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POWERS OF ATTORNEY AMENDMENT REGULATION 2007 (NO 1) (NO 12 OF 2007)
2007
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY
FOR THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
POWERS OF ATTORNEY AMENDMENT
REGULATION 2007 (No 1)
Subordinate Law No
SL2007-12
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Circulated by authority of
Simon Corbell MLA
Attorney
General
The Powers of Attorney Act 2006 (the Act) is to
commence operation on 30 May 2007 (the commencement day). Under the
Act, an attorney cannot be authorised to consent to the removal of
non-regenerative tissue from the principal (i.e. the person who made the
enduring power of attorney) for donation to someone else.
However, the
Powers of Attorney Act 1956 (previous Act) provides for enduring powers
of attorney to be made to authorise attorneys to consent to the donation of a
body part, blood or tissue of the principal to another person in accordance with
the Transplantation and Anatomy Act 1978. The Transplantation and
Anatomy Act enables a person to donate the person’s regenerative and
non-regenerative tissues for transplantation to another person.
The Act
also provides for the Act’s application to enduring powers of attorney
made before the commencement day. Therefore, the power given to an attorney
under such an enduring power of attorney, to consent to the removal of
non-regenerative tissue, will become inoperative after the commencement day.
The Powers of Attorney Amendment Regulation 2007 (No 1) amends the
Powers of Attorney Regulation 2007 (No 2) to provide that an attorney’s
power to consent to the donation of non-regenerative tissue of the principal,
granted under an enduring power of attorney in force immediately before the
commencement day, will continue.
The regulation also inserts section
152C in the Act to substitute an example under section 12, which clarifies that
donations (other than donations of non-regenerative tissue) under the
Transplantation and Anatomy Act is a health care matter.
NOTES ON CLAUSES
Clause 1 Name of regulation
This clause explains that
the name of the regulation is the Powers of Attorney
Amendment Regulation 2007 (No 1).
Clause 2 Commencement
This clause provides that the regulation commences on 30 May 2007.
Clause 3 provides that the regulation amends the Powers of Attorney
Regulation 2007 (No 2).
Clause 4 Modification of
Act, ch 20, new section 152B – Act, s 156
Clause 4 provides for
the modification of chapter 20 (Transitional provisions) of the Act by inserting
sections 152B and 152C in the Act pursuant to section 156 of the Act. Section
156(2) provides that a regulation may modify chapter 20 to make provision in
relation to anything that, in the Executive’s opinion, is not, or is not
adequately or appropriately, dealt with in that chapter.
New section
152B Transitional - powers of attorney to consent to body part donations etc
under previous Act
New section 152B provides for the continuing
validity after the commencement day of a power given to an attorney under an
enduring attorney made before that day to consent to a donation of a body part,
blood or tissue of the principal to another person in accordance with the
Transplantation and Anatomy Act 1978. Section 13(1)(b)(ii) of the
previous Act enables the principal to authorise an attorney to consent to such a
donation.
Section 35(b) of the Act provides that the principal cannot
authorise an attorney to exercise power in relation to special health care
matters. Section 37 of the Act lists the special health care matters. Section
37(1)(a) is a special health care matter of “ removal of non-regenerative
tissue from the principal while alive for donation for donation to someone
else”. The Act applies also to enduring powers of attorney made before
the commencement day. There is a concern, therefore, that a power given to an
attorney under an enduring power of attorney, made under the previous Act, to
consent to a donation of non-regenerative tissue of the principal, would become
invalid from the commencement day. New section 152B provides for the continuing
validity of such a power.
Previous Act means the Powers of Attorney
Act 1956, which is replaced by the Powers of Attorney Act 2006.
New section 152C Meaning of health care
matter
Section 12 explains that ‘health care
matter’ means a matter, other than a special health care matter, relating
to a principal’s health care, and provides examples.
New section
152C substitutes an example under section 12 to clarify the intention to include
donations (other than donations of non-regenerative tissue) under the
Transplantation and Anatomy Act by the principal to someone else. This example
supplements section 37(1)(a) referred to in the statement relating to new
section 152B.
Clause 5 Powers of Attorney Regulation 2007, schedule
1, modification 1.1, new section 156A
This clause omits new section
156A inserted in the Act by the Powers of Attorney Regulation 2007. New section
156A omitted example 2 from section 12 of the Act. The earlier omission is
omitted.