

- Title
COMMITTEES
Regional and Remote Indigenous Communities Select Committee
Report
- Database
Senate Hansard
- Date
28-10-2010
- Source
Senate
- Parl No.
43
- Electorate
Queensland
- Interjector
Crossin, Sen Trish (The ACTING DEPUTY PRESIDENT)
- Page
1109
- Party
LP
- Presenter
- Status
Final
- Question No.
- Questioner
- Responder
- Speaker
Macdonald, Sen Ian
- Stage
Regional and Remote Indigenous Communities Select Committee
- Type
- Context
Committees
- System Id
chamber/hansards/2010-10-28/0224
Previous Fragment Next Fragment
-
Hansard
- Start of Business
- NOTICES
- BUSINESS
- COMMITTEES
- COAL SEAM GAS PROJECTS
- COMMITTEES
- NATIONAL APOLOGY FOR VICTIMS OF FORCED ADOPTION POLICIES
- PARLIAMENTARY ZONE
- MIGRATION AMENDMENT (DETENTION OF MINORS) BILL 2010
- COMMITTEES
- SOCIAL SECURITY AMENDMENT (INCOME SUPPORT FOR REGIONAL STUDENTS) BILL 2010
- COMMITTEES
- BUDGET
-
AUTONOMOUS SANCTIONS BILL 2010
VETERANS’ AFFAIRS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (WEEKLY PAYMENTS) BILL 2010 - COMMITTEES
-
NATIVE TITLE AMENDMENT BILL (NO. 1) 2010
- Second Reading
-
In Committee
- Siewert, Sen Rachel
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Siewert, Sen Rachel
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Siewert, Sen Rachel
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Siewert, Sen Rachel
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Siewert, Sen Rachel
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Scullion, Sen Nigel
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Siewert, Sen Rachel
- McLucas, Sen Jan
- Scullion, Sen Nigel
- Siewert, Sen Rachel
- Siewert, Sen Rachel
- Third Reading
- LAW AND JUSTICE LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (IDENTITY CRIMES AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2010
-
OFFSHORE PETROLEUM AND GREENHOUSE GAS STORAGE LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (MISCELLANEOUS MEASURES) BILL 2010
OFFSHORE PETROLEUM AND GREENHOUSE GAS STORAGE (SAFETY LEVIES) AMENDMENT BILL 2010 - PRIMARY INDUSTRIES (EXCISE) LEVIES AMENDMENT BILL 2010
- VETERANS’ AFFAIRS AND OTHER LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (MISCELLANEOUS MEASURES) BILL 2010
- FOOD STANDARDS AUSTRALIA NEW ZEALAND AMENDMENT BILL 2010
- CARER RECOGNITION BILL 2010
- TRADEX SCHEME AMENDMENT BILL 2010
- OZONE PROTECTION AND SYNTHETIC GREENHOUSE GAS MANAGEMENT AMENDMENT BILL 2010
- LAW AND JUSTICE LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (IDENTITY CRIMES AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2010
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
- DISTINGUISHED VISITORS
-
QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
-
Broadband
(Barnett, Sen Guy, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Murray-Darling Basin
(Hanson-Young, Sen Sarah, Conroy, Sen Stephen) -
Superannuation
(Cormann, Sen Mathias, Sherry, Sen Nick) -
Imports
(Wortley, Sen Dana, Carr, Sen Kim) -
Mr David Hicks
(Brandis, Sen George, Ludwig, Sen Joe) -
Alcohol Abuse
(Fielding, Sen Steve, Ludwig, Sen Joe)
-
Broadband
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE: ADDITIONAL ANSWERS
- QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE: TAKE NOTE OF ANSWERS
- COMMITTEES
- MINISTERIAL STATEMENTS
- AUDITOR-GENERAL’S REPORTS
- MINERALS RESOURCE RENT TAX
- COMMITTEES
- SEX AND AGE DISCRIMINATION LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2010
- INDEPENDENT YOUTH ALLOWANCE
- EVIDENCE AMENDMENT (JOURNALISTS’ PRIVILEGE) BILL 2010
- RESTORING TERRITORY RIGHTS (VOLUNTARY EUTHANASIA LEGISLATION) BILL 2010
- DOCUMENTS
- COMMITTEES
- AUDITOR-GENERAL’S REPORTS
- ADJOURNMENT
- Adjournment
- DOCUMENTS
Page: 1109
Senator IAN MACDONALD (6:10 PM)
—I wish to say a few words in talking to the motion before the chair to note this particular report. This was a report in which the committee members looked into the issues with some care and dedication and I think the report is well worth reading and in fact adopting where appropriate recommendations are made. But I want to mention an issue that came up in this report, although there was a separate committee looking at this other issue at the same time as this particular committee was in Cape York. It was mentioned in relation to this committee, and it is the Wild Rivers legislation of the Queensland government.
To recapitulate very briefly, the Queensland Labor government has introduced the so-called Wild Rivers legislation, I always say, which effectively curtails activity in wild rivers areas. I know that the Queensland ministers have said, ‘Oh, it does not really curtail investment in these areas,’ but the evidence before both this and the other committee that I referred to clearly showed that some Indigenous people were indeed led to a conclusion that their rights to their land would be impacted upon. When someone said, ‘You can always apply for permission and consent,’ the response of one of the witnesses was, ‘Well, who is going to pay for it? We don’t have the money to engage teams of lawyers and accountants to go through and try and get some permission under the Wild Rivers legislation.’
As a result of that, Mr Abbott, in the other place, and Senator Scullion, here, have moved a bill that was in fact passed by the Senate prior to the election and which sought to overturn the Queensland legislation insofar as certain aspects of the Wild Rivers legislation were concerned. What Mr Abbott’s bill does, in short—and I paraphrase—is it says that you cannot declare a wild river in this area without the permission of the traditional owners. A lot of misconception and untruthfulness is being promoted about what Mr Abbott’s bill actually says, but that is the guts of Mr Abbott’s bill—that you cannot have a wild rivers regime in these areas unless the traditional owners agree.
The ACTING DEPUTY PRESIDENT
(Senator Crossin)—Senator Macdonald, I need to interrupt you for a moment. We are taking note here of the final report of the Senate Select Committee on Regional and Remote Indigenous Communities, which did not actually report into the Wild Rivers situation or the legislation, so I just want you to be mindful that we are taking note of the actual report of that committee and the contents of that report.
Senator IAN MACDONALD
—Thank you. You might notice that in my earlier remarks I indicated that there was a separate committee meeting in Cape York at the time this committee was in Cape York. Indeed, Senator Barnett was there, amongst others. I think you were also there, Madam Acting Deputy President Crossin. But certainly Wild Rivers was mentioned in the hearings of this particular committee, of which I am discussing the report. I am very conscious and thank you for your advice, but I was aware of that and I am being very careful to relate it to this particular report.
As I was saying, there is a lot of misunderstanding—some of it deliberately promoted—about what Mr Abbott’s bill might do. It is all relevant to regional and remote Indigenous communities and their ability to do things on their land which will give them an economic future and which will provide employment for their people. Mr Abbott’s bill says, ‘Yes, if you want a Wild Rivers regime, that’s fine; but you can’t do it unless the traditional owners agree.’ And who could argue with that? That is all by way of background and in the context of the Regional and Remote Indigenous Communities Select Committee report. But just this week the Queensland government has sought to extend that Wild Rivers legislation to take in not just rivers in Cape York and the Gulf of Carpentaria but those right down into western Queensland. The rivers running into Lake Eyre are now also going to be subjected to this Wild Rivers legislation, which will perhaps not impact so heavily on Indigenous people in the west—although some will be impacted upon—but on other landowners in that area, who will find that their enjoyment and use of their land is to be further curtailed. It will, in fact, impact upon remote Indigenous communities as well.
What concerns me is that in Queensland we have been going through a water reform process. It has been going on for four or five years, from memory, and all of these issues were looked into. Those water resources plans give the government and appropriate authorities the necessary power to properly manage land in those areas. Why, then, do you need this draconian, sledgehammer Wild Rivers legislation coming in over the top of it? The water resource management plans that are in place are sufficient to properly manage in a sustainable way the water resources in those rivers.
So it is probably timely to mention that. I will not take it much further at this stage except to again compliment the select committee on the work it did in relation to regional and remote Indigenous communities. I seek leave to continue my remarks later.
Leave granted; debate adjourned.