

- Title
CRIMES AMENDMENT (CONTROLLED OPERATIONS) BILL 1996
In Committee
- Database
Senate Hansard
- Date
30-05-1996
- Source
Senate
- Parl No.
38
- Electorate
WA
- Interjector
PANIZZA
CHAIRMAN
- Page
1403
- Party
GWA
- Presenter
- Status
Final
- Question No.
- Questioner
- Responder
- Speaker
Senator CHAMARETTE
- Stage
- Type
- Context
Bill
- System Id
chamber/hansards/1996-05-30/0127
Previous Fragment Next Fragment
-
Hansard
- Start of Business
- PETITIONS
-
NOTICES OF MOTION
- Consideration of Legislation
- Regulations and Ordinances Committee
- Uranium Mining
- Snowy River
- Aussie's Coffee Shop
- Banking
- Port Lillias
- Budget Cuts
- Salinity
- Tully Millstream Project
- Logging and Woodchipping
- Drugs
- Land Clearing
- Higher Education Funding
- Commonwealth Ombudsman
- Daw Aung San Suu Kyi
- Water Pollution
- Greenhouse Gases
- Murray-Darling Basin
- COMMITTEES
- ORDER OF BUSINESS
- REPRESENTATION OF VICTORIA
- ORDER OF BUSINESS
- LEAVE OF ABSENCE
- ORDER OF BUSINESS
- LEAVE OF ABSENCE
- COMMITTEES
- CONSIDERATION OF LEGISLATION
- CONSIDERATION OF LEGISLATION
- INDEXED LISTS OF FILES
- COMMITTEES
-
AIRPORTS BILL 1996
AIRPORTS (TRANSITIONAL) BILL 1996 - COMMITTEES
- CONSIDERATION OF LEGISLATION
- AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL
- CONSIDERATION OF LEGISLATION
- NOTICES OF MOTION
-
SUPPLY (PARLIAMENTARY DEPARTMENTS) BILL 1996-97
SUPPLY BILL (No. 1) 1996-97
SUPPLY BILL (No. 2) 1996-97 -
CUSTOMS TARIFF (MISCELLANEOUS AMENDMENTS) BILL 1996
TELECOMMUNICATIONS (CARRIER LICENCE FEES) AMENDMENT BILL 1996 -
CRIMES AMENDMENT (CONTROLLED OPERATIONS) BILL 1996
-
In Committee
- Senator SPINDLER
- Senator SPINDLER
- Senator BOLKUS
- Senator CHAMARETTE
- Senator VANSTONE
- Senator SPINDLER
- Senator BOLKUS
- Senator VANSTONE
- Senator BOLKUS
- Senator SPINDLER
- Senator VANSTONE
- Senator SPINDLER
- Senator VANSTONE
- Senator SPINDLER
- Senator BOLKUS
- Senator VANSTONE
- Senator BOLKUS
- Senator VANSTONE
- Senator SPINDLER
- Third Reading
-
In Committee
- EDUCATION AND TRAINING LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 1996
- LOAN BILL 1996
- SYDNEY 2000 GAMES (INDICIA AND IMAGES) PROTECTION BILL 1996
- AUSTRALIAN SPORTS DRUG AGENCY AMENDMENT BILL 1996
- INDIGENOUS EDUCATION (SUPPLEMENTARY ASSISTANCE) AMENDMENT BILL 1996
- BILLS RETURNED FROM THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
- SOCIAL SECURITY LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (NEWLY ARRIVED RESIDENT'S WAITING PERIODS AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 1996
- ORDER OF BUSINESS
- HOUSING ASSISTANCE BILL 1996
-
QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
-
Sale of Telstra
(Senator WHEELWRIGHT, Senator ALSTON) -
National Accounts Figures
(Senator MacGIBBON, Senator SHORT) -
Budget Deficit
(Senator SHERRY, Senator SHORT) -
Optus: Foreign Ownership
(Senator PATTERSON, Senator ALSTON) -
Housing
(Senator FAULKNER, Senator NEWMAN) -
Climate Change: Greenhouse Emissions
(Senator LEES, Senator HILL) -
Kakadu National Park
(Senator LUNDY, Senator HERRON) -
Land Fund
(Senator CHAMARETTE, Senator HERRON) -
Higher Education Funding
(Senator DENMAN, Senator VANSTONE) -
Equal Pay
(Senator MACKAY, Senator NEWMAN) -
Mahogany Glider
(Senator WOODLEY, Senator HILL) -
Defence Runways
(Senator FOREMAN, Senator NEWMAN) -
Mining Industry
(Senator TROETH, Senator PARER) -
Women
(Senator REID, Senator NEWMAN) -
Higher Education Funding
(Senator FAULKNER, Senator VANSTONE) -
Australian Defence Force Academy
(Senator NEWMAN) - Budget Deficit
-
Land Fund
(Senator CHAMARETTE) -
Kakadu National Park
(Senator BOB COLLINS, Senator Hill, Senator Campbell)
-
Sale of Telstra
- SHIPPING GRANTS LEGISLATION BILL 1996
- ACCESS TO INTERNET
- COALITION: ELECTION COMMITMENTS
- NOTICES OF MOTION
- MATTERS OF URGENCY
- DOCUMENTS
- HIGHER EDUCATION FUNDING
- COMMITTEES
- DOCUMENTS
- COMMITTEES
- PETITIONS
- COMMITTEES
- ADJOURNMENT
- Adjournment
- DOCUMENTS
- QUESTIONS ON NOTICE
Page: 1403
Senator CHAMARETTE(11.17 a.m.)
—I wish to put the Greens' position on the record. Sunset clauses do not work, or at least they do not work to achieve the purpose that I am sure Senator Spindler would wish they did—that is, to alert people; to stand as a signal that this is a bad bill, that bad powers are being put in place and that we should watch it and in two years do something about it. Sunset clauses simply allow unpalatable bills to be proceeded with and lull objectors into silence. Then the sunset clause provisions slip off unobtrusively, leaving the powers well and truly entrenched.
I would prefer to see this bill go through in the full position being put so that people can be aware of what a dangerous bill it is. A sunset clause merely says, `It's not quite that dangerous, because it has a sunset clause.' I remember the state government of Western Australia doing the same thing on the juvenile justice repeat offenders legislation which was an international disgrace and made mandatory provisions. Members of the government excused themselves by saying that there was a sunset clause provision. At the end of that sunset clause provision the mandatory powers were maintained and the legislation was made even worse by the next government that came into power.
So I could not speak more strongly against the use of sunset clauses. I do not think they work for the intention that they are designed and desired by people who have concerns about bills. The amendments Senator Spindler was moving were very good amendments. The concerns raised about them constitutio nally and in this chamber on both sides of the chamber are illustrations of the provisions of the bill and the unconstitutionality of what we are presently doing by passing this legislation.
In relation to the Health Insurance Commission's special powers, we saw how effective that sunset clause was. Senator Panizza, if you would like to wind me up, you will wind me up. The Health Insurance Commission powers that were given had a sunset clause provision—
Senator Panizza
—I raise a point of order, Madam Chairman. I would like to explain to the Committee that I was making signals to Senator McKiernan. I am very little interested in what Senator Chamarette has to say.
The CHAIRMAN
—That is not a point of order.
Senator CHAMARETTE
—I am delighted to hear Senator Panizza's explanation and I am delighted that he is listening so attentively to what I have to say. The Health Insurance Commission's special powers had sunset clause provisions which we were being asked in this place to remove without even giving them the scrutiny that the audit office provided at a later stage. That report, fortunately, was able to be received before we passed the bill, removing the sunset clauses. But the kind of scrutiny we gave was very limited.
I would be delighted if any senator in this place could give me an illustration of where sunset clauses have succeeded in taking back powers that had been given and about which people had expressed concerns, because I would be willing to review my position on sunset clauses in the light of such evidence. In the absence of such evidence, we indicate that we would much rather have supported Senator Spindler's amendments, with the questions about them notwithstanding, because we felt that they honoured and tried to put some kinds of controls over the mechanisms being bestowed by this bill upon the police to actually engage in illegal activities. I think I have made my position clear and I thank Senator Panizza in particular for his attention.