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ROAD TRANSPORT (GENERAL) AMENDMENT REGULATION 2010 (NO 1) (NO 18 OF 2010)
2010
THE
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY FOR THE
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY
ROAD TRANSPORT (GENERAL) AMENDMENT REGULATION 2010
(No 1)
SUBORDINATE LAW
SL2010-18
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Presented by
Mr Jon Stanhope
Minister for
Transport
This regulation is made under section 233 of the Road Transport
(General) Act 1999.
It amends the Road Transport (General)
Regulation 2000 (the Regulation). The amendments relate to technical and
evidentiary aspects of notices given by the road transport authority under the
road transport legislation where a person’s driver licence, vehicle
registration or right to drive has been or is about to be suspended under the
legislation. It also amends section 10, which deals with evidentiary
certificates.
CLAUSE NOTES
Clause 1 Name of
Regulation
This clause is a formal provision to set out the name of the
regulation.
Clause 2 Commencement
This clause is a formal
provision that sets the commencement of the regulation, which will be the day
after notification on the Legislation Register.
Clause 3 Legislation
amended
This clause explains that the amendments in the regulation apply
to the Road Transport (General) Regulation 2000.
Clause 4 New
sections 9 to 9B
New clause 9 fills an inadvertent gap in the road
transport legislation. It provides for the contents of notices of suspension
required to be given under section 44 of the Road Transport (General) Act
1999.
New clause 9A also fills an inadvertent gap in the road
transport legislation. It provides for the contents of notices of suspension
given under section 85 of the Road Transport (General) Act 1999.
New clause 9B deals with notices under the road transport legislation
that are sent by prepaid post to person’s residential address or address
for service. The note to clause 9B (1) reminds readers of the obligation of
drivers and registered operators of motor vehicles to inform the road transport
authority of a change of address. Clause 9B (2) provides that a notice is taken
to be given to a person when it is received at the person’s address.
Clause 9B (3) contains certain presumptions regarding timeframes for
postage and delivery of computer generated correspondence. By way of
background, the road transport authority generates several hundreds of thousands
of letters containing notices under the road transport legislation each year.
These notices include driver licence and vehicle registration renewal notices,
infringement notices and reminder notices, and notices of driver licence or
vehicle registration suspension and cancellation. Well over 95% of these
notices are generated by computer programs from templates. They are despatched
by prepaid post, rather than being manually addressed and stamped.
As
there are several provisions in the road transport legislation which provide for
something to happen a specified time after a person is given a notice it is
desirable to have a means of calculating when a notice that is sent by prepaid
post can be said to have been “given” to the person.
Accordingly, new regulation 9B (3) (a) provides for a rebuttable
presumption that a notice is posted 4 working days after the date of the notice,
while 9B (3) (b) provides for a presumption that the notice is received 4
working days after it is posted, unless the contrary is established. The
rebuttable presumption of receipt is based on section 62 of the New South Wales
Fines Act 1996. The presumption is consistent with the standard delivery
timeframes for postal articles and allows for some additional slippage due to
unforseen circumstances. Australia Post’s Customer Service Charter
requires it to deliver 94% of standard letters in metropolitan areas such as the
ACT by the next business day and by the second business day between country
areas. According to its 2008 - 2009 Annual Report (page 17), Australia Post
actually exceeded its community service obligations, by delivering 95.5% of
domestic letters on time or early and 97.5% of bulk mail on time or early. The
rebuttable presumption of receipt is also consistent with the obligation that
clients have to inform the road transport authority when they change their
address.
Clause 9B (4) disapplies section 250 (1) of the Legislation
Act 2001 to notices under the road transport legislation. Instead, the
presumptions relating to the date of postage and date of receipt in new section
9B will apply to those notices.
Clause 9B (5) defines the concept
“road transport authority record or register”, which encompasses
various registers of information about drivers and vehicles that are required to
kept under the road transport legislation.
Clause 5 Section
10
This clause replaces existing section 10 with a new provision that
deals with evidentiary certificates for the purpose of section 72 of the Act.
Former section 10 was incompletely drafted and the opportunity has been taken to
correct that error as part of this drafting process. New section 10 provides
for evidentiary certificates to be issued in relation to:
• authorised
examiners
• approved premises
• the process for electronically
generating notices; and
• the contents of electronically generated
notices.