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SOCIAL SECURITY LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (EMPLOYMENT SERVICES REFORM) BILL 2009



                                    2008




               THE PARLIAMENT OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA





                          HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES








   SOCIAL SECURITY LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (eMPLOYMENT SERVICES REFORM) BILL
                                    2008




                           EXPLANATORY MEMORANDUM






















   (Circulated by authority of the Minister for Employment Participation,
                     the Honourable Brendan O'Connor MP)





   SOCIAL SECURITY LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (eMPLOYMENT SERVICES REFORM) BILL
                                    2008

                                   OUTLINE

The Social Security Legislation Amendment (Employment Services Reform) Bill
2008 will amend the Social Security Act 1991 and the Social Security
(Administration) Act 1999 to give effect to measures announced in the 2008-
09 Budget to support the new Employment Services, in particular the
introduction of a new job seeker compliance system.

The new compliance framework will apply to newstart allowance, youth
allowance for persons who are not full-time students or new apprentices,
parenting payment for persons who have participation requirements and are
not new apprentices and special benefit for nominated visa holders.

A key feature of the new framework is the no show no pay failure. This new
failure will deter non-compliance and encourage re-engagement. It applies
to a job seeker who, without reasonable excuse, fails to attend an
activity, fails to attend a job interview or intentionally acts in a manner
that it is reasonably foreseeable may result in an offer of employment not
being made. The penalty for a no show no pay failure will be equivalent to
one work day of a job seeker's basic rate of payment and any approved
program of work supplement (normally 10% of a job seeker's 14 day
instalment).

A job seeker who fails, without reasonable excuse, to attend an appointment
with their employment service provider or to meet their job search
requirements under their Employment Pathway Plan will commit a connection
failure. Instead of an immediate penalty for a connection failure, the job
seeker may be required to comply with a reconnection requirement, which may
normally be to attend another appointment or, in the case of a job search-
related failure, to complete a Job Seeker Diary. If the job seeker fails,
without reasonable excuse, to comply with the reconnection requirement, a
reconnection failure period (the loss of the job seeker's basic rate of
payment and any approved program of work supplement) will apply until they
comply with a further reconnection requirement.

A job seeker will commit a serious failure if the job seeker has
intentionally, recklessly or negligently failed to meet their participation
obligations and has persistently failed to comply with those obligations,
or they fail to accept, without reasonable excuse, an offer of suitable
employment.  The consequence of a serious failure is to be an eight-week
period of non-payment. In order to promote greater participation,  a non-
payment period may be ceased if the job seeker commences a particular
serious failure requirement or if the job seeker does not have the capacity
to comply with a serious failure requirement and serving the penalty would
cause severe financial hardship.

A job seeker's participation payment will be not payable for a period of
eight weeks if they are unemployed due to a voluntary act (unless the
voluntary act is reasonable) or are dismissed from employment due to
misconduct (other than misconduct that would constitute minor
transgressions). The option of commencing an intensive activity to end
these non-payment periods will not be available; however, a non-payment
period can be ended if a person would be in severe financial hardship and
is in a class of persons specified by the Secretary in a legislative
instrument, for example a job seeker with dependent children.

The Bill will also amend the social security law to replace all references
to Activity Agreements with references to Employment Pathway Plans and to
allow for Employment Pathway Plans to have optional terms, for example
counselling.

The Bill removes references to the Personal Support Programme (PSP),
rehabilitation programs and labour market programs from the legislation,
while ensuring that participants in similar programs under the new
Employment Services do not lose the protections currently available to
participants of the discontinued programs.

Amendments will be made to ensure these persons undertaking work experience
activities under an Employment Pathway Plan are not treated as employees
under Commonwealth legislation, unless the activity they are undertaking is
paid work.

The Bill contains several minor technical amendments designed to clarify
and improve the operation of the current payment pending review provisions,
particularly in relation to the start date of penalties following the
affirmation of a decision to apply a penalty following a period of payment
pending review.

The Bill redrafts the notice provisions in sections 63 and 64 of the Social
Security (Administration) Act 1999 to resolve some overlapping between
those sections and correct drafting inconsistencies and shortfalls. The
Bill also contains other consequential amendments that do not reflect
policy changes, and various transitional provisions.

                              FINANCIAL IMPACT

The estimated financial impact associated with this Bill is:

Year             Expense
2008-09          -
2009-10          $  12.8m
2010-11          $  13.7m
2011-12          $  14.4m

Total            $  40.9 m


   SOCIAL SECURITY LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (eMPLOYMENT SERVICES REFORM) BILL
                                    2008

                              NOTES ON CLAUSES

Clause 1 sets out how the Act is to be cited, that is, the  Social  Security
Legislation Amendment (Employment Services Reform) Act 2008.

Clause 2 provides a table that  sets  out  the  commencement  dates  of  the
various sections to the Act. All substantive measures in  the  Act  commence
on 1 July 2009.

Clause 3 provides that each Act that is specified in a Schedule  is  amended
or repealed as set out in that Schedule.

For ease of description, this  explanatory  memorandum  uses  the  following
abbreviations:

'Social Security Act' means the Social Security Act 1991; and

'Administration Act' means the Social Security  (Administration)  Act  1999;
and

'job seeker' means a person receiving a participation  payment,  as  defined
by Item 43 of Schedule 1.

Schedule 1 - Compliance with obligations in relation to participation
payments

Explanation of changes

PART 1 - COMPLIANCE


Social Security (Administration) Act 1999


Item 1 inserts a  new  Division  3A  in  the  Administration  Act.  The  new
Division  3A  provides  for  a  new  legislative  framework  for  compliance
obligations and penalties for persons  in  receipt  of  newstart  allowance,
parenting payment (for those subject to participation  requirements),  youth
allowance (for those who are not full-time students or new apprentices)  and
special benefit (for nominated visa holders).

Previously, the Act contained  different  compliance  provisions  for  these
four payments. The new provisions are consolidated for  all  four  payments,
which  are  defined  as  participation  payments.  The  existing  compliance
provisions for austudy are retained, and  Items  11-22  amend  the  existing
compliance provisions for  youth  allowance  recipients  who  are  full-time
students  to  remove  all  employment-related  grounds  for  penalties  (eg.
refusal of a suitable offer of employment).

Section 42A - Simplified outline

The new section 42A of the Administration Act is  a  simplified  outline  of
the operation of the new Division 3A.

Section 42B - Objects

The new section 42B sets out the objects of  Division  3A.  It  is  intended
that decision makers will have regard to these objects in  interpreting  and
applying Division 3A.

Section 42C - No show no pay failures

The new Section 42C provides for the  Secretary  to  determine  that  a  job
seeker has committed a no show no pay failure. No show no pay  failures  are
committed in respect of particular days.

The Secretary must determine that a job seeker has committed a  no  show  no
pay failure if any of the grounds in section 42C are met.

Paragraph 42C(1)(b) provides that the Secretary may only  determine  that  a
job seeker has committed a  no  show  no  pay  failure  if  the  job  seeker
receives an instalment of a participation payment for the instalment  period
in which the failure occurred (participation  payment  is  defined  by  Item
44).

Paragraph 42C(1)(a) sets out the four grounds on which  a  no  show  no  pay
failure is determined.

Subparagraph  42C(1)(a)(i)  -  Failure  to  participate  in  activity  under
Employment Pathway Plan

The first ground (subparagraph 42C(1)(a)(i)) is where a job seeker fails  to
participate in an activity in which they  are  required  to  participate  by
their Employment Pathway Plan (Schedule 2 provides  for  Employment  Pathway
Plans to replace Activity Agreements).  Because  of  the  use  of  the  word
required, a job seeker will not commit a no show no pay failure  by  failing
to participate in an activity that their Employment Pathway  Plan  sets  out
as being optional (Items 19, 69, 129 and 179 of Schedule 2 allow  Employment
Pathway Plans to provide for optional terms).

The term activity is used in subparagraph 42C(1)(a)(i),  while  the  failure
to comply with a requirement to attend an appointment under a  job  seeker's
Employment Pathway Plan may be a connection failure (see the  new  paragraph
42E(2)(c)). Accordingly, if a job seeker fails to comply with a  requirement
of their  Employment  Pathway  Plan,  a  decision  maker  must  examine  the
requirement  to  determine  whether  it  is  properly  characterised  as  an
activity or an appointment, as the potential penalty  will  depend  on  that
characterisation.  It  is  intended  that  Employment  Pathway  Plans   will
explicitly   describe   requirements   as   being   either   activities   or
appointments, in order to assist decision makers in  this  task.  Activities
are intended to capture  vocational  or  non-vocational  tasks  that  a  job
seeker is required to undertake, such as training, work experience  or  Work
for the Dole (eg. a failure to attend Work for the Dole on a particular  day
will be a no show no pay failure).  Appointments  are  intended  to  capture
requirements that relate to  a  job  seeker's  expected  attendances  at  an
office of their employment service provider or Centrelink at stated times.

Subsection 42C(2) is intended to ensure that a 'failure to participate'  for
the purposes of subparagraph 42C(1)(a)(i) includes both failures  to  attend
activities at all, and failures to attend punctually.  For  example,  a  job
seeker will still be subject to a  no  show  no  pay  failure  if  they  are
substantially late in their attendance at an  activity,  or  they  leave  or
cease the activity before they are permitted. It is not intended that  a  no
show no pay failure would apply to inconsequential lateness to an activity.

Subparagraph  42C(1)(a)(ii)  -  Failure  to  comply  with  serious   failure
requirement

The new section 42Q allows for a job seeker's  serious  failure  period  (an
eight week non-payment period) to  be  ended  upon  the  commencement  of  a
serious failure requirement. If a job  seeker  commences  complying  with  a
serious failure requirement, but then fails to comply with that  requirement
on a particular day,  subparagraph 42C(1)(a)(ii) provides for  that  failure
to be treated as a no show no pay failure. However, if  a  job  seeker  does
not commence a serious failure requirement at  all,  section  42Q  will  not
apply, so the job seeker's serious failure period will continue and the  job
seeker would be not payable, rather  than  have  no  show  no  pay  failures
applied.

Subparagraph 42C(1)(a)(iii) - Committing misconduct

Subparagraph 42C(1)(a)(iii) provides that a job seeker will  also  commit  a
no show no pay failure if the job seeker attends an activity or purports  to
comply with a serious failure requirement on a particular day, but  the  job
seeker commits misconduct whilst doing so. The legislation does  not  define
misconduct, intending to capture its ordinary meaning. It is  intended  that
in determining whether a job  seeker  commits  misconduct,  decision  makers
will have reference to commonly expected  standards  of  behaviour,  and  if
applicable, any expressly stated standards of conduct for  participation  in
a particular activity.  It  is  intended  that  subparagraph  42C(1)(a)(iii)
should not be applied in circumstances where a  job  seeker's  behaviour  is
beyond their own control, but should apply to behaviour of a deliberate  and
serious nature.

Subparagraph 42C(1)(a)(iv) - Failure to attend job interview etc.

The new subparagraph 42C(1)(a)(iv)  is  designed  to  address  circumstances
where a job seeker intentionally acts in a manner  where  it  is  reasonably
foreseeable that acting in that manner could  result  in  a  job  offer  not
being made. The previous compliance provisions only had a  specific  penalty
for failing to attend  job  interviews,  which  made  it  possible  for  job
seekers to avoid penalties by  attending  job  interviews  but  deliberately
behaving in a manner that would make  it  unlikely  they  would  be  offered
employment. The new subparagraph 42C(1)(a)(iv) is designed to  address  this
circumstance.

The new subparagraph 42C(1)(a)(iv) is intended to encompass any  intentional
course of action that may result in an offer of employment  not  being  made
to a job seeker. The consequence of a job offer not  being  made  must  have
been reasonably foreseeable. This ground will  also  apply  to  failures  to
attend job interviews. The provision uses the test of 'could  result  in  an
offer of employment not being made' in order to indicate that  a  course  of
action does not definitely have to lead to an offer of employment not  being
made. For example, if a job seeker is one of a number of  candidates  for  a
job, their failure to attend a job interview would fall within  subparagraph
42C(1)(a)(iv) even if there was no guarantee the job seeker would have  been
offered the job had they attended the interview.

Recognising  that  some   job   seekers   may   fall   within   subparagraph
42C(1)(a)(iv) for reasons beyond their control (eg. a  medical,  psychiatric
or psychological impairment), a job seeker will not commit a no show no  pay
failure  under  subparagraph  42C(1)(a)(iv)  if  their  actions   were   not
intentional, or the job seeker had a reasonable  excuse  for  their  actions
(see paragraph 42C(4)(a)).

Subsection 42C(3) - more than one failure on a day

The new subsection 42C(3) is intended to give effect to the concept  of  'no
show no pay'. This provision  makes  it  impossible  for  the  Secretary  to
determine that a job seeker has committed more  than  one  no  show  no  pay
failure on a particular day. Not having this rule  could  result  in  a  job
seeker committing multiple no show no  pay  failures,  and  having  multiple
penalty amounts, in respect of failures committed on the one day.

However, it is intended that a job seeker may commit  multiple  no  show  no
pay failures within an instalment period, including no show no pay  failures
in relation to the same activity.

      Example: Sue is required by her Employment Pathway Plan to attend Work
      Experience on the mornings of Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday each week.
      She  must  also  attend  Job  Search  Training  sessions   on   Monday
      afternoons. One week, Sue fails  to  attend  her  Work  Experience  on
      Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday, and also  fails  to  attend  Job  Search
      Training on Monday. Sue has no reasonable  excuse  for  any  of  these
      failures. Sue will have committed three no show no pay failures -  one
      on Monday, one on Tuesday and one on Wednesday - and will  have  three
      penalty amounts. Even though Sue failed to attend  two  activities  on
      Monday, subsection 42C(3) provides that  a  decision  maker  may  only
      determine that she committed one no show no pay failure on that day.

Subsection 42C(4) - Reasonable excuse

Subsection 42C(4) precludes  the  Secretary  from  determining  that  a  job
seeker commits a no show no pay failure  under  subparagraphs  42C(1)(a)(i),
(ii) or (iv)  if  the  job  seeker  satisfies  the  Secretary  they  have  a
reasonable excuse for the failure. This  exception  is  directly  replicated
from the reasonable excuse exceptions in the previous  compliance  framework
(eg. the previous subsection 624(2)). There is no intended change in  policy
in the reasonable excuse exception, such that previous  authorities  on  the
application of the exception  should  remain  applicable  (see  for  example
Secretary, Department of Employment and Workplace Relations  v  Real  [2007]
FCA 988). The intent of this exception is that job  seekers  should  not  be
penalised for actions that are beyond their control.

The new section 42U  provides  the  Secretary  with  the  power  to  make  a
legislative instrument setting out the  matters  that  must  be  taken  into
account in deciding whether a job seeker has a reasonable  excuse.  However,
these matters are not to be exhaustive (see subsection 42U(2)).

Subsection 42C(5) - Determination of an instalment period

Subsection 42C(5) requires a decision  maker  to  determine  the  instalment
period in which a penalty amount for a no show no pay failure  is  to  apply
to a job seeker's participation payment.

Section 42D - Deducting penalty amounts

Section 42D sets out  the  consequence  of  committing  a  no  show  no  pay
failure: a job seeker  will  have  a  penalty  amount  deducted  from  their
instalment for the instalment period  determined  under  subsection  42C(5).
The legislative instrument made under the new section 42T will  provide  for
the method for calculating  and  deducting  a  penalty  amount.  Because  of
section 42V, there may be circumstances where a penalty amount  is  deducted
from multiple instalments, notwithstanding section 42D.

Section 42E - Connection failures

The new section 42E provides for the  Secretary  to  determine  that  a  job
seeker has committed a connection failure. There  is  no  immediate  penalty
applicable  for  a  connection  failure;  instead,  the  commission   of   a
connection failure will result in a reconnection failure  period  if  a  job
seeker is required, and fails, to comply  with  a  reconnection  requirement
(see the new sections 42G-42J).

The Secretary must determine that a job seeker has  committed  a  connection
failure if the grounds in section 42E are met.

Paragraph 42E(1)(b) provides that the Secretary may only  determine  that  a
job seeker has committed a connection failure if the job seeker receives  an
instalment of a participation payment for the  instalment  period  in  which
the  failure  occurred  (participation  payment  is  defined  by  Item  44).
Subsection  42E(3)  clarifies  that  a  job  seeker  may   commit   multiple
connection failures on a particular day (in contrast  to  the  rule  for  no
show no pay failures in subsection 42C(3)).

Subsection 42E(2) sets out the grounds on  which  a  connection  failure  is
determined.

Paragraph 42E(2)(a) - failure to comply with section 63 requirements

Section 63 of the Administration Act (as amended by Item 11 of  Schedule  4)
provides the Secretary with the power  to  require  certain  persons  to  do
certain things (eg. attending  appointments  with  service  providers).  The
consequence of failing to comply with such a requirement is that a  person's
payment is not payable (see the new section 64).

However, it is intended to retain the existing legislative policy  that  for
persons  in  receipt  of  activity  tested   payments   or   payments   with
participation  requirements,  failures  to  comply  with  some  requirements
notified under section 63 or its precursors should not be dealt  with  under
section 63 or its precursors,  but  as  part  of  the  compliance  framework
applicable to the particular payments.

The new paragraph 42E(2)(a) provides that where a job seeker is issued  with
a requirement under the new section  63,  a  failure  to  comply  with  that
requirement is a connection failure if the notice  of  the  requirement  did
not inform the job seeker that their payment might not be  payable  if  they
fail to comply with the requirement.

As there are no direct punitive consequences  for  committing  a  connection
failure, notices under section 63 that may trigger connection failures  will
not be required to set out that there may be  consequences  for  failing  to
comply. However, there are provisions relating to the  validity  of  notices
of reconnection requirements  and  further  reconnection  requirements  (see
section 42K).

Paragraph 42E(2)(b) - Failure to enter Employment Pathway Plan

The new paragraph 42E(2)(b) provides that a job seeker commits a  connection
failure if they fail to comply with a requirement  to  enter  an  Employment
Pathway Plan. There are specific provisions regarding requirements to  enter
Employment Pathway  Plans  (see  for  example  section  605  of  the  Social
Security Act, as amended by Schedule 2). Ordinarily,  if  a  job  seeker  is
required to attend a particular place at a particular time to  negotiate  an
Employment Pathway Plan, they will fail to enter the plan  if  they  do  not
enter the plan at that place and time.

However, paragraphs 42E(4)(b) and (c) provide for  exceptions  to  paragraph
42E(2)(b) where sections 547AA or 615 of  the  Social  Security  Act  apply.
Sections 547AA and 615 of the Social Security Act (as amended  by  Items  87
and 146 of Schedule 2) provide that youth allowance and  newstart  allowance
are not payable to new claimants for those payments who fail to comply  with
requirements to enter Employment Pathway Plans. It is  intended  that  where
sections 547AA and 615 apply,  they  should  override  paragraph  42E(2)(b),
maintaining the operation of sections 547AA and 615.

Paragraph  42E(2)(c)  -  Failure  to  attend  appointment  under  Employment
Pathway Plan

The new paragraph 42E(2)(c)  provides  that  a  job  seeker  will  commit  a
connection failure by failing to attend an appointment they are required  to
attend by their Employment Pathway Plan.

The word appointment is used in paragraph 42E(2)(c), while  the  failure  to
comply with an activity under a job seeker's Employment Pathway  Plan  is  a
no  show  no  pay  failure  (see   the   new   subparagraph   42C(1)(a)(i)).
Accordingly, if a job seeker fails to comply with  a  requirement  of  their
Employment Pathway Plan, a decision maker must examine  the  requirement  to
determine whether  it  is  properly  characterised  as  an  activity  or  an
appointment, as the potential penalty will depend on that  characterisation.
It is intended  that  Employment  Pathway  Plans  will  explicitly  describe
requirements as being either activities or appointments, in order to  assist
decision makers in this task. Activities are intended to capture  vocational
or non-vocational tasks that a job seeker is required to undertake, such  as
training, work experience or Work for the Dole.  Appointments  are  intended
to capture requirements that relate to a job seeker's  expected  attendances
at an office of their employment service provider or  Centrelink  at  stated
times.

Paragraphs 42E(2)(d)-(g) - Job search-related failures

Paragraphs 42E(d)-(g) set out grounds for a connection failure  relating  to
job search requirements. There are three potentially relevant sources  of  a
requirement  to  undertake  job  searches:  a  standard  provision   in   an
Employment Pathway Plan to undertake a certain number of  job  searches  per
fortnight  (paragraph  42E(2)(f)  refers);  a  provision  in  an  Employment
Pathway Plan relating to the maintenance of a job  seeker  diary  (paragraph
42E(2)(g) refers); and a  requirement  issued  under  the  new  section  42F
relating to  applying  for  job  vacancies  (paragraphs  42E(2)(d)  and  (e)
refer).

Failure to comply with any of these requirements at first instance  will  be
a connection failure (unless one of those requirements has been  imposed  as
a reconnection requirement or further reconnection requirement  in  relation
to an earlier connection failure).

A connection failure may not be imposed under any of the job search  grounds
for parenting payment recipients (see paragraph 42E(2)(e)).  This  continues
existing policy.

Paragraph 42E(4)(a) - Reasonable excuse

Paragraph 42E(4)(a) precludes the Secretary  from  determining  that  a  job
seeker commits any connection  failure  if  the  job  seeker  satisfies  the
Secretary they have a reasonable excuse for the failure. This  exception  is
directly replicated from the reasonable excuse exceptions  in  the  previous
compliance framework (eg. the  previous  subsection  624(2)).  There  is  no
intended change in policy in the  reasonable  excuse  exception,  such  that
previous authorities on the  application  of  the  exception  should  remain
applicable  (see  for  example  Secretary,  Department  of  Employment   and
Workplace Relations v Real [2007] FCA 988). The intent of this exception  is
that job seekers should not be penalised for actions that are  beyond  their
control.

The new section 42U  provides  the  Secretary  with  the  power  to  make  a
legislative instrument setting out the  matters  that  must  be  taken  into
account in deciding whether a job seeker has a reasonable  excuse.  However,
these matters are not to be exhaustive (see the new subsection 42U(2)).

Section 42F - Requiring a person to apply for job vacancies

Section 42F directly replicates previous provisions in the  Social  Security
Act allowing the Secretary to require job seekers to apply  for  and  report
on a certain number of job vacancies (see for example the  previous  section
625). Failure to comply with a  requirement  under  section  42F  to  either
apply for or provide a statement on a certain number of  job  vacancies  may
be a connection failure (see paragraphs 42E(2)(d) and  (e)).  A  requirement
of the kind in section 42F could also be made as a reconnection  requirement
or further reconnection requirement under section 42H or 42J).

Section 42G - Reconnection requirements

The new section 42G provides  the  Secretary  with  the  power  to  issue  a
reconnection requirement to a job seeker  who  has  committed  a  connection
failure. The identification of an appropriate  reconnection  requirement  is
within the discretion of the  Secretary.  In  cases  where  a  job  seeker's
connection failure is the failure  to  attend  an  appointment,  it  may  be
appropriate for a further appointment to be scheduled. Where a job  seeker's
connection failure is the failure to enter an Employment  Pathway  Plan,  it
may be appropriate for a further requirement to enter an Employment  Pathway
Plan to be made (eg. under section 605 of the Social Security Act). Where  a
job seeker's connection failure is related to unsatisfactory job  searching,
it may be appropriate for a further job  search  requirement  to  be  issued
(eg. in the form of a requirement to maintain and return a job seeker  diary
or a requirement under section 42F).

The new section 42K sets out specific requirements for the  notification  of
reconnection  requirements.  In  particular,  the  notice  must  inform  the
recipient that failing to comply with the  requirement  may  result  in  the
application of a penalty amount.

The failure to comply with  a  reconnection  requirement  may  result  in  a
reconnection failure period (see the section  42H)  and  the  issuing  of  a
further reconnection requirement (see the section 42J).

Section 42H - Reconnection failures

The new section 42H provides that the consequence of failing to comply  with
a reconnection requirement (see  section  42G)  or  a  further  reconnection
requirement (see section 42J) is a reconnection failure.

However, if the job seeker has a reasonable excuse  for  failing  to  comply
with a reconnection requirement or a further reconnection  requirement,  the
job seeker can not be determined to have committed  a  reconnection  failure
(subsection  42H(3)).  This  exception  is  directly  replicated  from   the
reasonable excuse exceptions in the previous compliance framework  (eg.  the
previous paragraph 626(2)(a)). There is no intended change in policy in  the
reasonable  excuse  exception,  such  that  previous  authorities   on   the
application of the exception  should  remain  applicable  (see  for  example
Secretary, Department of Employment and Workplace Relations  v  Real  [2007]
FCA 988). The intent of this exception is that job  seekers  should  not  be
penalised for actions that are beyond their control.  The  new  section  42U
provides the Secretary with the  power  to  make  a  legislative  instrument
setting out the matters that must be taken into account in deciding  whether
a job seeker has a reasonable excuse. However, these matters are not  to  be
exhaustive (see the new subsection 42U(2)).

The consequence of committing  a  reconnection  failure  is  a  reconnection
failure period (subsection 42H(4)). A reconnection failure period begins  on
the day the job seeker commits a failure.  It  is  intended  that  this  day
would be the day on which a job seeker fails to attend an appointment,  fail
to enter an Employment Pathway Plan, or the day at the end of the period  in
which they are required to undertake or report on  a  particular  number  of
job searches. The reconnection failure period ends the day  before  the  job
seeker complies with a further reconnection requirement (see section 42J).

Subparagraph 42H(4)(b)(ii)  is  a  provision  that  did  not  exist  in  the
previous legislation, allowing a job seeker's  reconnection  failure  period
to end if the job seeker has a reasonable excuse for failing to comply  with
a further reconnection requirement. This provision ensures that job  seekers
cannot be subject to a compliance penalty while they have had  a  reasonable
excuse for  failing  to  comply  with  a  requirement.  However,  while  the
reconnection failure period  may  end  in  these  circumstances,  a  further
reconnection requirement may still be issued (see subsection 42J(2)),  which
may result in another reconnection failure period if the  job  seeker  fails
to comply with that further reconnection requirement and  does  not  have  a
reasonable excuse for that failure.

Subsection 42H(5) requires a decision  maker  to  determine  the  instalment
period in which a penalty amount for a reconnection failure period is to  be
deducted from a job seeker's participation payment. Accordingly, unlike  the
previous compliance framework (see sections 626-628 of the  Social  Security
Act),  a  payment  is  not  automatically  withheld  from  the  time  of   a
reconnection failure. Section 42V also allows for unserved  penalty  amounts
to be carried forward.

Section 42J - Further reconnection requirements

Section 42J provides the  Secretary  with  the  power  to  issue  a  further
reconnection requirement to a job seeker who has  committed  a  reconnection
failure, or has failed to comply with a reconnection requirement or  further
reconnection requirement but had a  reasonable  excuse  for  doing  so.  The
identification of an appropriate further reconnection requirement is  within
the discretion of the Secretary. In cases where a  job  seeker's  connection
and reconnection failures related to attendance at appointments, it  may  be
appropriate for a further appointment to be scheduled. Where a job  seeker's
connection  and  reconnection  failures  related  to  the  entry   into   an
Employment Pathway Plan, it may be appropriate for a further requirement  to
enter  an  Employment  Pathway  Plan  to  be  made.  Where  a  job  seeker's
connection  and  reconnection  failures  related   to   unsatisfactory   job
searching, it may be appropriate for a further job search requirement to  be
issued (eg. in the form of  a  job  seeker  diary  or  a  requirement  under
section 42F).

The reasonable excuse exception ensures that a reconnection  failure  period
ceases if a job seeker has a reasonable excuse for failing to comply with  a
reconnection requirement or further reconnection requirement.  However,  the
reconnection  failure  period  may  recommence  if  a  further  reconnection
requirement is then issued, and the job seeker has a reasonable  excuse  for
failing to comply with it.

Section 42K sets out  requirements  for  the  notification  of  reconnection
requirements.

The failure to comply with a further reconnection requirement may result  in
a new reconnection failure period (see  section  42H)  and  the  issuing  of
another further reconnection requirement.

Section 42K - Notification requirements

Section  42K  contains  requirements  for   the   notice   of   reconnection
requirements and further reconnection requirements. It is intended  that  if
a notice does not comply with section 42K, it  will  not  be  valid  and  no
reconnection failure can be determined for a job seeker's failure to  comply
with the purported requirement. However, it is  intended  that  substantial,
rather than strict compliance, would be sufficient for  the  validity  of  a
notice  under  section  42K,  consistent  with  the  likelihood  that   many
requirements under section 42K will be issued orally and at short notice.

Section 42K is intended to ensure that if a job  seeker  is  issued  with  a
reconnection requirement  or  further  reconnection  requirement,  they  are
informed in advance of the potential consequence of failing to  comply  with
that requirement (i.e. that a penalty amount may be deducted  from  the  job
seeker's payment).

Subsection 42K(2) is intended to maintain the  existing  legislative  policy
that notices of participation-related requirements do not have  to  be  made
in writing.

Section 42L - Deduction of penalty amount

If a  job  seeker  has  committed  a  reconnection  failure  and  a  further
reconnection requirement  is  imposed,  the  job  seeker  is  subject  to  a
reconnection failure period under subsection 42H(4).  According  to  section
42L, the consequence of a reconnection failure period will be the  deduction
of  a  penalty  amount  (calculated  in  accordance  with  the   legislative
instrument to be made under section 42T). The penalty amount will relate  to
the number of days in the reconnection failure period, and  it  is  intended
the penalty amount will  generally  result  in  the  deduction  of  the  job
seeker's full amount of  their  basic  rate  of  payment  and  any  approved
program of work supplement for the reconnection failure period.

Section 42M - Serious failure for persistent non-compliance

Section 42M sets out the first of two grounds on  which  a  serious  failure
may be determined. The imposition of a serious failure under section 42M  is
discretionary, in that  a  decision  maker  may  determine  that  a  serious
failure should not apply even if the conditions in  section  42M  have  been
satisfied. However, the purpose of section 42M is to  provide  a  deterrence
against persistent non-compliance, and  there  are  specific  rules  to  end
serious failure periods. Accordingly, it is intended there would have to  be
good reason for a decision maker to not determine  that  a  job  seeker  has
committed a serious failure despite the  conditions  in  section  42M  being
satisfied.

Paragraph 42M(1)(a) requires a decision maker  to  assess,  at  a  point  in
time, a job seeker's compliance until  that  point  in  time.  The  decision
maker is to determine whether the job  seeker  has  persistently  failed  to
comply with their participation-related  obligations.  In  practice,  it  is
intended that the decision maker will  conduct  a  Comprehensive  Compliance
Assessment to determine if the job seeker's compliance until that  point  in
time demonstrated persistent non-compliance. A decision maker may only  make
a determination that a job seeker has  committed  a  serious  failure  under
section 42M if the job seeker received  an  instalment  of  a  participation
payment in  the  instalment  period  in  which  the  determination  is  made
(paragraph 42M(1)(b)).

The particular failures listed in the parentheses in subsection  42M(1)  are
not intended  to  be  exclusive.  To  avoid  doubt,  failures  that  do  not
constitute particular failures under the new compliance provisions may  also
be taken into account in determining persistent non-compliance.

The term persistent is used in  its  ordinary  meaning.  The  non-compliance
does not need to be total: a job seeker may  be  persistently  non-compliant
over a period despite complying with some or even most of their  obligations
during that period. The intention of  the  provision  is  to  deter  certain
patterns of behaviour. It is therefore intended that a decision maker  under
paragraph 42M(1)(a) will look at a job seeker's  recent  compliance  history
to determine whether the job seeker has been persistently non-compliant.

Subsection 42M(2) ensures that job seekers cannot  commit  serious  failures
for behaviour  beyond  their  control.  The  acts  considered  to  determine
persistent non-compliance must be  intentional,  reckless  or  negligent.  A
decision maker must be satisfied of the matters in subsection 42M(2)  before
determining that a job seeker has  committed  a  serious  failure.  However,
even if some of  a  job  seekers  individual  failures  have  not  satisfied
section  42M(2),  the  job  seeker  may  nonetheless  be  persistently  non-
compliant if there remain other failures  that  constitute  persistent  non-
compliance under subsection 42M(1) that also satisfy subsection 42M(2).

The phrase 'up  to  the  day  the  Secretary  makes  the  determination'  in
paragraph 42M(1)(a) is intended to fix the focus of a decision maker to  the
period of time before making their determination. Decision makers  reviewing
determination under section 42M should not take into account a job  seeker's
conduct after an original determination  of  persistent  non-compliance  has
been made.

Subsection 42M(3) precludes  the  Secretary  from  determining  that  a  job
seeker has committed a serious failure  under  section  42M  while  the  job
seeker is in a serious failure period  for  another  failure  under  section
42M. This subsection does not  extend  to  serious  failures  committed,  or
serious failure periods being served, under section  42N  (serious  failures
not related to persistent non-compliance).

However, if a job seeker's serious failure period ends, either by expiry  or
because of section 42Q,  further  serious  failures  may  be  imposed  if  a
decision  maker  is  subsequently  satisfied  of  further  persistent   non-
compliance.

Subsection 42M(4) requires the Minister to make a legislative instrument  to
assist decision makers  in  applying  the  persistent  non-compliance  test.
Decision makers must  take  the  matters  listed  in  this  instrument  into
account (subsection 42M(5)), but  that  those  matters  are  not  exhaustive
(subsection 42M(6)). It is intended that such an instrument might deal  with
matters  such  as  the  number  and  frequency  of   failures   constituting
persistent non-compliance, and the wilfulness of a pattern of compliance.

Section 42N - Serious failure for refusing or failing to accept an offer  of
suitable employment

Section 42N  maintains  the  existing  ground  for  a  serious  failure  for
refusing offers of suitable employment. Paragraph 42N  is  drafted  slightly
differently to its precursors (see for example paragraph  629(1)(d)  of  the
Social Security Act) by referring to offers of  suitable  employment  rather
than suitable offers of employment. This  drafting  change  is  intended  to
ensure that decision makers assess the suitability of the  employment  being
offered, not the suitability of the offer itself, and that  decision  makers
will be guided in this assessment by the kind of factors the Act  recognises
as being  relevant  to  the  suitability  of  employment  (see  for  example
subsection 601(2A) of the Social Security Act. Subsection 601(2A)  sets  out
nine factors relevant to the suitability of employment, including the  terms
and conditions  of  work  and  the  skills,  experience,  family  and  other
personal circumstances of an employee). It is intended that defects  in  the
nature of an offer of employment  should  not  automatically  result  in  no
serious failure being applied for a failure to accept  the  offer.  However,
the  unsuitability  of  an  offer  of  employment  may,  depending  on   the
circumstances, be relevant to the  question  whether  a  job  seeker  has  a
reasonable  excuse  for  refusing  or  failing  to  accept  the  offer  (see
subsection 42N(2)).

Subsection 42N(2) precludes  the  Secretary  from  determining  that  a  job
seeker commits a serious failure for refusing or failing to accept an  offer
of suitable employment if the job seeker satisfies the Secretary  they  have
a reasonable excuse for the failure. This exception is  directly  replicated
from the reasonable excuse exception in the  previous  compliance  framework
(see the previous paragraph 629(1)(d)).  There  is  no  intended  change  in
policy in the reasonable excuse exception, such  that  previous  authorities
on the application of  the  exception  should  remain  applicable  (see  for
example Secretary, Department of Employment and Workplace Relations  v  Real
[2007] FCA 988). The new section 42U provides the Secretary with  the  power
to make a legislative instrument setting out the matters that must be  taken
into account in deciding whether a  job  seeker  has  a  reasonable  excuse.
However, these matters are not to be  exhaustive  (see  the  new  subsection
42U(2)).

Section 42P - Consequences of a serious failure

Serious failure periods

Subject to sections 42Q and 42R,  section  42P  provides  for  participation
payments to be not payable for a period of  eight  weeks  if  a  job  seeker
commits a serious failure. These periods are defined to be  serious  failure
periods.

Paragraph 42P(2)(a) sets the start dates for serious  failure  periods.  The
start date of a serious failure period is subject  to  the  payment  pending
review provisions, as amended by Item 37 and  39.  Job  seekers  who  commit
serious failures will have their serious failure  periods  commence  on  the
first day of the instalment period after the decision maker  determines  the
serious failure was committed (as opposed to after the serious  failure  was
actually committed). Because instalments are usually  fortnightly  and  paid
in arrears, this rule generally enables  job  seekers  at  least  two  weeks
before being subject to the impact of a serious failure period.

Section 42Y clarifies that if a decision is made  on  review,  affirming  an
original decision that a job  seeker  committed  a  failure,  the  'day  the
Secretary determines' for the purposes of paragraph 42P(2)(a) is the day  of
the Secretary's original decision, not  the  day  of  the  review  decision.
However, the payment pending review provisions may  in  these  circumstances
cause a deferral of the serious failure period (see the amendments  in  Item
37 and 39).

Serious failure requirements

Subsection 42P(3) provides the Secretary with the power to issue  a  serious
failure requirement. Section 42Q allows for serious failure periods  to  end
if a job seeker begins to comply with a  serious  failure  requirement.  The
amendment in Item 37  provides  that  a  decision  under  subsection  42N(2)
relating to the imposition of a particular serious  failure  requirement  is
not subject to review by the Social Security Appeals  Tribunal  (although  a
decision that a job seeker has the capacity to undertake a  serious  failure
requirement would be).

It is intended that serious failure requirements  will  be  requirements  to
undertake a particular intensive activity over a period of time; and  it  is
intended that job seekers undertake eight weeks of  an  intensive  activity,
in lieu of serving an eight week serious failure period. Failures to  comply
with a serious failure  requirement  once  a  job  seeker  has  commenced  a
serious failure requirement will result  in  no  show  no  pay  failures  in
respect of each day on which the requirement was  failed  (see  subparagraph
42C(1)(a)(ii)).

Section 42Q - Ending serious failure periods

One of the principal purposes behind the new  compliance  provisions  is  to
facilitate re-engagement. In light of this purpose, section 42Q is  designed
to enable job seekers to re-engage with their participation  obligations  by
undertaking certain activities in lieu of serving a serious failure period.

The ending of a serious failure period results in the restoration of  a  job
seeker's participation payment (assuming the job  seeker  remains  qualified
and the payment remains payable) from the  day  after  the  serious  failure
period ends.

Paragraph 42Q(1)(a) - Undertaking serious failure requirements

The first ground on which a serious failure period may be ended  is  if  the
job seeker begins to comply  with  a  serious  failure  requirement  imposed
under subsection 42P(3). When this occurs, the serious failure  period  ends
on the day before the job seeker commenced complying  with  the  requirement
(paragraph 42P(2)(a)). In other words, payment is restored on and  from  the
day the job seeker commences complying with  the  requirement.  If  the  job
seeker begins to comply with a serious failure requirement and  subsequently
fails to comply with the requirement, those failures will be treated  as  no
show no pay failures in relation to  the  days  on  which  the  failures  to
comply occur (see subparagraph 42C(1)(a)(ii)).

Paragraph 42Q(1)(b) - Capacity and hardship

The second ground on which a serious failure period may be ended is  if  the
job seeker does not have the  capacity  to  undertake  any  serious  failure
requirement and serving the serious  failure  period  would  cause  the  job
seeker to be  in  severe  financial  hardship.  The  word  any  is  used  in
subparagraph 42Q(1)(b)(i) to make it clear that a job seeker must  not  have
the capacity to do any  activity  as  a  serious  failure  requirement,  not
merely one particular activity or type of activity.

For a job seeker who is not a member of a couple, the term severe  financial
hardship means where their liquid assets are below $2,500. A job seeker  who
is a member of a couple is in severe financial hardship if their  and  their
partner's liquid assets are less than $5,000 (see Items 2-4).

Section 42R - Payment pending commencement of a serious failure requirement

Section 42R is intended to provide for a job seeker's  payment  to  be  paid
pending their commencement of a serious failure requirement. This  provision
is designed to deal with  circumstances  in  which  there  may  be  a  delay
between a job seeker's agreement to commence a serious failure  requirement,
and the commencement of their serious failure requirement.

      Example: Centrelink has made a decision that Sabrina has  committed  a
      serious failure, and her serious failure period  will  commence  on  1
      March. On 1 March, Centrelink imposes a  serious  failure  requirement
      for Sabrina to undertake work experience  for  eight  weeks.  However,
      there is no work experience placement available until 15 March.  On  1
      March, Sabrina agrees to undertake the  work  experience  activity  to
      have  her  serious  failure  period  ended.  Accordingly,   Centrelink
      determines Sabrina should be paid for the period 1 March to 14  March.
      Sabrina then commences her  placement  on  15  March,  such  that  her
      serious failure period ended on 14  March.  Sabrina  therefore  served
      none of her serious failure period and  was  not  disadvantaged  by  a
      delay in the availability of a serious failure requirement.

Subsection 42R(3) provides that if a job  seeker  does  not  comply  with  a
serious failure requirement they had  agreed  to  commence,  the  period  of
payability under section  42R  does  not  count  towards  the  job  seeker's
serious failure period.

      Example: Geoff commits a serious  failure,  and  his  serious  failure
      period is due to commence on  1  January.  On  1  January,  Centrelink
      imposes a serious failure requirement to undertake a  work  experience
      placement, but the placement does not commence until 8 January.  Geoff
      agrees to commence the placement. He is therefore paid from 1  January
      to 7 January. However, Geoff does not  commence  the  placement  on  8
      January. Because of subsection 42R(3), he still has eight weeks of his
      serious failure period to serve, commencing on 8 January.

Section 42S - Unemployment resulting from a voluntary act or misconduct

Section 42S maintains the existing provisions for participation payments  to
be non-payable for a period of eight weeks for being  unemployed  due  to  a
voluntary act or misconduct as  an  employee  (other  than  misconduct  that
would constitute a minor transgression). There is intended to be  no  change
in policy from the existing provisions (see paragraphs  551(1)(b)  and  (c),
629(1)(b) and (c), and 745(1)(b) and (b) of the Social  Security  Act).  The
difference between a non-payment period under  section  42S  and  a  serious
failure period is that the former cannot  be  ended  prior  to  eight  weeks
under section 42Q or 42R.

Subsection 42S(2) retains the  exception  that  an  eight  week  non-payment
period will not apply to a voluntary act that is reasonable.

      Example: Alex resigns from his employment having been the  subject  of
      bullying and harassment by a fellow employee. While Alex's resignation
      is a voluntary act, his act is reasonable  because  it  would  not  be
      reasonable to expect  Alex  to  remain  in  his  employment  in  these
      circumstances. Therefore, no penalty applies.

Subsection 42S(3) sets out the start dates for  non-payment  periods.  If  a
person  is  not  receiving  a  participation  payment   when   they   become
unemployed,  the  eight  weeks  will  start  immediately  from  the  day  of
unemployment.  This  rule  has  a  beneficial  intention  of  allowing   new
claimants for a participation payment to 'self-serve' part or all  of  their
non-payment period prior to  making  a  claim.  An  eight  week  non-payment
period has the effect of being a waiting period for new  claimants,  because
of clause 5 of Schedule 2 to the Administration Act.

If a person  is  receiving  a  participation  payment,  paragraph  42S(3)(b)
affords a decision maker the discretion to commence the  non-payment  period
either on the date of the  job  seeker's  unemployment,  or  the  instalment
period following the decision  maker's  determination.  This  discretion  is
also intended to be exercised beneficially,  depending  on  a  job  seeker's
circumstances at the time.

Subsection 42S(4) allows non-payment periods to  end  at  any  time  if  the
Secretary determines the person would be in  severe  financial  hardship  by
serving a non-payment period, and is in a class of persons specified by  the
Secretary.  The  Secretary  is  to  make  a  legislative  instrument   under
subsection  42S(5)  specifying  classes  of  persons  for  the  purposes  of
subsection 42S(4). Examples of the classes specified might  include  parents
with dependent children, or persons who incur significant  costs  associated
with a medical condition.

Subsection 42T - Calculation of penalty amounts (legislative instrument)

Section 42T requires the Minister to make a legislative  instrument  setting
out, principally, the method by which penalty amounts for  no  show  no  pay
failures and reconnection failures are to be  calculated.  However,  section
42T itself provides  for  significant  restrictions  on  the  method  to  be
determined in the legislative instrument.

No show no pay failures

Subsection 42T(2) provides for  a  maximum  penalty  amount  for  which  the
legislative instrument can provide in respect of a no show no  pay  failure.
Most job seekers are paid on the basis of fortnightly instalments. The  rule
in subsection 42T(2) would preclude a penalty amount for a job  seeker  from
being any more than 10%  of  their  fortnightly  instalment  (an  instalment
being the final amount paid to a job seeker). This restriction  is  intended
to give effect to the concept of 'no show no  pay';  that  is,  the  penalty
amount for a no show no pay failure should be no more than the  amount  paid
to a job seeker in respect of a day of an instalment period,  in  proportion
to the number of weekdays in that instalment period.

Paragraph 42T(4)(a) then provides that the penalty amount for a no  show  no
pay failure must relate to the amount of the participation payment  paid  to
the job seeker on the day of the failure. Subsection  42T(5)  requires  that
rent assistance, pharmaceutical allowance and  youth  disability  supplement
(components of various rates of payment) must be  unaffected  by  a  penalty
amount for a  no  show  no  pay  failure.  Because  of  the  restriction  in
subsection 42T(5), a job seeker's penalty amount  will  ordinarily  be  less
than the maximum provided for in subsection 42T(2).

Reconnection failures

Subsection 42T(3) provides for  a  maximum  penalty  amount  for  which  the
legislative instrument can provide in respect  of  a  reconnection  failure.
The penalty amount cannot be more than the aggregate of the daily  rates  of
payment to a job seeker in their reconnection failure  period.  For  example
if a job seeker's reconnection failure period is two  days  in  length,  the
penalty amount may not be more than those two days of payment.

Paragraph  42T(4)(b)  then  provides  that  the   penalty   amount   for   a
reconnection failure must related to the  amount  of  participation  payment
paid to the job seeker during their reconnection failure period.  Subsection
42T(5) requires that rent assistance,  pharmaceutical  allowance  and  youth
disability supplement (components of  various  rates  of  payment)  must  be
unaffected by a penalty amount for a reconnection failure.

Other matters

Subsection 42T(6) ensures that it is possible to have a  penalty  amount  of
nil (eg. in circumstances where a job  seeker's  participation  payment  was
not payable for another reason on the day of a no show no pay failure or  in
a reconnection failure period).

Subsection  42T(7)  allows  the  legislative  instrument  to  provide  rules
relating to the quantum of a penalty amount that may  be  deducted  from  an
instalment. For example, the legislative instrument  might  provide  that  a
penalty amount can only be deducted from an instalment to the extent of  the
maximum basic rate component of that instalment (i.e.  so  that  supplements
such as rent assistance are  not  affected  by  either  the  calculation  or
deduction of a penalty amount). If there is any part  of  a  penalty  amount
that is left over after a deduction, section 42V allows for such  a  balance
to be deducted from subsequent instalments.

Section 42U - Legislative instruments relating to reasonable excuse

Section  42U  requires  the  Secretary  to  make  a  legislative  instrument
determining the matters that decision makers  must  take  into  account  for
determining whether a job seeker has a reasonable excuse for a  no  show  no
pay failure, connection failure, reconnection failure  or  serious  failure,
where a reasonable excuse exception is relevant to those failures.

Subsection 42U(2) retains the existing policy that  legislative  instruments
determining matters that must be taken  into  account  in  making  decisions
relating to reasonable excuse  are  not  exhaustive  (see  for  example  the
previous subsection 624(2B)).

Section 42V - Deductions from participation payments

There may be occasions in which the deduction of a penalty  amount  from  an
instalment under section 42D (no  show  no  pay  failures)  or  section  42L
(reconnection  failures)  may  not  reduce  that  penalty  amount  to   nil.
Primarily this will occur because the penalty  amount  is  deducted  from  a
different instalment period to the instalment period in  which  the  failure
occurred, and the instalment for that instalment period is smaller than  the
outstanding penalty amount. In these  cases,  section  42V  is  designed  to
allow for the deduction of any balance  of  a  penalty  amount  from  future
instalments of a job seeker's participation payment  (paragraph  42V(a))  or
any other participation  payment  received  by  the  job  seeker  (paragraph
42V(b)).

      Example 1: Ian commits three no show no pay failures in an  instalment
      period, resulting in a penalty amount of  $75.  Centrelink  determines
      the penalty amount  will  be  deducted  from  Ian's  next  instalment.
      However, Ian earned income in  the  next  instalment  period,  so  his
      instalment of newstart allowance was only $50.  Accordingly,  not  all
      the penalty amount can  be  deducted  from  this  instalment.  $50  is
      deducted, reducing Ian's instalment to nil, and the remaining  penalty
      amount is deducted from Ian's subsequent instalment.


      Example 2: Nasir incurs a penalty amount for  a  reconnection  failure
      period, totalling $60. The reconnection failure period extended across
      two instalment periods. In the second  of  these  instalment  periods,
      Nasir only received $25  in  newstart  allowance,  because  he  earned
      income in that instalment period. Centrelink determines that  the  $60
      penalty amount should be deducted from the second  instalment  period;
      however, the most that can be deducted is  $25  as  that  is  all  the
      newstart allowance  Nasir  received.  Accordingly,  section  42V  will
      provide that the balance of $35 should be deducted from  Nasir's  next
      instalment periods until the balance is reduced to nil.

Because of 42V(b), a job seeker's penalty  amount  is  not  extinguished  if
they cease receiving a particular participation payment. If the  job  seeker
transfers  to  another  participation  payment  or  later   claims   a   new
participation payment, their penalty amount will be carried forward  to  the
new payment.

Section 42W - Penalty amount not a debt

Section 42W provides, to avoid doubt, that a penalty  amount  that  has  not
yet been deducted is not a debt under Part 5.2 of the Social  Security  Act.
Sections 42D, 42L and 42V  provide  specific  rules  for  the  deduction  of
penalty amounts and the balance of penalty amounts that are not  reduced  to
nil. These rules apply to the deduction of penalty  amounts,  not  the  debt
recovery rules in Chapter 5 of the Social Security Act.

Section 42X - Payability

Section 42X is a  deeming  provision  enabling  job  seeker's  participation
payments to remain payable even if  they  are  not  actually  receiving  any
payment because of the deduction of a penalty amount for a no  show  no  pay
failure or a reconnection failure.

Section 42Y - Day of determination

Section 42Y is intended to  resolve  a  lack  of  clarity  in  the  previous
compliance  provision  about  the  meaning  of  the   'day   the   Secretary
determines' in relation to the application of serious failures. Section  42Y
provides that for the purposes of the serious failure  provisions,  the  day
the  Secretary  makes  a  determination  is   the   day   of   an   original
determination,  rather  than  any  decision  on  review  of  that   original
determination under Part 4 of the Administration Act.

However, the amendments made to the payment  pending  review  provisions  of
the  Administration  Act  set  out  in  Items  37  and  39  mean  that   the
commencement of a serious  failure  period  may  be  altered  by  a  payment
pending review declaration.

Section 42Z - Relationship with section 80

Section 80 of the Administration  Act  provides  a  general  power  for  the
Secretary to cancel or suspend a person's social  security  payment  if  the
person is not qualified for the payment  or  the  payment  is  not  payable.
There are circumstances in which a failure to comply with the  terms  of  an
Employment Pathway Plan (previously an Activity Agreement) or  the  activity
test (where applicable) may result in a job seeker losing qualification  for
a participation payment. The consequence  of  a  loss  of  qualification  is
suspension or cancellation under  section  80  of  the  Administration  Act.
Section 42Z explicitly maintains the existing position that  section  80  of
the Administration Act may apply where  appropriate  (for  examples  of  the
operation  of  section  80  in  the  context  of   activity   test   related
qualification  requirement,  see   Secretary,   Department   of   Education,
Employment and Workplace Relations and Ford [2008] AATA 232  and  Secretary,
Department of  Education,  Employment  and  Workplace  Relations  and  Linge
[2008] AATA 744).

PART 2 - CONSEQUENTIAL AMENDMENTS

The introduction of Item 1 requires a number of consequential amendments  to
the social security law.

Social Security Act 1991

Repeal of old compliance provisions

The compliance provisions for  parenting  payment,  newstart  allowance  and
special benefit are repealed by  Items  10,  23  and  28.  These  compliance
provisions are replaced in full by the compliance provisions  introduced  by
Item 1.

Items 6, 7 and 9 repeal the definitions of newstart  participation  failure,
parenting payment participation failure and  special  benefit  participation
failure in subsection 23(1) of the Social Security  Act.  These  definitions
are redundant because of the repeal of the newstart allowance and  parenting
payment compliance provisions by Items 10 and 23.

Youth allowance (students)

The compliance provisions for youth allowance are amended  by  Items  11-22.
Youth  allowance  for  persons  who  are  not  full-time  students  or   new
apprentices will be a participation payment  to  which  the  new  compliance
provisions introduced by Item  1  will  apply.  Consequently,  the  existing
youth allowance compliance provisions in Subdivisions D and E of Division  2
of Part 2.11 of the Social Security Act are amended in two ways:

    . to restrict the operation of the provisions to persons who  are  full-
      time students; and
    . to remove employment-related grounds for  participation  failures  and
      serious failures from the provisions, made redundant by the exhaustive
      application of the new  compliance  provisions  in  Item  1  to  youth
      allowance  recipients  who  are  not   full-time   students   or   new
      apprentices.

Compliance penalty periods

Item 5 is a consequential amendment replacing the definition  of  compliance
penalty period in subsection 23(1) of the Social  Security  Act.  Compliance
penalty periods are referred to at various points  in  the  social  security
law and other legislation. Amongst other things, if a job  seeker's  payment
is not payable only because of a compliance penalty period, the job seeker:
    . retains qualification for pensioner concession card  (section  1061ZEC
      of the Social Security Act); and
    . retains qualification for a health care card (section 1061ZNA  of  the
      Social Security Act).

The previous definition of compliance penalty  period  in  subsection  23(1)
referred  to  any  period  in  which  parenting  payment,  youth  allowance,
austudy, newstart allowance or special benefit was not payable to  a  person
because of particular penalty periods relating to compliance failures. As  a
number of those penalty provisions are being repealed and replaced with  the
new compliance framework  in  Item  1,  a  consequential  amendment  to  the
definition of compliance penalty period is required.

The new definition of compliance  penalty  period  encompasses  any  serious
failure period under the new subsection 42P(1) of  the  Administration  Act,
any  non-payment  period  under   the   new   subsection   42S(1)   of   the
Administration Act,  as  well  as  any  penalty  period  imposed  under  the
remaining austudy or youth allowance provisions of the Social Security  Act.
The new definition does not encompass penalty amounts for  no  show  no  pay
failures or reconnection failures under Item 1 because the new  section  42X
provides for participation payments to remain payable even if a  payment  is
reduced to nil due to the deduction of a penalty amount.

Other amendments

Items 2 to 4 are consequential amendments  to  section  14A  of  the  Social
Security Act, to apply the definitions of liquid assets and maximum  reserve
in that provision to the tests set out  in  the  new  section  42Q  and  42S
relating to the ending of serious  failure  periods  and  unemployment  non-
payment periods.

Item 8 is a consequential  amendment  to  the  definition  of  participation
failure instalment period in subsection 23(1) of the  Social  Security  Act.
This term is not relevant to the new  compliance  provisions  introduced  by
Item 1; it is only relevant  to  the  remaining  compliance  provisions  for
austudy and youth allowance.

Items 24-27 are consequential amendments to the special benefit
qualification provisions (section 729 of the Social Security Act), to
ensure that special benefit does not become payable to a job seeker whose
participation payment is not payable because of a serious failure period or
unemployment non-payment period.

Items 29-33 include references to the new sections 42P and 42S of the
Administration Act for the purposes of continuation of mobility allowance.

Social Security (Administration) Act 1999

Items 34 and 35 are consequential amendments to paragraph 110A(b) of the
Administration Act, ensuring that determinations to resume participation
payments following serious failure periods or unemployment non-payment
periods take effect from the end of the serious failure period (whether by
expiration of because of the new section 42Q) or unemployment non-payment
period.

Item 36 is a consequential amendment to paragraph 118(12C)(b) of the
Administration Act, providing that decisions made to suspend a job seeker's
participation payment because of a serious failure period or unemployment
non-payment period take effect from the commencement of the job seeker's
serious failure period or unemployment non-payment period.

Items 37 and 39 amend the payment pending review provisions in the
Administration Act. The new section 42P provides for the start date of
serious failure periods; however, under sections 131 and 145 (as amended),
the Secretary has the ability to pay a job seeker pending review of a
serious failure or unemployment non-payment period. The legislation was
previously unclear as to the application of a non-payment period when a job
seeker was paid pending review of a non-payment period and the non-payment
period was then upheld. The new subsections 131(5A) and 145(4A) explicitly
provide that a job seeker's serious failure period, unemployment non-
payment period, or the balance thereof is to be served following the
cessation of the job seeker's payment pending review declaration under
subsection 131(5) or 145(5).

      Example: Andrew refuses an offer of suitable employment, and a serious
      failure period commences on 8 September 2009. Andrew seeks review of
      this serious failure period on 15 September 2009, and he is paid
      pending review from that date under section 131 of the Administration
      Act. On 3 December 2009, an authorised review officer affirms the
      serious failure period. Andrew must then serve the remaining seven
      weeks of his serious failure period from 3 December 2009, but he would
      not have to repay any of his payments from 15 September 2009 to 3
      December 2009. Of course, Andrew's serious failure period may still be
      ended on any of the grounds in the new section 42Q of the
      Administration Act.

Item 38 provides that decisions to impose particular serious failure
requirements are not reviewable by the Social Security Appeals Tribunal
(and by extension, the Administrative Appeals Tribunal). If a job seeker
lacks the capacity to undertake a serious failure requirement, that matter
would be taken into account by tribunals in whether a serious failure
period should end under the new paragraph 42Q(1)(b) of the Administration
Act. However, it would not be appropriate for tribunals to make decisions
about the particular serious failure requirement a job seeker should
undertake, given that such decisions depend almost entirely on practical
concerns only apparent to a decision maker at the time the decision is
actually made (eg. the availability of particular programs and activities
that may constitute a serious failure requirement for a job seeker).

Item 40 amends section 192 of the Administration Act to ensure the
Secretary has the power to require the production of any information or
document relevant to the operation of the compliance provisions introduced
by Part 2 of Schedule 1. There are a number of decisions made under those
provisions that do not immediately relate to any of the matters currently
in section 192 of the Administration Act. Accordingly, this amendment is
intended to ensure decision makers can make those decisions with powers
available to them to obtain relevant material.

Items 41-52 add new definitions to the Dictionary to the Administration
Act, for particular terms introduced to the Administration Act by the new
compliance provisions in Part 2 of Schedule 1.

Item 54 amends the start date rule in clause 5 of Schedule 2 to the
Administration Act. The intention of the new subclause 5(1B) is to ensure
that if a job seeker is subject to a serious failure period or unemployment
non-payment period, their start date for any social security payment that
is not a participation payment (see Item 42) is not affected. In other
words, if a person claims a non-activity tested social security payment
during a serious failure period, their start date for that payment could be
before the end of that serious failure period.

Item 55 introduces a new clause 5A to Schedule 2 to preclude members of a
couple from transferring from a participation payment to parenting payment
(without participation requirements) in order to avoid the operation of
serious failure periods. Item 53 introduces a note to clause 5 to refer to
the new clause 5A.
PART 3 - APPLICATION PROVISION

Item 55 sets out the application provisions for the new compliance
framework. There are two essential elements to the application provisions:
     . Failures committed under the previous legislation are saved (eg. non-
       payment periods under the previous legislation would continue beyond
       the commencement of the new provisions as if the new provisions were
       not in force).
    . Any eight week non-payment period incurred by a job seeker prior to
      commencement for a reason other than unemployment due to misconduct or
      a voluntary act continues after commencement; however the rule in
      section 42Q relating to ending serious failure periods apply to those
      non-payment periods as if they were serious failure periods.
      Schedule 2 - Employment Pathway Plans

Explanation of changes


Social Security Act 1991 and Social Security (Administration) Act 1999


The items in Schedule 2  are  generally  designed  to  give  effect  to  the
replacing of Activity Agreements with Employment Pathway  Plans.  Employment
Pathway Plans will be documents setting out things  that  a  job  seeker  is
required to do.  Employment  Pathway  Plans  will  be  developed  between  a
delegate of the Secretary and a job seeker, and the requirements of  a  plan
will be approved by the delegate. Subject to the  changes  explained  below,
there is intended to be  no  change  in  legislative  provisions  that  were
previously applicable to Activity Agreements.

The amendments in Items 19, 69, 129 and 179 are designed to allow for  terms
to be included in Employment Pathway Plans that a job seeker does  not  have
to comply with. These terms are defined  by  the  new  subsections  501(4B),
544B(1C), 606(1C) and 731M(2) of the Social  Security  Act  to  be  optional
terms. Because optional terms of an Employment Pathway Plan do not  have  to
be complied with, the new compliance provisions  introduced  by  Schedule  1
will not apply to those terms.

The amendments in Items 33, 81, 147 and 195 amend provisions in the Social
Security Act that ensure participants in approved programs of work cannot
be employees for certain Commonwealth legislation. The amended provisions
also apply to any job seeker participating in an activity under an
Employment Pathway Plan (unless that activity is actually suitable paid
work). These amendments are primarily designed to ensure that job seekers
can undertake certain work experience activities and placements that are
not approved programs of work (but are approved in the sense of being
approved as activities in an Employment Pathway Plan), without being
treated as employees.
Schedule 3 - exemptions in relation to youth allowance and newstart
allowance

Explanation of changes

As part of the new employment services model commencing on 1 July 2009,  the
Personal  Support  Programme  (PSP)  will  cease  to  exist  as  a  separate
identifiable program.

The Items in Schedule 3 of the Bill are generally  designed  to  remove  all
references to the PSP from the social security law. Where  participation  in
PSP has legislative consequences, the social security law  will  be  amended
to give the Secretary the power to make  a  legislative  instrument  setting
out the activities that will attract those consequences.

Social Security Act 1991

Item 1 repeals the definition of PSP from subsection 23(1) of the Social
Security Act.

Items 2 and 9 repeal subsections 541(1A) and 601(6A) of the Social Security
Act,  which provide that job seekers satisfy the activity test by
participating in PSP. Items 3 and 8 are consequential to these amendments.

Items 4 and 7 amend the liquid assets test waiting period provisions for
youth allowance and newstart allowance. Those provisions previously
exempted persons from the liquid assets test waiting period who were
undertaking formal vocational training in a labour market program,
participating in the PSP, or undertaking an approved rehabilitation
program, and who had been exempted from the waiting period by a decision
maker. These references to specific programs are being removed, and
replaced with a power for the Secretary to specify particular activities in
a legislative instrument. It is intended that the Secretary would specify
the same kinds of activities previously referred to in the legislation, so
as not to disadvantage any job seeker.

Items 5 and 13 amend the moving to an area of lower employment prospects
non-payment period provisions for youth allowance and newstart allowance.
Those provisions previously exempted persons from the non-payment period
who were undertaking formal vocational training in a labour market program,
participating in the PSP, or undertaking an approved rehabilitation
program, and who had been exempted from the waiting period by a decision
maker. These references to specific programs are being removed, and
replaced with a power for the Secretary to specify particular activities in
a legislative instrument. It is intended that the Secretary would specify
the same kinds of activities previously referred to in the legislation, so
as not to disadvantage any job seeker.

Items 6 and 12 amend the seasonal work preclusion period provisions for
youth allowance and newstart allowance. Those provisions previously
exempted persons from the seasonal work preclusion period who were
undertaking formal vocational training in a labour market program,
participating in the PSP, or undertaking an approved rehabilitation
program, and who had been exempted from the waiting period by a decision
maker. These references to specific programs are being removed, and
replaced with a power for the Secretary to specify particular activities in
a legislative instrument. It is intended that the Secretary would specify
the same kinds of activities previously referred to in the legislation, so
as not to disadvantage any job seeker.

Item 11 amends the ordinary waiting period provisions for newstart
allowance. Subsection 620(2) of the Social Security Act previously exempted
persons from the ordinary waiting period who were undertaking formal
vocational training in a labour market program, participating in the PSP,
or undertaking an approved rehabilitation program, and who had been
exempted from the waiting period by a decision maker. These references to
specific programs are being removed, and replaced with a power for the
Secretary to specify particular activities in a legislative instrument. It
is intended that the Secretary would specify the same kinds of activities
previously referred to in the legislation, so as not to disadvantage any
job seeker.
Schedule 4 - Other amendments

Explanation of changes

Social Security Act 1991

Activity test

Items 2-5, 8 and 9 repeal provisions that automatically deemed any job
seeker who complied with the terms of an Activity Agreement to satisfy the
activity test. These provisions will be replaced with provisions that do
not automatically deem job seekers to satisfy the activity test by
complying with their Employment Pathway Plans. Instead, the Secretary will
have the ability to specify (by legislative instrument) classes of persons.
If a job seeker falls within a specified class and complies with the terms
of their Employment Pathway Plan, they will be deemed to satisfy the
activity test. Additionally, if a job seeker falls outside a specified
class, there will be a residual discretion to determine that the job seeker
should be deemed to satisfy the activity test. It is intended that the
specification of classes and the residual discretion would be exercised in
cases where it is inappropriate for job seekers to be expected to be
actively seeking and willing to undertake work in addition to complying
with the terms of their Employment Pathway Plans. This Bill does not affect
any of the existing provisions exempting certain persons from the activity
test (eg. on the grounds of temporary incapacity or special circumstances).

Amendments to section 1210

Item 10 corrects an incorrect cross-reference in subparagraph
1210(1)(b)(ii) of the Social Security Act. The provision now refers to rate
reductions because of section 1173, rather than section 1168, of the Social
Security Act. Section 1173 is the operative provision for reductions in a
person's rate of payment because of the receipt of compensation, not
section 1168.

Item 10 also amends the heading to section 1210 to remove the words 'for
income tax purposes'. There is no qualification in the body of section 1210
that would limit the rules in section 1210 to being for the purposes of
assessing income tax. As the calculation of penalty amounts for the new
compliance framework introduced by Schedule 1 will depend on the ordering
rules for the application of the income test in section 1210, to dissect
rent assistance, pharmaceutical allowance and youth disability supplement
from a job seeker's rate while also applying the income test. Accordingly,
amending the heading to section 1210 makes it clear that the ordering rule
for the application of the income test in that section can apply for
purposes other than income tax assessment, including the calculation of
penalty amounts for no show no pay failures or reconnection failures.

Social Security (Administration) Act 1999

New provisions relating to requirements

Item 11 introduces new sections 63 and 64 in the Administration Act in
place of the existing sections 63 and 64. The previous sections 63 and 64
were confusing in that there was substantial overlap between the two
provisions, and inconsistencies in the drafting. The new section 63
provides the Secretary with the power to make requirements. The new section
64 deals with the general consequences of failing to comply with those
requirements (unless there are consequences elsewhere in the social
security law, such as in the new compliance provisions introduced in
Schedule 1). There is minimal change in policy in the new provisions.

Subsections 63(1) and (2) apply to all social security payments and
concession cards. If a person is receiving or holding any social security
payment or concession card, claims any social security or concession card,
or contacts the Department in advance of a claim for newstart allowance or
youth allowance (job seeker), the Secretary may require the person to do
any of the four things set out in subsection 63(2).

Subsections 63(3) and (4) apply to the specific social security payments
set out in paragraph 63(3)(1)(a). These are the same social security
payments to which the previous section 64 of the Administration Act
applied. For recipients or claimants of these payments (including persons
who contact the Department in advance of a claim for newstart allowance or
youth allowance), the Secretary may issue a requirement to complete a
questionnaire or attend a medical, psychiatric or psychological
examination. The new paragraph 63(4)(b) provides clarification that the
medical, psychiatric or psychological examination may be at a stipulated
place (i.e. a person may be able to attend a specific appointment arranged
by Centrelink or a delegated provider).

Subsection 63(5) allows notice of requirements under subsections 63(2) or
(4) to be given in any manner, including by post. Accordingly, requirements
under subsections 63(2) or (4) may be notified orally.

Subsection 63(6) is a new provision. Paragraph 63(2)(c) allows the
Secretary to require persons to attend a particular place for a particular
purpose. Subsection 63(6) ensures that notices of these requirements are
not invalid merely because they do not describe the particular purpose for
which attendance is not required. This ensures changes in the purpose of
attendance at a notified activity do not affect the validity of the
underlying requirement to attend.

Subsection 63(7) provides that the consequences set out in section 64 for
failing to comply with a requirement made under section 63 do not apply if
the notice of the requirement did not inform the recipient of those
consequences (i.e. non-payability). Previously, sections 63 and 64 imposed
positive obligations on notices to inform persons of the consequences of
failing to comply. This is no longer workable as notices that do not inform
persons that failure to comply with a requirement may result in non-
payability may give rise to connection failures (see the new section 42K in
Schedule 1). Because connection failures have no immediate consequences,
there is no sense in requiring notices of requirements that may give rise
to connection failures to set out the consequences of non-compliance.

Subsection 64(1) sets out the consequences for a recipient of a social
security payment who fails to comply with a requirement made under section
63. The consequence is non-payability (i.e. the suspension or cancellation
of payment). The fundamental requirements for non-payability to arise where
a person fails to comply with a requirement are that the requirement was
reasonable, the recipient did not have a reasonable excuse for failing to
comply with the requirement, and that the Secretary is satisfied it is
reasonable for non-payability to apply to the person. Additionally,
subsection 63(7) requires that the notice of the requirement informed the
person of the effect of subsection 64(1) for subsection 64(1) to apply.

As youth allowance and austudy participation failures for students are
retained, subsections 64(2) and (3) ensure notices under section 63 to
students advising that a failure to comply with the requirement may
constitute a participation failure are not dealt with under subsection
64(1).

Subsection 64(4) is a new provision explicitly providing that a period of
non-payment under subsection 64(1) may end at a time determined by the
Secretary to be reasonable. Ordinarily, it would be expected that a period
of non-payability would end when the person ultimately complies with the
original requirement or another requirement made in its place. This
provision ensures that the legislation does not provide for indefinite
periods of non-payability (unless a person does not comply with a
requirement at all so it is reasonable for the non-payment to continue).

Subsection 64(5) provides similar consequences for concession card holders
to the rules in subsections 64(1) and (4).

Item 12 saves the previous sections 63 and 64 for notices given prior to 1
July 2009. If a notice is given prior to 1 July 2009, even for a
requirement to be satisfied after 1 July 2009, the previous sections 63 and
64 continue to apply to that requirement as if they had not been amended.
Items 1, 6 and 7 are consequential to the amendments to sections 63 and 64.

Payment pending review

Items 13 and 14 amend the payment pending review provisions in sections 131
and 145 of the Administration Act. Currently, subparagraphs 131(5)(b)(ii)
and 145(4)(b)(ii) stipulate that a payment pending review declaration
ceases to have effect if a decision is made on review upholding an adverse
decision. This leaves little time for a payment pending review declaration
to cease to have effect. For example, a person who is unsuccessful on a
review application before an authorised review officer or the Social
Security Appeals Tribunal would face the immediate implementation of an
adverse decision, without being afforded to the opportunity to consider
further appeal options. These amendments afford decision makers the
discretion to cease a payment pending review declaration at any time within
13 weeks of an adverse decision being made on review.

 


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