules of the Council to the
exclusion of the model rules.
(5) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council’s rules may,
with the approval of the Registrar, be amended, repealed or replaced from time
to time.
(6) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may appeal to the
Court against the Registrar’s refusal to approve of rules or to approve
of an amendment, a repeal or a replacement of its
rules.
(7) On the hearing of an appeal under subsection (6), the Court may
direct the Registrar to approve of rules, or an amendment, a repeal or a
replacement of rules, specified in the direction.
118 Advisory committees
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may from time to time
appoint such advisory committees as the Council considers appropriate for the
purpose of advising the Council, carrying out consultations with Aboriginal
persons or facilitating discussion about issues arising under this
Act.
(2) An advisory committee has such functions as the Council may from
time to time determine in respect of it.
(3) An advisory committee consists of such persons appointed by the
Council as the Council thinks fit.
(4) A committee member holds office for such period as is specified in
the instrument of appointment of the committee member, but any such
appointment may be terminated by the Council at any
time.
(5) One of the committee members, in and by the instrument of
appointment of the committee member, is to be appointed as chairperson of the
committee.
(6) The procedure for the calling of meetings of an advisory committee
and for the conduct of business at those meetings is to be as determined by
the Council or (subject to any determination of the Council) by the
committee.
(7) A committee member is entitled to be paid such travelling and
other allowances as the Minister may from time to time determine in respect of
the committee member.
119 Approvals
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may impose conditions
on any approval given by the Council under this
Act.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), an approval may impose a time
within which a condition must be complied with.
(3) A Local Aboriginal Land Council must comply with the conditions of
an approval given to the Council by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
(4) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may revoke an approval
given by the Council under this Act.
Division 3 Councillors of NSW Aboriginal Land
Council
120 Membership of New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council is to consist of an
Aboriginal councillor elected for each Region.
(2) The councillors are to be full-time.
(3) Subject to this Act, a councillor holds office for a period
beginning on the councillor’s election and expiring:(a) on the councillor’s election for another term,
or
(b) on the election of the councillor’s
successor.
(4) A councillor is eligible (if otherwise qualified) for
re-election.
(5) A councillor is entitled to be paid remuneration in accordance
with the Statutory and Other Offices
Remuneration Act 1975.
(6) A councillor is entitled to be paid such travelling and other
allowances as the Minister may from time to time determine in respect of the
councillor.
(7) Part 3 of Schedule 3 has effect. The regulations may prescribe
additional requirements for or with respect to
meetings.
121 Election of councillors
(1) Each councillor is to be elected in the manner specified in this
Division to represent a Region.
(2) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the
election of councillors.
(3) The Electoral Commissioner for New South Wales, or a person
employed in the office of and nominated by the Electoral Commissioner, is to
be the returning officer for elections of
councillors.
(4) A person is not qualified to stand for election, or to be elected,
as a councillor representing a Region unless the person is a voting member of
a Local Aboriginal Land Council the area of which is within the
Region.
(5) A person is entitled to vote at an election for a councillor to
represent a Region if the person is a voting member of a Local Aboriginal Land
Council the area of which is within the Region.
(6) A person is only entitled to cast his or her vote in respect of
the Local Aboriginal Land Council area in which the person has voting
rights.
122 Timing of elections
(1) Elections of all councillors are to be held:(a) not sooner than 3 years and 9 months, and
(b) not later than 4 years and 3 months,
after the previous election of all
councillors.
(2) The Minister, in consultation with the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council, is in accordance with this section to determine a date for the
election of all councillors and is to notify the returning officer of that
date.
123 Declaration of election
If the returning officer for an election of councillors is advised
by a regional electoral officer that the result of the counting of votes is
that a candidate has been elected, the returning officer must immediately
publicly declare the candidate elected as a
councillor.
124 Councillors pending determination of disputed
return
(1) Section 123 applies even if the election of the candidate (or of
any other candidate in the election) is the subject of an application under
section 125 disputing the validity of the election of the
candidate.
(2) A candidate who is publicly declared elected as a councillor by
the returning officer holds that office until the determination of any
proceedings disputing the validity of the election of the
candidate.
(3) A candidate referred to in subsection (2) is taken to hold office,
and is competent to carry out all the functions and duties of a duly elected
councillor, from the date on which the returning officer declares the
candidate elected, until:(a) the Court hearing an application under section 125 disputing the
validity of the election of the candidate determines otherwise,
or
(b) the term of office of the councillor expires or becomes
vacant,
whichever is the earlier.
(4) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council in which a candidate
referred to in subsection (2) holds office is not invalidly constituted for
that reason.
125 Method of disputing elections and returns
(1) The validity of an election for a councillor to represent a
Region, or of any return or statement showing the voting in any such election,
may be disputed by an application to the Court, and not
otherwise.
(2) Any person may make an application to the Court under this section
within 28 days after the returning officer has publicly declared the result of
the election that is the subject of the
application.
(3) In determining an application under this section, the Court has
the same powers as are conferred by section 161 of the Parliamentary Electorates and Elections Act
1912 on the Court of Disputed
Returns.
(4) The returning officer is entitled to be represented at the hearing
of an application under this section.
126 Procedure
(1) The procedure of the Court on an application under section 125 is
to be determined by rules of Court, or in the absence of rules of Court, by
the Court or a Judge of the Court.
(2) The Court is not bound by the rules or practice of evidence and
can inform itself on any matter in such manner as it considers
appropriate.
(3) Despite section 125 (3), the Court may make an order for costs in
respect of an application under section 125 only if the Court is satisfied
that there are exceptional circumstances that warrant the making of such an
order.
127 Immaterial errors not to invalidate election
(1) An election of councillors of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council, or any return or statement showing the voting in an election, is not
invalid because of:(a) any delay in taking the votes of the electors or in making any
statement or return, or
(b) the absence of any officer, or
(c) the error or omission of any officer,
that could not have affected the result of the
election.
(2) If a person was prevented from voting in an election because of
the absence of any officer, or the error or omission of any officer, the Court
must not admit any evidence of the way the person intended to vote in order to
determine whether or not the absence, error or omission could have affected
the result of the election.
128 Decisions to be final
(1) A decision of the Court in respect of an application under section
125 is final and conclusive and without appeal, and is not to be questioned in
any way.
(2) Section 58 of the Land and
Environment Court Act 1979 does not apply to any such decision
of the Court.
129 Chairperson and Deputy Chairperson
(1) The councillors of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council are
to elect a Chairperson and a Deputy Chairperson at the first meeting of the
Council following the election of councillors.
(2) The Chairperson and Deputy Chairperson are to hold office for a
term of 2 years and are eligible (if otherwise qualified) for
re-election.
(3) The Deputy Chairperson is to act in the office of Chairperson
during the illness or absence of the Chairperson, and the Deputy Chairperson
while so acting, has and may exercise all the functions of the Chairperson and
is taken to be the Chairperson.
130 Role of councillors of NSW Aboriginal Land
Council
(1) The role of a councillor is, as a member of the governing body of
the Council:(a) to direct and control the affairs of the Council in accordance
with this Act, and
(b) to participate in the allocation of the Council’s resources
for the benefit of Aboriginal people, and
(c) to participate in the creation and review of the Council’s
policies and objectives, and
(d) to review the performance of the Council in the exercise of its
functions and the achievement of its objectives.
(2) The role of a councillor is, in addition:(a) to represent the interests and respond to the concerns of Local
Aboriginal Land Council members, and
(b) to facilitate communication between the Local Aboriginal Land
Council members and the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
131 Training for councillors
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must arrange training
in relation to the matters prescribed by the regulations for each councillor
elected for the first time to the Council.
(2) The training is to be provided not later than 6 months after the
date of election of the councillor.
(3) A councillor must not refuse or fail to undergo training provided
under this section when required to do so by the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council.
(4) If a councillor refuses or fails to undergo training provided
under this section when required to do so by the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council, the councillor is, on written notice being given to the
councillor by the Council, suspended from office as a councillor until the
person undergoes the training.
(5) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may:(a) exempt a councillor wholly or partly from the requirement to
undergo training provided under this section, if the Council is satisfied that
the councillor already has sufficient expertise, skills and experience to
carry out his or her functions as a councillor, or
(b) extend the period within which training is to be provided to a
councillor under this section.
Division 4 Removal from office
132 Grounds for disqualification from office
(1) A person is disqualified from holding office as a councillor of
the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council if the person:(a) has a conviction in New South Wales or elsewhere for an offence
relating to the management of a corporation that was recorded within the last
5 years, or
(b) has a conviction for an offence under this Act that was recorded
within the last 5 years, or
(c) has a conviction in New South Wales for any other 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 that was recorded within the last 5 years,
or
(d) is a mentally incapacitated person, or
(e) is or 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
(f) is or was a director or person concerned in the management of a
body corporate that is the subject of a winding up order or for which a
controller or administrator has been appointed under the Corporations Act 2001 of the Commonwealth
during the previous 3 years, or
(g) is disqualified from holding office in or being concerned in the
management of a corporation under any law of this or any other State or
Territory or the Commonwealth, or
(h) is an employee of, or a consultant to, the Council,
or
(i) in the case of a councillor, engages in other paid employment,
or
(j) was, on 2 or more occasions before an administrator was appointed
to the Council, an officer of the Council, or
(k) fails, without a reasonable excuse, for a period of 3 months or
more to comply with a written requirement by the Council to undergo training
under section 125, or
(l) is disqualified from being a Board member, other than on the
ground that the person is a councillor.
(2) The Registrar may determine that an offence committed by a person
should be ignored for the purposes of this section because of the time that
has passed since the offence was committed or because of the triviality of the
acts or omissions giving rise to the offence.
(3) The Registrar may determine that a person is not disqualified on
the ground set out in subsection (1) (j) if the Registrar is satisfied that it
is appropriate in the circumstances that the person not be disqualified on
that ground.
133 Vacancy in office
A person who is a councillor of the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council vacates office if the person:(a) dies, or
(b) is absent from 2 consecutive meetings of the Council of which
reasonable notice has been given to the person personally or by post, except
on leave granted by the Council or unless the person is excused by the Council
for having been absent from those meetings, or
(c) completes a term of office and is not re-elected,
or
(d) resigns the office by instrument in writing addressed to the
Council, or
(e) becomes disqualified from holding office as a councillor under
this Act, or
(f) represents a Region the area of which is
changed.
134 Casual vacancy
A person is to be appointed in accordance with the regulations to
fill a casual vacancy in the office of a councillor for the remainder of the
term of office.
135 ADT may declare particular offices of New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council vacant
(cf section 329 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) Any person may apply to the Administrative Decisions Tribunal for
an order declaring that a particular office of a councillor has become vacant
under this Act.
(2) The Tribunal may award costs under section 88 of the Administrative Decisions Tribunal Act
1997 in respect of proceedings commenced by an application
made under this section.
136 Appeals to Supreme Court against order
(cf section 330 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) A person whose office has been declared vacant by order of the
Administrative Decisions Tribunal may appeal against the order, on a question
of law, to the Supreme Court.
(2) Such an appeal may not be made more than 28 days after the date on
which the order is made.
137 Effect of order declaring vacancy
(cf section 331 of Local Government
Act 1993)
An order declaring a vacancy in an office made by the
Administrative Decisions Tribunal under this Division takes effect:(a) if no appeal to the Supreme Court is made against the order, at
the end of the period during which such an appeal may be made,
or
(b) if such an appeal is made within that period and the order is
confirmed on appeal, when the order is confirmed, or
(c) if, within that period, the person against whom the order is made
serves on the Chief Executive Officer of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council written notice of intention not to appeal against the order, when the
notice is lodged.
Division 5 Community, land and business plans
137A Community, land and business plans
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must prepare and
implement a community, land and business plan.
(2) The Council when preparing a community, land and business plan
must consult with the following persons:(a) persons who have a cultural association with land within the
State,
(b) any other persons required to be consulted by the regulations or a
policy of the Council.
(3) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may amend a community,
land and business plan.
(4) The provisions of this Division apply to any proposed amendment in
the same way as they apply to the preparation and approval of a
plan.
(5) For the purposes of this section, a person has a cultural
association with land if the person is an Aboriginal owner or a person of a
class prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this
subsection.
137B Matters covered by plans
(1) A community, land and business plan of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council must contain the following matters:(a) the objectives and strategy of the Council for the acquisition,
management and development of land and other assets,
(b) the objectives and strategy of the Council for the provision and
management of community benefits schemes,
(c) the objectives and strategy of the Council for carrying out
business enterprises and investment,
(d) the objectives and strategy of the Council in relation to
Aboriginal culture and heritage,
(e) if the plan contains particular proposals related to the
strategies in paragraph (a), (b) or (c), strategies for the development or
acquisition of human resources and skills to implement the
proposals,
(f) timelines for the achievement of proposed strategies and proposals
in the plan,
(g) particulars of the assets and liabilities of the
Council,
(h) any matter required to be included by a policy of the
Council,
(i) any other matter prescribed by the
regulations.
(2) A community, land and business plan must contain the following
matters in relation to land:(a) the identity, and particulars of any encumbrance affecting, any
parcel of land of the Council,
(b) the particulars of any other interest in land of the
Council,
(c) whether, and what, land is subject to the restriction contained in
section 42 or to Part 4A of the NPW Act,
(d) any conditions affecting land of the Council under section 36 or
39,
(e) any other matters prescribed by the
regulations.
137C Approval of community, land and business
plans
(1) A community, land and business plan is adopted by the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council if it is approved by a meeting of the Council,
of which not less than 14 days notice was given.
(2) The Chief Executive Officer of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council must make available to its councillors, on request, for a period of
not less than 14 days before any such meeting and at the meeting, a summary of
the proposed community, land and business plan or a copy of the
plan.
(3) The summary is to contain the matters prescribed by the
regulations.
(4) More than one meeting may be called to enable approval of a
community, land and business plan.
(5) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must not approve a
community, land and business plan unless it is satisfied that the plan
complies with this Act and the regulations and is consistent with any
applicable policy of the Council.
(6) A community, land and business plan takes effect when it is
approved by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
(7) A community, land and business plan has effect for the period (not
exceeding 5 years) specified in the plan or until it is replaced, whichever
occurs first.
(8) Failure to comply with a requirement of this Division for the
preparation or approval of a community, land or business plan does not affect
the validity of the plan.
137D Administration may follow plan failure
(1) A failure by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council to
approve a proposed community, land and business plan within 3 months after the
plan is first referred to a meeting of the Council for approval is, for the
purposes of section 223, a ground that justifies the appointment of an
administrator (without any requirement for a report referred to in section 223
(3)).
(2) A substantial failure by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council to comply with its community, land and business plan is, for the
purposes of section 223, a ground that justifies the appointment of an
administrator (without any requirement for a report referred to in section 223
(3)).
Divisions 6–8
(Repealed)
Division 9 Chief Executive Officer of New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council
(cf sections 334–336 of Local
Government Act 1993)
138 Chief Executive Officer
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must appoint a person
to be its Chief Executive Officer.
(2) For the purposes of this Act (other than section 139), the Chief
Executive Officer is taken to be a member of staff of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council.
138A Certain persons must not be employed as Chief Executive
Officer
(1) The following persons must not be or continue to be employed as
the Chief Executive Officer of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council:(a) a person who is a Board member or a
councillor,
(b) a person who has a conviction in New South Wales or elsewhere for
an offence relating to the management of a corporation that was recorded
within the last 5 years,
(c) a person who has a conviction in New South Wales for any 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 that was recorded within the
last 5 years,
(d) a person who is disqualified from holding office in or being
concerned in the management of a corporation under any law of this or any
other State or Territory or the Commonwealth,
(e) a person who has an interest in, or is an employee of or concerned
in the management of, a corporation that receives a benefit from the
Council,
(f) a person who is already engaged as a consultant to the
Council,
(g) a person who is a member of staff of a Local Aboriginal Land
Council,
(h) a person who has been dismissed on the recommendation of the
Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal within the last 5
years,
(i) a person who is disqualified under this Act from being a Board
member or a councillor (other than on the grounds of employment by the Council
or ceasing to be a voting member of a Local Aboriginal Land
Council).
(2) The Registrar may determine that an offence committed by a person
should be ignored for the purposes of this section because of the time that
has passed since the offence was committed or because of the triviality of the
acts or omissions giving rise to the offence.
139 Functions of Chief Executive Officer
(1) The Chief Executive Officer is generally responsible for the
efficient and effective operation of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council’s organisation and for ensuring the implementation, without
undue delay, of decisions of the Council.
(2) The Chief Executive Officer has the following particular
functions:(a) the day-to-day management of the Council’s
affairs,
(b) the exercise of such of the functions of the Council as are
delegated by the Council to the Chief Executive Officer,
(c) the appointment of members of staff in accordance with the staff
organisation structure and resources approved by the
Council,
(d) the direction and dismissal of members of
staff.
(3) The Chief Executive Officer has such other functions as may be
conferred or imposed on the Chief Executive Officer by or under this or any
other Act.
140 Attendance of Chief Executive Officer at
meetings
(cf section 376 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) Subject to subsection (2), the Chief Executive Officer is entitled
to attend, but not to vote at, a meeting of the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council.
(2) However, the Council may, by resolution, exclude the Chief
Executive Officer from a meeting, or part of a meeting, of the
Council.Note. The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may resolve to exclude
the Chief Executive Officer from a meeting, or part of a meeting, that deals
with a matter relating to the standard of performance of the Chief Executive
Officer or the terms of the employment of the Chief Executive
Officer.
141 Filling of vacancy in position of Chief Executive
Officer
(1) If a vacancy occurs in the position of Chief Executive Officer,
the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must immediately appoint a person
under section 138 to the vacant position or appoint a person to act in the
vacant position.
(2) A vacancy occurs in the position of Chief Executive Officer if the
Chief Executive Officer:(a) dies, or
(b) completes the term of his or her contract and is not re-appointed,
or
(c) resigns from the position, or
(d) becomes a mentally incapacitated person and is removed from the
position by the Council because of that mental incapacity,
or
(e) becomes a person who is not eligible to continue to be employed on
a ground referred to in section 138A, or
(f) is removed from the position for breach of or under the terms of
the Chief Executive Officer’s contract with the
Council.
141A Delegations by Chief Executive Officer
(1) The Chief Executive Officer may delegate to any person or body any
of the functions of the Chief Executive Officer, other than this power of
delegation.
(2) The Chief Executive Officer may sub-delegate a function delegated
to the Chief Executive Officer by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
to any person or body (including another member of staff of the
Council).
Division 10 Staff of New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council
142 Staff organisation structure
(cf sections 332 (1) and 333 of Local Government Act
1993)
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must determine:(a) a staff organisation structure that it considers
appropriate:(i) to enable the Council to exercise its functions,
and
(ii) (Repealed)
(b) the resources to be allocated towards the employment of
staff.
(2) The organisation structure may be re-determined by the Council
from time to time.
(3) The organisation structure must be reviewed by the Council within
12 months after every election of all councillors.
143 Appointments and promotion to be on merit
(1) Appointments to the staff of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council and promotions for members of that staff are to be made on the basis
of the merit of the applicants for appointment or
promotion.
(2) The merit of persons eligible for appointment or promotion to a
vacant position is to be determined having 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.
143A Vacancies to be advertised
(1) If it is proposed to make an appointment to a vacant position in
the staff of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council, the Chief Executive
Officer must advertise the vacancy in the manner prescribed by the
regulations.
(2) The Chief Executive Officer need not advertise a vacant position
if the Registrar approves.
144 Certain persons must not be employed
A person who is convicted of an offence under Part 3 (except
section 61), 4, 4A or 5 of the Crimes Act
1900 must not be employed as a staff member of the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council for 5 years from the date of
conviction.
145 Consultants to be engaged on merit
(cf former section 27E)
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may engage such
consultants as it considers appropriate.
(2) A decision by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council to
engage a consultant is to be made on the basis of
merit.
(3) The merit of persons eligible to be engaged as a consultant is to
be determined having regard to:(a) the nature of the duties of the work required to be done,
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.
Division 11
146–148(Repealed)
Part 8 Finance
Division 1 Establishment of accounts
149 NSW Aboriginal Land Council Account
(cf former section 29)
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council is to establish in an
authorised deposit-taking institution an account named the “New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council Account” (the Account).
(2) The following is to be deposited in the Account:(a) money provided to the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council by
Parliament for the purposes of this Act,
(b) any other money received by that Council and not required by or
under this or any other Act to be paid into any other account or
fund.
(3) Subject to section 150, the following is to be paid from the
Account:(a) money to be provided to advisory committees and Local Aboriginal
Land Councils for the purposes of this Act,
(b) amounts required to meet expenditure incurred by the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council in the execution or administration of this
Act,
(c) any other payments authorised by or under this or any other
Act.
(4) Expenditure incurred in the execution or administration of this
Act includes:(a) the payment of the salaries of staff of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council, and
(b) the cost of the election of councillors (including the costs
incurred by the Electoral Commissioner for New South Wales),
and
(c) the payment of amounts for travelling and other allowances to
Board members and remuneration and allowances to
councillors.
(5) Money to the credit of the Account may be invested in any manner
authorised by the regulations.
149A NSW Aboriginal Land Council Community Fund
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council is to establish in an
authorised deposit-taking institution an account named the “New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council Community Fund” into which is to be
paid:(a) amounts of community development levy, and
(b) additional amounts payable by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council under section 42U, and
(c) any money paid to the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council for
the purposes of the Fund, and
(d) any interest received in respect of the investment of money
belonging to the Fund, and
(e) any money directed to be paid into the Fund by or under this or
any other Act.
(2) There is payable from the Fund:(a) money for grants to a Local Aboriginal Land Council for the
purpose of the management and acquisition of land, and
(b) money for community benefit schemes for persons within the area of
a Local Aboriginal Land Council, and
(c) amounts of repayments of excess community development levy paid by
Local Aboriginal Land Councils, and
(d) amounts of excess payments made by the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council under section 42U, and
(e) any other payments authorised by or under this or any other
Act.
(3) In determining amounts to be paid from the Fund, the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council must have regard to any applicable policy of the
Council.
(4) Money to the credit of the account may be invested in any manner
in which the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council Account may be
invested.
150 Preservation of money in NSW Aboriginal Land Council
Account
(cf former section 29A)
(1) The capital value of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
Account, as at 31 December 1998, is to be maintained.Note. The capital value of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
Account as at 31 December 1998 was determined in the 1998–1999 Annual
Report for that Council to be $485,340,000.
(2) Net realised investment income and net realised capital gains on
money to the credit of the Account (being realised investment income and
realised capital gains less any costs incurred in investing the money,
including the cost of obtaining investment advice) after 31 December 1998 may
be disbursed from the Account.
(3) For the purposes of subsection (1), any amount to the credit of
the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council Community Fund is to be taken into
account for the purposes of determining the capital value of the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council Account.
151 (Repealed)
152 Local Aboriginal Land Council Accounts
(cf former section 31)
(1) Each Local Aboriginal Land Council is to establish in an
authorised deposit-taking institution an account (the Local
Aboriginal Land Council’s Account).
(2) The following is to be deposited in the Local Aboriginal Land
Council’s Account:(a) money received from the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
for or in respect of the acquisition of land,
(b) any other money received by the Local Aboriginal Land Council and
not required by or under this or any other Act to be paid into any other
account or fund.
(3) The following is to be paid from the Local Aboriginal Land
Council’s Account:(a) amounts required for the acquisition of land by the Council where
that acquisition has been approved in accordance with this
Act,
(b) amounts required to meet expenditure incurred by the Council in
the execution or administration of this Act,
(c) any other payments authorised by or under this or any other
Act.
(4) Money to the credit of the account may be invested in any manner
authorised by the regulations.
Division 2 Keeping of accounts
153 Local Aboriginal Land Councils to keep
accounts
(cf former section 32)
(1) Each Local Aboriginal Land Council must cause proper accounts and
records to be kept in relation to all its
operations.
(2) Each such Council must prepare financial statements for each
financial year of the Council in accordance with section 41B (1) of the
Public Finance and Audit Act
1983.
(2A) Section 41BA of the Public
Finance and Audit Act 1983 applies to financial statements
required to be prepared under this section in the same way that it applies to
financial reports required to be prepared under that
Act.
(3) The financial statements must be submitted for verification and
certification to an auditor appointed by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council in the manner prescribed by the
regulations.
(4) The financial statements must be prepared and submitted to the
auditor not later than 6 weeks after the end of the financial year to which
they relate.
(5) Each such Council must furnish to the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council the audited financial statements and such other documents as are
prescribed by the regulations, not later than 4 months after the end of each
financial year.
(6) For the avoidance of doubt, the audited financial statements
prepared and furnished to the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council under
this section must include information relating to all the Council’s
funding and operations and not merely funding received from, and operations
funded by, the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
154 Regulations may set requirements to judge satisfactory
financial statements
The regulations may provide for the requirements that must be met
by audited financial statements and other documents to assess whether the
audited financial statements and other documents required to be furnished to
the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council under this Division by a Local
Aboriginal Land Council are satisfactory.
155 Local Aboriginal Land Councils may request special
auditor
The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must, on the request
of a Local Aboriginal Land Council, appoint a special auditor to examine the
financial affairs of the Local Aboriginal Land
Council.
156 Financial year of Aboriginal Land Councils
(cf former section 33)
The financial year of an Aboriginal Land Council is the year
commencing 1 July.
157 Budget of New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council
(cf former section 34 (1) and (2))
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must, not less than 6
weeks before the commencement of each financial year, prepare and submit for
the approval of the Minister a detailed budget relating to its proposed
operations during that financial year.
(2) In determining whether or not to approve a budget, the Minister
may seek from the Council, and the Council must furnish to the Minister, such
information as the Minister requests relating to the
budget.
158 Budget of Local Aboriginal Land Councils
(cf former section 34A)
(1) Each Local Aboriginal Land Council must, not less than 10 weeks
before the commencement of each financial year, prepare and submit for the
approval of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council a detailed budget
relating to its proposed operations during that financial
year.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may seek information
relating to the budget from a Local Aboriginal Land Council at any
time.
(3) The budget prepared and submitted under this section is to include
details of a Council’s proposed operations, including operations to be
funded by persons or bodies other than the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council, and is to contain any matters prescribed by the
regulations.
159 Quarterly and six monthly reports by New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must, if directed to
do so by the Minister, prepare and submit to the Minister within 10 weeks
after the end of each quarter of each financial year a report
specifying:(a) the amounts of funds granted during the quarter by that Council to
Local Aboriginal Land Councils and the purposes for which the funds were
granted, and
(b) whether the Local Aboriginal Land Councils concerned have complied
with the financial obligations imposed by this Part in relation to those
grants.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must prepare and
submit to the Minister within 10 weeks after the end of each 6-month period
ending on 30 June and 31 December in each year a report specifying:(a) the amounts of funds granted during the 6-month period by that
Council to Local Aboriginal Land Councils and the purposes for which the funds
were granted, and
(b) whether the Local Aboriginal Land Councils concerned have complied
with the financial obligations imposed by this Part in relation to those
grants.
(3) The regulations may prescribe the form and content of such
reports.
160 NSW Aboriginal Land Council may give other Councils
directions regarding accounting
(cf former section 34 (4))
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may give directions,
not inconsistent with this Act or the regulations, to Local Aboriginal Land
Councils with respect to the following:(a) the establishment and monitoring of a uniform system of accounting
by those Aboriginal Land Councils,
(b) the form, contents and method of preparation of budgets by those
Councils,
(c) other matters relating to the keeping of financial records and the
making of financial reports by those Councils.
(2) A Local Aboriginal Land Council must comply with a direction given
under this section.
161 Annual reports
(cf former section 61 and sections 8 and 9 of Annual Reports (Statutory Bodies) Act
1984)
(1) Each Local Aboriginal Land Council must in each year, as soon as
practicable after 30 June, but on or before 1 November, forward to the New
South Wales Aboriginal Land Council a report of its operations for the 12
months ending on 30 June in that year.
(2) The report of the operations of a Local Aboriginal Land Council is
to include the particulars set out in Schedule 1 to the Annual Reports (Statutory Bodies)
Regulation 2000.
(3) In addition to any other requirement under any other Act relating
to the annual report of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council, the
annual report is to include the following particulars for the financial year
to which the report relates:(a) the total remuneration (including travelling expenses) paid to
each councillor by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council,
(b) the total funds granted to each Local Aboriginal Land Council by
the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council.
Division 3 Funding of Local Aboriginal Land
Councils
162 Funding agreements
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may enter into a
funding agreement with a Local Aboriginal Land Council under which the New
South Wales Aboriginal Land Council agrees to grant funds to the Local
Aboriginal Land Council on certain specified
conditions.
(2) A funding agreement may provide that if the Local Aboriginal Land
Council breaches a provision of the agreement, the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council is to cease to provide funds to the Local Aboriginal Land
Council.
(3) A funding agreement is subject to the provisions of section
163.
(4) The regulations may prescribe a model funding agreement that my be
adopted for the purposes of this section.
163 Cessation of funding
(cf former section 34C)
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must cease immediately
to provide any funds to a Local Aboriginal Land Council if the Local
Aboriginal Land Council:(a) fails to furnish satisfactory audited financial statements and
documents to the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council in accordance with
Division 2, or
(b) otherwise fails to comply with section 153, 158 or 159,
or
(c) is the subject of a report by an investigator appointed in
accordance with Division 1 of Part 11 recommending that funds should cease to
be provided to the Council.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may not resume
providing funds to such a Local Aboriginal Land Council until:(a) the Local Aboriginal Land Council furnishes satisfactory audited
financial statements and documents to the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council under Division 2 or otherwise complies with section 153, 158 or 159,
or
(b) the Minister, after consideration of a report of:(i) an investigator appointed in accordance with Division 1 of Part
11, or
(ii) an administrator of the area of the
Council,
notifies the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council in writing that the
provision of funds may be resumed.
(3) Nothing in this section prevents funds from being provided to a
Local Aboriginal Land Council for the area for which an administrator has been
appointed under Division 2 of Part 11.
(4) Despite subsection (1), the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council may, in its discretion, make payments from the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council Account to cover expenses incurred by the Local
Aboriginal Land Council before or after the cessation of
funding.
Part 9 Registrar and Registers of Aboriginal Land Claims and
Aboriginal Owners
(cf former Part 8A)
Division 1 Registrar
164 Appointment of Registrar
(1) The Governor may appoint a Registrar.
(2) Schedule 1 has effect with respect to the
Registrar.
(3) The Registrar has and may exercise the functions conferred or
imposed on the Registrar by or under this or any other
Act.
165 Functions of Registrar
The functions of the Registrar are as follows:(a) to register land claims made under this Act by the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council or Local Aboriginal Land Councils,
(b) to maintain the Register of Aboriginal Land Claims and the
Register of Aboriginal Owners,
(c) to approve the rules of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council and Local Aboriginal Land Councils,
(d) to make recommendations to the Minister and carry out such other
prescribed functions in relation to the constitution of Local Aboriginal Land
Council areas and the constitution of Local Aboriginal Land Councils, the
alteration of area boundaries of Local Aboriginal Land Council areas and the
changing of names of Local Aboriginal Land Councils,
(e) to make recommendations to the Minister and carry out such other
prescribed functions in relation to the alteration of area boundaries of
Regions and the changing of names of Regions,
(f) to issue compliance directions to Aboriginal Land Councils,
officers of Aboriginal Land Councils and councillors relating to the
administration of the Act and the regulations and to refer failures to comply
with such directions to the Court,
(g) to mediate, conciliate or arbitrate disputes relating to the
operation of this Act and the regulations or to refer such disputes to
independent mediators, conciliators or arbitrators,
(h) to investigate complaints regarding the non-disclosure of
pecuniary interests, misbehaviour by councillors, Board members and members of
staff of, and consultants to, Aboriginal Land Councils and breaches of this
Act and the regulations,
(h1) at the request of the Minister, to provide to the Minister
information as to the operations of an Aboriginal Land
Council,
(i) such other functions conferred or imposed on the Registrar by or
under this or any other Act.
165A Delegation
The Registrar may delegate the exercise of any function of the
Registrar under this Act (other than this power of delegation) to:(a) any member of staff of the Department of Aboriginal Affairs,
or
(b) any person, or any class of persons, authorised for the purposes
of this section by the regulations.
Division 2 Register of Aboriginal Land Claims
166 Register of Aboriginal Land Claims
(1) The Registrar must establish and keep a Register of land
claims.
(2) The Register of Aboriginal Land Claims is to be kept in a form
prescribed by the regulations or, if no form is prescribed, in a form
determined by the Registrar.
167 Contents of Register of Aboriginal Land Claims
The Register of Aboriginal Land Claims is to include the following
information:(a) a number for each individual land claim (sequential over
time),
(b) the name of the Aboriginal Land Council that made the land
claim,
(c) a description of the land claimed,
(d) the parish or parishes and the county or counties that the land
claimed is within,
(e) the local government area or areas that the land claimed is
within,
(f) the date of lodgment with the Registrar of the land
claim,
(g) the date of determination of the land claim by the Crown Lands
Minister (within the meaning of section 36),
(h) such other information prescribed by the
regulations.
168 Registrar may request information from Crown Lands
Minister
The Registrar may request the Crown Lands Minister (within the
meaning of section 36) to provide information relating to a land claim that is
listed on the Register of Aboriginal Land Claims.
169 Regulations may provide for public inspection of
Register
The regulations may make provision for public inspection of the
Register of Aboriginal Land Claims.
Division 3 Register of Aboriginal Owners
170 Register of Aboriginal Owners
(cf former section 49B)
(1) The Registrar must establish and keep a Register of Aboriginal
Owners.
(2) The Register is to be kept in a form prescribed by the regulations
or, if no form is prescribed, in a form determined by the
Registrar.
171 Contents of Register of Aboriginal Owners
(cf former section 49C)
(1) The Registrar is to use the Registrar’s best endeavours to
enter in the Register of Aboriginal Owners:(a) the name of every Aboriginal person who has a cultural association
with land in the State, and
(b) the location of the land with which the Aboriginal person has a
cultural association, and
(c) the nature of the cultural association that the Aboriginal person
has with the land.
(2) The name of an Aboriginal person must not be entered in the
Register unless the Aboriginal person:(a) is directly descended from the original Aboriginal inhabitants of
the cultural area in which the land is situated, and
(b) has a cultural association with the land that derives from the
traditions, observances, customs, beliefs or history of the original
Aboriginal inhabitants of the land, and
(c) has consented to the entry of the person’s name in the
Register.
(3) The Registrar is to give priority to the entry in the Register of
the names of Aboriginal persons who have a cultural association with:(a) lands listed in Schedule 14 to the NPW Act,
and
(b) lands to which section 36A applies.
Note. Schedule 14 to the NPW Act lists lands of cultural significance to
Aboriginal persons that are reserved or dedicated under that
Act.Section 36A applies to lands that are the subject of a claim by
one or more Aboriginal Land Councils under section 36 of this Act and that the
Crown Lands Minister is satisfied would be claimable lands except for the fact
that the lands are needed, or likely to be needed, for the essential public
purpose of nature conservation.
172 Requests for entry of names in Register
(cf former section 49D)
(1) Any Aboriginal person may make a written request to the Registrar
to enter the name of an Aboriginal person in the Register of Aboriginal
Owners.
(2) A request must specify the land with which the Aboriginal person
nominated for inclusion in the Register has a cultural association and the
cultural area in which the land is situated.
(3) A request must not be made without the written consent of the
Aboriginal person nominated for inclusion in the
Register.
173 Requests for opening of parts of Register of Aboriginal
Owners
(cf former section 49E)
(1) The Minister administering the NPW Act may request the Registrar
to open a part of the Register of Aboriginal Owners for the purpose of
entering the names of Aboriginal persons who have a cultural association with
lands that the Minister administering the NPW Act has recommended to the
Governor be listed in Schedule 14 to that Act.
(2) The Registrar is to comply with a request made by a Minister under
this section.
(3) An Aboriginal person or an Aboriginal Land Council may also
request the Registrar to open a part of the Register for the purpose of
entering the names of Aboriginal persons who have a cultural association with
a particular area of land specified in the request.
174 Rectification of Register
(cf former section 49F)
(1) An Aboriginal person or group of Aboriginal persons that considers
that his, her or their names have been wrongly entered on or omitted from the
Register of Aboriginal Owners may request the Registrar to rectify the
register.
(2) An Aboriginal person or group of Aboriginal persons who has or
have made a request under subsection (1) may appeal to the Court if the
Registrar fails or refuses to rectify the Register in the manner requested
within 6 months after the making of the request.
(3) On the hearing of an appeal under this section, the Court
may:(a) order the Registrar to rectify the Register,
or
(b) decline to order that the Register be rectified,
or
(c) make such other order as to the Court appears
appropriate.
(4) An appeal is to be made within the time and in the manner provided
by the rules of the Court.
(5) The Registrar has the right to appear and be heard by the Court in
the appeal proceedings.
(6) In deciding an appeal, the Court:(a) has the functions and discretions of the Registrar under this
Part, and
(b) is not bound by the rules of evidence and may inform itself on any
matter in any way that the Court considers to be
just.
(7) A decision of the Court on an appeal is final and is to be given
effect to as if it were the decision of the
Registrar.
(8) The Court may award costs in an appeal under this section in
exceptional circumstances only.
175 Reference by Registrar to Land and Environment
Court
(cf former section 49G)
(1) The Registrar may refer to the Court, for decision by the
Court:(a) a request for the entry of the name of an Aboriginal person in the
Register of Aboriginal Owners, or
(b) a request for the omission of the name of an Aboriginal person
from the Register, or
(c) any other question arising under this Part in relation to the
keeping of the Register by the Registrar.
(2) The Chief Judge of the Court is to determine whether or not the
Court should deal with the request or question.
(3) The Court may:(a) hear and determine the request or question, or
(b) refer the request or question back to the Registrar, with such
directions or recommendations as the Court considers
appropriate.
(4) The Court may hear and determine a part of a question and refer
the remainder back to the Registrar.
(5) The Registrar is to give effect to a determination of the Court
under this section.
Part 10 Honesty and disclosure of interests
(cf Chapter 14 of Local Government
Act 1993)
Division 1 Honesty, care and diligence
176 Conduct of councillors, Board members and staff of
Aboriginal Land Councils
(cf section 439 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) Every councillor, Board member and member of staff of an
Aboriginal Land Council or an advisory committee, must:(a) act honestly and exercise a reasonable degree of care and
diligence in carrying out his or her functions under this or any other Act,
and
(b) act for a proper purpose in carrying out his or her functions
under this or any other Act, and
(c) not use his or her office or position for personal advantage,
and
(d) not use his or her office or position to the detriment of an
Aboriginal Land Council.
(2) Although this section places certain duties on officers and
members of staff of a Council, and on councillors, nothing in this section
gives rise to, or can be taken into account in, any civil cause of
action.
Division 2 Codes of conduct
177 Codes of conduct
(cf section 440 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) Every Local Aboriginal Land Council must, within such period as
the Registrar directs, prepare and submit to the Registrar for approval a code
of conduct to be observed by all officers and members of staff of the
Council.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must, within such
period as the Registrar directs, prepare and submit to the Registrar for
approval a code of conduct to be observed by all councillors and members of
staff of the Council.
(3) An Aboriginal Land Council may, with the approval of the
Registrar, amend or replace its code of conduct.
(4) The Registrar may prepare and issue a model code of conduct. A
Council may, but need not, adopt the model code.
(5) A code of conduct prepared in accordance with this section may
declare that the breach of a specified provision of the code (a dismissal
provision):(a) by a Board member of a Local Aboriginal Land Council—allows
the Council by majority vote to remove that person from office,
or
(b) (Repealed)
(c) by a councillor of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council—causes a councillor to vacate his or her office as
councillor.
(6) Until a code of conduct for an Aboriginal Land Council is approved
by the Registrar in accordance with this section, the code of conduct
prescribed by the regulations is the code of conduct for that Aboriginal Land
Council.
Division 3 Aboriginal Land Councils Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal
178 Establishment of Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal
(cf section 487 of Local Government
Act 1993)
For the purposes of this Part, there is established a tribunal to
be known as the Aboriginal Land Councils Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal.
179 Constitution of Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal
(cf section 488 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) The Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal consists of one
part-time member, appointed by the Governor, who is an Australian legal
practitioner eligible for appointment as a District Court or Supreme Court
Judge or who is a retired District Court or Supreme Court
Judge.
(2) A person is not qualified for appointment if, within 12 months
before the appointment, the person has been an officer or a member of staff of
an Aboriginal Land Council or a councillor.
(3) Schedule 2 has effect with respect to the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal.
180 Functions of Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal
(cf section 489 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) The Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal has exclusive
jurisdiction at first instance to decide allegations of contraventions of
Division 4.
(2) Accordingly, proceedings at first instance to decide allegations
of contraventions of Division 4 may not be brought before, or entertained by,
any other tribunal or any court.
(3) The Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal has such other
functions as are conferred or imposed on it by or under this or any other
Act.
181 Annual report
(cf section 490 of Local Government
Act 1993)
The Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal must, within 2
months after the end of each year, provide a report to the Minister concerning
proceedings that have been conducted before it during that
year.
Division 3A Misbehaviour
181A Interpretation
(cf section 440F of Local
Government Act 1993)
(1) In this Division:member
of staff means a member of staff of, or a consultant to, an
Aboriginal Land Council.
misbehaviour of a
person means any of the following:
(a) a contravention by the person of this Act or the
regulations,
(b) a failure by the person to comply with an applicable code of
conduct,
(c) if the person is a councillor or a Board member—an act of
disorder committed by a councillor at a meeting of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council or by a Board member at a meeting of the Board or of
the Local Aboriginal Land Council,
but does not include a contravention of the disclosure requirements of
Division 4.
(2) A reference in this Division to misbehaviour or an
incident
of misbehaviour includes a reference to misbehaviour that consists
of an omission or failure to do something.
181B Formal censure for misbehaviour
(cf section 440G of Local
Government Act 1993)
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may by resolution at a
meeting formally censure a councillor or a member of staff of the Council for
misbehaviour.
(2) A Local Aboriginal Land Council or a Board of a Council may by
resolution at a meeting formally censure a Board member or member of staff of
the Council for misbehaviour.
(3) A formal censure resolution may be passed only if the Council or
Board is satisfied that the person has misbehaved on one or more
occasions.
(4) The Council or Board must specify in the formal censure motion the
grounds on which it is satisfied that the person should be
censured.
181C Process for initiating suspension or other
action
(cf section 440H of Local
Government Act 1993)
(1) The process for the suspension of, or taking action against, a
person is initiated by:(a) a request made by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council or
Local Aboriginal Land Council or Board by resolution communicated to the
Registrar, in which the Council or Board states its belief that grounds may
exist that warrant a councillor’s or Board member’s expulsion or
action being taken against a member of staff of the Council concerned,
or
(b) a request made by the Registrar to the Council or Board for a
report from the Council or Board in relation to a councillor’s or Board
member’s or member of staff’s alleged misbehaviour,
or
(c) a report made by the Ombudsman in which the Ombudsman states that
the Ombudsman is satisfied that grounds exist that warrant the
councillor’s or Board member’s suspension or action being taken
against a member of staff, or
(d) a report made by the Independent Commission Against Corruption in
which the Commission recommends that consideration be given to suspending a
councillor or Board member or taking action against a member of staff under
this Division.
(2) The Council or Board must make a report to the Registrar requested
under subsection (1) (b) before the date specified in the Registrar’s
request or any later date allowed by the Registrar.
(3) This section authorises such requests and reports to be made, and
a reference in this section to a report made by the Independent Commission
Against Corruption or the Ombudsman is a reference to a report made to the
Registrar under the authority of this subsection or under any other provisions
of this or any other Act.
(4) Nothing in this section affects any function under any other
provision of this or any other Act that authorises the making of a report or
recommendation concerning suspension of a councillor or Board member or taking
action against a member of staff.
181D Grounds on which a person may be suspended or action
taken
(cf section 440I of Local
Government Act 1993)
(1) The grounds on which a councillor or Board member may be suspended
from office or action taken against a member of staff under this Division are
as follows:(a) the person’s behaviour has:(i) been disruptive over a period, and
(ii) involved more than one incident of misbehaviour during that
period,
and the pattern of behaviour during that period is of such a sufficiently
serious nature as to warrant the person’s suspension or the action being
taken,
(b) the person’s behaviour has involved one incident of
misbehaviour that is of such a nature as to warrant the person’s
suspension or the action being taken.
(2) The process for the suspension of or taking other action against a
person cannot be initiated by a request made by an Aboriginal Land Council or
a Board unless:(a) where subsection (1) (a) applies—the person has:(i) on 2 or more occasions been formally censured for incidents of
misbehaviour that occurred during the period concerned, or
(ii) in the case of a councillor or Board member—on at least one
occasion been expelled from a meeting of the Council or Board for an incident
of misbehaviour during the period concerned, or
(b) where subsection (1) (b) applies—the person has:(i) been formally censured for the incident of misbehaviour concerned,
or
(ii) in the case of a councillor or Board member—been expelled
from a meeting of the Council or Board for the incident of misbehaviour
concerned.
(3) Subsection (2) does not affect the Registrar’s power to
initiate the process for the suspension of a person or to take action against
a member of staff.
(4) Furthermore, subsection (2) does not prevent the Registrar from
initiating the process for the suspension of a person as a result of a request
or report referred to in section 181C.
181E How requests and reports are to be dealt with
(cf section 440J of Local
Government Act 1993)
(1) The Registrar may conduct an investigation into any or all of the
matters raised by or connected with a request or report referred to in section
181C or authorise an investigator referred to in section 216 to conduct such
an investigation and to prepare a report into those
matters.
(2) The conduct of an investigation by the Registrar or the
preparation of a report by an investigator is a prerequisite to a decision by
the Registrar to suspend the councillor or Board member from office or take
action against a member of staff, but is not necessary if the Independent
Commission Against Corruption or the Ombudsman states in a report that the
Commission or Ombudsman is satisfied that grounds exist that warrant the
person’s suspension or action being taken.
181F Suspension by Registrar for misbehaviour
(cf section 440K of Local
Government Act 1993)
(1) The Registrar may by order in writing suspend a councillor or
Board member from office for a period not exceeding 3 months:(a) if the Registrar has conducted an investigation or considered an
investigator’s report into the matters concerned and is satisfied that
grounds exist that warrant the person’s suspension,
or
(b) if the Independent Commission Against Corruption or the Ombudsman
states in a report that the Commission or Ombudsman is satisfied that grounds
exist that warrant the councillor’s or Board member’s
suspension.
(2) A copy of the order must be served on the councillor or Board
member.
(3) A councillor or Board member, while suspended from office under
this section:(a) is not entitled to exercise any functions of the office,
and
(b) is not entitled to any fee or other remuneration to which he or
she would otherwise be entitled as the holder of the
office.
181G When suspension order takes effect
(cf section 440L of Local
Government Act 1993)
The period of suspension under an order made by the Registrar
commences on the date 7 days after the service of the order on the councillor
or Board member or the date specified in the order for the commencement of the
period of suspension, whichever is the later.
181H Appeals against suspension
(cf section 440M of Local
Government Act 1993)
(1) A councillor or Board member against whom an order of suspension
is made by the Registrar may appeal against the order to the Pecuniary
Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal.
(2) Such an appeal may not be made more than 28 days after the date
the order was served on the councillor.
(3) The Tribunal may stay the order of suspension until such time as
the Tribunal determines the appeal.
(4) The Tribunal may:(a) confirm the order, or
(b) quash the order, or
(c) amend the order consistently with the powers of the
Registrar.
(5) If the order is quashed, any fee or other remuneration withheld is
payable to the councillor or Board member.
(6) If the order is amended, the order as amended has effect as if it
had been made in that form by the Registrar.
(7) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the
making, hearing and determination of appeals under this
section.
181I Actions by Registrar against members of staff for
misbehaviour
(1) The Registrar may take action under this section in relation to a
member of staff:(a) if the Registrar has conducted an investigation or considered an
investigator’s report into the matters concerned and is satisfied that
grounds exist that warrant the action, or
(b) if the Independent Commission Against Corruption or the Ombudsman
states in a report that the Commission or Ombudsman is satisfied that grounds
exist that warrant the taking of action.
(2) The Registrar may:(a) counsel the member of staff, or
(b) reprimand the member of staff, or
(c) recommend that the Council take disciplinary action against the
member of staff (including counselling or reprimanding the member of staff),
or
(d) recommend dismissal of the member of
staff.
181J Appeals against action against members of
staff
(1) A member of staff against whom a decision is made by the Registrar
to take action may appeal against the decision to the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal.
(2) Such an appeal may not be made more than 28 days after the date
notice of the decision was served on the member of
staff.
(3) The Tribunal may stay the decision until such time as the Tribunal
determines the appeal.
(4) The Tribunal may:(a) confirm the decision, or
(b) quash the decision, or
(c) amend the decision consistently with the powers of the
Registrar.
(5) If the decision is amended, the decision as amended has effect as
if it had been made in that form by the Registrar.
(6) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the
making, hearing and determination of appeals under this
section.
181K Referral of matters to Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal
(cf section 440N of Local
Government Act 1993)
(1) The Registrar may refer a matter that is the subject of a request
or report referred to in section 181C for consideration by the Pecuniary
Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal instead of suspending the councillor or
Board member or taking action against the member of staff concerned under this
Division.
(2) However, a matter that is the subject of a request by an
Aboriginal Land Council or Board may not be referred to the Tribunal unless
the councillor or Board member concerned has previously been suspended or
dealt with under this Division for misbehaviour.
(3) The conduct of an investigation on the preparation and
consideration of an investigator’s report is not a prerequisite to a
decision by the Registrar to refer a matter to the Tribunal, but the Registrar
may take into consideration any such investigation or any investigator’s
report if one is prepared.
(4) A matter is referred to the Tribunal under this section by means
of a report presented to the Tribunal by the Registrar. A report may contain
or be accompanied by such material and observations as the Registrar thinks
fit.
(5) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the
reference of matters to the Tribunal under this
section.
181L Alternatives to suspension or referral to Pecuniary
Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal
(cf section 440O of Local
Government Act 1993)
(1) The Registrar may, after conducting an investigation or
considering a request or report made under section 181C and any relevant
investigation or investigator’s report prepared under section 181E,
decide to take no further action on the request or report, whether or not an
investigation or a report by an investigator has been authorised, started or
completed, if satisfied that no further action is
warranted.
(2) The Registrar may, at any time, exercise the power to issue a
compliance direction to a councillor or Board member or member of staff under
this Act.
(3) The Registrar may, instead of suspending a councillor or Board
member from office under this Division or taking action in relation to a
member of staff or referring the matter to the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal, refer the matter to the Aboriginal Land Council or
Board of a Local Aboriginal Land Council with recommendations as to how the
Council or Board might resolve the matter, by alternative dispute resolution
or otherwise.
181M Expenses to be borne by Aboriginal Land
Councils
(cf section 440P of Local
Government Act 1993)
(1) The Registrar may recover the reasonable expenses incurred by or
in respect of the Registrar considering and dealing with a request made under
section 181C, including the expenses of any investigation by the Registrar or
an investigator and investigator’s report into the matters raised by or
connected with the request.
(2) The Registrar may make a determination of the amount of the
expenses referred to in subsection (1) and serve a notice requiring the amount
so determined to be paid in recovery of the Registrar’s expenses
on:(a) in the case of a councillor or a member of its staff—the New
South Wales Aboriginal Land Council, or
(b) in the case of a Board member or a member of its staff—the
Local Aboriginal Land Council.
(3) An amount equal to the expenses as so determined is payable to the
Registrar as a debt by the Council concerned, except as determined by the
Minister.
(4) The Council may apply to the Administrative Decisions Tribunal for
a review of whether any part of the expenses so determined are not reasonable
expenses.
(5) The Registrar must give effect to any decision of that Tribunal on
a review of the determination of the amount of the
expenses.
(6) A reference in this section to expenses incurred includes a
reference to remuneration paid to the investigator.
181N Reasons to be given
(cf section 440Q of Local
Government Act 1993)
(1) The Registrar is required to prepare a written statement of
reasons for:(a) imposing or deciding not to impose a period of suspension or
taking or deciding not to take action in relation to a member of staff,
or
(b) referring a matter to the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal.
(2) The statement of reasons is to be provided to the councillor,
Board member or member of staff concerned.
181O Other proceedings or actions not affected
Nothing in this Division affects or limits any proceedings or
other action that may be taken in respect of a councillor, Board member or
member of staff.
Division 4 Duties of disclosure
Subdivision 1 Preliminary
182 Definition of “pecuniary interest”
(cf section 442 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) For the purposes of this Part, a pecuniary
interest is an interest that a person has in a matter because of a
reasonable likelihood or expectation of appreciable financial gain or loss to
the person or another person with whom the person is associated as provided in
section 183.
(2) A person does not have a pecuniary interest in a matter if the
interest is so remote or insignificant that it could not reasonably be
regarded as likely to influence any decision the person might make in relation
to the matter.
183 Persons who have pecuniary interests
(cf section 443 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) For the purposes of this Part, a person has a pecuniary interest
in a matter if the pecuniary interest is the interest of:(a) the person, or
(b) another person with whom the person is associated as provided by
this section.
(2) A person is taken to have a pecuniary interest in a matter
if:(a) the person’s spouse or de facto partner or a relative of the
person, or a partner or employer of the person, has a pecuniary interest in
the matter, or
(b) the person, or a nominee, partner or employer of the person, is a
member of a company or other body that has a pecuniary interest in the
matter.
Note. “De facto partner” is defined in section 21C of the
Interpretation Act
1987.
(3) However, a person is not taken to have a pecuniary interest in a
matter as referred to in subsection (2):(a) if the person is unaware of the relevant pecuniary interest of the
spouse, de facto partner, relative, partner, employer or company or other
body, or
(b) just because the person is a member of, or is employed by, a
council or a statutory body or is employed by the Crown,
or
(c) just because the person is a member of, or a delegate of a council
to, a company or other body that has a pecuniary interest in the matter, so
long as the person has no beneficial interest in any shares of the company or
body.
Subdivision 2 Disclosure of pecuniary interests at
meetings
184 Disclosure and presence in meetings
(cf section 451 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) An officer or member of staff of an Aboriginal Land Council or a
councillor who has a pecuniary interest in any matter with which the Council
is concerned and who is present at a meeting of the Council at which the
matter is being considered must disclose the nature of the interest to the
meeting as soon as practicable.
(2) Unless the Aboriginal Land Council determines otherwise, the
officer, member of staff or councillor must not be present at, or in sight of,
the meeting of the Aboriginal Land Council:(a) at any time during which the matter is being considered or
discussed by the Council, or
(b) at any time during which the Council is voting on any question in
relation to the matter.
185 Disclosures to be recorded
(cf section 453 of Local Government
Act 1993)
A disclosure made at a meeting of an Aboriginal Land Council must
be recorded in the minutes of the meeting.
186 General disclosure
(cf section 454 of Local Government
Act 1993)
A general notice given to a meeting of an Aboriginal Land Council
in writing by an officer or a member of staff of the Aboriginal Land Council
or a councillor to the effect that the officer, staff member or councillor, or
the officer’s, staff member’s or councillor’s spouse, de
facto partner or relative, is:(a) a member, or in the employment, of a specified company or other
body, or
(b) a partner, or in the employment, of a specified
person,
is, unless and until the notice is withdrawn, sufficient disclosure of
the officer’s, staff member’s or councillor’s interest in a
matter relating to the specified company, body or person that may be the
subject of consideration by the Council after the date of the
notice.
187 Disclosure by consultants
(cf section 456 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) A consultant, engaged by an Aboriginal Land Council, who gives
advice on any matter at any meeting of the Council must disclose the nature of
any pecuniary interest the person has in the matter to the meeting at the time
the advice is given.
(2) The person is not required to disclose the person’s interest
as a consultant.
188 Circumstances in which sections 184 and 187 are not
breached
(cf section 457 of Local Government
Act 1993)
A person does not breach section 184 or 187 if the person did not
know and could not reasonably be expected to have known that the matter under
consideration at the meeting was a matter in which he or she had a pecuniary
interest.
Division 5 Complaints concerning non-disclosure
189 Complaints concerning failure to disclose pecuniary
interests
(cf section 460 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) A person may make a complaint to the Registrar, or the Registrar
may make a complaint, that a person has or may have contravened Division
4.
(2) A complaint must:(a) be in writing, and
(b) identify the complainant and the person against whom the complaint
is made, and
(c) give particulars of the grounds of the complaint,
and
(d) be verified by statutory declaration, and
(e) be lodged with the Registrar.
(3) The provisions of subsection (2) (b), in so far as they require a
complaint to identify the complainant, (d) and (e) do not apply to a complaint
made by the Registrar.
190 Registrar may require further information
(cf section 461 of Local Government
Act 1993)
The Registrar may require the complainant to provide further
particulars of the complaint within the time specified by the
Registrar.
191 Inquiries regarding complaints
(cf section 462 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) The Registrar may make inquiries regarding a
complaint.
(2) The Registrar may decide not to make inquiries regarding a
complaint but to request the Minister to appoint an investigator under
Division 1 of Part 11 to investigate a matter to which the complaint
relates.
192 Decision not to inquire into complaint
(cf section 463 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) The Registrar may decide to take no action concerning a complaint
if the Registrar considers that the complaint falls into any of the following
categories:(a) the complaint is frivolous, vexatious or not made in good
faith,
(b) the subject-matter of the complaint is trivial or does not warrant
inquiry,
(c) the subject-matter of the complaint has been or is under
investigation by some other competent person or body or has been or is the
subject of legal proceedings,
(d) the complaint raises issues that require investigation by another
person or body,
(e) there is or was, in relation to the matter complained of, a
satisfactory alternative means of dealing with the matter by the
complainant,
(f) the complaint relates to a matter that occurred more than 2 years
before the complaint was made and the complainant does not have a sufficient
reason for having delayed the making of the complaint,
(g) the complainant has failed to provide further particulars of the
complaint within the time specified by the
Registrar.
(2) If the Registrar decides to take no action concerning a complaint,
the Registrar must notify the complainant and give the reasons for the
decision, unless the Registrar is the complainant.
193 Referral and investigation of complaints by other
authorities
(cf section 464 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) An authority who receives a matter for the purpose of
investigation is authorised by this Act to refer the matter to the Registrar
if the matter involves a possible contravention of Division
4.
(2) A matter referred to the Registrar under this section is taken to
be a complaint made by the Registrar.
Note. Authority is defined in
section 4 to mean the Ombudsman, the Independent Commission Against
Corruption, the Commissioner of Police or the Director of Public
Prosecutions.
194 Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal to be
notified of inquiries
(cf section 465 of Local Government
Act 1993)
The Registrar must notify the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal of a decision to make inquiries regarding a complaint or to refer a
complaint for investigation to an authority.
195 Persons to be notified of complaint
(cf section 466 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) The Registrar must, within 3 months after receiving a complaint,
making a complaint or having a matter referred to the Registrar under section
193, give the person against whom the complaint is made notice of the nature
of the complaint and whether any action has been, or is intended to be, taken
concerning the complaint.
(2) At the same time as notice is given to the person against whom the
complaint is made, the Registrar must, unless the Registrar is the
complainant, notify the complainant whether any action has been, or is
intended to be, taken concerning the complaint.
(3) However, at the time the notice is given to the person against
whom the complaint is made, the Registrar is not obliged to notify the
complainant of the decision not to make inquiries regarding a complaint if
notice of that decision has already been given under section 192
(2).
196 Reports of investigation of complaints by
authorities
(cf section 467 of Local Government
Act 1993)
An authority who has investigated an allegation that a person has
or may have contravened Division 4 (whether or not the allegation was referred
for inquiry by the Registrar) is authorised by this Act to send any report
prepared by the authority concerning the investigation to the
Registrar.Note. Authority is defined in
section 4 to mean the Ombudsman, the Independent Commission Against
Corruption, the Commissioner of Police or the Director of Public
Prosecutions.
197 Presentation of reports to Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal
(cf section 468 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) The Registrar must present a report to the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal of the Registrar’s inquiries regarding a complaint
carried out by the Registrar.
(2) The Registrar must present to the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal any report received under section 196 from an
authority.
Division 6 Proceedings before the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal
Subdivision 1 Proceedings relating to pecuniary interest
matters
198 Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal to decide
whether or not to conduct proceedings into a complaint
(cf section 469 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) After considering a report presented to it in relation to a
complaint, the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal may decide to
conduct proceedings into the complaint.
(2) If the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal decides not to
conduct proceedings into a complaint, it must provide a written statement of
its decision, and the reasons for its decision:(a) to the person against whom the complaint was made,
and
(b) to the person who made the complaint, and
(c) to the Registrar, unless the Registrar is the
complainant.
(3) To avoid doubt, a decision by the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal not to conduct proceedings into a complaint is not a
decision to which section 213 (Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal to
provide details of its decisions) or 214 (Appeals to Supreme Court)
applies.
199 Circumstances in which Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal may dispense with hearing
(cf section 470 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) After considering the report of the Registrar and any other
document or other material lodged with or provided to the Tribunal, the
Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal may determine the proceedings
without a hearing if:(a) the person who made the complaint and the person against whom the
complaint is made have agreed that the proceedings may be determined without a
hearing, and
(b) there are no material facts in dispute between the person who made
the complaint and the person against whom the complaint is made,
and
(c) in the opinion of the Tribunal, public interest considerations do
not require a hearing.
(2) To avoid doubt, a decision by the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal to determine proceedings into a complaint without a
hearing is a decision to which sections 213 (Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal to provide details of its decisions) and 214 (Appeals to
Supreme Court) apply.Note. Section 213 requires the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal to inform certain parties of decisions in proceedings before
it.
Subdivision 2 Proceedings relating to misbehaviour
199A Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal to decide
whether or not to conduct proceedings into a referred matter relating to
misbehaviour
(cf section 470A of Local
Government Act 1993)
(1) After considering a report presented to it under section 181K in
relation to a referred matter, the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal may decide to conduct proceedings into the
matter.
(2) If the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal decides not to
conduct proceedings into a referred matter, it must provide a written
statement of its decision, and the reasons for its decision:(a) to the person to whom the report relates, and
(b) to the Council or Board concerned, and
(c) to the Registrar.
(3) To avoid doubt, a decision by the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal not to conduct proceedings is not a decision to which
section 213 or 214 applies.
(4) The Registrar is to be a party to any proceedings conducted by the
Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal into a referred
matter.
199B Circumstances in which Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal may dispense with hearing
(cf section 470B of Local
Government Act 1993)
(1) After considering a report presented to it under section 181K and
any other document or other material lodged with or provided to the Tribunal
in relation to the report, the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal
may determine the proceedings without a hearing if:(a) the Registrar and the person to whom the report relates have
agreed that the proceedings may be determined without a hearing,
and
(b) there are no material facts in dispute between the Registrar and
person, and
(c) in the opinion of the Tribunal, public interest considerations do
not require a hearing.
(2) To avoid doubt, a decision by the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal to determine proceedings in a referred matter without a
hearing is not a decision to which section 213 or 214 applies.Note. Section 213 requires the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal to inform certain parties of decisions in proceedings before
it.
Subdivision 3 General provisions
200 General conduct of proceedings
(cf section 471 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) The Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal may determine its
own procedure, subject to this Act.
(2) In the conduct of any proceedings, the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal:(a) may inform itself on any matter in any way it thinks fit and is
not bound by the rules of evidence, and
(b) may receive information or submissions in the form of oral or
written statements, and
(c) may consult with such persons as it thinks
fit.
201 Private and public hearings
(cf section 472 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) A hearing is to be held in public unless the Pecuniary Interest
and Disciplinary Tribunal decides otherwise.
(2) In reaching such a decision, the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal is to have regard to any matters which it considers are
related to the public interest.
202 Representation at hearings
(cf section 473 of Local Government
Act 1993)
At a hearing before the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal, a person is entitled to be represented by an Australian legal
practitioner.
203 Presentation of cases at hearings
(cf section 474 of Local Government
Act 1993)
A party to proceedings before the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal conducted by hearing may:(a) call and examine any witness, and
(b) cross-examine any witness called by another party,
and
(c) examine any copy of any document or part of a document produced in
the proceedings, and
(d) produce documents and exhibits to the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal, and
(e) otherwise adduce, orally or in writing, to the Pecuniary Interest
and Disciplinary Tribunal such matters, and address the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal on such matters, as are relevant to the
proceedings.
204 Power to summon witnesses and take evidence at
hearings
(cf section 475 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) This section applies only to proceedings conducted by
hearing.
(2) The Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal may summon a
person to appear in proceedings before the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal, to give evidence and to produce such documents (if any) as are
referred to in the summons.
(3) The Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal may require a
person appearing in the proceedings to produce a
document.
(4) The Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal may, in
proceedings before it, take evidence on oath, and for that purpose the
Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal:(a) may require a person appearing in the proceedings to give evidence
to take an oath or affirmation in a form approved by the Pecuniary Interest
and Disciplinary Tribunal, and
(b) may administer an oath or affirmation to a person so appearing in
the proceedings.
(5) A person served with a summons to appear in any such proceedings
and to give evidence must not, without reasonable excuse:(a) fail to attend as required by the summons, or
(b) fail to attend from day to day unless excused, or released from
further attendance, by the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal.
(6) A person appearing in proceedings to give evidence must not,
without reasonable excuse:(a) when required to be sworn—fail to comply with the
requirement, or
(b) fail to answer a question that the person is required to answer by
the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal, or
(c) fail to produce a document that the person is required to produce
by this section.
Maximum penalty: 20 penalty
units.
205 Power to obtain documents
(cf section 476 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) The Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal may, by notice in
writing served on a person, require the person:(a) to attend, at a time and place specified in the notice, before the
Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal, and
(b) to produce, at that time and place, to the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal a document specified in the
notice.
(2) A person who, without reasonable excuse, fails to comply with a
notice served on the person under this section is guilty of an
offence.Maximum penalty (subsection (2)): 20 penalty
units.
206 Privilege concerning answers and documents
(cf section 477 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) A witness summoned to attend or appearing before the Pecuniary
Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal at a hearing is not excused from answering
any question or producing any document or other thing:(a) on the ground that the answer or production may incriminate the
witness, or
(b) on any other ground of privilege, or
(c) on the ground of a duty of secrecy or other restriction on
disclosure, or
(d) on any other ground.
(2) An answer made, or document or other thing produced, by a witness
at a hearing before the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal is not
(except as otherwise provided by this section) admissible in evidence against
the witness in any civil or criminal proceedings or in any disciplinary
proceedings.
(3) Nothing in this section makes inadmissible:(a) any answer, document or other thing in any civil or criminal
proceedings or in any disciplinary proceedings if the witness does not object
to giving the answer or producing the document or other thing irrespective of
the provisions of subsection (1), or
(b) any document in any civil proceedings for or in respect of any
right or liability conferred or imposed by the document or other
thing.
(4) If:(a) an Australian legal practitioner or other person is required to
answer a question or produce a document or other thing at a hearing before the
Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal, and
(b) the answer to the question would disclose, or the document or
other thing contains, a privileged communication passing between the
practitioner (in his or her capacity as an Australian legal practitioner) and
a person for the purpose of providing or receiving legal professional services
in relation to the appearance, or reasonably anticipated appearance, of a
person at a hearing before the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal,
the Australian legal practitioner or other person is entitled to refuse
to comply with the requirement, unless the privilege is waived by a person
having authority to do so.
207 Additional complaints
(cf section 478 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) The Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal may in
proceedings before it deal with one or more complaints about a
person.
(2) If, during any such proceedings, it appears to the Pecuniary
Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal that, having regard to any matters that
have arisen, another complaint could have been made against the person
concerned:(a) whether instead of or in addition to the complaint which was made,
and
(b) whether or not by the same complainant,
the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal may take that other
complaint to have been referred to it and may deal with it in the same
proceedings.
(3) If another complaint is taken to have been referred to the
Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal under subsection (2), the
complaint may be dealt with after such an adjournment (if any) as is, in the
opinion of the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal, just and
equitable in the circumstances.
(4) If another complaint is taken to have been referred to the
Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal under subsection (2), the
Tribunal may do either or both of the following:(a) reconsider any decision under section 199 to determine proceedings
on the original complaint without a hearing and, if appropriate, recommence
proceedings in relation to that complaint, or that complaint and any
additional complaint, by way of hearing,
(b) decide, in accordance with section 199, to determine proceedings,
in relation to the original complaint, any additional complaint or all
complaints, without a hearing.
208 Adjournments
(cf section 479 of Local Government
Act 1993)
The Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal may adjourn
proceedings for any reason it thinks fit.
209 Release of information
(cf section 480 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) The Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal may, if it thinks
it appropriate in the particular circumstances of the case (and whether or not
on the request of a person):(a) direct that the name of any witness is not to be disclosed in the
proceedings, or
(b) in the case of a complaint—direct that all or any of the
following matters are not to be published:(i) the name and address of any witness,
(ii) the name and address of a complainant,
(iii) the name and address of the person against whom the complaint was
made,
(iv) any specified evidence,
(v) the subject-matter of a complaint, or
(c) in the case of proceedings in relation to a matter referred to the
Tribunal under section 181K—direct that all or any of the following
matters are not to be published:(i) the name and address of any witness,
(ii) the name and address of the person to whom the referred matter
relates,
(iii) any specified evidence,
(iv) the subject-matter of the referred
matter.
(2) A direction may be amended or revoked at any time by the Pecuniary
Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal.
(3) A direction may be given before or during proceedings, but must
not be given before the proceedings unless notice is given of the time and
place appointed by the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal for
consideration of the matter to:(a) a person who requested the direction, and
(b) the complainant or the person against whom the complaint was made,
or the person to whom the referred matter relates, as appropriate,
and
(c) such other person as the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal thinks fit.
(4) A person who contravenes a direction given under this section is
guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty (subsection (4)): 20 penalty units (in the case of
an individual) or 150 penalty units (in the case of a
corporation).
210 Witnesses’ expenses
(cf section 481 of Local Government
Act 1993)
A person who is required to appear or to give evidence before the
Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal is entitled to be paid such
allowances and expenses as the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal
may determine in respect of the person.
211 Decision of Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal—interest matters
(cf section 482 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) The Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal may, if it finds
a complaint against an officer of an Aboriginal Land Council or a councillor
is proved:(a) counsel the officer or councillor, or
(b) reprimand the officer or councillor, or
(c) if the complaint is against a councillor:(i) suspend the councillor from office for a period not exceeding 6
months, or
(ii) if the councillor is an officer of the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council, remove the councillor from that office,
or
(d) disqualify the officer or councillor from holding office as a
councillor or a Board member for a period not exceeding 5
years.
Note. Suspension from office as a councillor under this section does not
create a casual vacancy in that office.
(2) If it finds a complaint against a member of staff of an Aboriginal
Land Council is proved, the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal
may:(a) counsel the staff member, or
(b) reprimand the staff member, or
(c) recommend that the Council take specified disciplinary action
against the staff member (including counselling or reprimanding the staff
member), or
(d) recommend dismissal of the staff
member.
(3) The Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal may, if it finds
a complaint against a consultant to an Aboriginal Land Council is
proved:(a) counsel the consultant, or
(b) reprimand the consultant, or
(c) suspend the consultant from acting as consultant for a period not
exceeding 6 months, or
(d) disqualify the consultant from acting as a consultant to that
Council for a period not exceeding 5 years.
211A Decision of Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal—misbehaviour matters
(1) This section applies where a matter has been referred to the
Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal under section
181K.
(2) The Tribunal may, if it finds that the behaviour concerned of a
councillor or Board member warrants action under this section:(a) counsel the councillor or Board member, or
(b) reprimand the councillor or Board member, or
(c) suspend the councillor or Board member from office for a period
not exceeding 6 months, or
(d) if the referral relates to a councillor who is an officer of the
New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council, remove the councillor from that
office, or
(e) disqualify the councillor or Board member from holding office as a
councillor or Board member for a period not exceeding 5
years.
(3) The Tribunal may, if it finds that the behaviour concerned of a
member of staff of an Aboriginal Land Council warrants action under this
section:(a) counsel the member of staff, or
(b) reprimand the member of staff, or
(c) recommend that the Council take specified disciplinary action
against the member of staff (including counselling or reprimanding the member
of staff), or
(d) recommend the dismissal of the member of staff,
or
(e) disqualify the member of staff from holding office in an
Aboriginal Land Council for a period not exceeding 5
years.
(4) In this section, member of
staff has the same meaning as it has in Division
3A.
212 Standard of proof
(cf section 483 of Local Government
Act 1993)
A finding of the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal is
to be made on the balance of probabilities.
213 Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal to provide
details of its decisions
(cf section 484 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) The Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal must provide a
written statement of a decision made in proceedings before it to the person
against whom the proceedings were taken, to the person who made the initial
complaint (or to the relevant Aboriginal Land Council in the case of a matter
that has been referred to the Tribunal under section 181K) and, unless the
Registrar is that initial complainant, to the Registrar and must do so as soon
as practicable after the decision is made.
(2) The statement of a decision must:(a) set out the findings on material questions of fact,
and
(b) refer to any evidence or other material on which the findings were
based, and
(c) give the reasons for the decision.
(3) The Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal may also:(a) provide the statement of a decision to any other persons that the
Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal thinks fit,
and
(b) if it thinks fit, and subject to section 209, make the statement
of a decision publicly available.
(4) The Registrar may, if he or she thinks fit, and subject to any
direction made by the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal under
section 209, make any statement of decision provided to the Registrar by the
Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal publicly
available.
214 Appeals to Supreme Court
(cf section 485 of Local Government
Act 1993)
(1) A party to a proceeding before the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal may appeal to the Supreme Court against any decision of
the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal in the proceeding, other than
a decision of the Tribunal determining an appeal to the Tribunal under section
181H.
(2) An appeal must be made within 28 days after the day on which the
statement of the decision of the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal
is provided to the person making the appeal or within such further time as the
Supreme Court allows.
(3) The Supreme Court may stay any decision made by the Pecuniary
Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal, on such terms as the Court thinks fit,
until such time as the Court determines the appeal.
(4) On the hearing of an appeal, the Supreme Court may:(a) make an order reversing, affirming or amending the decision
appealed against, or
(b) remit the matter to the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal for decision by the Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary Tribunal in
accordance with the order of the Court, or
(c) make an order directing a rehearing of the proceedings in respect
of which the decision appealed against was made, or
(d) make such other order in relation to the appeal as the Court
thinks fit.
215 Referral of matters by Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal
(cf section 486 of Local Government
Act 1993)
Despite section 180 (1) and (2), the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal may refer a matter before it to an authority if it
considers that it is more appropriate that the authority deal with the matter
and if the authority agrees to the referral.
Part 11 Investigation and administration of Aboriginal Land
Councils
Division 1 Investigation of Aboriginal Land
Councils
216 Appointment of investigator into Aboriginal Land
Councils
(cf former section 56D (1)–(4))
(1) The Minister may appoint an investigator, from a list of
investigators jointly prepared by the Director-General and the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council, to investigate the affairs, or specified affairs, of
an Aboriginal Land Council, including its efficiency and
effectiveness.
(2) The Minister may appoint an investigator to investigate the
affairs of a Local Aboriginal Land Council only with the approval of the New
South Wales Aboriginal Land Council or on the recommendation of the Registrar
with the approval of that Council.
(3) The Minister must prepare a report in writing of the
Minister’s reasons for appointing an investigator to investigate the
efficiency and effectiveness of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
(4) The Minister is to cause a copy of such a report to be laid before
both Houses of Parliament as soon as practicable after the investigator is
appointed.
(5) The investigator is to be paid out of the funds of the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council. However, in the case of an investigator
appointed to investigate the affairs, or specified affairs, of a Local
Aboriginal Land Council, the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may
recover that amount from the Council concerned.
217 Contents of investigator’s instrument of
appointment
(1) The instrument by which the Minister appoints an investigator
under this Division must specify the following:(a) whether all or only specified affairs of the Aboriginal Land
Council concerned are to be investigated,
(b) the time within which the report required to be prepared by the
investigator under section 219 is to be delivered to the Minister, or the
Minister and the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council,
(c) the term of office of the investigator,
(d) the functions and duties of the investigator,
(e) unless remuneration for investigators appointed under this
Division is prescribed by the regulations—the remuneration of the
investigator,
(f) any other matter prescribed by the
regulations.
(2) The instrument may also contain provision for the payment to the
investigator of remuneration in addition to the remuneration specified in the
instrument. For example, the instrument could provide for the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council to approve the payment of additional remuneration that
it is satisfied is reasonable.
218 Aboriginal Land Councils to assist
investigators
(cf former section 56D (5)–(7))
(1) The Chairperson of an Aboriginal Land Council and any other person
who has possession or control of any records of the Council must, if required
to do so by an investigator who produces evidence of his or her appointment,
provide the investigator with:(a) access to such of the records as relate to the affairs being
investigated, and
(b) information that the Chairperson or other person is able to give
in relation to those records and affairs, and
(c) authorities or orders on bankers and others that relate to those
records or affairs and that the Chairperson or other person is able to
provide.
Maximum penalty (subsection (1)): 10 penalty
units.
(2) If a record:(a) is not in writing, or
(b) is not written in the English language, or
(c) is not decipherable on sight,
a requirement to provide access to the record is not complied with unless
access is provided to a statement, written in the English language and
decipherable on sight, that contains all the information in the
record.
(3) A person must not hinder, obstruct or delay an investigator in the
exercise of his or her functions.Maximum penalty (subsection (3)): 10 penalty
units.
219 Investigator to report
(cf former section 56D (8))
The investigator is to report on the investigation:(a) in the case of an investigation of the affairs of the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council—to the Minister,
(b) in any other case—to the Minister and the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council.
220 Minister may extend term of office of
investigator
(1) The Minister may extend the term of office of an investigator
appointed under this Division to investigate the affairs, or specified
affairs, of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
(2) The Minister may, with the consent of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council, extend the term of office of an investigator
appointed under this Division to investigate the affairs, or specified
affairs, of a Local Aboriginal Land Council.
221 Minister may remove an investigator
(1) The Minister may, at any time, remove an investigator appointed
under this Division to investigate the affairs, or specified affairs, of the
New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council.
(2) The Minister may, at any time, with the consent of the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council, remove an investigator appointed under this
Division to investigate the affairs, or specified affairs, of a Local
Aboriginal Land Council.
221A Provision of information to Registrar and New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council
(1) The Chairperson of an Aboriginal Land Council and any other person
who has possession or control of any records of the Council must, if required
to do so by the Registrar, provide the Registrar with:(a) access to such of the records as relate to the operations of the
Council requested by the Registrar, and
(b) information that the Chairperson or other person is able to give
in relation to those records and operations, and
(c) authorities or orders on bankers and others that relate to those
records or operations and that the Chairperson or other person is able to
provide.
Maximum penalty (subsection (1)): 10 penalty
units.
(2) The Chairperson of a Local Aboriginal Land Council and any other
person who has possession or control of any records of the Council of the
Council must, if required to do so by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council, provide the Council with:(a) access to such of the records as relate to the operations of the
Local Aboriginal Land Council requested by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council, and
(b) information that the Chairperson or other person is able to give
in relation to those records and operations, and
(c) authorities or orders on bankers and others that relate to those
records or operations and that the Chairperson or other person is able to
provide.
Maximum penalty (subsection (2)): 10 penalty
units.
(3) If a record:(a) is not in writing, or
(b) is not written in the English language, or
(c) is not decipherable on sight,
a requirement to provide access to the record is not complied with unless
access is provided to a statement, written in the English language and
decipherable on sight, that contains all the information in the
record.
Division 2 Administration of Aboriginal Land
Councils
222 Administrators—Local Aboriginal Land
Councils
(cf former section 57)
(1) The Minister may at any time appoint, from a list of persons
jointly prepared by the Director-General and the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council, an administrator for a Local Aboriginal Land Council:(a) if there are not sufficient members of that Council to form a
quorum of the Council, or
(b) if the Council fails to furnish satisfactory audited financial
statements and documents to the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council in
accordance with Division 2 of Part 8, or
(c) if the Council otherwise fails to comply with section 153, 158 or
159, or
(d) if the Minister is of the opinion, on the receipt of a report by
an investigator appointed in accordance with Division 1, or otherwise, that
the funds or other property of the Council have not been properly applied or
managed, or
(e) if the Council has substantially breached the requirements of this
Act or the regulations or the rules of the Council, or
(f) if the Minister is of the opinion that the Council has ceased for
6 months substantially to exercise its functions.
(2) Notice of an appointment of an administrator under this section
must be published in the Gazette.
(3) The Minister must not appoint an administrator under this section
without the approval of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
(4) The administrator has, during the period of his or her
appointment, to the exclusion of the Council:(a) all, or such part as is specified in the administrator’s
instrument of appointment, of the functions of the Board of the Council
conferred or imposed by or under this Act, and
(b) the functions of the Council and the members of the Council
exercised by resolution of the members of the Council that are prescribed by
the regulations (except as provided by the administrator’s instrument of
appointment).
(5) The administrator is to be paid out of the funds of the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council which may recover the amount paid from the Local
Aboriginal Land Council for which the administrator has been
appointed.
(6) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the
functions of the administrator.
(7) Without limiting subsection (6), the regulations may:(a) specify functions that the administrator must not exercise, except
on a resolution of members of the Council, and
(b) specify functions of the Board of the Council that the
administrator must not exercise, except on a resolution of members of the
Council.
223 Administrators—New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council
(cf former section 57A)
(1) The Minister may appoint an administrator of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council.
(2) Notice of an appointment of an administrator under this section
must be published in the Gazette.
(3) The Minister may appoint an administrator under this section only
after considering one of the following reports that discloses, in the opinion
of the Minister, grounds that justify the making of such an
appointment:(a) a report of the Auditor-General, or
(b) a report of an investigator appointed in accordance with Division
1.
(4) The administrator has, during the period of his or her
appointment, all, or such part as is specified in the administrator’s
instrument of appointment, of the functions of the Council conferred or
imposed by or under this Act, to the exclusion of the
Council.
(5) The administrator is to be paid out of the funds of the
Council.
(6) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the
functions of the administrator.
223A Notice of appointment of administrator
(1) The Minister may, before appointing an administrator of an
Aboriginal Land Council under this Division, give not less than 14 days notice
in writing of the appointment to:(a) in the case of a Local Aboriginal Land Council—each Board
member and the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council,
and
(b) in the case of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council—each councillor.
(2) The Minister must, before appointing an administrator, take into
account any written representations received from any person or body to whom
notice was given under this section.
223B Interim actions pending appointment of
administrator
(1) The Minister may, by notice in writing to an Aboriginal Land
Council, take any of the following actions, pending the appointment of an
administrator of the Council:(a) prohibit the Council from exercising certain specified functions
or taking specified actions, except with the approval of the Minister, for a
specified period,
(b) appoint a person to act as an interim administrator of the
Council, with specified functions, for a specified period (not exceeding 3
months).
(2) A notice under this section ceases to have effect if an
administrator is appointed under this Division or if the Minister decides not
to appoint an administrator under this Division.
(3) The Minister must notify the Aboriginal Land Council in writing if
the Minister decides not to appoint an
administrator.
(4) The Minister may revoke or vary a notice given under this
section.
(5) An Aboriginal Land Council must not fail to comply with a notice
given under this section.
224 Contents of administrator’s instrument of
appointment
(1) The instrument by which the Minister appoints an administrator
under this Division must specify the following:(a) whether the administrator is to administer all or only specified
functions of the Aboriginal Land Council concerned,
(b) the term of office of the administrator,
(c) the functions and duties of the administrator,
(d) unless remuneration for administrators appointed under this
Division is prescribed by the regulations—the remuneration of the
administrator,
(e) any other matter prescribed by the
regulations.
(2) The instrument may also contain provision for the payment to the
administrator of remuneration in addition to the remuneration specified in the
instrument. For example, the instrument could provide for the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council to approve the payment of additional remuneration that
it is satisfied is reasonable.
225 Certain persons ineligible to be
administrators
The Minister must not appoint any of the following persons as an
administrator of an Aboriginal Land Council:(a) a councillor,
(b) a Board member,
(c) a member of a Local Aboriginal Land Council,
(d) a member of staff of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
226 Removal of office holders on appointment of
administrator
(cf former section 57B)
(1) On the appointment of an administrator to administer all of the
functions of a Local Aboriginal Land Council, the Board members of the Council
are removed from office and fresh elections to fill the vacancies are to be
held, in the manner specified by the regulations, so as to enable vacancies to
be filled at the conclusion of the administrator’s term of
office.
(2) On the appointment of an administrator to administer all of the
functions of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council, the councillors are
removed from office and fresh elections to fill the vacancies are to be held,
in the manner specified by the regulations, so as to enable vacancies to be
filled at the conclusion of the administrator’s term of
office.
Note. If an administrator is appointed to administer only specified
functions of an Aboriginal Land Council, the officers or councillors (as the
case may be) of that Council remain in office and may continue to exercise
those functions of the Council not given to the
administrator.
227 Officers to assist administrator
(cf clause 94 of 1996 Regulation)
(1) The Chairperson of an Aboriginal Land Council and any other person
who has possession or control of any records of the Council must, if required
to do so by an administrator who produces evidence of his or her appointment,
provide the administrator with:(a) access to such of the records as relate to the functions of the
Council being performed by the administrator, and
(b) information that the Chairperson or other person is able to give
in relation to those records and functions, and
(c) authorities or orders on bankers and others that relate to those
records or functions and that the Chairperson or other person is able to
provide.
Maximum penalty: 10 penalty
units.
(2) A requirement to provide access to a record that:(a) is not in writing, or
(b) is not written in the English language, or
(c) is not decipherable on sight,
is not complied with unless access is provided to a statement, written in
the English language and decipherable on sight, that contains all the
information in the record.
(3) A person must not hinder, obstruct or delay an administrator in
the exercise of his or her functions.Maximum penalty (subsection (3)): 10 penalty
units.
228 Administrator of an Aboriginal Land Council may call
meetings
The administrator of an Aboriginal Land Council may call meetings
of the Council.
229 Administrator to report monthly
(1) The administrator for a Local Aboriginal Land Council must report
at least once a month to the following:(a) the Minister,
(b) the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council,
(c) the Local Aboriginal Land Council
concerned.
(2) The administrator of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
must report at least once a month to the following:(a) the Minister,
(b) the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
(3) The Minister may give directions to an administrator of an
Aboriginal Land Council concerning the form and content of such
reports.
(4) The administrator must comply with a direction given under this
section.
230 Administrator may not buy or sell Local Aboriginal Land
Council land without consent
The administrator for a Local Aboriginal Land Council must not
dispose of or otherwise deal with land vested in or acquired by the Council
without the consent of the Council (as decided at a
meeting).
231 Minister may extend term of office of
administrator
(1) The Minister may extend the term of office of an administrator of
the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council.
(2) The Minister may, with the consent of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council, extend the term of office of an administrator for a
Local Aboriginal Land Council.
(3) The Minister may, by further instrument of appointment, vary the
functions of the Council that may be exercised by an administrator during the
extension of the administrator’s term of
appointment.
232 Minister may remove administrator
(1) The Minister may, at any time, remove an administrator of the New
South Wales Aboriginal Land Council.
(2) The Minister may, at any time, with the consent of the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council, remove an administrator for a Local Aboriginal
Land Council.
Division 3 Non-functioning Aboriginal Land Councils and
assistance to Local Aboriginal Land Councils
233 Failure of NSW Aboriginal Land Council to
function
(cf former section 58)
(1) If, in the opinion of the Minister, the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council has wilfully failed or neglected to exercise any of its functions
in a material respect, the Governor may, by order published in the Gazette,
declare that the Council has ceased to function.
(2) An order under subsection (1) may be limited in its operation
according to time, place or circumstance.
(3) If the Governor has made an order under subsection (1), the
Minister may make, in writing, orders relating to the transfer, disposal or
dealing with the assets, debts and liabilities of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council as the Minister considers appropriate (having regard
to the objects of that Council set out in section 105) and those orders have
effect according to their tenor.
234 Appointment of advisors
(1) The Minister may, on the recommendation of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council or the Registrar, appoint an advisor to the Board of a
Local Aboriginal Land Council, if the Minister is of the opinion that the
Council is in danger of failing.
(2) An advisor is to be appointed from a list of persons jointly
prepared by the Director-General and the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
(3) Notice of the appointment of an advisor is to be published in the
Gazette.
(4) An advisor is to be appointed for a term specified by the Minister
in the advisor’s instrument of appointment.
(5) An advisor has, subject to any limitations specified in the
advisor’s instrument of appointment, the following functions:(a) to advise and assist the Board of the Local Aboriginal Land
Council and the Council in the exercise of their
functions,
(b) to report to the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council and the
Minister, when requested to do so by that Council or the Minister or at the
advisor’s discretion, as to the operations of the Local Aboriginal Land
Council.
(6) The appointment of an advisor ceases to have effect if an
administrator is appointed for the Local Aboriginal Land
Council.
Part 12 Compliance directions
235 Registrar may issue compliance directions
(1) Any person or body may request the Registrar to issue a direction
to an Aboriginal Land Council, an officer of an Aboriginal Land Council or a
councillor requiring the Council, officer or councillor to comply with a
specified provision or provisions of this Act or of any regulations or rules
made under this Act.
(2) If the Registrar is satisfied that an Aboriginal Land Council, an
officer of an Aboriginal Land Council or a councillor has failed to comply, or
is not complying, with a specified provision or provisions of this Act or of
any regulations or rules made under this Act, the Registrar may issue a
direction to the Council, officer or councillor requiring the Council, officer
or councillor to comply with that provision or those provisions within a time
stated in the direction.
(3) The Registrar is not to issue a direction under this Part in
relation to any matter if:(a) the matter could constitute an offence under this Act or any other
law, or
(b) provision is made for the determination of the matter under
another section of this Act.
236 Registrar may refer failure to comply to Court
If an Aboriginal Land Council, an officer of an Aboriginal Land
Council or a councillor does not comply with a direction issued under this
Part within the time stated in the direction, the Registrar may refer the
matter that is the subject of the direction to the Court for
determination.
237 Court to determine compliance matters
(1) The Court must hear and determine any matter referred to it by the
Registrar under this Part.
(2) The Court may give such directions as it considers necessary to
determine a matter referred to it.
(3) Any person who contravenes a direction given by the Court under
this Part is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty (subsection (3)): 10 penalty
units.
Part 13 Dispute resolution
238 Application of Part
(1) This Part applies to a dispute concerning the operation of this
Act or the regulations.
(2) This Part does not apply to a dispute if:(a) the dispute relates to a matter that could constitute an offence
under this Act or the regulations or any other law, or
(b) provision is made for the resolution or determination of the
dispute under another provision of this Act (other than under Part 12) or the
regulations.
239 Mediation, conciliation or arbitration of disputes by NSW
Aboriginal Land Council
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may, if the parties to
a dispute to which this Part applies (other than a dispute to which that
Council is a party) have agreed, attempt to resolve the dispute by mediation,
conciliation or arbitration.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may, if the parties to
the dispute have agreed, refer a dispute to which this Part applies (other
than a dispute to which the Council is a party) to mediation, conciliation or
arbitration by the Registrar or another independent
person.
(3) The Registrar may, if the parties to a dispute to which this Part
applies have agreed:(a) attempt to resolve the dispute by mediation, conciliation or
arbitration, or
(b) refer the dispute to mediation, conciliation or arbitration by an
independent person.
239A Compulsory mediation of land dealing application
disputes
(1) This section applies to a dispute relating to a decision by the
New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council under Division 4 of Part 2 to approve
or not to approve a land dealing.
(2) A Local Aboriginal Land Council must, if the Council proposes to
commence legal proceedings in relation to the dispute, refer the dispute to
the Registrar.
(3) The Registrar may, with the parties consent:(a) attempt to resolve the dispute by mediation, conciliation or
arbitration, or
(b) refer the dispute to mediation, conciliation or arbitration by an
independent person.
240 Application of Commercial Arbitration Act
1984
(1) Subject to this Act and the regulations, the Commercial Arbitration Act 1984
applies to an arbitration undertaken by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council, the Registrar or an independent person under this
Part.
(2) The provisions of the Commercial Arbitration Act 1984
apply to an arbitration under this Act with the modification that a reference
in that Act to the
Court or the
Supreme Court is to be taken to be a reference to the Land and
Environment Court.
Note. The Commercial Arbitration Act
1984 contains machinery and other provisions applying to
arbitrations. The provisions applying to arbitrations under that Act set out
the way in which arbitrators are to conduct arbitration proceedings and powers
to require evidence to be given, as well as parties’ rights to
representation and other procedural matters. They also provide that an award
by an arbitrator is to be final and provide for enforcement procedures. An
appeal to a Court on a question of law is also available under that
Act.
241 Reference of disputes to Court
(cf former section 59)
(1) The Registrar may refer a dispute to which this Part applies to
the Court for determination.
(2) The Court must hear and determine any dispute referred to it by
the Registrar under this section.
(3) The Court may give such directions as it considers necessary to
determine a dispute referred to it.
(4) Any person who contravenes a direction given by the Court under
this section is guilty of an offence.Maximum penalty (subsection (4)): 10 penalty
units.
Part 14 Miscellaneous
242 Exclusion of personal liability
(cf former section 54)
(1) An act or omission of an Aboriginal Land Council, or any of the
following persons:(a) a councillor,
(b) a member of any Local Aboriginal Land Council or Board member or
chief executive officer of a Local Aboriginal Land
Council,
(b1) a member of an advisory committee,
(b2) an advisor to a Local Aboriginal Land Council,
(c) the Chief Executive Officer of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council,
(d) any person acting under the direction of an Aboriginal Land
Council,
(e) a person who is a member of an expert advisory panel constituted
under section 42I,
does not subject a councillor, member, advisor, Chief Executive Officer
or person so acting personally to any action, liability, claim or demand if
the act or omission was done, or omitted to be done, in good faith for the
purpose of executing this or any other Act.
(2) An act or omission of any of the following persons:(a) the Registrar,
(b) an investigator,
(c) an administrator,
(d) a person acting as a mediator, conciliator or arbitrator under
Part 13,
does not subject the Registrar, investigator, administrator or person so
acting personally to any action, liability, claim or demand if the act or
omission was done, or omitted to be done, in good faith for the purpose of
executing this or any other Act.
243 Delegation
(cf former section 55 (1))
The Minister may delegate to any person any of the functions of
the Minister under this Act, other than this power of
delegation.
244 Service of documents
(cf former section 62)
(1) A document may be served on an Aboriginal Land Council by leaving
it at, or by sending it by post to:(a) the office of the Council, or
(b) if it has more than one office—any one of its
offices,
or, where some other manner of service is prescribed by the regulations,
by serving it in the manner prescribed.
(2) Nothing in subsection (1) affects the operation of any provision
of a law or of the rules of a court authorising a document to be served on an
Aboriginal Land Council in a manner not provided for by subsection
(1).
245 Authentication of certain documents
(cf former section 63)
Every summons, process, demand, order, notice, statement,
direction or document requiring authentication by an Aboriginal Land Council
may be sufficiently authenticated without the seal of the Council if signed by
the Chairperson of the Council or by any member, officer or employee of the
Council authorised to do so by the Chairperson.
246 Proof of certain matters not required
(cf former section 64)
In any legal proceedings, no proof is required (until evidence is
given to the contrary) of:(a) the constitution of an Aboriginal Land Council,
or
(b) any resolution of an Aboriginal Land Council,
or
(c) the appointment or election of any councillor or any Board member,
or
(d) the holding of office by a person as an officer of the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council or as the Chairperson or Deputy Chairperson of a
Board, or
(e) the presence or nature of a quorum at any meeting of an Aboriginal
Land Council.
247 Aboriginal Land Councils not statutory bodies
representing the Crown
(cf former section 65)
An Aboriginal Land Council is not, for the purposes of any law, a
statutory body representing the Crown.
248 Aboriginal Land Councils to be public authorities etc for
certain purposes
(cf former section 65A)
Each Aboriginal Land Council is taken to be a public authority for
the purposes of the Ombudsman Act
1974, the Independent
Commission Against Corruption Act 1988 and the Freedom of Information Act
1989.
249 Proceedings for offences
(cf former section 67)
Proceedings for an offence against this Act or the regulations are
to be dealt with summarily.
249A Offences by corporations
(1) If a corporation contravenes, whether by act or omission, any
provision of this Act or the regulations, each person who is a director of the
corporation or who is concerned in the management of the corporation is taken
to have contravened the same provision if the person knowingly authorised or
permitted the contravention.
(2) A person may be proceeded against and convicted under a provision
pursuant to subsection (1) whether or not the corporation has been proceeded
against or has been convicted under the provision.
(3) Nothing in this section affects any liability imposed on a
corporation for an offence committed by the corporation under this Act or the
regulations.
250 Establishment of new Local Aboriginal Land
Councils
(1) If, after the commencement of Schedule 1 [17] to the Aboriginal Land Rights Amendment Act
2001, a Local Aboriginal Land Council is constituted by this
Act:(a) the Registrar (or a person appointed by the Registrar) is to
prepare a membership roll for the Council under section 54 (1),
and
(b) the first meeting of the Council is to be held at a time (being a
time as soon as practicable after its constitution) and place determined by
the Registrar, and
(c) until a Chairperson of the Board is elected at that first meeting,
the Registrar (or a person appointed by the Registrar) is to preside at that
meeting, and
(d) at the first meeting of the Council, the members are to elect the
Board of the Council.
(2) Despite section 54, when first prepared as required by subsection
(1), the membership roll is to contain the names and addresses of those adult
Aboriginal persons:(a) who:(i) reside in the Local Aboriginal Council area concerned,
or
(ii) have a sufficient association with that area or are Aboriginal
owners of land in that area, and
(b) who have requested in writing that they be enrolled as members of
the Council, and
(c) who have been accepted by the Registrar (or a person appointed by
the Registrar under subsection (1) (a)) as members.
251 (Repealed)
252 Regulations
(cf former section 68)
(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) Without affecting the generality of subsection (1), the Governor
may make regulations for or with respect to the following:(a) determining the boundaries of, and naming, Local Aboriginal Land
Council areas,
(b)–(e) (Repealed)
(f) the keeping of minutes of meetings of Aboriginal Land Councils and
the access to those minutes by other Aboriginal Land Councils and other
persons and bodies,
(g) (Repealed)
(h) the investment of money by Aboriginal Land Councils, including
regulations for or with respect to the prescribing or the determining of the
proportion of the funds of those Councils to be invested,
(i) the audit of accounts and records of Aboriginal Land Councils
(including regulations for or with respect to the employment of
auditors),
(j) disputed returns in elections of councillors,
(k) the fees, allowances or expenses that may be paid to investigators
and administrators of Aboriginal Land Councils,
(l) the preparation and maintenance of membership rolls of Local
Aboriginal Land Councils, and the time and manner in which those rolls must be
provided to the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council,
(m) the keeping and operation of the Register of Aboriginal Land
Claims and the Register of Aboriginal Owners.
(3) A regulation made for the purposes of subsection (2) (a) may apply
to the matters referred to in that paragraph any provisions (with any
necessary alterations) of this Act relating to the constitution of Local
Aboriginal Land Council areas.
(4) A regulation may create an offence punishable by a penalty not
exceeding 10 penalty units.
252A Review of Act
(1) The Minister is to review this Act to determine whether the policy
objectives of the Act remain valid and whether the terms of the Act remain
appropriate for securing those objectives.
(2) The review is to be undertaken as soon as possible after the
period of 5 years from the date of assent to the Aboriginal Land Rights Amendment Act
2006 and as soon as possible after the end of every period of
5 years thereafter.
(3) A report on the outcome of a review is to be tabled in each House
of Parliament within 12 months after the end of the period of 5
years.
253 Savings, transitional and other provisions
(cf former section 71)
Schedule 4 has effect.
Schedule 1 Provisions relating to the Registrar
(Section 164 (2))
1 Term of office
Subject to this Act, the Registrar is to be appointed for such
term, not exceeding 7 years, as is specified in the relevant instrument of
appointment, but is (if otherwise qualified) eligible for
re-appointment.
2 Remuneration
The Registrar is entitled to be paid:(a) remuneration in accordance with the Statutory and Other Offices Remuneration Act
1975, and
(b) such travelling and subsistence allowances as the Minister may
from time to time determine.
3 Public Sector Management
Act 1988 not to apply
The Public Sector Management Act
1988 (including Part 8) does not apply to or in respect of the
appointment of the Registrar and the Registrar is not, in his or her capacity
as the Registrar, subject to that Act during his or her term of
office.
4 Vacancy in office
The office of Registrar becomes vacant if the Registrar:(a) dies, or
(b) engages in New South Wales or elsewhere during his or her term of
office in any paid employment outside the duties of his or her office without
the approval of the Minister, or
(c) 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, allowances or estate for
their benefit, or
(d) absents himself or herself from duty for a period exceeding 14
consecutive days, except on leave granted by the Minister,
or
(e) becomes a mentally incapacitated person, or
(f) 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, or
(g) resigns the office by instrument in writing addressed to the
Minister, or
(h) is removed from office under clause 5.
5 Removal from office
The Governor may remove the Registrar from office for incapacity,
misbehaviour or incompetence.
6 Superannuation and leave—preservation of
rights
(1) In this clause:superannuation
scheme means a scheme, fund or arrangement under which any
superannuation or retirement benefits are provided and which is established by
or under an Act.
(2) A person appointed as Registrar:(a) may continue to contribute to any superannuation scheme to which
he or she was a contributor immediately before becoming Registrar,
and
(b) is entitled to receive any payment, pension or gratuity accrued or
accruing under the scheme,
as if he or she had continued to be such a contributor during service as
Registrar.
(3) Service by a person as Registrar is taken to be service as an
officer in his or her previous employment for the purposes of any law under
which the member continues to contribute to the scheme or by which an
entitlement under the scheme is conferred.
(4) The Registrar is to be regarded as an officer or employee, and the
State is to be regarded as the employer, for the purposes of the
scheme.
(5) This clause ceases to apply to the Registrar if he or she becomes
a contributor to another superannuation scheme, but the Registrar is not
prevented from receiving a resignation benefit from the first superannuation
scheme.
(6) A person appointed as Registrar retains any rights to annual
leave, extended or long service leave and sick leave accrued or accruing in
his or her previous employment.
(7) A Registrar is not entitled to claim, under both this Act and any
other Act, dual benefits of the same kind for the same period of
service.
Schedule 2 Aboriginal Land Councils Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal
(Section 179 (3))
1 Definition
In this Schedule, the
member means the member appointed as the Pecuniary Interest and
Disciplinary Tribunal under section 179.
2 Deputy member
(1) The Governor may, from time to time, appoint a person to be the
deputy of the member, and the Governor may revoke any such appointment. A
person appointed as a deputy must have the same qualifications as those
required of a person appointed as the member.
(2) In the absence of the member, the member’s deputy:(a) may, if available, act in the place of the member,
and
(b) while so acting, has the functions of the member and is taken to
be the member.
(3) A person while so acting in the place of the member is entitled to
be paid such remuneration (including travelling and subsistence allowances) as
the Minister may from time to time determine in respect of the
person.
(4) For the purposes of this clause, a vacancy in the office of the
member is taken to be an absence from office of the
member.
3 Term of office of the member
Subject to this Schedule, the member holds office for such period,
not exceeding 5 years, as is specified in the member’s instrument of
appointment, and (if otherwise qualified) is eligible for
re-appointment.
4 Remuneration of the member
The member is entitled to be paid such remuneration (including
travelling and subsistence allowances) as the Minister may from time to time
determine in respect of the member.
5 Vacancy in office of the member
(1) The office of the 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) becomes a member of staff of an Aboriginal Land Council,
or
(e) is removed from office by the Governor under this clause or under
Part 8 of the Public Sector Management Act
1988, or
(f) 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
(g) becomes a mentally incapacitated person, or
(h) 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 Governor may remove the member from office at any
time.
6 Filling of vacancy in office of member
If the office of the member becomes vacant, a person is, subject
to this Act, to be appointed to fill the vacancy.
7 Application of other Acts
(1) Part 2 of the Public Sector
Management Act 1988 does not apply to or in respect of the
appointment of the member.
(2) If by or under any Act provision is made:(a) requiring a person who is the holder of a specified office to
devote the whole of his or her time to the duties of that office,
or
(b) prohibiting the person from engaging in employment outside the
duties of that office,
that provision does not operate to disqualify the person from holding
that office and also the office of a member or from accepting and retaining
any remuneration payable to the person under this Act as the
member.
Schedule 3 Procedure of Boards and Councils
(Sections 52H, 61 (3) and 120 (7))
Part 1 Procedure of Local Aboriginal Land Councils
1 Frequency of meetings
(1) Subject to subclause (2), a Local Aboriginal Land Council is to
hold meetings at such time as the Board of the Council
determines.
(2) A Council must:(a) hold not less than 3 ordinary meetings a year, at intervals of not
more than 4 calendar months, and
(b) hold annual meetings at the times, or within the periods,
prescribed by the regulations.
2 General procedure
The procedure for the calling of meetings of a Local Aboriginal
Land Council and for the conduct of business at those meetings is, subject to
this Act and the regulations, to be as determined by the
Council.
3 Quorum
The quorum for a meeting of a Local Aboriginal Land Council is 10
per cent of the total number of voting members of the
Council.
4 Presiding member
(1) The Chairperson of the Board (or, in the absence of the
Chairperson, the Deputy Chairperson of the Board, or in the absence of both
the Chairperson and the Deputy Chairperson, a person elected by the members of
the Local Aboriginal Land Council who are present at a meeting of the Council)
is to preside at a meeting of the Council.
(2) The presiding member has a deliberative vote and, in the event of
an equality of votes, has a second or casting vote.
(3) If an administrator is appointed to the Council, the administrator
is to preside at meetings of the Council.
5 Voting
(1) A decision supported by a majority of the votes cast at a meeting
of a Local Aboriginal Land Council at which a quorum is present is the
decision of the Council.
(2) The attendance of each person who is a voting member at a meeting
of the Council is to be recorded on the membership
roll.
6 Minutes
(1) The Local Aboriginal Land Council must cause minutes to be kept of
the proceedings of each meeting of the Council.
(2) The minutes are to include a record of the following:(a) motions put to the meeting,
(b) amendments to such motions,
(c) the names of the movers and seconders of those motions and
amendments,
(d) the resolutions passed by the meeting.
Part 2 Procedure of Boards of Local Aboriginal Land
Councils
1 Frequency of meetings
(1) A Board must meet at intervals not longer than every 2 calendar
months.
(2) The Chairperson may, at the request of a majority of the members
of the Board, call a meeting of the Board at any
time.
2 General procedure
The procedure for the calling of meetings of the Board and for the
conduct of business at those meetings is, subject to this Act and the
regulations, to be as determined by the Board.
3 Quorum
The quorum for a meeting of the Board is a majority of its members
for the time being.
4 Presiding member
(1) The Chairperson (or, in the absence of the Chairperson, the Deputy
Chairperson, or in the absence of both the Chairperson and the Deputy
Chairperson, a person elected by the members of the Board who are present at a
meeting of the Board) is to preside at a meeting of the
Board.
(2) The presiding member has a deliberative vote and, in the event of
an equality of votes, has a second or casting vote.
5 Voting
A decision supported by a majority of the votes cast at a meeting
of the Board at which a quorum is present is the decision of the
Board.
6 Transaction of business by telephone
(1) The Board may, if it thinks fit, transact any of its business at a
meeting at which members (or some members) participate by telephone,
closed-circuit television or other means, but only if any member who speaks on
a matter before the meeting can be heard by the other
members.
(2) For the purposes of a meeting held in accordance with subclause
(1), the presiding member and each Board member have the same voting rights as
they have at an ordinary meeting of the Board.
(3) A resolution approved under subclause (1) is, subject to the
regulations, to be recorded in the minutes of the meetings of the
Board.
(4) Papers may be circulated among the Board members for the purposes
of subclause (1) by facsimile or other transmission of the information in the
papers concerned.
7 Authentication of documents
Any document requiring authentication by the Board is sufficiently
authenticated if it is signed by:(a) the Board member who presided at the meeting that dealt with the
proceedings with respect to which the document was prepared,
or
(b) in the absence of that Board member, any other member who was
present at that meeting.
8 First meeting
The chief executive officer of the Council or, if there is no
chief executive officer, the Registrar may call the first meeting of the Board
in such manner as he or she thinks fit.
9 Minutes
(1) The Board must cause minutes to be kept of the proceedings of each
meeting of the Board.
(2) The minutes are to include a record of the following:(a) motions put to the meeting,
(b) amendments to such motions,
(c) the names of the movers and seconders of those motions and
amendments,
(d) the resolutions passed by the meeting.
Part 3 Procedure of New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council
1 Frequency of meetings
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council is to hold its first
meeting after each election of all councillors in accordance with the
regulations at a time (being a time as soon as practicable after the election)
and place arranged by the Registrar.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must hold ordinary
meetings at least once every 3 calendar months.
(3) The Chairperson must call an extraordinary meeting of the Council
if requested to do so by a majority of the councillors for the time
being.
(4) The Chairperson may call an extraordinary meeting of the Council
at any time.
2 General procedure
The procedure for the calling of meetings of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council and for the conduct of business at those meetings is,
subject to this Act and the regulations, to be as determined by the
Council.
3 Quorum
The quorum for a meeting of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council is a majority of the councillors constituting the Council for the time
being.
4 Presiding member
(1) The Chairperson of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
(or, in the absence of the Chairperson or Deputy Chairperson, a person elected
by the members of the Council who are present at a meeting of the Council) is
to preside at a meeting of the Council.
(2) The presiding member has a deliberative vote and, in the event of
an equality of votes, has a second or casting vote.
(3) If an administrator is appointed to the Council, the administrator
is to preside at meetings of the Council.
5 Voting
A decision supported by a majority of the votes cast at a meeting
of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council at which a quorum is present is
the decision of the Council.
6 Minutes
(1) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must cause minutes to
be kept of the proceedings of each meeting of the
Council.
(2) The minutes are to include a record of the following:(a) motions put to the meeting,
(b) amendments to such motions,
(c) the names of the movers and seconders of those motions and
amendments,
(d) the resolutions passed by the meeting.
Schedule 3A Transfer of assets, rights and
liabilities
(Section 89 (6))
1 Definitions
In this Schedule:assets means any
legal or equitable estate or interest (whether present or future and whether
vested or contingent) in real or personal property of any description
(including money), and includes securities, choses in action and
documents.
instrument
means an instrument (other than this Act) that creates, modifies or
extinguishes rights or liabilities (or would do so if lodged, filed or
registered in accordance with any law), and includes any judgment, order or
process of a court.
liabilities
means any liabilities, debts or obligations (whether present or future and
whether vested or contingent).
transfer
order means an order made under section 89.
2 Vesting of undertaking in transferee
When any assets, rights or liabilities are transferred by a
transfer order, the following provisions have effect (subject to the
order):(a) those assets of the transferor vest in the transferee by virtue of
this Schedule and without the need for any conveyance, transfer, assignment or
assurance,
(b) those rights and liabilities of the transferor become by virtue of
this Schedule the rights and liabilities of the
transferee,
(c) all proceedings relating to those assets, rights or liabilities
commenced before the transfer by or against the transferor or a predecessor of
the transferor and pending immediately before the transfer are taken to be
proceedings pending by or against the transferee,
(d) any act, matter or thing done or omitted to be done in relation to
those assets, rights or liabilities before the transfer by, to or in respect
of the transferor is (to the extent that that act, matter or thing has any
force or effect) taken to have been done or omitted by, to or in respect of
the transferee,
(e) a reference in any Act, in any instrument made under any Act or in
any document of any kind to the transferor or a predecessor of the transferor
is (to the extent that it relates to those assets, rights or liabilities but
subject to regulations or other provisions under Schedule 4), to be read as,
or as including, a reference to the transferee.
3 Operation of Schedule
(1) The operation of this Schedule is not to be regarded:(a) as a breach of contract or confidence or otherwise as a civil
wrong, or
(b) as a breach of any contractual provision prohibiting, restricting
or regulating the assignment or transfer of assets, rights or liabilities,
or
(c) as giving rise to any remedy by a party to an instrument, or as
causing or permitting the termination of any instrument, because of a change
in the beneficial or legal ownership of any asset, right or
liability.
(2) The operation of this Schedule is not to be regarded as an event
of default under any contract or other instrument.
(3) No attornment to the transferee by a lessee from the transferor is
required.
(4) The operation of this Schedule includes the making of a transfer
order.
4 Date of vesting
A transfer order takes effect on the date specified in the
order.
5 Consideration for vesting
(1) A transfer order may specify the consideration on which the order
is made and the value or values at which the assets, rights or liabilities are
transferred.
(2) The consideration and value or values cannot exceed the optimised
deprival value of those assets, rights or
liabilities.
(3) In this clause, optimised deprival
value means a value determined by the application of the Guidelines
on Accounting Policy for Valuation of Government Trading Enterprises prepared
by the Steering Committee on National Performance Monitoring of Government
Trading Enterprises, agreed on by the Commonwealth and States and published in
October 1994.
6 Duties
Duty under the Duties Act
1997 is not chargeable in respect of:(a) the transfer of assets, rights and liabilities to a person by a
transfer order, or
(b) anything certified by the Minister as having been done in
consequence of such a transfer (for example, the transfer or registration of
an interest in land).
7 Transfer of interest in land
(1) A transfer order may transfer an interest in respect of land
vested in the transferor without transferring the whole of the interests of
the transferor in that land.
(2) If the interest transferred is not a separate interest, the order
operates to create the interest transferred in such terms as are specified in
the order.
(3) This clause does not limit any other provision of this
Schedule.
8 Determinations of Minister for purposes of
orders
For the purposes of any transfer order, a determination by the
Minister as to which entity to which any assets, rights or liabilities relate
is conclusive.
9 Confirmation of vesting
(1) The Minister may, by notice in writing, confirm a transfer of
particular assets, rights and liabilities by operation of this
Schedule.
(2) Such a notice is conclusive evidence of that
transfer.
Schedule 4 Savings, transitional and other
provisions
(Section 253)
Part 1 Preliminary
1 Definitions
In this Schedule:appointed
day, in relation to a provision of this Schedule, means the day of
commencement of the provision.
former
Corporation means the corporation sole named “The Minister,
Aborigines Act 1969”
constituted under section 6 of the Aborigines Act
1969 as in force immediately before the repeal of that Act by
this Act.
former
Trust means The Aboriginal Lands Trust constituted under the
Aborigines Act 1969 as in force immediately
before the repeal of that Act by this Act.
instrument
means an Act (other than this Act), a rule, a by-law, a regulation or an
ordinance, or any other instrument or document, whether of the same or of a
different kind or nature.
1A Savings and transitional regulations
(1) The regulations may contain provisions of a savings or
transitional nature consequent on the enactment of the following Acts:Aboriginal Land Rights (Amendment) Act
1990
National Parks and Wildlife Amendment (Aboriginal
Ownership) Act 1996.
Aboriginal Land Rights
Amendment Act 2001
Aboriginal Land Rights
Amendment Act 2006
Aboriginal Land Rights Amendment
Act 2009
(2) Any such provision may, if the regulations so provide, take effect
on the date of assent to the Act concerned or a later
date.
(3) To the extent to which any such provision takes effect on a date
that is earlier than the date of its publication in the Gazette, the provision
does not operate so as:(a) to affect, in a manner prejudicial to any person (other than the
State or an authority of the State), the rights of that person existing before
the date of its publication, or
(b) to impose liabilities on any person (other than the State or an
authority of the State) in respect of anything done or omitted to be done
before the date of its publication.
Part 2 Provisions consequent on the enactment of this
Act
2 Transfer of certain property etc of the former
Trust
(1) Except as provided by Division 1 of Part 6, on and from the
appointed day:(a) all real and personal property and all right and interest therein
and all management and control thereof that, immediately before that day, was
vested in or belonged to the former Trust shall vest in or belong to the New
South Wales Aboriginal Land Council (in this clause referred to as the
Council),
(b) all debts, money and claims, liquidated and unliquidated, that,
immediately before that day, were due or payable to, or recoverable by, the
former Trust shall be debts due to, money payable to and claims recoverable by
the Council,
(c) all suits, actions and proceedings pending immediately before that
day at the suit of the former Trust shall be respectively suits, actions and
proceedings pending at the suit of the Council and all suits, actions and
proceedings so pending at the suit of any person against the former Trust
shall be respectively suits, actions and proceedings pending at the suit of
that person against the Council,
(d) all contracts, agreements, arrangements and undertakings entered
into with and all securities lawfully given to or by the former Trust and in
force immediately before that day shall be deemed to be contracts, agreements,
arrangements and undertakings entered into with and securities given to or by
the Council,
(e) the Council may, in addition to pursuing any other remedies or
exercising any other powers that may be available to it, pursue the same
remedies for the recovery of money and claims referred to in this clause and
for the prosecution of suits, actions and proceedings so referred to as the
former Trust might have done but for the enactment of this
Act,
(f) the Council may enforce and realise any security or charge
existing immediately before that day in favour of the former Trust and may
exercise any powers thereby conferred on the former Trust as if the security
or charge were a security or charge in favour of the
Council,
(g) all debts, money and claims, liquidated and unliquidated, that,
immediately before that day, were due or payable by, or recoverable against,
the former Trust shall be debts due by, money payable by and claims
recoverable against the Council, and
(h) all liquidated and unliquidated claims for which the former Trust
would, but for the enactment of this Act, have been liable shall be liquidated
and unliquidated claims for which the Council shall be
liable.
(2) No attornment to the Council by a lessee from the former Trust
shall be required.
3 Transfer of certain property etc of the former
Corporation
(1) On and from the appointed day:(a) all real and personal property and all right and interest therein
and all management and control thereof that, immediately before that day, was
vested in or belonged to the former Corporation shall vest in or belong to the
corporation sole constituted under section 50 (in this clause referred to as
the
Minister),
(b) all debts, money and claims, liquidated and unliquidated, that,
immediately before that day, were due or payable to, or recoverable by, the
former Corporation shall be debts due to, money payable to and claims
recoverable by the Minister,
(c) all suits, actions and proceedings pending immediately before that
day at the suit of the former Corporation shall be respectively suits, actions
and proceedings pending at the suit of the Minister and all suits, actions and
proceedings so pending at the suit of any person against the former
Corporation shall be respectively suits, actions and proceedings pending at
the suit of that person against the Minister,
(d) all contracts, agreements, arrangements and undertakings entered
into with and all securities lawfully given to or by the former Corporation
and in force immediately before that day shall be deemed to be contracts,
agreements, arrangements and undertakings entered into with and securities
given to or by the Minister,
(e) the Minister may, in addition to pursuing any other remedies or
exercising any other powers that may be available to the Minister, pursue the
same remedies for the recovery of money and claims referred to in this clause
and for the prosecution of suits, actions and proceedings so referred to as
the former Corporation might have done but for the enactment of this
Act,
(f) the Minister may enforce and realise any security or charge
existing immediately before that day in favour of the former Corporation and
may exercise any powers thereby conferred on the former Corporation as if the
security or charge were a security or charge in favour of the
Minister,
(g) all debts, money and claims, liquidated and unliquidated, that,
immediately before that day, were due or payable by, or recoverable against,
the former Corporation shall be debts due by, money payable by and claims
recoverable against the Minister, and
(h) all liquidated and unliquidated claims for which the former
Corporation would, but for the enactment of this Act, have been liable shall
be liquidated and unliquidated claims for which the Minister shall be
liable.
(2) No attornment to the Minister by a lessee from the former
Corporation shall be required.
4 Effect of certain acts etc of the former Trust and the
former Corporation
(1) Subject to this Act, to the extent that any act, matter or thing
done or omitted to be done before the appointed day by, to or in respect of
the former Trust would, but for the enactment of this Act, have had, on or
after that day, any force or effect or been in operation, that act, matter or
thing shall be deemed to have been done or omitted to be done by, to or in
respect of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
(2) Subject to this Act, to the extent that any act, matter or thing
done or omitted to be done before the appointed day by, to or in respect of
the former Corporation would, but for the enactment of this Act, have had, on
or after that day, any force or effect or been in operation, that act, matter
or thing shall be deemed to have been done or omitted to be done by, to or in
respect of the corporation sole constituted under section
50.
5 Transfer of certain assets, debts and liabilities of the
former Trust and the former Corporation
(1) A reference in this clause to assets, debts and liabilities of the
New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council is a reference to assets, debts and
liabilities of the Council (excluding former Trust lands within the meaning of
section 35) which were, immediately before the appointed day, assets, debts or
liabilities of the former Trust.
(2) The Minister may, after taking into consideration any
recommendations made by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council,
determine:(a) whether any, and if so what, assets, debts and liabilities of the
New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council should be those of a Local Aboriginal
Land Council, and
(b) whether any, and if so what, assets, debts and liabilities of the
corporation sole constituted under section 50 should be those of the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council, a Regional Aboriginal Land Council, a Local
Aboriginal Land Council or some other organisation or body established for the
benefit of Aborigines.
(3) A determination made under this clause shall be given effect to by
the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council, the corporation sole constituted
under section 50 and the relevant Regional or Local Aboriginal Land Council or
organisation or body, as the case may require.
6 Vesting of certain assets etc referred to in clause
5
(1) Without affecting anything in clause 5, the Governor may, by
proclamation published in the Gazette, declare that any assets, debts or
liabilities referred to in that clause and specified or referred to in the
proclamation belong to an Aboriginal Land Council or an organisation or body
specified in the proclamation.
(2) A proclamation may be published under subclause (1) in respect
only of assets, debts and liabilities that are determined under clause 5 to be
those of the Aboriginal Land Council or the organisation or body specified in
the proclamation in accordance with subclause (1).
(3) The provisions of clauses 2 and 4 (1) apply to and in respect of
the assets, debts or liabilities to which a proclamation under subclause (1)
relates in the same way as they apply to and in respect of the things therein
referred to, and so apply as if references therein to:(a) the appointed day were references to the date of publication in
the Gazette of the proclamation or a later date specified in the
proclamation,
(b) the former Trust were references to the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council or the corporation sole constituted under section 50, as the case
may require, and
(c) the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council were references to the
Aboriginal Land Council or the organisation or body specified in the
proclamation.
(4) For the purposes of subclause (1), any assets, debts or
liabilities may be specified or referred to in a proclamation by reference to
documents, lists or inventories kept at a place specified in the
proclamation.
7 Construction of certain references
Subject to the regulations, a reference in an instrument enacted,
made, proclaimed or published before the repeal by this Act of the
Aborigines Act 1969, being a reference to, or a
reference to be read or construed as a reference to, or deemed or taken to
refer to:(a) the former Trust shall be read and construed as a reference to the
New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council, and
(b) the corporation sole constituted under section 6 of the
Aborigines Act 1969, as in force immediately
before the repeal of that Act by this Act, shall be read and construed as a
reference to the corporation sole constituted under section
50.
8 Claimable Crown lands
Where, but for this clause, any lands would be claimable Crown
lands as defined in section 36, those lands shall not, if they were, on the
appointed day, the subject of a lease, licence or permissive occupancy, be
claimable Crown lands as so defined until the lease, licence or permissive
occupancy ceases to be in force.
9 Existing contracts of employment
(1) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act or any other law,
any contracts entered into between the former Trust and its officers or
employees in respect of wages, payments or any other benefits or in respect of
conditions of employment, or any other contracts entered into between the
former Trust and any person and declared by the Minister to be contracts to
which this clause applies, are on and from the appointed day or the date of
the declaration, as the case may require, null and void and any money which
would, but for this clause, have been payable under those contracts shall not
be payable or paid by the former Trust, the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council, the Crown or any other person or body.
(2) Any payments made under a contract referred to in subclause (1)
before the appointed day and which, in the Minister’s opinion, are
excessive may be declared by the Minister by instrument in writing to have
been unauthorised payments.
(3) A payment under a contract referred to in subclause (1) after the
time that it became null and void under that subclause or an unauthorised
payment referred to in subclause (2) shall be repaid to the Crown by the
person to whom it was paid, on demand, and if not paid shall be recoverable,
wholly or in part, in any court of competent jurisdiction as a debt due to the
Crown.
(4) In subclause (3), a reference to the Crown includes a reference to
a person or authority nominated by the Minister, by instrument in writing, for
the purposes of that subclause.
(5) In the absence of evidence to the contrary, any instrument
purported to have been signed by the Minister for the purposes of this clause
shall, in any legal proceedings, be accepted without proof of the signature of
the Minister.
Part 2A Provision consequent on the enactment of the
Aboriginal Land Rights (Amendment) Act
1986
9A Funding of acquisition of certain land
(1) Where, as at 2 May 1986 (the date of assent to the amending Act),
land was being acquired by a Local Aboriginal Land Council with money or other
financial assistance provided by a Regional Aboriginal Land Council, the
Regional Aboriginal Land Council may, notwithstanding the provisions of this
Act, as amended by the amending Act, continue to provide that money or
financial assistance and the Local Aboriginal Land Council may continue to
acquire and complete the acquisition of that land.
(2) This clause is taken to have commenced on 2 May
1986.
(3) Subclause (1) re-enacts (with minor modifications) clause 1 of
Schedule 2 to the amending Act. Subclause (1) is a transferred provision to
which section 30A of the Interpretation Act
1987 applies.
(4) In this clause:amending
Act means the Aboriginal Land Rights (Amendment) Act
1986.
Part 3 Provisions consequent on the enactment of the
Aboriginal Land Rights (Amendment) Act
1990
10 Definitions
In this Part:appointed
day means the day on which Schedule 1 (3) to the 1990 Act
commences.
the 1990
Act means the Aboriginal Land Rights (Amendment) Act
1990.
11 Vesting of property in NSW Aboriginal Land
Council
(1) Any property that, immediately before the appointed day, was
vested in a Regional Aboriginal Land Council is on and from that day vested in
the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council.
(2) On and from the appointed day:(a) all real and personal property (including any estate or interest
in, or right to control or manage, real or personal property) that,
immediately before the appointed day, was vested in a Regional Aboriginal Land
Council vests in the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council,
and
(b) all money that, immediately before the appointed day, was payable
to a Regional Aboriginal Land Council becomes payable to the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council, and
(c) any liquidated or unliquidated claim that, immediately before the
appointed day, was enforceable by or against a Regional Aboriginal Land
Council becomes enforceable by or against the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council, and
(d) any proceedings pending immediately before the appointed day at
the suit of or against a Regional Aboriginal Land Council becomes a proceeding
pending at the suit of or against the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council,
and
(e) any contract or arrangement entered into with a Regional
Aboriginal Land Council and in force immediately before the appointed day
becomes a contract or arrangement entered into with the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council, and
(f) any security or charge given to or by a Regional Aboriginal Land
Council and in force immediately before the appointed day becomes a security
or charge given to or by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council,
and
(g) any act, matter or thing done or omitted to be done before the
appointed day by, to or in respect of a Regional Aboriginal Land Council is
(to the extent that that act, matter or thing has any force or effect) to be
taken to have been done or omitted by, to or in respect of the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council.
12 Claims to Crown lands made by Regional Aboriginal Land
Councils
Any claim made by a Regional Aboriginal Land Council under section
36 which, immediately before the appointed day, had not been granted or
refused under that section is to be taken to be a claim made under that
section by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council on the appointed
day.
13 Mining Royalties Account
Money to the credit of the Mining Royalties Account is to be
disbursed in accordance with section 46, as amended by the 1990 Act, whenever
the money was paid into the Account.
14 Election of members of the NSW Aboriginal Land
Council
(1) For the purpose of enabling the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council to be constituted on or after the appointed day, regulations may be
made, elections may be held and any other act, matter or thing may be done
before that day as if the whole of the 1990 Act commenced on the date of
assent to that Act.
(2) The first election of all councillors is to be held as soon as
practicable after the date of assent to the 1990
Act.
(3) If elections are not held in accordance with this Act, as amended
by the 1990 Act, before the term of office of the current members of the
Council expires:(a) the term of office of the current members, and
(b) the term of office of the current Chairperson, Secretary and
Treasurer of the Council,
are extended until the new members are
elected.
(4) In this clause:current
members means the members of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council on the date of assent to the 1990 Act, and
current
Chairperson, Secretary and Treasurer means the Chairperson,
Secretary and Treasurer of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council on the
date of assent to the 1990 Act.
15 Interim arrangements
(1) This clause applies in relation to the first election of
councillors of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council held after the date
of assent to the 1990 Act.
(2) Despite any other provision of this Act:(a) the Registrar is to arrange forthwith the first meeting of the
Council after the returning officer for the election has publicly declared
elected candidates representing at least 10 Regional Aboriginal Land Council
areas, and
(b) those candidates hold office and are taken always to have held
office as councillors on and from the date on which the returning officer
declared them elected, and the Council is taken to be properly constituted
even though councillors representing all such areas have not been elected or
otherwise appointed, and
(c) the terms of office of the persons who were members of the Council
on the date of assent to the 1990 Act are taken to have expired on the date
referred to in paragraph (b), and
(d) the councillors may not elect officers referred to in clause 2 of
Schedule 6 until councillors representing all such areas have been elected or
otherwise appointed in accordance with this Act, but are at their first
meeting to elect members to act in place of those officers and with all the
functions of those officers, until an election of the officers can take place
in accordance with that clause, and
(e) otherwise, the Council is to proceed to transact business at its
first and later meetings in accordance with this
Act.
Part 3A Provision consequent on the enactment of the
Aboriginal Land Rights (Revival of Financial Provision) Act
1990
15A Saving of certain directions
(1) Any directions given by the Minister under section 33A (as
inserted by the Aboriginal Land Rights (Amendment) Act
1986) that were in force immediately before 2 May 1990 are to
be taken to be directions given by the Minister under that section (as revived
by the amending Act).
(2) This clause is taken to have commenced on 22 June
1990.
(3) Subclause (1) re-enacts (with minor modifications) section 4 of
the amending Act. Subclause (1) is a transferred provision to which section
30A of the Interpretation Act
1987 applies.
(4) In this clause:amending
Act means the Aboriginal Land Rights (Revival of
Financial Provision) Act 1990.
Part 4 Provisions consequent on enactment of
National Parks and Wildlife Amendment (Aboriginal Ownership) Act
1996
16 Definitions
In this Part:appointed
day means the day on which Schedule 2 [6] to the
National Parks and Wildlife Amendment (Aboriginal Ownership) Act
1996 commences.
Crown Lands
Minister has the same meaning as in section
36.
17 Extension of certain provisions to claims to Crown
lands
The provisions of this Act, as amended by the
National Parks and Wildlife Amendment (Aboriginal Ownership) Act
1996, extend to the following claims and the Crown Lands
Minister may deal with the claims accordingly:(a) claims made before the appointed day that were not determined by
the Crown Lands Minister before that day,
(b) claims made before the appointed day that have been refused by the
Crown Lands Minister but in respect of the refusal of which the right to
appeal to the Land and Environment Court has not expired before the appointed
day,
(c) claims in respect of which appeals to the Land and Environment
Court are pending on the appointed day.
Part 5 Provisions consequent on the enactment of Aboriginal Land Rights Amendment Act
2001
18 Definition
In this Part:amending
Act means the Aboriginal Land
Rights Amendment Act 2001.
19 Local and Regional Aboriginal Land Council
areas
(1) A Local Aboriginal Land Council area constituted under section 5
immediately before its repeal is taken to be a Local Aboriginal Land Council
area constituted under section 49.
(2) A Regional Aboriginal Land Council area constituted under section
14 immediately its repeal is taken to be a Regional Aboriginal Land Council
area constituted under section 85.
20 Aboriginal Land Councils
(1) A Local Aboriginal Land Council constituted under section 6 before
its repeal is taken to have been constituted under section
50.
(2) A Regional Aboriginal Land Council constituted under section 15
before its repeal is taken to have been constituted under section
86.
(3) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council constituted under
section 22 before its repeal is taken to have been constituted under section
104.
(4) No amendment made by the amending Act affects the continuity of
any Aboriginal Land Council in existence immediately before the commencement
of the amendment.
21 Existing officers of Aboriginal Land Councils
(1) A person holding an office as a Chairperson, Secretary, Treasurer,
Regional or Alternate Representative of a Local Aboriginal Land Council
immediately before the commencement of this clause continues, subject to this
Act, to hold that office until the office falls vacant pursuant to subclause
(2).
(2) At the first annual meeting of a Local Aboriginal Land Council
after the commencement of this clause, the offices of Chairperson, Secretary,
Treasurer, Regional and Alternate Representative of the Council become vacant.
A person elected to such an office at that annual meeting, subject to this
Act, holds office until his or her re-election for another term, or the
election of his or her successor, at the second annual meeting of the Council
following his or her election.
(3) A person holding an office as a Chairperson, Secretary or
Treasurer of a Regional Aboriginal Land Council or the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council immediately before the commencement of this clause
continues, subject to this Act, to hold that office until the next annual
meeting after that commencement.
22 Existing members of staff of Aboriginal Land
Councils
Any person employed by an Aboriginal Land Council under this Act
immediately before its amendment by the amending Act is taken to be employed
by that Council as constituted after that amendment.
23 Existing industrial agreements
Any agreement entered into with the Public Employment Industrial
Relations Authority or the Public Employment Office under section 27D of this
Act before its repeal by the amending Act and in force immediately before that
repeal is taken to be an agreement entered into with the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council.
24 Membership rolls
A roll prepared for the purposes of this Act before its amendment
by the amending Act becomes a membership roll for the purposes of this Act
until a membership roll is prepared for the purposes of this Act as so
amended.
25 Registrar
The person appointed as Registrar under section 49 before its
repeal is, on the commencement of the amending Act, taken to have been
appointed as Registrar by the Governor under section
164.
26 Chief Executive Officer of New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council
(1) The person employed by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
as Chief Executive Officer before the commencement of section 138 is taken to
have been appointed as Chief Executive Officer by that Council under that
section.
(2) Subject to this Act, the terms and conditions of that
person’s employment (including the duration of the person’s
employment) remain in force.
27 Register of Aboriginal Owners
The Register of Aboriginal Owners established and kept under
section 49B before its repeal by the amending Act is taken to have been
established under section 170.
28 Persons who are members of more than one Local Aboriginal
Land Council
A person who, on the commencement of section 56 (as substituted by
the amending Act), is a member of more than one Local Aboriginal Land Council
must make a nomination under that section within 8 weeks of the commencement
of this clause.
29 References to exemptions of Aboriginal lands from payment
of rates
A reference in any Act, instrument or other document to a
declaration made under Division 5 of Part 6 is to be taken to be a reference
to a declaration made under Division 5 of Part 2.
30 Changing of financial year
Despite any provision of Division 2 of Part 8, the regulations may
make provision for or with respect to the preparation of the first audited
financial statements, budgets, quarterly reports and annual reports of an
Aboriginal Land Council required under that Division after the change to the
financial year of the Council effected by the amending
Act.
31 Aboriginal Land Councils Accounts
(1) A Local Aboriginal Land Council Account established under section
31 before its repeal is taken to have been established under section
152.
(2) A Regional Aboriginal Land Council Account established under
section 30 before its repeal is taken to have been established under section
151.
(3) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council Account established
under section 29 before its repeal is taken to have been established under
section 149.
(4) No amendment made by the amending Act affects the continuity of
any Aboriginal Land Council Account in existence immediately before the
commencement of the amendment.
32 Delegations
(1) A delegation made by the Minister under section 55 (1) before its
repeal is taken to have been made under section
243.
(2) A delegation made by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council
under section 55 (3) before its repeal is taken to have been made under
section 146.
33 Regulations
A regulation made under section 68 before its repeal is taken to
have been made under section 252.
34 Rules of Court
A rule of Court made under section 27AF before its repeal is taken
to have been made under section 127.
Part 6 Aboriginal Land
Rights Amendment (Gandangara Estate) Act 2004
35 Definitions
In this Part:disposal of
land means sale, exchange, mortgage or other disposal of land, change of use
of land and the grant of an easement over land, and includes purported
disposal of land.
Gandangara
Estate land means the land comprised in Deposited Plan 1061416,
being the land formerly comprising lots 6081–6084 (inclusive) in
Deposited Plan 1018026 and lot 2 in Deposited Plan 1041291.
Gandangara
LALC means the Gandangara Local Aboriginal Land
Council.
36 Gandangara Estate—deemed compliance with ss 40B and
40D
The requirements of sections 40B and 40D are deemed to have been
complied with in respect of any disposal of Gandangara Estate land by
Gandangara LALC before the commencement of this Part, and it is to be
conclusively presumed for all purposes that any such disposal does not (and
did not ever) contravene either of those sections.
37 Validation
(1) Any disposal before the commencement of this Part of Gandangara
Estate land by Gandangara LALC or by a person to whom Gandangara Estate land
was disposed of before that commencement is validated to the extent of any
invalidity that would otherwise have resulted from any contravention of
section 40B or 40D in connection with the disposal.
(2) Any act or omission by the Registrar-General in the exercise or
purported exercise of a function under the Real Property Act 1900 in connection
with a disposal of Gandangara Estate land before the commencement of this Part
is validated to the extent of any invalidity that would otherwise have
resulted from any contravention of section 40B or 40D in connection with any
such disposal.
38 Certificate evidence
(1) A certificate may be given under section 40D (2) certifying that a
disposal of Gandangara Estate land by Gandangara LALC before the commencement
of this Part does not contravene section 40D.
(2) The failure to give or obtain such a certificate does not limit or
otherwise affect the operation of this Part or prevent the exercise of any
function of the Registrar-General.
(3) The Registrar-General is not required to obtain, and is not to
require any other person to obtain, such a certificate as a condition of or as
authority for the exercise of any function of the Registrar-General with
respect to any such disposal of land.
39 Notice of contravention
This Part has effect despite any notice that any person has or had
of any contravention of section 40B or 40D in connection with any disposal of
Gandangara Estate land. In particular any such notice has no effect for the
purposes of section 40D (2) and any certificate issued under that
subsection.
Part 7 Aboriginal Land
Rights Amendment Act 2006
40 Definition
In this Part:amending
Act means the Aboriginal Land
Rights Amendment Act 2006.
41 Existing officers of Local Aboriginal Land
Councils
(1) A person who was an officer of a Local Aboriginal Land Council
immediately before the commencement of Division 3 of Part 5 of the Act, as
inserted by the amending Act, ceases to hold office on that
commencement.
(2) An officer of a Local Aboriginal Land Council is not entitled to
any remuneration or compensation because of the loss of
office.
(3) Nothing in this clause prevents a former officer of a Local
Aboriginal Land Council from seeking election as a Board
member.
42 First elections of Boards of Local Aboriginal Land
Councils
(1) For the purpose of enabling Boards of Local Aboriginal Land
Councils to be constituted on or after the commencement of Division 3 of Part
5 of the Act, as inserted by the amending Act, regulations may be made,
elections for Board members may be held and any other act, matter or thing may
be done before that commencement as if the whole of the amending Act, and any
regulations relating to the elections, commenced on the date of assent to that
Act.
(2) If elections for Board members are not held in accordance with
this Act, as amended by the amending Act, before the term of office of the
current officers of the Local Aboriginal Land Council, or of an administrator
of the Council, expires, the term of office of the officers or administrator,
as the case may be, is extended until the Board members are
elected.
(3) Nothing in this clause prevents the appointment of an
administrator from being revoked in accordance with this Act or an
administrator from being appointed for a Council.
43 First meetings
(1) For the purpose of enabling councillors to be elected on or after
the commencement of Part 6 of the Act, as inserted by the amending Act,
regulations may be made, elections for councillors may be held and any other
act, matter or thing may be done before that commencement as if the whole of
the amending Act, and any regulations relating to the elections, commenced on
the date of assent to that Act.
(2) If elections for councillors are not held in accordance with this
Act, as amended by the amending Act, before the term of office of the
administrator of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council expires, the term
of office of the administrator is extended until the councillors are
elected.
(3) Nothing in this clause prevents the appointment of the
administrator from being revoked in accordance with this
Act.
44 Regional Aboriginal Land Councils
(1) A Regional Aboriginal Land Council constituted under this Act
immediately before the commencement of Part 6, as inserted by the amending
Act, ceases to exist on that commencement and the officers of the Council
cease to hold office.
(2) An officer of the Council is not entitled to any remuneration or
compensation because of the loss of the office.
45 Existing social housing
(1) This clause applies to residential accommodation provided by Local
Aboriginal Land Councils to Aboriginal persons that was provided immediately
before the commencement of this clause (an existing social
housing scheme).
(2) A Local Aboriginal Land Council must not operate an existing
social housing scheme on or after 1 July 2010, except in accordance with an
approval of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
(3) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council must not approve an
existing social housing scheme unless it is satisfied that:(a) the scheme complies with this Act and the regulations,
and
(b) the scheme is consistent with any applicable policy of the New
South Wales Aboriginal Land Council, and
(c) the scheme is consistent with the community, land and business
plan (if any) of the Local Aboriginal Land Council, and
(d) the scheme is fair and equitable and will be administered in a
responsible and transparent way, and
(e) the income (including any subsidies and grants) from the existing
social housing scheme is or will be sufficient to meet all the expenses of the
scheme, including long term maintenance requirements, and
(f) it has considered the impact of the scheme on the overall
financial position of the Local Aboriginal Land
Council.
(4) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may impose conditions
on an approval under this clause.
(5) Without limiting subclause (4), the New South Wales Aboriginal
Land Council may make it a condition of an approval under this clause that the
Local Aboriginal Land Council operate the existing social housing scheme by
using the services of another body or agency, or with the assistance of
another body or agency, approved by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council.
(6) A Local Aboriginal Land Council that fails to obtain the approval
of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council to operate an existing social
housing scheme under this clause may, with the approval of that Council, enter
into an agreement or other arrangement with another body or agency for that
body or agency to operate the existing social housing
scheme.
46 Other existing community benefits
(1) This section applies to a community benefits scheme (other than an
existing social housing scheme) under which community benefits were provided
by Local Aboriginal Land Councils to Aboriginal persons immediately before the
commencement of this clause (an existing
community benefits scheme).
(2) A Local Aboriginal Land Council may continue to operate an
existing community benefits scheme despite any other provision of this
Act.
(3) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may review an existing
community benefits scheme, to determine whether or not:(a) it is fair and equitable and is administered in a responsible and
transparent way, or
(b) it is likely to prevent the Local Aboriginal Land Council from
being able to meet its debts as and when they fall
due.
(4) On a review, the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may
impose conditions on the provision of an existing community benefits scheme by
a Local Aboriginal Land Council.
(5) Any such condition is to be consistent with any applicable policy
of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council.
(6) A Local Aboriginal Land Council must comply with any conditions
imposed on it after a review under this clause.
47 Preparation of community, land and business
plans
(1) Despite any other provision of this Act, a Local Aboriginal Land
Council is to prepare and adopt a community, land and business plan, in
accordance with this Act, not later than 18 months after the commencement of
Division 6 of Part 5.
(2) The New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may extend the period
within which a Local Aboriginal Land Council is to prepare and adopt a plan,
and may waive the requirement wholly or partially in an appropriate
case.
(3) Despite any other provision of this Act, the New South Wales
Aboriginal Land Council is to prepare and adopt a community, land and business
plan, in accordance with this Act, not later than 18 months after the
commencement of Division 5 of Part 7.
(4) The Minister may extend the period within which the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council is to prepare and adopt a
plan.
48 References to Aboriginal Land Councils Pecuniary Interest
Tribunal
A reference in any Act, instrument or other document to the
Aboriginal Land Councils Pecuniary Interest Tribunal is taken to be a
reference to the Aboriginal Land Councils Pecuniary Interest and Disciplinary
Tribunal.
Part 8 Statute Law
(Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 2007
49 Remuneration of investigators and
administrators
(1) Each instrument of appointment of an investigator or administrator
under Part 11 that was executed before the commencement of this clause is
taken to include (and always to have included) provision to the effect that
the New South Wales Aboriginal Land Council may approve the payment of
additional remuneration to the investigator or administrator that the Council
is satisfied is reasonable.
(2) An amount paid before the commencement of this clause as
remuneration to an investigator or administrator appointed under Part 11,
being an amount paid with the approval of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council in addition to the remuneration specified in the investigator’s
or administrator’s instrument of appointment, is taken to be and always
to have been validly paid as remuneration of the investigator or
administrator.
(3) Sections 217 (2) and 224 (2) extend to an instrument of
appointment of an investigator or administrator under Part 11 that was
executed before the commencement of this clause, with the result that a
provision included in such an instrument that would have been valid had
sections 217 (2) and 224 (2) been in force when the instrument was executed is
taken to be and always to have been valid.
Part 9 Aboriginal Land
Rights Amendment Act 2009
50 Definitions
(1) In this Part:amending
Act means the Aboriginal Land
Rights Amendment Act 2009.
existing land
dealing means a land dealing that was approved by the New South
Wales Aboriginal Land Council before the commencement of the new land dealing
provisions.
existing
registrable instrument means a registrable instrument giving effect
to or forming part of an existing land dealing.
former land
dealing provisions means Division 4 of Part 2 of this Act, as in
force immediately before its substitution by the amending Act.
new land dealing
provisions means Division 4 of Part 2 of this Act, as substituted by
the amending Act.
(2) Words and expressions used in this Part have the same meaning as
they have in Divisions 4 and 4A of Part 2 of this Act, as substituted by the
amending Act.
51 Existing land dealings
(1) Except as provided by this Part, the new land dealing provisions
do not apply to or in respect of an existing registrable instrument or to an
existing land dealing.
(2) Except as provided by this clause and clause 52, the former land
dealing provisions continue to apply to an existing land dealing and an
existing registrable instrument.
(3) If the requirements of the former land dealing provisions were not
complied with in relation to a land dealing entered into before the
commencement of the new land dealing provisions, the new land dealing
provisions apply to that land dealing.
52 Registration approval provisions to apply to existing
dealings
(1) This clause applies to an existing land dealing, other than a
dealing for which an existing registrable instrument was lodged with the
Registrar-General for registration or recording before the commencement of the
new land dealing provisions.
(2) Section 42M applies to a registrable instrument giving effect to
an existing land dealing.
(3) The Chief Executive Officer of the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council must give a registration approval certificate in respect of an
existing registrable instrument if the Chief Executive Officer is satisfied
that any conditions of the approval by the New South Wales Aboriginal Land
Council of the existing land dealing have been met.
(4) A registration approval certificate given under subclause (3) is
taken to be a registration approval certificate for the purposes of section
42M (2) (a).
(5) The regulations may make provision for or with respect to
applications for registration approval certificates under this clause and the
fees for the making of such applications.
53 Application of community development levy provisions to
existing land dealings
Division 4A of Part 2 does not apply to dutiable transactions for
existing land dealings.
Schedule 5 Regions
(Section 93 (1))
Central Region
The Central Region consists of the following Local Aboriginal Land
Council areas:
Dubbo, Gilgandra, Mudgee, Narromine, Nyngan, Quambone, Trangie,
Warren Macquarie, Weilwan, Wellington.
Central Coast Region
The Central Coast Region consists of the following Local
Aboriginal Land Council areas:
Birpai, Bowraville, Bunyah, Coffs Harbour, Forster, Karuah,
Kempsey, Nambucca, Purfleet/Taree, Stuart Island Tribal Elders Descendants,
Thunggutti, Unkya.
Northern Region
The Northern Region consists of the following Local Aboriginal
Land Council areas:
Amaroo, Anaiwan, Armidale, Ashford, Coonabarabran, Dorrigo
Plateau, Glen Innes, Guyra, Moombahlene, Nungaroo, Red Chief, Tamworth,
Walhallow, Wanaruah.
North Coast Region
The North Coast Region consists of the following Local Aboriginal
Land Council areas:
Baryugil, Birrigan Gargle, Bogal, Casino, Grafton-Ngerrie, Gugin
Gudduba, Jali, Jana Ngalee, Jubullum, Muli Muli, Ngulingah, Tweed Byron,
Yaegl.
North Western Region
The North Western Region consists of the following Local
Aboriginal Land Council areas:
Baradine, Brewarrina, Collarenabri, Coonamble, Goodooga, Lightning
Ridge, Moree, Mungindi, Murrawari, Narrabri, Nulla Nulla, Pilliga, Toomelah,
Walgett, Wee Waa, Weilmoringle.
South Coast Region
The South Coast Region consists of the following Local Aboriginal
Land Council areas:
Batemans Bay, Bega, Bodalla, Cobowra, Eden, Illawarra, Jerrinja,
Merrimans, Mogo, Ngunnawal, Nowra, Ulladulla,
Wagonga.
Sydney and Newcastle Region
The Sydney and Newcastle Region consists of the following Local
Aboriginal Land Council areas:
Awabakal, Bahtaba, Darkingjung, Deerubbin, Gandangara, Koompahtoo,
La Perouse, Metropolitan, Mindaribba, Tharawal,
Worimi.
Western Region
The Western Region consists of the following Local Aboriginal Land
Council areas:
Balranald, Broken Hill, Cobar, Dareton, Ivanhoe, Menindee,
Mutawintji, Tibooburra, Wanaaring, Wilcannia,
Winbar.
Wiradjuri Region
The Wiradjuri Region consists of the following Local Aboriginal
Land Council areas:
Albury and District, Bathurst, Brungle/Tumut, Condobolin, Cowra,
Cummergunja, Deniliquin, Griffith, Hay, Leeton and District, Moama, Murrin
Bridge, Narrandera, Onerwal, Orange, Peak Hill, Pejar, Wagga Wagga, Wamba
Wamba, West Wyalong, Young.
Schedule 6 (Repealed)
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
Aboriginal Land Rights Act
1983 No 42. Assented to 4.5.1983. Date of commencement, secs 1
and 2 excepted, 10.6.1983, sec 2 (2) and GG No 84 of 10.6.1983, p 2691. This
Act has been amended as follows:
1983 | No 153 | Miscellaneous Acts (Public Finance and Audit) Repeal
and Amendment Act 1983. Assented to 29.12.1983. Date of commencement of Sch 1, 6.1.1984, sec 2 (2) and GG No 4 of
6.1.1984, p 19.
|
1986 | No 18 | Aboriginal Land Rights (Amendment)
Act 1986. Assented to 2.5.1986. |
1987 | No 143 | Water Legislation (Repeal, Amendment and Savings)
Act 1987. Assented to 16.6.1987. Date of commencement of Sch 1, 3.7.1987, sec 2 (2) and GG No 115 of
3.7.1987, p 3785.
|
1990 | No 32 | Aboriginal Land Rights (Revival of Financial
Provision) Act 1990. Assented to 22.6.1990. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 60 | Aboriginal Land Rights (Amendment) Act
1990. Assented to 11.10.1990. Date of commencement of Schs 1 (1) and 8, assent, sec 2 (2); date of
commencement of Sch 1 (3), 17.10.1990, sec 2 (1) and GG No 128 of 17.10.1990,
p 9195; date of commencement of so much of Sch 6 (5) as inserts sec 33 into
the Aboriginal Land Rights Act
1983 and Sch 7 (4), 28.6.1991, sec 2 (1) and GG No 98 of
28.6.1991, p 5009; date of commencement of remainder of provisions, 16.8.1991,
sec 2 (1) and GG No 116 of 16.8.1991, p 6753. Amended by Statute
Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2) 1990 No 108.
Assented to 13.12.1990. Date of commencement of the provisions of Sch 2
relating to the Aboriginal Land Rights (Amendment) Act
1990, assent, sec 2.
|
1991 | 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 59 | Aboriginal Land Rights (Amendment) Act
1991. Assented to 12.12.1991. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
| | No 69 | Charitable Fundraising Act
1991. Assented to 17.12.1991. Date of commencement, 1.9.1993, sec 2 and GG No 91 of 20.8.1993, p
4619.
|
| | No 94 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2)
1991. Assented to 17.12.1991. Date of commencement of the provisions of Sch 2 relating to the Aboriginal Land Rights Act 1983,
assent, Sch 2.
|
1992 | No 29 | Mining Act 1992.
Assented to 18.5.1992. Date of commencement, 21.8.1992, sec 2 and GG No 101 of 20.8.1992, p
5905.
|
| | No 57 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2)
1992. Assented to 8.10.1992. Date of commencement of the provisions of Sch 2 relating to the Aboriginal Land Rights Act 1983,
assent, Sch 2.
|
| | No 112 | Statute Law (Penalties) Act 1992.
Assented to 8.12.1992. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
1994 | No 45 | Native Title (New South Wales)
Act 1994. Assented to 2.6.1994. Date of commencement of the provisions of Sch 1 relating to the Aboriginal Land Rights Act 1983,
28.11.1994, sec 2 and GG No 156 of 25.11.1994, p
6868.
|
| | 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.
|
1995 | No 11 | Statute Law Revision (Local Government) Act
1995. Assented to 9.6.1995. Date of commencement of the provisions of Sch 1 relating to the Aboriginal Land Rights Act 1983,
23.6.1995, sec 2 (1) and GG No 77 of 23.6.1995, p
3279.
|
| | No 39 | Aboriginal Land Rights Amendment Act
1995. Assented to 26.10.1995. Date of commencement, 10.11.1995, sec 2 and GG No 138 of 10.11.1995, p
7698.
|
1996 | No 24 | Financial Institutions (Miscellaneous Amendments)
Act 1996. Assented to 21.6.1996. Date of commencement, 12.7.1996, sec 2 and GG No 84 of 12.7.1996, p
3984.
|
| | No 121 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2)
1996. Assented to 3.12.1996. Date of commencement of Sch 3, 3 months after assent, sec 2
(3).
|
| | No 137 | Mining Legislation Amendment Act
1996. Assented to 16.12.1996. Date of commencement of Sch 2.1, 14.3.1997, sec 2 and GG No 26 of
14.3.1997, p 1470. The proclamation appointed 8.3.1997 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 Sch 2.1 to the Act to commence on the day on
which the proclamation was published in the
Gazette.
|
| | No 142 | National Parks and Wildlife Amendment (Aboriginal
Ownership) Act 1996. Assented to 16.12.1996. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 5.5.1997, sec 2 (1) and GG No 49 of
5.5.1997, p 2647. The proclamation appointed 2.5.1997 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 Sch 2 to the Act to commence on the day on which
the proclamation was published in the Gazette.
|
1997 | No 55 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act
1997. Assented to 2.7.1997. Date of commencement of Sch 3, 3 months after assent, sec 2 (3); date of
commencement of Sch 4, assent, sec 2 (1).
|
1998 | 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 88 | Native Title (New South Wales) Amendment Act
1998. Assented to 24.9.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 30.9.1998, sec 2 and GG No 142 of
29.9.1998, p 7885.
|
| | No 143 | Rural Lands Protection Act
1998. Assented to 8.12.1998. Date of commencement of Sch 6, 28.9.2001, sec 2 and GG No 146 of
28.9.2001, p 8183.
|
1999 | No 42 | Offshore Minerals Act
1999. Assented to 8.7.1999. Date of commencement, 31.3.2000, sec 2 and GG No 42 of 31.3.2000, p
2490.
|
| | No 85 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 1999. Assented to 3.12.1999. Date of commencement of Sch 4, assent, sec 2
(1).
|
| | No 94 | Crimes Legislation Amendment (Sentencing) Act
1999. Assented to 8.12.1999. Date of commencement of sec 7 and Sch 5, 1.1.2000, sec 2 (1) and GG No
144 of 24.12.1999, p 12184.
|
2001 | No 118 | Aboriginal Land Rights
Amendment Act 2001. Assented to 19.12.2001. Date of commencement, 25.10.2002, sec 2 and GG No 189 of 25.10.2002, p
9059.
|
| | No 121 | Justices Legislation Repeal and
Amendment Act 2001. Assented to 19.12.2001. Date of commencement of Sch 2, 7.7.2003, sec 2 and GG No 104 of
27.6.2003, p 5978. The amendment made by Sch 2.1 was without effect as the
provision being amended was repealed by the Aboriginal Land Rights Amendment Act
2001.
|
2003 | No 4 | Valuers Act 2003.
Assented to 28.5.2003. Date of commencement of Sch 1.1, 31.3.2005, sec 2 (1) and GG No 37 of
29.3.2005, p 929.
|
2004 | No 69 | Aboriginal Land Rights Amendment
(Gandangara Estate) Act 2004. Assented to 28.9.2004. Date of commencement, assent, sec 2.
|
2005 | No 98 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act (No 2) 2005. Assented to 24.11.2005. Date of commencement of Sch 3, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
2006 | No 30 | Legal Profession Amendment Act
2006. Assented to 26.5.2006. Date of commencement of Sch 9, 2.6.2006, sec 2 and GG No 72 of 2.6.2006,
p 3730.
|
| | No 40 | State Property Authority Act
2006. Assented to 8.6.2006. Date of commencement, 1.9.2006, sec 2 and GG No 111 of 1.9.2006, p
7063.
|
| | No 85 | Crown Lands Legislation
Amendment (Carbon Sequestration) Act 2006. Assented to
2.11.2006. Date of commencement, 9.2.2007, sec 2 and GG No 31 of 9.2.2007, p
735.
|
| | No 111 | Aboriginal Land Rights
Amendment Act 2006. Assented to 4.12.2006. Date of commencement of Sch 1 [1] [3] [6] (except to the extent to which
it inserts the definition of Region into sec 4 (1)) [7] [8]
[18]–[31] [33] [34] [36]–[44] [47] (to the extent to which it
inserts secs 106 (3) (e), 107 and 131) [48] [52] [80] [82] [84]–[95]
[103] [105]–[108] [114] [115] [119]–[124] [126]–[128] [131]
[133] [136] (except to the extent to which it inserts Part 3 of Sch 3) [137]
and [139] (except to the extent to which it inserts the heading to, and cll
40, 43, 44 and 47 (3) and (4) of, Part 7 of Sch 4), 1.7.2007, sec 2 and GG No
83 of 29.6.2007, p 3965; date of commencement of Sch 1 [2] [4] [5] [6] (to the
extent to which it inserts a definition of Region into section 4 (1))
[9]–[17] [32] [35] [45] [46] [47] (except to the extent to which it
inserts sections 106 (3) (e), 107 and 131) [49]–[51] [53]–[79]
[81] [83] [96]–[102] [104] [109]–[113] [116]–[118] [125]
[129] [130] [132] [134] [135] [136] (to the extent to which it inserts Part 3
of Sch 3) [138] [139] (to the extent to which it inserts the heading to, and
cll 40, 43, 44 and 47 (3) and (4) of, Part 7 of Sch 4) and [140], 7.2.2007,
sec 2 and GG No 24 of 2.2.2007, p 585. Amended by Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act
2007 No 27. Assented to 4.7.2007. Date of commencement of Sch
1.2, assent, sec 2 (2).
|
2007 | No 27 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2007. Assented to 4.7.2007. Date of commencement of Sch 1.1 [1] and [3]–[5], assent, sec 2 (2);
date of commencement of Sch 1.1 [2], 7.2.2007, Sch 1.1 and GG No 24 of
2.2.2007, p 585.
|
2008 | No 23 | Miscellaneous Acts Amendment
(Same Sex Relationships) Act 2008. Assented to
11.6.2008. Date of commencement, 22.9.2008, sec 2 and GG No 118 of 19.9.2008, p
9283.
|
| | No 62 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2008. Assented to 1.7.2008. Date of commencement of Sch 1.1, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
2009 | No 56 | Statute Law (Miscellaneous
Provisions) Act 2009. Assented to 1.7.2009. Date of commencement of Sch 4, 17.7.2009, sec 2
(1).
|
| | No 58 | Aboriginal Land Rights Amendment
Act 2009. Assented to 16.9.2009. Date of commencement, 31.3.2010, sec 2 and 2009 (624) LW
24.12.2009.
|
2010 | No 19 | Relationships Register Act
2010. Assented to 19.5.2010. Date of commencement of Sch 3, assent, sec 2
(2).
|
Table of amendments
No reference is made to certain amendments made by Schedule 3
(amendments replacing gender-specific language) to the Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act (No 2)
1996 and the Statute Law
(Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1997.
Sec 3 | Rep 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (1). Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[1]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [2] [3]. |
Sec 4 | Am 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (2); 1994 No 45, Sch 1; 1996
No 142, Sch 2 [1]; 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [2] [3]; 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[4]–[11]; 2008 No 23, Sch 3.1 [1] [2]; 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [1] [2]; 2010
No 19, Sch 3.1 [1]. |
Part 2 (as originally enacted) | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Secs 5–8 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 9 | Am 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (3) (4). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch
1 [4]. |
Secs 10, 11 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 12 | Am 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (5). Subst 1990 No 60, Sch 3
(1). Am 1996 No 142, Sch 2 [2] [3]. Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[4]. |
Sec 12A | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 3 (2). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[4]. |
Sec 13 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Part 3 (as originally enacted) | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 14 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 15 | Am 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (6). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[4]. |
Sec 16 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 17 | Am 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (3) (7). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch
1 [4]. |
Sec 18 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 19 | Rep 1990 No 60, Sch 1 (1). |
Sec 20 | Am 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (8). Subst 1990 No 60, Sch 2
(1). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 21 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Part 4 (as originally enacted) | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Part 4, Div 1, heading (as originally
enacted) | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 1 (2). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[4]. |
Part 4, Div 1 (as originally
enacted) | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 22 | Am 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (9); 1990 No 60, Sch 1 (3).
Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 23 | Subst 1990 No 60, Sch 1 (4). Am 1994 No 45, Sch 1;
1996 No 142, Sch 2 [4] [5]; 1998 No 88, Sch 2 [1]. Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[4]. |
Sec 24 | Am 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (3) (10). Subst 1990 No 60,
Sch 1 (4). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Part 4, Div 2, heading (as originally
enacted) | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 1 (4). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[4]. |
Part 4, Div 2 (as originally
enacted) | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 25 | Subst 1990 No 60, Sch 1 (4). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[4]. |
Sec 26 | Subst 1990 No 60, Sch 1 (4); 1995 No 39, Sch 1 (1).
Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 27 | Subst 1990 No 60, Sch 1 (4). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[4]. |
Sec 27A | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 1 (4). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[4]. |
Part 4, Divs 2A, 2B (secs 27AA–27AH) (as
originally enacted) | Ins 1995 No 39, Sch 1 (2). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[4]. |
Part 4, Div 3 (secs 27B–27E) (as originally
enacted) | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 1 (4). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[4]. |
Part 5 (as originally enacted) | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Part 5, Div 1 (as originally
enacted) | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 28 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 29 | Am 1990 No 60, Sch 6 (1); 1996 No 24, Sch 1. Rep
2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 29A | Ins 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (11). Am 1990 No 60, Sch 6
(2). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 30 | Am 1990 No 60, Sch 6 (3); 1996 No 24, Sch 1. Rep
2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 31 | Am 1990 No 60, Sch 6 (4); 1996 No 24, Sch 1. Rep
2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Part 5, Div 2 | Subst 1990 No 60, Sch 6 (5). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[4]. |
Sec 32 | Subst 1990 No 60, Sch 6 (5). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[4]. |
Sec 33 | Am 1983 No 153, Sch 1. Subst 1990 No 60, Sch 6 (5).
Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 33A | Ins 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (12). Expired, 2.5.1990.
Revived and am 1990 No 32, sec 3. Rep 1990 No 60, Sch 6
(5). |
Secs 33B–33D | Ins 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (12). Rep 1990 No 60, Sch 6
(5). |
Sec 34 | Am 1983 No 153, Sch 1. Subst 1990 No 60, Sch 6 (5).
Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [4]. |
Secs 34A–34C | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 6 (5). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[4]. |
Part 2 (previously Part 6) | Renumbered 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[5]. |
Part 2, Div 1 (sec 35) | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [6]. |
Sec 36 | Am 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (13); 1990 No 60, Sch 2 (2);
1994 No 45, Sch 1; 1998 No 88, Sch 2 [2] [3]; 2006 No 40, Sch 3.1; 2006 No 85,
Sch 4 [1] [2]; 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [12] [13]. |
Sec 36A | Ins 1996 No 142, Sch 2 [6]. Am 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[7]. |
Sec 37 | Am 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (14); 1998 No 143, Sch 6.1
[1]–[4]; 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [14]. |
Sec 38 | Am 1990 No 60, Sch 2 (3); 1996 No 142, Sch 2 [7];
2001 No 118, Sch 1 [8] [9]; 2003 No 4, Sch 1.1. |
Sec 39 | Subst 1992 No 57, Sch 2. |
Part 2, Div 4 | Subst 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 40 | Am 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (15). Subst 1990 No 60, Sch 5.
Am 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [10]. Subst 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 40AA | Ins 1994 No 45, Sch 1. Am 1996 No 142, Sch 2 [8].
Rep 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 40AB | Ins 1996 No 142, Sch 2 [9]. Rep 2009 No 58, Sch 1
[3]. |
Sec 40A | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 5. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [15].
Rep 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 40B | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 5. Am 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [11]
[12]. Rep 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 40C | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 5. Am 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [13].
Rep 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 40D | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 5. Am 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [14];
2006 No 111, Sch 1 [16]. Rep 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [3]. |
Secs 41, 42 | Subst 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 42A | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2009 No 58, Sch
1 [3]. |
Secs 42B–42P | Ins 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [3]. |
Part 2, Div 4A (secs 42Q–42X) | Ins 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [3]. |
Sec 43 | Am 1991 No 53, Sch 1; 1994 No 88, Sch 7; 1995 No
11, Sch 1. Subst 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [15]. |
Sec 44 | Am 1991 No 53, Sch 1; 1994 No 88, Sch 7; 1995 No
11, Sch 1. |
Sec 44A | Ins 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (16). Am 1990 No 60, Sch 6
(6). |
Part 3 (previously Part 7) | Renumbered 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[5]. |
Sec 45 | Am 1990 No 60, Sch 2 (4); 1992 No 29, Sch 5; 1996
No 137, Sch 2.1; 1999 No 42, Sch 3.1 [1]–[3]. |
Sec 46 | Subst 1990 No 60, Sch 6 (7). Am 1996 No 24, Sch
1. |
Part 4 (previously Part 8) | Renumbered 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[5]. |
Sec 48 | Am 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [16]. |
Part 5 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 5, Div 1 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Secs 49–51 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 5, Div 1A | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [18]. |
Sec 52 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [18]. Am 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [4]. |
Sec 52A | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [18]. |
Sec 52AA | Ins 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [5]. |
Sec 52B | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [18]. Am 2009 No 58, Sch 1
[6]. |
Secs 52C–52F | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [18]. |
Sec 52G | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [18]. Am 2009 No 58, Sch 1
[7]. |
Sec 52H | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [18]. |
Part 5, Div 2 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 53 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 54 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[19]–[22]. |
Sec 55 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[23]–[27]. |
Sec 56 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[28]–[33]. |
Sec 57 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[34]–[37]. |
Sec 58 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[38] [39]. |
Sec 59 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [40]. |
Sec 60 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 5, Div 3 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [41]. |
Secs 61, 62 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [41]. |
Sec 63 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [41] (am 2007 No 27, Sch 1.2). |
Secs 64–72 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [41]. |
Part 5, Div 4 (secs 73–77) | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Rep 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[41]. |
Part 5, Div 5 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 78 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Secs 78A–78C | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [42]. |
Sec 79 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 79A | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [43]. |
Secs 80, 81 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 5, Div 6 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [44]. |
Sec 82 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [44]. |
Sec 83 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [44]. Am 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [8]. |
Sec 84 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [44]. |
Secs 85, 86 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Rep 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[45]. Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [44]. |
Part 5, Div 7 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [44]. |
Secs 87–92 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Rep 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[45]. Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [44]. |
Part 6 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [45]. |
Sec 93 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [45]. Am 2009 No 56, Sch 4.1. |
Secs 94–103 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Rep 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[45]. |
Part 7 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 7, Div 1, heading | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[46]. |
Part 7, Div 1 (secs 104, 105) | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 7, Div 2 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [47]. |
Sec 106 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [47]. Am 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [9]–[11]. |
Sec 106A | Ins 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [12]. |
Secs 107–112 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [47]. |
Sec 113 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [47]. Am 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [13]. |
Secs 114, 115 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [47]. |
Sec 116 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [47]. Am 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [14] [15]. |
Sec 117 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [47]. |
Sec 118 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [47]. Am 2007 No 27, Sch 1.1 [1]. |
Sec 119 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [47]. |
Part 7, Div 3 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [47]. |
Sec 120 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [47]. Am 2007 No 27, Sch 1.1 [2]. |
Secs 121–131 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [47]. |
Part 7, Div 4 (secs 132–137) | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [47]. |
Part 7, Div 5 | Subst 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [47]. |
Sec 137A | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [47]. |
Sec 137B | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [47]. Am 2009 No 58, Sch 1
[8]. |
Secs 137C, 137D | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [47]. |
Part 7, Divs 6–8 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Rep 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[47]. |
Part 7, Div 9 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 138 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 138A | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [48]. |
Secs 139, 140 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 141 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[49]. |
Sec 141A | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [50]. |
Part 7, Div 10 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 142 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[51]. |
Sec 143 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 143A | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [52]. |
Secs 144, 145 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 7, Div 11 (secs 146–148) | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Rep 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[53]. |
Part 8 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 8, Div 1 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 149 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[54]–[56]. |
Sec 149A | Ins 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [16]. |
Sec 150 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2009 No 58, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 151 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Rep 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[57]. |
Sec 152 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 8, Div 2 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 153 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[58]–[60]. |
Sec 154 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[61] [62]. |
Sec 155 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[63]. |
Secs 156, 157 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 158 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[64]–[66]. |
Sec 159 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [67]. |
Sec 160 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[68]–[70]. |
Sec 161 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[71]. |
Part 8, Div 3, heading | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[72]. |
Part 8, Div 3 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 162 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[73]. |
Sec 163 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[74]. |
Part 8A | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17] (for information
concerning Part 8A before the commencement of 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17] see the
Historical table of amendments below). |
Part 9 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17] (for information
concerning Part 9 before the commencement of 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17] see the
Historical table of amendments below). |
Part 9, Div 1 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 164 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 165 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[71] [75]–[78]. |
Sec 165A | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [79]. |
Part 9, Divs 2, 3 (secs
166–175) | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 10 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 10, Div 1 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 176 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[80]. |
Part 10, Div 2 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 177 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[81]–[83]. |
Part 10, Div 3 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 178 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[84]. |
Sec 179 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 30, Sch
9.1. |
Secs 180, 181 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 10, Div 3A (secs
181A–181O) | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [85]. |
Part 10, Div 4 (secs 182–188) | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 182 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 183 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2010 No 19, Sch 3.2
[2]. |
Secs 184–188 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 10, Div 5 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 10, Div 5, Subdiv 1, heading | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Rep 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[86]. |
Secs 189–197 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 10, Div 5, Subdiv 2, heading | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Rep 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[86]. |
Part 10, Div 6, heading | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [87]. |
Part 10, Div 6, Subdiv 1, heading | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [87]. |
Secs 198, 199 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 10, Div 6, Subdiv 2 (secs 199A,
199B) | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [88]. |
Part 10, Div 6, Subdiv 3, heading | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [88]. |
Secs 200, 201 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 202 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2005 No 98, Sch 3.1
[1]. |
Secs 203–205 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 206 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2005 No 98, Sch 3.1
[1] [2]. |
Secs 207, 208 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 209 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[89]–[91]. |
Sec 210 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 211 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[92]. |
Sec 211A | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [93]. |
Sec 212 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 213 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[94]. |
Sec 214 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[95]. |
Sec 215 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 11 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 11, Div 1 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 216 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[96] [97]. |
Sec 217 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2007 No 27, Sch 1.1
[3]. |
Secs 218, 219 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 220 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[98]. |
Sec 221 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[99]. |
Sec 221A | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [100]. |
Part 11, Div 2 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 222 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[101]–[105]. |
Sec 223 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Secs 223A, 223B | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [106]. |
Sec 224 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2007 No 27, Sch 1.1
[4]. |
Sec 225 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[107]. |
Sec 226 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[108] [109]. |
Secs 227, 228 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 229 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[110]. |
Sec 230 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 231 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[111] [112]. |
Sec 232 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[113]. |
Part 11, Div 3, heading | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[114]. |
Part 11, Div 3 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 233 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 234 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Subst 2006 No 111, Sch
1 [115]. |
Part 12 (secs 235–237) | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 13 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 238 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[116]–[119]. |
Sec 239 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 239A | Ins 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [18]. |
Secs 240, 241 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Part 14 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 242 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[120]–[122]; 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [19]. |
Secs 243–245 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 246 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[123] [124]. |
Secs 247–249 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 249A | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [125]. |
Sec 250 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[126]–[128]. |
Sec 251 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Rep 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[129]. |
Sec 252 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[130]–[134]. |
Sec 252A | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [135]. |
Sec 253 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sch 1 | Rep 1992 No 57, Sch 2. Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[18]. |
Sch 2 | Ins 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [18]. |
Sch 3 | Am 1987 No 143, Sch 1. Rep 1999 No 85, Sch 4. Ins
2006 No 111, Sch 1 [136]. |
Sch 3A | Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [137]. |
Sch 4 | Am 1990 No 60, Sch 8; 1991 No 59, sec 3; 1996 No
142, Sch 2 [14] [15]; 1997 No 55, Sch 4 [1] [2]; 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[19]–[21]; 2004 No 69, Sch 1; 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [138] [139]; 2007 No
27, Sch 1.1 [5]; 2008 No 62, Sch 1.1; 2009 No 58, Sch 1 [20]
[21]. |
Sch 5 | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 1 (5). Am 1999 No 94, sec 7 (3)
and Sch 5, Part 3. Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [22]. Ins 2006 No 111, Sch 1
[140]. |
Sch 6 | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 1 (5). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[22]. |
The whole Act (except Sch 4) | Am 2006 No 111, Sch 1 [1] (“Pecuniary
Interest Tribunal” omitted wherever occurring, “Pecuniary Interest
and Disciplinary Tribunal” inserted instead). |
Historical table of amendments
Information concerning Parts 8A and 9 before the commencement of
2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17].
Part 8A | Ins 1996 No 142, Sch 2 [10]. Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 49 | Rep 1996 No 142, Sch 2 [11]. Ins 1996 No 142, Sch 2
[10]. Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Secs 49A–49G | Ins 1996 No 142, Sch 2 [10]. Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Part 9 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 50 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 51 | Am 1991 No 69, Sch 1. Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 52 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 53 | Am 1990 No 60, Sch 2 (5). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 54 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 55 | Subst 1990 No 60, Sch 7 (1). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 56 | Rep 1998 No 47, Sch 2.1. Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 56A | Ins 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (17). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 56B | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 4. Am 1991 No 94, Sch 1. Rep
2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 56C | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 4. Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 56D | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 6 (8). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 57 | Am 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (18). Subst 1990 No 60, Sch 6
(8). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 57A | Ins 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (19). Subst 1990 No 60, Sch 6
(8). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 57B | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 6 (8). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 58 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 58A | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 7 (2). Am 1991 No 94, Sch 2;
1996 No 142, Sch 2 [12]. Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 59 | Am 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (20). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 60 | Rep 1990 No 60, Sch 7 (3). |
Sec 61 | Subst 1990 No 60, Sch 7 (4). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 62 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 63 | Am 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (3). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 64 | Am 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (21). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 65 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 65A | Ins 1990 No 60, Sch 7 (5). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 66 | Am 1992 No 112, Sch 1. Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 67 | Am 1990 No 60, Sch 7 (6). Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1
[17]. |
Sec 68 | Am 1986 No 18, Sch 1 (22); 1990 No 60, Schs 3 (3),
7 (7) (am 1990 No 108, Sch 2); 1992 No 112, Sch 1; 1995 No 39, Sch 1 (3); 1996
No 142, Sch 2 [13]. Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 69 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |
Sec 70 | Rep 1999 No 85, Sch 4. |
Sec 71 | Rep 2001 No 118, Sch 1 [17]. |