

- Title
HUMAN RIGHTS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL (No. 2) 1998
Second Reading
- Database
Senate Hansard
- Date
01-07-1998
- Source
Senate
- Parl No.
38
- Electorate
NSW
- Interjector
- Page
4638
- Party
NP
- Presenter
- Status
Final
- Question No.
- Questioner
- Responder
- Speaker
Brownhill, Sen David
- Stage
Second Reading
- Type
- Context
Bills
- System Id
chamber/hansards/1998-07-01/0227
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-
Hansard
- Start of Business
- ORDER OF BUSINESS
-
TELEVISION BROADCASTING SERVICES (DIGITAL CONVERSION) BILL 1998
DATACASTING CHARGE (IMPOSITION) BILL 1998-
In Committee
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Margetts, Sen Dee
- Brown, Sen Bob
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Lundy, Sen Kate
- Margetts, Sen Dee
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Bourne, Sen Vicki
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Margetts, Sen Dee
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Margetts, Sen Dee
- Bourne, Sen Vicki
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Lundy, Sen Kate
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Lundy, Sen Kate
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Lundy, Sen Kate
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Lundy, Sen Kate
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Lundy, Sen Kate
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Lundy, Sen Kate
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Lundy, Sen Kate
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Lundy, Sen Kate
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Lundy, Sen Kate
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Bourne, Sen Vicki
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Quirke, Sen John
- Lundy, Sen Kate
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Bourne, Sen Vicki
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Alston, Sen Richard
- Schacht, Sen Chris
- Bourne, Sen Vicki
-
In Committee
- MATTERS OF PUBLIC INTEREST
-
QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
-
Attorney-General's Department: Vacant Office Space
(Crossin, Sen Trish, Vanstone, Sen Amanda) -
Taxation: Savings Rebate Initiative
(Abetz, Sen Eric, Kemp, Sen Rod) -
Australian Taxation Office: Vacant Office Space
(Campbell, Sen George, Kemp, Sen Rod) -
Primary and Resource Industries
(Watson, Sen John, Parer, Sen Warwick) -
Minister for Resources and Energy
(Cook, Sen Peter, Parer, Sen Warwick) -
Workplace Relations
(Murray, Sen Andrew, Alston, Sen Richard) -
Youth Allowance
(Forshaw, Sen Michael, Newman, Sen Jocelyn) -
Hume Dam
(Brown, Sen Bob, Parer, Sen Warwick) -
Job Network
(Neal, Sen Belinda, Ellison, Sen Chris) -
Youth Allowance
(McGauran, Sen Julian, Newman, Sen Jocelyn) -
Job Network
(Gibbs, Sen Brenda, Ellison, Sen Chris) -
Salmon Industry
(Woodley, Sen John, Parer, Sen Warwick) -
Minister for Resources and Energy
(Faulkner, Sen John, Parer, Sen Warwick) -
Environment: Uranium Mining
(Knowles, Sen Susan, Hill, Sen Robert)
-
Attorney-General's Department: Vacant Office Space
- ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS WITHOUT NOTICE
-
NOTICES OF MOTION
- Days and Hours of Meeting and Routine of Business
- Wood and Paper Industry
- Environment Legislation
- Breast Cancer
- Northern Territory
- Indonesia: Former President Suharto
- Introduction of Legislation
- Introduction of Legislation
- Common Youth Allowance
- Education: Rural Students
- Regulations and Ordinances Committee
- Microsoft
- Days and Hours of Meeting and Routine of Business
- Regulations and Ordinances Committee
- Days and Hours of Meeting and Routine of Business
- Federation Fund
- Franklin River
- Sustainable Energy
- COMMITTEES
- ORDER OF BUSINESS
- COMMITTEES
- ORDER OF BUSINESS
- COMMITTEES
- SOCIO-ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES OF THE NATIONAL COMPETITION POLICY COMMITTEE
- WEST PAPUA
- VICTIMS OF TORTURE
- MATTERS OF PUBLIC IMPORTANCE
- COMMITTEES
- PARLIAMENTARY DELEGATION TO THE 99TH INTER-PARLIAMENTARY CONFERENCE
- DEPARTMENT OF THE SENATE
- COMMITTEES
- ASSENT TO LAWS
- BILLS RETURNED FROM THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
- HUMAN RIGHTS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL (No. 2) 1998
- STATES GRANTS (PRIMARY AND SECONDARY EDUCATION ASSISTANCE) AMENDMENT BILL 1998
- FAMILY LAW AMENDMENT BILL (No. 1) 1998
- ORDER OF BUSINESS
- DOCUMENTS
- ADJOURNMENT
- Adjournment
- DOCUMENTS
- QUESTIONS ON NOTICE
Page: 4638
Senator BROWNHILL (6:42 PM)
—I move:
That this bill be now read a second time.
I seek leave to have the second reading speech incorporated in Hansard .
Leave granted.
The speech read as follows—
The Human Rights Legislation Amendment Bill (No. 2) 1998 is the result of a detailed examination by the Government of the structure and operations of the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission. The Government's examination found that the current structure of the Commission is inefficient and top-heavy, and does not always operate in the best interests of the entire Australian community.
The bill provides for the reorganisation of the Commission's membership, which will comprise a President and three Deputy Presidents The Commission and its members will have a common responsibility to protect and promote human rights for all Australians. In order to maintain areas of expertise, each Deputy President will also have responsibility for particular subject areas. One Deputy President will be responsible for human rights and disability, one will be responsible for social justice and race, and one will be responsible for sex discrimination and equal opportunity.
Most importantly, this bill will be the catalyst for a fundamental cultural change in the Commission. The bill makes it clear that the new Commission's priority will be to educate Australians about human rights and discrimination, and to help them to understand their responsibility, as members of the Australian community, to respect other people's human rights.
The bill also emphasises the Commission's role to assist business and the community to avoid discrimination by issuing practical guidelines for that purpose.
This re-focusing of the Commission's functions is reflected in its new name—the Human Rights and Responsibilities Commission.
Consistent with this cultural change, the bill will make the Commission's power to intervene in court proceedings which raise human rights issues conditional upon it first obtaining my approval. The bill provides very broad criteria for the granting of my approval, which will enable me to ensure that every intervention by the new Commission is in the best interests of the Australian community as a whole.
The bill also separates the Privacy Commissioner from the new Human Rights and Responsibilities Commission by creating a statutory Office of the Privacy Commissioner. This provides the Privacy Commissioner with an opportunity to further increase , . the profile, and thus the effectiveness, of her work in promoting the protection of individual privacy across all sectors.
The bill provides further evidence of this Government's commitment to the affective and equitable protection of human rights of all Australians.
Ordered that further consideration of the second reading speech of this bill be adjourned until the first day of the spring sittings, in accordance with standing order 111.