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WORKERS COMPENSATION AMENDMENT REGULATIONS 2002 (NO 1) (NO 29 OF 2002)
2002
THE
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY
FOR THE AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
Workers Compensation Amendment
Regulations 2002 (No. 1)
Explanatory
Statement
SL2002-29
Circulated by
authority of
Simon Corbell MLA
Minister for Industrial
Relations
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL TERRITORY
Workers
Compensation Amendment Regulations 2002 (No. 1)
Explanatory Statement
Overview
These Regulations amend the Workers
Compensation Regulations 2002.
The Regulations exclude work
experience students from the meaning of ‘worker’ in Chapter three of
the Workers Compensation Act 1951. The power to make this Regulation is
provided by section 245 of the Act.
The Regulations re-make Regulations
that cap workers compensation premiums for group trainers in the building and
construction industry at 15% of total wages paid to trainees of the group
trainer. These regulations were unintentionally omitted from the Workers
Compensation Regulations 2002 made in July 2002. The amending Regulations
also include a number of minor and technical amendments. The power to make these
regulations is found under section 223 of the Workers Compensation Act
1951.
Clause 1, Clause 2 and Clause 3
These are formal clauses.
Clause 1 names the regulations as the Workers Compensation Amendment
Regulations 2002 (No. 1). Clause 2 notes when the regulations will commence
and clause 3 notes that the regulations amend the Workers Compensation
Regulations 2002.
Clause 4
Clause 4 substitutes existing regulation 7 with a new regulation 7. The new
regulation more accurately expresses the function of the regulation, which is to
enable internet sites and other electronic sources of information to be approved
as clinically relevant research. New subregulations 7(3) and 7(4) allow the
approval of information as in force from time to time. This will ensure that
where information is approved that will be updated frequently, such as web
sites, the information will not need to be re-notified under the Legislation
Act 2001 every time the information is updated. This will ensure that the
provisions regarding clinically relevant research can operate effectively in
practice. Subregulation 7(4) identifies that particular sections of the
Legislation Act 2001 that would otherwise require the re-notification of
the approved information when it is updated do not apply to regulation
7.
Clause 5
Clause 5 amends regulation 10 to make it clear that
if the party requesting a specialist medical assessment proposes an earlier
appointment than the two weeks notice required in regulation 10(3), the party
being notified of the request may agree to the shorter time
proposed.
Clause 5 does not negate the requesting person’s
obligation to provide a notice that complies with regulation
10(4).
Clause 6
Clause 6 provides for renumbering of the
regulations when next republished under the provisions of the Legislation Act
2001.
Clause 7
Clause 7 amends regulation 45 to remove a
reference to the scale of costs in the Supreme Court Rules for the purposes of
conciliation under the Regulations. The conciliation process, set out in part 6
of the Regulations, is intended to be a cost-effective, alternative dispute
resolution process to the Court.
It was therefore intended that the costs
of conciliation would be less than those applying to formal Court hearings.
However, following the repeal of the New South Wales Workers Compensation
(General) Regulations 1995, which were originally to be referenced, the
Supreme Court scale of costs was mistakenly identified as the appropriate
scale.
Instead of using the Supreme Court scale, a scheduled of maximum
costs for conciliation will be included in the conciliation protocol to be
developed in accordance with regulation 47 (see notes on clause 9
below).
Clause 8
Clause 8 amends subregulation 46(3) by
substituting a description of the regulation’s expiry date with a specific
expiry date of 1 July 2006. This is intended to simplify the regulations for
ease of use.
Clause 9
Clause 9 amends regulation 47 to allow a
schedule of costs and disbursements, including maximum amounts, to be included
in the conciliation protocol. This amendment is necessary as the current
reference to the Supreme Court scale of fees is to removed from regulation 45
(see notes on clause 7 above).
Clause 10
Clause 10 amends
regulation 62 to make it clear that if the insurer informs the employer of the
employer’s obligations in the insurance policy itself, the insurer does
not have to again tell the employer of their obligations within 14 days after
the policy is issued. However, if this information is not in the policy itself
the insurer must tell the employer of their obligations within 14
days.
Clauses 11 and 12
Clause 11 amends subregulation 86(1)(k) to
make it clear that employers who wish to apply to become self-insurers must use
the current version of Australian Standard 4801 that exists at the time of their
application to become a self-insurer. The former wording could have been
construed to mean that employers could only use the version of AS 4810 that
applied when the regulations were made on 1 July 2002.
Clause 12 amends
subregulation 86(5) to clarify that sections of the Legislation Act 2001
do not apply to Australian Standard 4801 (identified in regulation 86(1)(k)).
The relevant Australian Standard details the occupational health and safety
management system that an employer must have in place before they can be
approved as a self-insurer. The standard is updated by Standards Australia from
time to time, in consultation with industry and Governments. These amendments
will ensure that an employer seeking to self-insure must comply with the most
recent version of the Standard.
Clause 13
Clause 13 re-makes
regulations made in September 2001 that were accidentally left out of the
Workers Compensation Regulations 2002 made on 1 July 2002.
Regulation 95A(1) is consistent with section 176 of the Workers
Compensation Act 1951. The regulation sets the maximum workers’
compensation premium for trainees employed by group trainers in the building and
construction industry at 15% of the total wages paid to trainees by the group
trainer.
Regulation 95A(2) defines ‘trainee’, ‘building
and construction industry’, ‘group trainer’, ‘registered
provider’ and ‘training agreement’. The definitions are
consistent with the ACT’s vocational training scheme as set out by the
Vocational Education and Training Act 1995.
Regulation 95A(3)
identifies 11 September 2003 as the expiry date of regulation
95A.
Clause 14 and 15
Clause 14 introduces modifications to the
Workers Compensation Act 1951 in the form of a schedule. Clause 15
introduces Schedule 4, which addresses the status of work experience students
under the Workers Compensation Act 1951.
Section 245 of the Act
enables regulations to be made to modify the operation of Chapter 16 of the Act,
Transitional, to address matters the Executive considers not already, or
adequately, dealt with in Chapter 16.
The Schedule clarifies the
Workers Compensation Act 1951 to ensure that students in the workplace on
work experience programs (however described) are not considered to be
workers.
Prior to the Workers Compensation Amendment Act 2001 (the
Amendment Act) work experience students were not covered by the workers
compensation scheme. The amendments made by the Amendment Act to ensure that
individuals being trialled by employers before being employed were covered by
the Workers Compensation Act 1951 (section 14 of the Act) left the
position of work experience students unclear.
Work experience students
participating in work placements are covered by insurance arrangements entered
into by the educational institution they attend. Because the educational
institution bears the risk of injury to work experience students, employers are
more willing to provide work experience opportunities to students than if the
employers were required to provide workers compensation coverage for the
students.
An amendment to section 14 of the Act to clarify the position
of work experience students has been included in the Statute Law Amendment Bill
2002. It is expected that this Bill will be introduced later in the current
sittings. However, given that work experience students were not intended to be
covered by the Act and have not been covered in the past, to ensure that
schools’ work experience programs can continue in the meantime, this
regulation is being made as a transitional measure pending passage of the
Bill.