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HEAVY VEHICLE NATIONAL LAW (ACT) (TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS) REGULATION 2014 (NO 16 OF 2014)
2014
THE
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY
FOR THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
HEAVY VEHICLE NATIONAL LAW
(ACT) (TRANSITIONAL PROVISIONS) REGULATION
2014
SL2014-16
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Presented by
Simon Corbell
MLA
Attorney-General
HEAVY VEHICLE NATIONAL LAW (ACT) (TRANSITIONAL
PROVISIONS) REGULATION 2014
Outline
The Heavy Vehicle National Law (ACT) (Transitional
Provisions) Regulation 2014 will ensure that infringement notice offences under
the Heavy Vehicle National Law (ACT) are treated in the same way as other ACT
traffic infringement offences, for the purposes of the Crimes Act
1900.
The Heavy Vehicle National Law (ACT) Act 2013 commenced
in the ACT and five other participating jurisdictions on 10 February 2014. The
Heavy Vehicle National Law provides that infringement notices relating to heavy
vehicle offences are issued under part 10.2 of that Law.
By national
agreement, the procedures for issuing Heavy Vehicle National Law infringement
notices follow the laws applied in each participating jurisdiction. In the ACT,
the Road Transport (General) Act 1999 and the Road Transport
(Offences) Regulation 2005 set out the relevant procedures.
Section
187 (1) of the Crimes Act 1900 provides that part 1C of the Crimes Act
1914 (Cwlth) applies in relation to most types of ACT summary offences. Part
1C includes protections for people arrested and interviewed for indictable
Commonwealth offences.
However, section 187 (2) provides that the
provisions of part 1C do not apply to a range of offences, including
infringement notice offences under the Road Transport (General) Act 1999,
where a police officer intends to either proceed by way of infringement notice
or take no further action in relation to the offence.
The rationale for
section 187 (2) is that the protections of part 1C are not appropriate or
necessary to circumstances where an offender is dealt with by way of
infringement notice. Applying those requirements would be an impediment to
dealing efficiently with routine traffic matters.
This reasoning would
also apply to summary heavy vehicle offences under the National Heavy Vehicle
Law.
Section 42 of the Heavy Vehicle National Law (ACT) Act 2013
allows for a regulation prescribing transitional matters necessary or convenient
to be prescribed because of the enactment of the Act. This Regulation, made
under that section, amends section 187 (2) of the Crimes Act 1900 to the
effect that part 1C of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cwlth) does not apply to
infringement notice offences for the Heavy Vehicle National Law, where the
police officer intends to serve an infringement notice under the Heavy Vehicle
National Law or not take any further action.
Human Rights
Implications
This regulation is consistent with human rights.
Section 28 of the Human Rights Act 2004 provides that human
rights are subject only to reasonable limits set by laws that can be
demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society. Section 28 (2) of the
Human Rights Act provides that in deciding whether a limit on a human right is
reasonable, all relevant factors must be considered, including:
The nature of the right being limited
Removing the
protections in part 1C of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cwlth) may engage the
right to a fair trial and rights in criminal proceedings.
The
importance of the purpose of the limitation
The purpose of the
limitation (ensuring consistency in the enforcement of the road transport
legislation) is of high importance. Without this regulation, people issued with
an infringement notice under the National Heavy Vehicle Law would be subjected
to burdens that people who are issued with an infringement notice for other
traffic offences would not be subjected to. This regulation ensures that all
people who are issued with an infringement notice for a routine traffic offence
are treated equally, delivering consistent enforcement practice for all road
users
The nature and extent of the limitation
Any
limitation is not extensive. It applies to drivers who have been issued with an
infringement notice for an offence under the National Heavy Vehicle Law.
The nature between the limitation and its purpose
The
amendment provides that part 1C of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cwlth) does not
apply to infringement notice offences for the Heavy Vehicle National Law, where
the police officer intends to serve an infringement notice under the Heavy
Vehicle National Law or not take any further action.
While prima facie
the amendment removes protections for suspects being interviewed, in reality
those protections would in practice impose a burden on people issued with an
infringement notice under the National Heavy Vehicle Law. A similar burden was
not imposed on those people prior to the National Heavy Vehicle Law commencing,
nor does it apply to drivers who are issued with infringement notices for
similar offences under the road transport legislation. This Regulation protects
the interests of heavy vehicle owners and operators, and provides for consistent
enforcement practice for all road users.
Less restrictive means
reasonably available to achieve the purpose
There are not any less
restrictive means available to achieve the purpose of the amendment.
For these reasons it is considered that the any limitation arising from
this regulation is reasonable and proportionate.
Notes on
clauses
Clause 1 Name of regulation
This is a formal
provision that sets out the name of the regulation.
Clause
2 Commencement
This is a formal provision that provides for the
commencement of the regulation. The regulation commences on the day after its
notification day.
Clause 3 Modification of Act, pt 6—Act, s 42
(2)
This clause modifies part 6 of the Heavy Vehicle National Law
(ACT) Act 2013 to include a new section 42A Modification—Crimes Act
1900. Section 42A provides that the Crimes Act 1900 is modified as set
out in Schedule 1 of this Regulation. Section 42A (2) provides the section
expires on the day this Regulation expires.
Clause
4 Expiry—regulation
This clause provides that this Regulation
expires on the day the Heavy Vehicle National Law (ACT) Act 2013, part 6
(Transitional) expires.
Schedule 1 Modification—Crimes Act
1900
This clause substitutes a new section 187 (2) (b) (i) of the
Crimes Act 1900. The new, substituted, section extends the exemption
from the requirements in part 1C of the Crimes Act 1914 (Cwlth) to
infringement notice offences under the Heavy Vehicle National Law (ACT), where a
police officer intends to issue an infringement notice or take no further action
in relation to the offence. This is consistent with the treatment of
infringement notice offences under the Road Transport (General) Act
1999.