[Index] [Search] [Download] [Related Items] [Help]
PLANNING AND DEVELOPMENT (TRANSITIONAL) AMENDMENT REGULATION 2010 (NO 1) (NO 34 OF 2010)
2010
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY
FOR THE
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
Planning and Development (Transitional)
Amendment Regulation 2010 (No
1)
SL2010-34
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Presented by
Mr Andrew Barr MLA
Minister
for Planning
This Explanatory Statement relates to the Planning and Development
(Transitional) Amendment Regulation 2010 (No 1) (the amending regulation).
Background
Under Part 10.4 of the Planning and Development
Act 2007 (the Act) there must be plans of management for public
land.
Certain procedures must take place in relation to the making of
plans of management under the Act. For instance, draft plans must contain
certain material and public consultation on draft plans must take place in
accordance with s323. Draft plans must also be given to the Minister (s325) and
the Legislative Assembly must consider draft plans (s326). There are also
provisions relating to notification, presentation and disallowance of plans
(s330). The provisions in Part 10.4 are in similar terms to those in the
previous Land (Planning and Environment) Act 1991 (the repealed Act) s197
onwards.
The Act also contains transitional provisions for plans of
management. Section 467 provides that a plan of management made under the
repealed Act is taken to be a plan of management under the Planning and
Development Act. This transitional provision is limited in its operation and the
purpose of the amending regulation is to ensure that the transitional
arrangements for plans of management also apply to plans that commenced
preparation under the repealed Act but had not been made before the commencement
of the Act.
Some plans of management were not in existence when the Act
began but the preparation of the plans had commenced and many of the steps
required under the Act were done when the repealed Act was in force and before
the Act became operational.
There is presently no mechanism under the
Act to allow recognition of these steps having been undertaken. The amending
regulation corrects this by inserting a transitional provision in the Act that
allows those actions to be considered as if they were done under the Act. It
does this by way of the regulation-making power in section 429 of the Act which
permits a regulation to modify the Act, chapter 15 (Transitional).
Regulatory impact statement
The Legislation Act 2001
section 36 states:
(1) A regulatory impact statement need not be prepared
for a proposed subordinate law or disallowable instrument (the proposed law) if
the proposed law only provides for, or to the extent it only provides
for:
(f) a matter of a transitional character;
As the amending
regulation provides only for a matter of a transitional character, a regulatory
impact statement is not required.
Outline of
Provisions
Clause 1 Name of regulation
Names the regulation
as the Planning and Development (Transitional) Amendment Regulation 2010 (No
1).
Clause 2 Commencement
States that the regulation
commences on the day after its notification.
Clause 3 Legislation
amended
States that the regulation amends the Planning and Development
Regulation 2008.
Clause 4 New section 411
Inserts new
section 411 Modification of Act, ch 15 – Act s429 in the Planning
and Development Regulation (the regulation) which states that chapter 15 of the
Planning and Development Act (the Act) is modified by schedule 21. Schedule 21
is inserted in the regulation by Clause 5 below. New section 411, and schedule
21, expire on 31 March 2013. This date is consistent with the present expiry
date for section 467 under section 431 of the Act.
Clause 5 New
schedule 21
Inserts new schedule 21 in the regulation.
Section
431 of the Act is modified by schedule 21 as a consequence of the amendments to
section 467 of the Act by this amending regulation. In section 431, the words
“and section 467” are omitted and the words “,section 467 and
468” are substituted.
Schedule 21 modifies the Act to omit section
467(4). Section 467 (4) states that section 467 is not a section to which the
Legislation Act, section 88 (Repeal does not end effect of transitional laws,
etc) applies. Section 467(4) means the plans of management referred to in the
section will cease to apply as plans of management under the Act when section
467 expires on 31 March 2013. The omission of section 467(4) means section
88 of the Legislation Act applies so that the expiry of section 467 will not
affect the transitional provision’s continued operation. Given the
complexity, length and number of plans of management affected by section 467 and
the fact that it is important that the plans remain in operation, an arbitrary
time frame for the expiry of the operation of the transitional provision is not
considered appropriate.
Schedule 21 modifies the Act to include new
section 468. Under Part 10.4 of the Act there must be plans of management for
public land. Some plans of management were not in existence when the Act began
but the preparation of the plans had commenced and many of the steps required
under the Act were done before the Act became operational. New section 468
inserts a transitional provision in the Act that allows those actions to be
considered as if they were done under the Act where preparation of a plan had
commenced prior to the commencement of the Act.