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RETIREMENT VILLAGES AMENDMENT REGULATION 2013 (NO 1) (NO 21 OF 2013)
2013
THE LEGISLATIVE
ASSEMBLY FOR THE
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY
RETIREMENT VILLAGES
AMENDMENT REGULATION 2013 (No 1)
SUBORDINATE LAW No. SL2013-21
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Presented by
Simon Corbell
MLA
Attorney-General
RETIREMENT VILLAGES AMENDMENT REGULATION 2013 (No
1)
Overview of the Regulation
The Retirement
Villages Act 2012 (‘the Act’) and the Retirement Villages
Regulation 2013 (‘the Regulation’) commenced on 4 March 2013.
The Act and Regulation bring into the ACT regulatory requirements for
the retirement village industry which are based on the NSW
requirements.
The Retirement Villages Amendment Regulation 2013 (No
1) (‘the Amendment Regulation’) makes four amendments to the
Regulation.
Payroll tax
The amendments ensure that the
regulations have the same operative effect as the equivalent provision in NSW,
which provides that payroll tax must not be financed by way of recurrent charges
unless (i) the wages paid by the operator are more than the threshold amount in
the Payroll Tax Act 2007 (NSW); or ii) before the commencement of the
clause, the residents consented to the financing of payroll tax from recurrent
charges and continued to provide consent.
Paragraph ii) allows for larger
for-profit retirement village operators who own more than one retirement village
to recover the costs of payroll tax from the recurrent charges of residents of
each retirement village on an apportionment basis. This is where the wages paid
by the operator in relation to each village are less than the threshold amount
but where the wages paid in relation to all the villages collectively operated
by the operator attract payroll tax.
Payroll tax can only be financed
by way of recurrent charges under this arrangement, where residents consented
prior to the commencement of the Retirement Villages Act 2012 and
Retirement Villages Regulation 2013 (4 March 2013) and continue to give
consent.
Strict liability offences
The first of the
amendments removes references to offences in the Regulation being offences of
strict liability. The effect of this amendment will be that to prosecute a
retirement village operator in relation to the two relevant offences in the
Regulation, there must be a finding of intent.
Technical
amendment
The Amendment Regulation corrects a technical oversight in
a transitional regulation providing for increases in recurrent charges prior to
commencement of the Act.
Budget disagreement
The Code of
Practice provided for resolution of a budget impasse by the budget referee
appointed by the Fair Trading Commission. It is likely therefore that existing
residence contracts make reference to the resolution of such disputes by the
budget referee under the Code.
A new transitional regulation is inserted
into the Regulation to provide that a resident or operator can apply to the ACAT
under section 163 where a budget cannot be agreed to, even though an existing
contract may provide for resolution of such a dispute by the budget referee
under the repealed Code.
CLAUSE NOTES
Clause 1 Name of regulation
This clause names the regulation as
the Retirement Villages Amendment Regulation 2013 (No 1).
Clause 2 Commencement
This clause provides for the
commencement of the regulation on the day after its notification.
Clause 3 Legislation amended
This clause provides that the
regulation amends the Retirement Villages Regulation
2013.
Clause 4 Section 36 (1) (d)
This clause ensures
that section 36(1)(d) of the Retirement Villages Regulation 2013 has the
same operative effect as section 26(d) of the NSW Retirement Villages
Regulation 2009.
The clause allows larger for-profit operators who
own more than own village to recover the costs of payroll tax from
residents’ recurrent charges on an apportionment basis where the wages
paid for each village are below the threshold amount.
This only applies
where the residents under such an arrangement had, prior to the commencement of
the Retirement Villages Act 2012 and Retirement Villages Regulation
2013, provided consent for payroll tax to be financed by way of recurrent
charges and continue to provide consent.
Clause 5 Section 50
(2)
This clause omits reference to the offence against section 50(1)
as being an offence of strict liability.
Section 6 Section 52
(3)
This clause omits reference to the offence against section 52(2)
as being an offence of strict liability.
Section 7 Part
20
As section 100 is no longer necessary (as a result of the
amendments to section 36(1)(d)), it is omitted. As section 100 is the only
provision in part 20 of the Retirement Villages Regulation 2013, the part
is omitted.
Section 8 Schedule 5, modification 5.1, section 503W
(2)
Section 503W of the Retirement Villages Regulation 2013
provides for the application of section 148(2) of the Retirement Villages Act
2012 to amendments of recurrent charges in the 12 months before the
commencement of the Act.
This clause corrects a technical oversight in
section 503W(2) by substituting reference to the date the contract was last
amended with a reference to the date that the recurrent charges payable under
the contract were last amended.
Section 9 Schedule 5, modification
5.1, new section 503XA
Section 503ZB of the Retirement Villages
Regulation 2013 provides for termination of existing residence contracts.
Under the repealed Code of Practice, the Fair Trading Commissioner could appoint
a contract referee to terminate a residence contract on certain grounds.
Section 503ZB provides that the termination procedures in part 9 of the
Retirement Villages Act 2012 are to apply to existing residence contracts
and that a reference to the contract referee is taken to be a reference to the
ACAT.
This clause inserts a similar clause relating to circumstances
where the retirement village operator and residents cannot agree to a budget.
Under the repealed Code of Practice, the Fair Trading Commissioner could appoint
a budget referee to resolve a budget impasse.
New section 503XA
provides that a budget referee provision applying to an existing residence
contract before commencement ceases to apply on commencement and that section
163 of the Act applies.
If a budget referee clause is included in an
existing contract it ceases to operate, and instead, section 163 of the Act
applies to the contract.
Any reference to a budget referee is taken to
be a reference to the ACAT and a procedure involving the resolution of a budget
disagreement by a budget referee is, on the commencement day, take to be a
reference to the procedures in section 163 of the Act.