Australian Capital Territory Bills Explanatory Statements
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COMMUNITY REFERENDUM BILL 2002
2002
THE
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY FOR THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
COMMUNITY
REFERENDUM BILL
2002
EXPLANATORY
Statement
Circulated
by the authority of Gary Humphries MLA
Leader of the Opposition
OUTLINE
The purpose of this Bill is to provide a mechanism
for electors of the Australian Capital Territory to initiate changes to the laws
of the ACT to the extent permitted by the Autralian Capital Terrotory
(Self-Government Act 1988).
The steps set out in the Bill to enable
electors to initiate and vote on legislation are as follows:
Step 1 -
establishment notice. A sponsoring committee (?-10 electors) is established
for the purpose of initiating a request to make or change a law. The sponsoring
committee registers its establishment notice with the Electoral Commissioner.
Including the names and addresses of the members of the committee, the name of
the committee's contact officer and a description, in no more than 100 words, of
what the legislative proposal is to achieve.
Step 2 - registration of
proposal. Once the sponsoring committee has submitted the names. addresses
and signatures of 1,000 or more electors who support the proposal, the Electoral
Commissioner registers the legislative proposal and publishes a notice in the
Gazette.
Step 3 - support by 5% or 10% of electors. After
registration, the sponsoring committee has 6 months in which to gather the
support of electors to have their legislative proposal submitted to the people
for decision at a referendum. If the Electoral Commissioner is satisfied (after
checking a random sample of signatures of electors) that more than 5% of the
number of electors eligible to vote in the previous Legislative Assembly
election have indicated support for the proposal being put to referendum, the
Commissioner publishes a notice in the Gazette advising that the
registered legislative proposal may be put to a referendum. If the Commissioner
is satisfied that more than 10% of that number of electors has indicated support
for the proposal, the Commissioner publishes a further notice in the
Gazette advising that the registered legislative proposal has become a
qualified legislative proposal (which may be put to a referendum at an earlier
time - see step six).
Step 4 - development of proposed law. The
sponsoring committee may then begin the task of developing legislation to give
effect to the registered proposal. Officers of the Attorney-General’s
Department shall assist with this task. Once the proposed law is drafted, the
sponsoring committee may apply to the Attorney-General for certification that
the proposed law is consistent with the registered legislative proposal
sponsored by the committee and is suitable for presentation to the Legislative
Assembly.
Step 5 - presentation of the proposed law to the Legislative
Assembly. The sponsoring committee may give the proposed law and
accompanying Attorney-General's certificate to the Legislative Assembly. If so,
the Speaker must lay the proposed law and certificate before the Assembly and
request the Chief Minister to estimate the costs or savings of the proposal. The
Assembly may decide to pass the same law, or enact its own law to give effect to
the intentions of the proposed law, in which case there is no need for a
referendum. Alternatively, the Assembly may decide to refer the proposed law to
a referendum. If the Assembly does nothing, the proposed law goes to referendum
anyway.
The most important aspects of the Bill are:
Step 6 - a
referendum. In the usual case, once a proposed law giving effect to a
legislative proposal is tabled in the Assembly, a referendum will he held in
conjunction with the next general election of the Legislative Assembly, so long
as that election is four months after the day the proposed law has been tabled
in the Assembly . The day of the referendum is called a community
consultation day. Referendums are to he conducted by the ACT Electoral
Commission under the Referendum (Machinery Provisions) Act
1994. "For" and "Against" cases may be distributed to households as part of
the referendum process.
However, where a proposal has become a qualified
legislative proposal bgaining the approval of more than 10% of electors. and the
Bill is tabled prior to 3I May in the first two years of the three year life of
an Assembly, it will be put to referendum at a special community consultation
day on the following third Saturday in October in that year. Should that
occur, any other proposals that are eligible to be considered at the next
ordinary community consultation day will also be put to referendum on the
special community consultation day.
Step 7- presentation of the
referendum result to the Legislative Assembly. Where a referendum has been
approved by a majority of formal voters, the Speaker shall notify the Assembly
of the result determined by the Electoral Commissioner. The Chief Minister may
then move a motion in the Legislative Assembly that it enact the proposed law.
Under tile Australian Capital Territory (Self Government Act 1988) the
Legislative Assembly cannot be bound to pass a proposed law that has gained the
approval of a majority of voters at a referendum.
This Community
Referendum Bill 2002 is largely an updated republication of the Bill presented
to the Assembly in 1998. As a general proposition, the policy contained in the
1998 Bill is repeated in the 2002 Bill which conforms with the drafting
conventions currently being followed in ACT law.
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