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DANGEROUS SUBSTANCES (GENERAL) AMENDMENT REGULATION 2014 (NO 1) (NO 19 OF 2014)
Dangerous Substances (General) Amendment Regulation 2014 (No 1)
Subordinate law SL2014–19
made under the
Dangerous Substances Act 2004
EXPLANATORY STATEMENT
Overview of the Amendment
Regulation
The Dangerous Substances (General) Amendment
Regulation 2014 (No 1) (‘the Amendment Regulation’) amends the
Dangerous Substances (General) Regulation 2004 by inserting new part
3.5.
New part 3.5 is designed to improve the safety of tradespeople and
other visitors or workers on residential property affected by loose fill
asbestos (“Mr Fluffy”) insulation.
The owner of residential
property affected by loose fill insulation must ensure that an asbestos warning
sign is displayed at the premises in the place, and in the way, approved by the
Minister.
The ACT Government will be assisting owners of affected
residential property to meet this new obligation by delivering a program to
affix the warning sign by 30 December 2014, as well as by making the
warning sign available free of charge to affected homeowners.
Human
Rights Implications
The Amendment Regulation may engage section
12(a) of the Human Rights Act 2004. That section requires that everyone
has the right not to have his or her privacy, family, home or correspondence
interfered with unlawfully or arbitrarily.
The Amendment Regulation is
not an arbitrary or unlawful interference with the right. In any case, the
limitation on the right is reasonable. The Amendment Regulation’s
potential interference with the human right is minimal and the importance of its
purpose is such that the limitation is reasonable.
The offences do not
attract strict liability.
CLAUSE NOTES
Clause 1 Name of Regulation
This clause provides for the name
of the regulation as the Dangerous Substances (General) Amendment Regulation
2014 (No 1).
Clause 2 Commencement
This clause provides
for the commencement date of the regulation (other than section 5), which is 1
September 2014. Section 5 commences on 1 January 2015.
In effect, the
regulation commences on 1 September 2014, with delayed commencement of the
offence provision in section 340(1) that mandates the fixing of warning signs,
until 1 January 2015.
While homeowners are responsible for ensuring the
warning signs are attached from 1 January 2015, WorkSafe ACT Inspectors will
deliver a program between 1 September and 31 December 2014 to attach the
warning labels to all affected home in the way prescribed by the
Minister.
Homeowners are encouraged to attach the warning label
immediately and can obtain a warning label from the Asbestos Response Taskforce
(or other way outlined at www.act.gov.au/asebstos
). Attching a warning sign before 1 January 2015 is strongly
encouraged.
However, as soon as a warning label is attached (regardless
of who attaches it) the offence provision in section 340 that applies if the
owner or occupier fails to replace a tag that has been removed applies. For
example, if a WorkSafe Inspector attaches the warning label to an affected
residential premises on 14 September 2014, it is an offence not to replace it if
it is removed from that date.
Clause 3 Legislation
amended
This clause provides that the regulation amends the
Dangerous Substances (General) Regulation 2004.
Clause 4 New
part 3.5
This clause inserts new part 3.5 of the Dangerous
Substances (General) Regulation 2004.
Part 3.5 Asbestos
management–residential premises
337 Application–pt
3.5
New section 337 provides for the application of new part 3.5,
which is to residential premises that contain or have contained loose fill
asbestos insulation (defined in section 338).
338 Definitions–pt
3.5
New section 338 provides for the definitions of ‘approved
warning sign’, ‘class’ for a class of building, ‘loose
fill asbestos insulation’ and ‘residential premises’ as the
terms are used in new part 3.5.
339 Asbestos warning signs –
approval
New section 339 provides for approved warning
signs.
The Minister can approve the warning sign, and the way or place
where it must be displayed. An approval of this nature can be found on the ACT
Legislation Register www.legislation.act.gov.au
.
New section 340 provides that a person commits an offence if the
person is the owner or occupier of an affected residential premises and a
warning sign is removed from the place where it is displayed and the person
fails to ensure that the warning sign is replaced (in the way, and in the place,
approved by the Minister).
The fault elements in division 2.2.3 of the
Criminal Code 2002 apply to the elements of the offence. A person must know
they are an owner of an affected home and be reckless as to whether the warning
label has been removed and reckless as to whether it has been replaced it in
accordance with the prescribed requirements.
The offence provision
commences on 1 September 2014, however as noted above, it is only an offence to
fail to replace a warning sign that has been removed after it has been
attached. While homeowners are encouraged to attach the warning sign as soon as
possible, and WorkSafe Inspectors are delivering a program to attach all warning
signs by 31 December 2014, it is not an offence to fail to replace a removed
sign until the warning sign has been attached.
Clause 5 New section
340(1)
New section 340(1) provides for the requirement for the owner
of affected residential premises to ensure that a warning sign is displayed at
the premises. The warning sign must be displayed in the place, and in the way,
approved by the Minister and must comply with the standard approved by the
Minister.
Again, the fault elements in division 2.2.3 of the Criminal
Code 2002 apply to the elements of the offence. A person must know they are
an owner of an affected home and be reckless as to whether the relevant warning
sign is attached in the prescribed manner.
This provision commences on 1
January 2015. If a warning sign has not been attached by this date the
homeowner or occupier must ensure that they do so.
WorkSafe ACT
inspectors can use other enforcement and compliance mechanisms in the Dangerous
Substances Act to achieve compliance with the new obligations, these include
improvement notices.
Clause 6 Dictionary, new
definitions
Clause 5 inserts into the Dictionary to the Dangerous
Substances (General) Regulation 2004 terms introduced into the Dangerous
Substances (General) Regulation 2004 by new part 3.5.