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DANGEROUS SUBSTANCES (EXPLOSIVES) AMENDMENT REGULATION 2009 (NO 2) (NO 43 OF 2009)
THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY
FOR THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
Subordinate Law No SL2009-43
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Circulated by the authority of
John Hargreaves MLA
Minister for
Industrial Relations
Background
The Dangerous Substances
(Explosives) Amendment Regulation 2009 (No 2) (The Regulation) amends the
Dangerous Substances (Explosives) Regulation 2004 to ban the use of fireworks by
members of the public. The use of fireworks by the public on the Queen’s
birthday weekend will no longer be permitted. Retailers will no longer be able
to sell fireworks to the public.
The amendments mean that fireworks may
now only be brought into the ACT and used by licensed operators for authorised
displays.
However, this amendment does not affect the public’s use
of a class of fireworks called general use fireworks. These are items
containing very small quantities of explosives or pyrotechnic substances. They
include sparklers, bon bons (Christmas crackers) and party poppers.
The
Regulation repeals infringement notice offences in the Magistrates Court
(Dangerous Substances Infringement Notices) Regulation 2004 that are associated
with the repealed Queen’s birthday firework use provisions. It also
introduces an infringement notice offence for an unlicensed person to use
certain fireworks.
Notes on Specific Provisions
Clause
1 Name of regulation
This clause provides that the name of the
Regulation is the Dangerous Substances (Explosives) Amendment Regulation 2009
(No 2).
Clause 2 Commencement
This clause provides for
commencement of this Regulation to be on the day after the notification day of
this Regulation.
Clause 3 Legislation amended
This clause
provides that this Regulation amends the Dangerous Substances (Explosives)
Regulation 2004.
Clause 4 Section 25 (2)
This clause
removes the reference to ‘consumer fireworks’ and is redrafted to
retain “general use fireworks”.
Clause 5 Section
28
This clause omits the section, which defines ‘Queen’s
birthday supply’.
Clause 6 and 7 Section 34 (2) (g) and 34
(5)
These clauses omit provisions about the packaging and labelling
of consumer fireworks registered for Queen’s birthday supply and retain as
section 34(5) the present section 34(5)(a).
Clause
8 Division 2.2.4
This clause omits the division (sections 37-40)
which deals with the registration of fireworks for supply during the
Queen’s birthday weekend.
Clause 9 Section 43
(b)
This clause omits a provision about packaging, labelling and
safety instructions.
Clause 10 Section 100 example
This
clause omits an example referring to consumer fireworks.
Clause
11 Section 123, table 123, items 8 and 9
This clause omits items from
Table 123 about the storage of consumer fireworks.
Clause 12 Section
125 (1), note
This clause omits from the note references to storage
of consumer fireworks.
Clause 13 Section 166 (b)
This
clause omits a provision about the retail supply of consumer
fireworks.
Clause 14 Section 171
This clause omits
references to the retail supply of consumer fireworks but retains a provision
about general use fireworks.
Clause 15 Section 178 (2) (c)
This clause omits a reference to consumer
fireworks.
Clause 16 Part 3.1, note
This clause amends the
note to substitute ‘controlled fireworks’ for ‘consumer
fireworks’.
Clause 17 and 18 Section 260 and table 260
heading
These clauses omit ‘consumer fireworks’ and bring
in a class of ‘controlled fireworks’, having similar explosive
qualities to consumer fireworks.
Clause 19 Part
3.3
This clause omits sections 264-297, including 19 strict liability
offences, relating to the advertising, supply, storage and use of consumer
fireworks for the Queen’s birthday weekend period.
This clause
omits section 295, a strict liability offence prohibiting the use of consumer
fireworks outside the Queen’s birthday weekend period, but preserves it in
the new section 264. This makes it a strict liability offence for an unlicensed
person to use controlled fireworks at any time with a penalty of 30 penalty
units ($3,000 for an individual), with the option of an infringement notice of
$600.
This permits law enforcement bodies the discretion to charge a
person with a much lower-level offence, or to issue an infringement notice,
where an unlicensed individual is apprehended using relatively low
intensity fireworks. Currently it is an offence under section 79 of the
Dangerous Substances Act 2004 for an unauthorized person to use a
dangerous substance. The penalties are 2,500 penalty units ($250,000 for an
individual) and 10 years imprisonment for a prohibited dangerous substance or
750 units ($75,000 for an individual) and 3 years imprisonment for a controlled
dangerous substance.
The penalties under the new section 264 are the
same as those that previously applied to the use of consumer fireworks outside
the Queen’s birthday period. The offence meets the criteria for a strict
liability offence as:
• The circumstances in which this offence
will apply are very narrow.
• The offence does not attract a
penalty of imprisonment.
• Explosives, including fireworks, are
subject to a strict licensing regime.
• There is high community
awareness that the possession and use of fireworks without a permit or licence
is illegal.
• The lack of availability for public sale and the risk
engendered by fireworks use would generally alert a reasonable person to the
probability that firework use would be regulated.
Clause 20
Section 298(2) except note
This clause is redrafted to omit a
reference to the use of a consumer firework.
Clause 21 Section 302
heading
This clause omits “consumer” from the heading. It
has no substantive effect.
Clause 22 Schedule 1
This
clause omits the schedule setting out standards for consumer
fireworks.
Clauses 23 Dictionary, note 3
This clause omits
a reference to section 265, which is about the supply of consumer
fireworks.
Clauses 24-26 Dictionary, definitions including new
definition of controlled firework
These clauses omit
definitions relating to consumer fireworks licensing, use and supply and insert
a new definition of ‘controlled firework’.
Clause
27 Magistrates Court (Dangerous Substances Infringement Notices) Regulation
2004, schedule 1, part 1.2, items 48 to 87.
This clause omits
infringement notice offences relating to the sale, use and storage of consumer
fireworks over the Queen’s birthday weekend period. It also introduces an
infringement notice offence for the unlicensed use of a controlled firework.
That offence replaces an offence of using a consumer firework outside the
Queen’s birthday period (see clause 19).