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ROAD TRANSPORT LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2002
2002
THE
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY
FOR THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
ROAD
TRANSPORT LEGISLATION AMENDMENT ACT
2002
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Circulated
by authority of
Bill Wood MLA
Minister for Urban
Services
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
ROAD TRANSPORT LEGISLATION
AMENDMENT ACT 2002
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Overview
The Road Transport Legislation Amendment
Act 2002 amends the Road Transport (Driver Licensing) Act 1999, the
Road Transport (General) Act 1999, the Road Transport (Vehicle
Registration) Regulations 2000.
The amendments facilitate:
• the introduction of image retention for driver licenses and proof of
age cards in order to help combat identity fraud;
• the introduction of
a written-off vehicle register to help prevent the registration of stolen
vehicles; and
• the streamlining of procedures for issuing an identity
card to authorised persons for the purposes of the Road Transport Legislation.
Detail
Part 1 –
Preliminary
Clause 1 – Name of Act
This clause names the amendment Act.
Clause 2 – Commencement
This clause provides for the commencement of the changes to the Road
Transport legislation. The commencement will occur as
follows:
• sections 3 to 7 (pertaining to image retention) and sections
10 to 12 (pertaining to identity cards) to commence on the day after the Act is
notified;
• sections 8 and 9, which relate to renumbering of the
Road Transport (Driver Licensing) Act 1999 to cater for the new amendments,
commence immediately after the commencement of the Statute Law Amendment Act
2002, part 3.66.
• sections 13 to 25 (written-off vehicle
register) to commence on a day fixed by the Minister by written notice.
Part 2 – Road Transport
(Driver Licensing) Act 1999
Clause 3 – Act amended – pt 2
Specifies that the Road Transport (Driver Licensing) Act 1999 is the
Act being amended.
Clause 4 – New Part 3A
Inserts Part 3A, Protection of photographs and signatures.
Proposed
new section 33A – Application of pt 3A – specifies that the
photographs and signatures to which the part applies are those taken or given in
transactions involving a driver licence or proof of age card.
Proposed
new section 33B – Definitions for part 3A– extends the current
definition of a photograph and inserts a new definition of signature to include
a copy of a photograph and signature.
Proposed new section 33C –
Use of photographs and signatures – prescribes the allowed uses of
photographs and signatures by the road transport authority (the
authority).
Proposed new section 33D – Disclosure of photographs
and signatures by the authority – limits the persons to whom a signature
or photograph may be disclosed to. This section also allows the regulations to
prescribe the people to whom, the purposes for which, or the circumstances when,
a photograph may be disclosed under paragraphs (a) to (d).
Proposed new
section 33E – Security of photographs and signatures – this section
places an obligation on the authority to ensure that photographs and signatures
are disclosed only according to this Act or another law in force in the ACT,
such as the Privacy Act 1988.
Proposed new section 33F –
Unauthorised reproduction of photographs and signatures – this section
makes it an offence for a record keeper (anyone involved in the administration
or enforcement of the road transport legislation) to reproduce a photo or
signature other than:
• for the administration or enforcement of the
road transport legislation or the Liquor Act 1975, section 175, or
• in
accordance with sections 33C and 33D.
Clause 5
Proposed new
section 34 – Additional matters about identity - specifies circumstances
when the authority may refuse to issue, replace, renew or vary a driver licence
or proof of age card, such as when an applicant has not had a photograph taken
in a place designated by the authority by an authorised person. This section
also allows the authority to refuse to issue, replace, renew or vary a driver
licence or proof of age card if any supporting evidence of the applicant’s
identity or home address required by the authority is not provided. It is
similar in terms to subsection (1).
The substitution of this section
also removes the current prohibition in existing subsections (2) and (3) on the
authority from retaining copies of photographs of persons to whom driver
licences have been issued. The offence provision in existing subsection (4) is
incorporated into proposed new section 33F.
Clause 6 – Dictionary, definition of
photograph
This substituted section aligns the definition of a photograph to section
33B, which defines photographs for the purposes of Part 3A.
Clause 7 – Dictionary, new
definitions
This section inserts into the Road Transport (Driver Licensing) Act
1999 dictionary definitions of proof of age card and signature.
Clause 8 – Parts 3A, 4 and 5 -
renumbering
This is a consequential amendment.
Clause 9 – Sections 33A to 42 -
renumbering
This is a consequential amendment.
Part 3 - Amendments of Road
Transport (General) Act 1999
Clause 10 – Act amended – pt 3
Specifies that the Road Transport (General) Act 1999 is the Act
being amended.
Clause 11 – Authorised persons, Section
19 (3) (b)
Section 19 (3) (b) is amended to remove the requirement that
the authority certify in writing that a person is suitable to be authorised, a
provision that is redundant given that a person has to be appointed in writing
under a separate provision. The requirement for the person to be suitable, with
regard to criminal convictions and employment record, is retained.
Clause 12 – Identity cards, Section 20 (1)
(b)
Section 20 (1) (b) is amended to allow the authority to include on an
identity card the authorisation number issued by the authority as well as, or
instead of, the name of the person. The change arises from the need to balance
the occupational, health and safety issues associated with disclosing the
authorised person’s full name and the right of the member of the public to
be able to identify the person who has exercised powers under the Road Transport
legislation.
Clause 13 – New Division 5.3
Inserts new division, Division 5.3 – Written-off vehicles register
(referred to as WOVR from this point on).
Proposed new section 83A
Purposes of div.5.3 - describes the purposes of the division.
Proposed
new section 83B Definitions for div 5.3 - defines terms used in the WOVR
legislation.
Proposed new section 83C When a vehicle is a total loss.
Describes the condition of a vehicle that makes it subject to the provisions of
the WOVR legislation and regulations.
Proposed new section 83D
Written-off vehicle register – requires the authority to maintain a WOVR
and describes in general terms the sort of information that may be kept in it
and the forms in which it may be kept. It also allows the authority to correct
mistakes on the WOVR, and to authorise a person to make entries in the WOVR.
Proposed new section 83E Security of information in register - requires
the authority to ensure that personal information on the WOVR is kept and
released subject to the Road Transport (General) Act 1999 or another law
in force in the Territory. (The Privacy Act 1988 (Commonwealth) applies
to the ACT.)
Proposed new section 83F Regulations about written-off
vehicles – provides a regulation making power describing the sorts of
provisions that may be contained in the regulations.
Clause 14 - Dictionary, new definitions
This section inserts the new definitions found in Division 5.3 into the
Dictionary.
Part 4 – Amendments of
Road Transport (Vehicle Registration) Regulations 2000
Clause 15 – Regulations amended by pt
4
Specifies that the Road Transport (Vehicle Registration) Regulations
2000 are the regulations being amended.
Clause 16 – Deciding applications for
registration – regulation 32 (2)
This amendment requires the authority to refuse to register a vehicle that
is recorded on an ACT or interstate WOVR as a ‘statutory write-off’.
This is critical to the nationally agreed WOVR principles and ensures that
statutory write-offs, which are vehicles that by national agreement are those
most likely to have their identifiers used to rebirth a stolen vehicle in order
to obtain registration, are not available to professional car thieves.
‘Statutory write-off’ is defined in detail in proposed new
regulation 32B (see clause 17).
Clause 17 – New regulations 32A and
32B
Proposed new regulation 32A – Deciding applications for
registration – written-off vehicles. This regulation requires the
authority:
• to refuse an application to register a vehicle assessed as
a statutory write-off;
• to ensure that, before a repairable write-off
can be registered, the authority must be satisfied that the vehicle is the
original vehicle i.e. not a rebirthed vehicle and that it meets the other
requirements of the road transport legislation such as the applicable vehicle
standards.
Subregulation (4) exempts a repairable write-off from the
requirements listed above, where the vehicle has been registered following
assessment as a repairable write-off. This saves the registered operator of
such a vehicle from having to re-present the vehicle for an identity check on
every renewal of registration.
Proposed new regulation 32B – When
a vehicle is a statutory write-off
This regulation defines, in detail, when a
vehicle is a statutory write-off. This is the definition proposed by Austroads
following consultation with the insurance industry and road transport
authorities. Vehicles that fit the description of a statutory write-off are
targeted by professional car thieves for vehicle identifiers because of their
low cost. This definition, along with legislation precluding the authority from
registering such vehicles, will immediately prevent about 20% of written-off
vehicles ever being used for rebirthing.
Clause 18 – Renewal of registration,
regulation 68 (4), note
Consequential amendment due to renumbering of provisions about seasonal
registration.
Clause 19 – Regulation 68 (9) to (12)
This
amendment expands the existing subregulation 68 (9) to include a reference to
regulation 32A, which precludes the authority from renewing the registration of
a vehicle that has been assessed as a statutory write-off. It also remakes
regulations 68(10) to (12) as new regulation 68A.
Clause 20 – Obligation to notify if vehicle
destroyed or written-off, Regulation 70
This section omits regulation 70, which requires a registered operator to
notify the authority when a vehicle has been written-off. This obligation will
be maintained (with some variations) under separate amendments of the Road
Transport (General) Regulation 2000 in relation to the WOVR.
Clause 21 – When transfer of registration may or must be
refused – Regulation 78 (1) (d) to (h)
This is a consequential
amendment.
Clause 22 – New Regulation 78 (1) (d)
This
amendment allows the authority to refuse to transfer the registration of a
vehicle that has been notified in a WOVR. There may be some cases where the
transfer should be allowed, even for a statutory write-off, such as when the
registration needs to be transferred to a person in order for that person to
obtain a refund of the registration fees.
Clause 23 –
Suspension or cancellation of registration – Regulation 84 (1)
(d)
This amendment substitutes a new paragraph (d) which, rather than
referring in general terms to a ‘vehicle has been destroyed or damaged
beyond repair’, refers to a vehicle that has been notified in the WOVR,
and provides for the authority to proceed to suspend or cancel the registration
of a vehicle so notified.
Clause 24 – Procedures for
suspension and cancellation of registration – Regulations 85 (5)
(b)
This amendment allows, but does not require, the authority to cancel
the registration of a vehicle notified in the WOVR as a written-off vehicle,
prior to the 14-day period referred to in regulation 85 (4). This
amendment is directed at vehicles assessed as statutory write-offs.
Clause 25 – Dictionary, new
definitions
This amendment inserts the new definitions used in the WOVR provision into
the dictionary.
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