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HERITAGE BILL 2004
LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY FOR
THE
AUSTRALIAN CAPITAL
TERRITORY
REVISED
HERITAGE BILL
2004
EXPLANATORY
STATEMENT
Presented
by
Mr Bill Wood
MLA
Minister for Urban Services
HERITAGE BILL 2004
EXPLANATORY STATEMENT
Outline
The Heritage Bill 2004 presents a new set of principles and processes
for conserving significant heritage places and objects in the ACT. The approach
provided in the Land (Planning and Environment) Act 1991 (Land Act) has
given rise to concern that has led to a review of the heritage provisions. The
review commenced in 1999 as part of a wider review of the heritage function in
the ACT, including consultation with the community and key stakeholders. A
discussion paper was circulated to the community in 2001. The early legislative
basis for reform was the release of the Exposure Draft Heritage Bill
2002. Following the release of the Exposure Draft, substantial further
consultation took place. The Heritage Bill 2004 incorporates some elements of
the exposure draft bill but makes significant reforms to processes dealing with
the registration of heritage places and objects and the conservation of heritage
places and objects in the ACT.
The Bill also incorporates, where
practicable, the latest developments and practices dealing with heritage
conservation that have been adopted by other jurisdictions around Australia in
recent years.
This Bill contains provisions for the establishment of the
Heritage Council; a Heritage Register (separate from the Territory Plan);
registration processes for entry of significant heritage places and objects in
the Register; heritage guidelines (which set out requirements for conserving the
heritage significance of a place or object), offences relating to damaging
heritage; heritage directions and enforcement; obligations of public
authorities; and incentives for heritage conservation. It covers natural and
cultural heritage (including Aboriginal heritage) and deals with both heritage
places and objects.
This Bill sets out new provisions for protection and
conservation of heritage places and objects in the Territory. The current
provisions relating to heritage are in Part 3 of the Land (Planning and
Environment) Act 1991 (the Land Act), numerous other provisions in that Act
and the Heritage Objects Act 1991 (the Objects Act). This Bill repeals
Part 3 of the Land Act (and many other provisions throughout the Land Act
relating to the registration of heritage places) and establishes a new scheme
for the conservation of heritage places and objects and heritage registration.
The consequential amendments to the Land Act also deal with the integration of
heritage matters into the development assessment process, providing
opportunities for a more efficient and flexible scheme but involving the role of
the Heritage Council in conservation of heritage values. The Objects Act is to
be repealed, as heritage objects will be treated in the same manner as heritage
places in the Heritage Act 2004.
The Bill establishes the Heritage
Council that has the principal functions of conserving significant heritage
places and objects in the Territory. The Council has specific functions in the
registration process of nominated, provisionally registered and registered
heritage places and objects. It keeps the Heritage Register and makes heritage
guidelines on the conserving the heritage significance of places and objects.
It has an important advisory role in the protection of significant heritage
places and objects affected by land development in the Territory.
The new
Heritage Register will be on-line and available to the ACT Planning and Land
Authority to enable the Authority to instantly be informed of changes in the
Heritage Register and aspects relating to land, planning and development in the
Territory, eg issuing of any heritage guidelines.
This explanatory
statement includes an appendix on the new registration process, outlining all of
the steps in the process, and an appendix explaining the involvement of the
Heritage Council in providing advice on a development application within the
land development and approval process of the ACT Planning and Land Authority.
Offences
The Bill contains a number of penalties. These offences dealing mainly
with damage to heritage places and objects, publishing restricted information
and regarding enforcement provisions. There is also a number of strict
liability offences. A strict liability offence under section 23 of the Criminal
Code means that there are no fault elements for any of the physical elements of
the offence. That means that conduct alone is sufficient to make the defendant
culpable. However, under the Criminal Code, all strict liability offences will
have a specific defence of mistake of fact. Clause 23(3) of the Criminal Code
provides that other defences may still be available for use in strict liability
offences. Strict liability offences do not have a mental element, termed
‘mens rea’. However, the actus reus, the physical actions, do have
a
mental element of their own, for example, voluntariness. For that reason,
the
general common law defences of insanity and automatism still apply as
they go
towards whether a person has done something voluntarily, as well as
whether they
intended to do the act.
Revenue/Cost
Implications
There are no additional costs involved in the Bill as
any costs related to the administration of the new system are to be met within
existing financial resources.
Formal
Clauses
Part 1- Preliminary
Clauses 1 and 2 are formal requirements. They deal
with the short title of the Bill and its commencement
provisions.
Clause 3 specifies the main objects of the Act. It
also provides that functions must be exercised under the Act with the notion of
retaining the natural and cultural heritage significance of the places and
objects to which the legislation applies and also to achieve the greatest
sustainable benefit to the community.
Clause 4 specifies that the
Heritage Council must not register an individual tree under this Bill. This is
to avoid duplication with provisions of the Tree Protection Act 2004. This does
not prevent the registration of a place at which a tree or trees forms part of
the heritage significance of the place.
Clause 5 provides for a
dictionary of terms used within the Bill and notifies that the dictionary is
located at the end of the Bill.
Clause 6 advises that the notes
included within the Bill are explanatory and do not form part of the Bill
.
Clause 7 provides that other legislation applies in relation to
offences against this Act, in particular the Criminal
Code.
Part 2 Important
Concepts
This part defines the major concepts used in the Act
that relate to heritage and heritage conservation. Most other definitions are
included in the dictionary.
Clause 8 defines “place”
and “object”. A place can be for example, a natural site or a
structure made by people. Most of the entries in the ACT Heritage Register will
be places.
Clause 9 defines “Aboriginal place” and
“Aboriginal object.” The definition of Aboriginal place and object
refers to places with their significance derived from Aboriginal tradition or
the history, including contemporary history of any Aboriginal
people.
Clause 10 provides for the meaning of “heritage
significance” based on the criteria of heritage significance. These
criteria are applied to the assessment of a place or object to determine whether
the place or object has heritage significance.
Clause 11 defines
the meaning of “registered” places and objects to be if they are
provisionally registered or registered under Part 6 of the Act.
Clause
12 specifies the meaning of “registration details” in the
registration of a place or object including the provision of a statement of
heritage significance.
Clause 13 defines the meaning of
“interested person” in terms of the Act. This term is used in
relation to the registration process and of various stages when information is
to be provided for opportunity to comment.
Clause 14 defines “representative
Aboriginal organisation” to be those organisations declared as such by the
Minister. It also establishes an arrangement where the Minister can set criteria
to assess whether an organisation is a representative Aboriginal organisation.
After setting these criteria, any declaration about representative organisations
must be made in accordance with them. The criteria are to be disallowable in
the Legislative Assembly.
Clause 15 specifies the use and
application of the term “conservation management
plan”.
Part 3 Heritage
Council
Part 3 deals with provisions on the membership and functions of the
Heritage Council.
Clause 16 establishes the ACT Heritage
Council (the Council).
Clause 17 establishes the composition of the Council. This
provision seeks to establish the expert and representative nature of the
Council. The Council is to have eleven members.
Clause 18 defines the
functions of the Council, and provides examples that do not limit the power of
the Council.
Clause 19 allows for the procedures of the Council to be set by
regulation.
Part 4 Heritage
Register
This Part establishes the ACT Heritage Register and the recording of
information to be entered in the Register. The Heritage Register is now not
part of the Territory Plan. There are consequential amendments to the Land Act
to allow for the Heritage Register to be removed from the Territory Plan. The
Heritage Council is to be responsible for the Heritage Register and the heritage
registration process. The Heritage Register will include heritage
objects.
Clause 20 provides that the Council must keep a register
of heritage places and heritage objects. It also specifies the details that
must be included in the process of registering a place or object, including a
statement of heritage significance. The Heritage Register must also include
each heritage guideline, each heritage direction and each enforcement
order.
Clause 21 enables the Council to approve an internet site
for this Act and to publish a copy of the Heritage Register on the internet
site. The public can have access and inspect the heritage register.
Clause 22 provides that restricted
information on the register must not be disclosed publicly. It may be made
available for inspection or copying only if approved by the Heritage
Council.
Clause 23 provides that proof is not required about a matter
recorded in the register if a copy of the matter is published on the internet
site as approved in section 20.
Clause 24 provides that the
Council may correct a mistake or an omission in the heritage register subject to
the requirements of the regulations.
Part 5 Heritage
guidelines
The legislation provides for the development and application of Heritage
Guidelines. These are formulated by the Heritage Council and set the policy for
how registered places and objects with heritage significance are to be
conserved. They may control how development is to take place in an area which
is a heritage place or contains a heritage object. They will be
performance-based but may include mandatory provisions.
Clause 25 allows the Heritage Council to
make heritage guidelines about how the heritage significance of a registered
place or object is to be conserved. Guidelines may also be made about places or
objects nominated for provisional registration. Such guidelines are
disallowable instruments.
Clause 26 provides for the application of heritage guidelines to
functions under the Heritage Act 2004 in relation to heritage places and
objects. The application of guidelines is especially relevant in the giving of
advice to the ACT Planning and Land Authority about the impact of development
applications under section 58, the making of a heritage order, the making of a
heritage agreement and the giving of a heritage direction.
Part 6 Registration of places and
objects
This Part provides for the process of registration of heritage places
and objects. There are a number of steps and time periods involved in the
nomination and final registration of a heritage place or object. These steps
are the initial nomination, provisional registration, public consultation,
report to the Minister and then final registration which is subject to a
potential appeal to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal. The process of
determining registration entails notification and consultation.
Provisional registration is a process to put in place immediate
protection while the more extended registration process, including consultation
and possible appeals, is undertaken. Protection of these
provisionally-registered places is provided through the notification process (s
32) and through the operation of Part 10.
The Heritage Council will
administratively provide a notice of each nomination to the ACT Planning and
Land Authority and each interested person. There are particular provisions
concerning consultation for the registration of Aboriginal places and objects.
These steps are illustrated in a flow chart at Appendix A.
Division 6.1 Provisional registration
Clause 27 allows anyone to make a nomination to the council for
a provisional change to the register.
Clause 28 allows anyone to
apply to the Council for an urgent decision on the nomination for a place or
object. A member of the Legislative Assembly can apply to obtain an urgent
decision on a nominated place or object. The Council must use its best
endeavours to decide within 20 working days after receiving the application
whether or not to provisionally register the nominated place or
object.
Clause 29 provides that where a nomination is made in
relation to an Aboriginal place or object before making a decision about the
nominated provisional change to the register, the Heritage Council must consult
and consider the views of each representative Aboriginal organisation about the
nomination.
Clause 30 requires the Heritage Council to decide
whether or not to provisionally register each nominated place or object only if
it is satisfied that the place or object may have heritage significance. A
decision by the Council not to provisionally register a place or object is
appellable to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal.
Clause 31
requires the Heritage Council in provisionally registering a place or object, to
enter the registration details of the place or object in the register and
indicate that the entry is provisional.
Clause 32 requires the
Heritage Council to prepare a written notice about each provisional
registration. The notice which is a notifiable instrument must be published in
a daily newspaper as soon as possible.
Clause 33 states that the
provisional registration is for a period of five months beginning on the day the
place or object is provisionally registered.
Clause 34 provides
for the extension of provisional registration by the Heritage Council making an
application to the Minister to extend the period of provisional registration.
The Minister would then make an extension. An extension would end after eight
months after the place or object was provisionally registered. The decision
concerning an extension is reviewable by the AAT.
Div 6.2 Registration
Clause 35 requires that a notice under section 34 (notice of
decision about provisional registration) must include an invitation to make
comments about the registration of the place or object within 4 weeks after the
day it is notified. The Heritage Council is required to consider any comments
made to the Council about the registration before the end of the consultation
period.
Clause 36 requires the Council to report to the Minister
after the period of provisional registration on the place or object and provide
the Council’s view on whether the place or object should be
registered.
Clause 37 allows the Minister to direct the Council to
give further consideration to the matters raised in or arising from a report
given by the Council to the Minister in relation to the proposed registration of
a place or object. The Minister must give the Council a direction in writing
within 15 working days after the report is received by the
Minister.
Clause 38 requires the Council to decide whether
or not to register a provisionally registered place or object. Registration can
only occur after the Council has considered any direction by the Minister under
section 37 and it is satisfied that it has heritage significance. This decision
is reviewable by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal.
Clause 39 requires the Council in registering a place or object
to enter the registration details in the heritage register and remove any
indication that the earlier registration was provisional. Registration can only
occur if the appeal period has expired or any appeal has been finally decided
and is unsuccessful.
Clause 40 requires the Council to prepare a
written notice about its decision concerning the registration of a place or
object within three working days. The notice is a notifiable instrument. The
Council must apply its best endeavours to give a copy of the notice to each
interested person within ten working days.
Part 7 Cancellation of
Registration
Part 7 provides for the cancellation of an entry in the Heritage
Register of a registered place or object. This Part is to provide for cases
where a place or object has lost its heritage significance through processes or
events such as damage or destruction, eg loss in a bushfire.
Clause
41 allows anyone to make a proposal to the Heritage Council to cancel the
registration of a place or object under Division 6.2. The Heritage Council may
refuse to consider frivolous or vexatious cancellation
proposals.
Clause 42 requires the Heritage Council to give written
notice of a proposal to cancel a registration. The notice is a notifiable
instrument. The notice must be published in a daily newspaper as soon as
practicable.
Clause 43 requires the Heritage Council to consult
and consider the views of each representative Aboriginal organisation about a
proposal to cancel a registration.
Clause 44 provides that a
notice under section 44 must invite comments on the proposal to the Heritage
Council within four weeks after the day the notice is notified. The Heritage
Council must have regard to any such comments about the proposed
cancellation.
Clause 45 requires the Heritage Council to consider
whether or not to cancel the registration of the place or object. The Heritage
Council’s decision to cancel is based on the assessment that the place or
object has no longer heritage significance. This decision is reviewable by the
AAT.
Clause 47 provides for the notification of a decision
about cancellation and the procedures to be followed by the Heritage Council in
notifying interested persons.
Clause 48 deals with the partial
cancellation of a place. The Heritage Council must amend the registration
details for the place if a place is partially
cancelled.
Part 8 Reporting discovery of
unregistered Aboriginal places and objects
This Part contains
provisions dealing with the reporting of the discovery of unregistered
Aboriginal places and objects.
Clause 49 requires a person who
discovers a place or object and has reasonable grounds for believing it is an
Aboriginal place or object, to report the discovery to the Heritage Council
within one week after the discovery. It is an offence of strict liability to
contravene this section.
Clause 50 provides specific exceptions to
Clause 49 regarding the obligation to report unregistered Aboriginal places and
objects.
Part 9 Restricted
information
This part deals with restricted information on the register pertaining
to registered heritage places and objects. There may be limited access to
information of registered places and objects on the register. In general,
restricted information is mainly concerned with information relating to
Aboriginal places and objects.
Clause 51 provides that the
Heritage Council may in writing declare particular information about a place or
object’s location to be restricted information. The Council may make the
declaration only if it is satisfied that public disclosure of the information
would be likely to have a substantial adverse effect on the heritage
significance of the place or object.
Clause 52 provides that
information about the location or nature of an Aboriginal place or object is
restricted information unless the Heritage Council declares in writing that it
is not restricted.
Clause 53 provides that a person must not
publish restricted information about a place or object unless the information is
published in accordance with an approval under section 56. It is an offence to
publish restricted information.
Clause 54 allows the Heritage
Council to approve the publication of restricted information about a place or
object if it is satisfied on reasonable grounds that the publication will not
have a substantial adverse effect on the heritage significance of the place or
object. This decision is reviewable by the Administrative Appeals
Tribunal.
Clause 55 provides that if land is offered for sale the
interested person for the land or someone considering an interest in the land
can apply to the Heritage Council for access to restricted information relevant
to the conservation and use of the land. The Council must give the applicant
the restricted information.
Part 10 Land Development
Applications
This Part deals with the conservation of heritage places and objects in
the land development process in the Territory. The provisions reflect the
relationship between the ACT Planning and Land Authority and the Heritage
Council in dealing with land development applications and approvals. The
consequential amendments to the Land Act will have the effect of obliging the
Planning and Land Authority to notify the Heritage Council of a development
application related to a nominated or registered place. The Heritage Council in
turn provides advice to the Planning and Land Authority about the effect of the
proposed development on the heritage significance of the place or object and on
any conditions to be applied to the development approval to avoid or minimise
such impacts. In the case of a nominated place, the advice will reflect what is
known about the heritage values of the place or object. The Planning and Land
Authority will be obliged to ensure that the impact of any proposed development
on the heritage significance of the place is avoided or minimised, that is,
reduced to the smallest possible amount or degree. A flow chart illustrating
these steps is at Appendix B.
Clause 56 defines the meaning of
“development” as a development application under Part 6 of the Land
Act.
Clause 58 applies where the Heritage Council decides that a
development would affect the heritage significance of a nominated or registered
place or object. It allows the Council to consider development applications as
notified to the Council by the ACT Planning and Land Authority. The Heritage
Council must consider the development application and notify the ACT Planning
and Land Authority within 15 working days of the receipt of the written notice
on the development application.
Part 11 Heritage
directions
These provisions establish a range of directions dealing with heritage
matters. They allow the Minister to make directions to intervene in situations
where the heritage values of places and objects in the Territory are at risk, or
are being adversely affected by the actions (or inaction) of the owner of the
place or object in question.
Clause 60 empowers the Minister to
give directions to the owner or occupier of a place to do or not to do something
to conserve the heritage significance of the place or object. The Council is
required to recommend the giving of the direction and the Minister is required
to be satisfied that there is a serious and imminent threat to the heritage
significance of the place or object. The direction can be given in relation to
an unregistered place or object as well as a registered place or object. The
decision of the Minister to make a direction is reviewable by the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal.
Clause 61 specifies that a heritage direction
may only be given to the owner or occupier of a place by leaving it secured in a
conspicuous position at the place.
Clause 62 allows the Supreme
Court on application by the Minister to extend the period for which a heritage
direction is in force.
Clause 63 provides that it is an offence to
intentionally contravene a heritage direction. It is a strict liability offence
if a person commits an offence in contravening a requirement of a heritage
direction.
Clause 64 enables the Territory, where a person served
with a heritage direction contravenes the direction, to enter the place or land
where the place or object is located and take action as stated in the heritage
direction. The Minister is required to endeavour to give each interested person
written notice of the action proposed before the action is
commenced.
Clause 65 provides that an authorised person may apply
to the Magistrates Court to make an order to enable the officer to exercise
functions under section 64(2).
Part 12 Civil Protection of
heritage
This Part provides civil remedies for the protection of heritage by
giving the Heritage Council standing to take action on behalf of the Territory
in the Supreme Court or someone else with the Supreme Court’s leave.
Clause 66 enables the Heritage Council on behalf of the Territory or
someone else with the leave of the Supreme Court to apply for a heritage order.
A person other than the Council can only get standing if they have asked the
Heritage Council to apply for a heritage order and the Council has failed to do
so within a reasonable time, and it is in the public interest that the person be
given standing.
Clause 67 enables the Court to make an order, on
an application under section 65, restraining the respondent from contravening a
defined offence and about anything else the Court considers appropriate for
giving effect to the order. The Court must be satisfied that the respondent has
contravened, is contravening, or is likely to contravene a defined offence and
an order is necessary to avoid material harm to the heritage significance of a
place or object. The section states what a “defined offence
provision” means with respect to sections 49, 53, 63, 71, 72, 73 and 92 of
the Heritage Act 2004.
Clause 68 allows the Court to make an
interim order under section 67 before deciding an application for an
order.
Clause 69 provides that in deciding the amount of costs to be
awarded against a party to a proceeding under section 67, the Supreme Court must
have regard to whether the proceeding brought before it is in the public
interest.
Clause 70 enables the Supreme Court to order an
applicant for a heritage order under section 71 to give (i) security for the
payment of costs that may be awarded against the applicant if the application is
subsequently dismissed or (ii) an undertaking about the payment of an amount
that may be awarded against the applicant under section 70.
Clause
71 empowers the Court to award damages against an applicant for heritage
orders where it is satisfied that there was no relevant contravention, the
respondent suffered loss or damage as a result of the order being made, and it
is otherwise appropriate to do so.
Part 13 Heritage
Offences
This Part establishes a number of heritage offences related to the act
or conduct of diminishing the heritage significance of places and
objects.
Clause 72 provides that it is an offence if a person
engages in conduct that diminishes the heritage significance of a registered
place or object. There are three situations related to the act of the offence:
the person is reckless about whether the conduct diminishes the heritage
significance; the person is negligent or the person directly engages in conduct
that diminishes the heritage significance of a place or object an offence is
committed. The latter situation is a strict liability offence.
Clause
73 provides that it is an offence if a person engages in conduct that causes
damage to an Aboriginal place or object and is reckless about whether the
conduct would diminish the heritage significance of the place. It is also an
offence if a person is negligent about whether the conduct would diminish the
heritage significance of the place or object. If a person directly commits the
offence it is a strict liability offence.
Clause 74 provides a number
of exceptions to the offences under this Part.
Part
14 Enforcement
This part provides for a
number of powers to enable authorised officers to enforce the provisions of the
Act.
Division 14.1 General
Clause 75 provides for the definitions of “connected”,
“occupier” and “offence” as applied to this Part of the
legislation.
Division 14.2 Authorised people
Clause 76 empowers the chief executive to
appoint persons as authorised persons for the Act.
Clause 77 requires the chief executive to give each authorised
person an identity card that states the person’s name and appointment as
an authorised person. An offence is committed if the authorised person on
ceasing to be an authorised person does not return the person’s identity
card to the chief executive.
Division 14.3 Powers of authorised people
Clause 78 establishes the procedures
required for an authorised officer to obtain consent to entry, and the
requirement for giving acknowledgement of that consent to the occupier of the
premises.
Clause 80 establishes the procedures
required for an authorised officer to obtain consent to entry, and the
requirement for giving acknowledgement of that consent.
Clause 81
specifies the general powers an authorised person who enters premises may do on
entry to premises.
Clause 82 specifies the powers under which an
authorised person who enters premises may seize things. A person commits an
offence if the person interferes with a seized thing or anything containing a
seized thing to which access has been restricted.
Clause 83
enables an authorised person to require a person to state their name and address
providing the authorised officer has tell the person the reason for the
requirement. It is an offence for a person to contravene this
requirement.
Division 14.4 Search warrants
Clause 84 makes provision for an authorised person to apply to a
magistrate for a warrant to enter premises. The section also sets out the power
for a magistrate to issue a warrant. The warrant expires after 14 days of the
warrant’s issue.
Clause 85 enables an authorised person to
apply for a warrant by fax, phone, radio or other form of distant communication
if the authorised person considers it necessary because of urgent circumstances
or other special circumstances. The section also sets out the procedures for
recording a warrant issued by a distant application (fax, phone radio or other
form of communication).
Clause 86 requires that before an
authorised person enters premises under a search warrant announce that the
authorised person is authorised person to enter the premises. Such an
announcement is not required if the authorised person believes on reasonable
grounds that immediate entry is required on safety grounds.
Clause 87
provides that the authorised person or a person assisting must make
available to the occupier of the premises a copy of the warrant and a document
setting out the rights and obligations of the person.
Clause 88
entitles the occupier of a premises to be present while the search is being
conducted, providing the person does not impede the search.
Division 14.5 Return and forfeiture of things
seized
Clause 89 requires the authorised person to give as soon as
practicable a receipt to the person whose thing has been
seized.
Clause 90 provides for the circumstances in which a thing
found at a premises entered under a search warrant may be moved to another place
for examination or processing. The thing may be moved to another place for
examination or processing for no longer than 72 hours but an extension may be
sought if the thing cannot be examined or processed within 72
hours.
Clause 91 provides that a person is entitled to inspect a
thing that has been seized and if it is a document to take extracts from it or
make copies of it.
Clause 92 sets out the circumstances in which that
a thing that has been seized must be returned to its owner or reasonable
compensation be paid to the owner by the Territory for the loss of the
thing
Division 14.6 Miscellaneous
Clause 93 enables the Council where there are reasonable grounds
to give an order requiring a person to give information or produce documents to
the Council required for the administration of the Act. These are termed
information discovery orders.
Clause 94 that it is an offence if a
person contravenes an information discovery order.
Clause 95
requires that in the exercise of a function under this Part, an authorised
person must take all reasonable steps to ensure that the authorised person and
any person assisting the authorised person causes as little damage or detriment
as practicable.
Clause 96 enables a person to claim compensation
from the Territory if the person suffers a loss or expense due to the exercise
or purported exercise of a function under this Part by an authorised
person.
Part 15 Heritage
agreements
This Part deals with the provision of heritage agreements. These allow
the Minister to enter into an agreement with a person to conserve the heritage
significance of a registered place or object.
Clause 97 allows the Minister to enter
into a heritage agreement with the owner of a registered place or object, on the
advice of the Council, and to make regulations exempting that place (or land
where a place or object is located) from specified provisions of a Territory
law. Where it is proposed to introduce such regulations, consultation will
occur with the relevant government agencies and authorities.
Clause 98 sets out what provisions that
may be included in a heritage agreement.
Clause 99 provides that the
Minister may, in the advice of Heritage Council amend or end a heritage
agreement by consent of the parties, or as provided in the original
agreement.
Clause 100 provides that heritage agreements are to last for the
time stated in the agreement.
Clause 101 provides that a heritage agreement will also bind future
owners of the land.
Clause 102 allows a party to an agreement to seek Supreme Court
orders to require the other party to comply with the agreement.
Clause 103 allows the Heritage Council to provide financial,
technical or other assistance to owners of heritage places and objects, as it
considers necessary.
Part 16 Heritage and public
authorities
These provisions relate to how ACT public authorities are to take
action to identify and manage heritage places and objects that are their
responsibility.
Clause 104 adopts the meaning of “public
authority” as defined in the Annual Reports (Government Agencies) Act
2004.
Clause 105 defines heritage place and object in relation to a public
authority. Places and objects controlled, owned or occupied by an authority
that are registered, meet the significance criteria or are Aboriginal places and
objects meet the definition.
Clause 106 obliges public authorities to give a report each year as
to what heritage places and objects they have held during the course of the
year. The report will not need to be given in the first year after the
provision commences (allowing time for an audit) and after the first report,
subsequent reports need only be on changes to what is held.
Clause 107 establishes a requirement for public authorities to
conduct a heritage audit within 2 years of the commencement of the Act. A
written report must be prepared about the audit to the Council within 3 years of
the commencement of the Act.
Clause 108 empowers the Council to require
public authorities to prepare conservation management plans for places and
objects held by the authority.
Part 17 Review of
decisions
This Part provides for the review of decisions of the Heritage Council
by the Administrative Appeals Tribunal.
Clause 109 provides that a
decision listed in respect to the following sections is a reviewable decision:
sections 30, 34, 38, 46, 54, and 60(including a decision to make or not a
heritage direction or a decision to revoke or not revoke a heritage
direction).
Clause 110 requires the decision maker of a reviewable
decision to provide a written notice of the decision to each interested person
for the place or object to which the decision relates. The notice to the person
must conform with the requirements of the Administrative Appeal Tribunal Act
1989.
Clause 111 enables a person to apply to the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal for a review of a reviewable decision.
Part
18 Miscellaneous
Clause 112 provides that the Minister must ensure the keeping or
provide for the keeping of a repository for Aboriginal objects owned by the
Territory.
Clause 113 provides that an executive officer of a
corporation commits an offence where the corporation contravenes a provision of
the act and under specified circumstances in the legislation. There are certain
specified factors that a court must have regard to in deciding whether the
executive officer has contravened the Act.
Clause 114 provides
that a document may be given to the Heritage Council if it is given to the chief
executive.
Clause 115 provides legal immunity for members of the
heritage Council and authorised officers who act in good faith in the exercise
of their powers.
Clause 116 empowers the Council to approve forms for the Act. This
will include forms for nomination of places and objects, if it becomes
necessary. An approved form is a notifiable instrument.
Clause 118 provides the standard power for
the Minister to determine fees for the Act.
Clause 116 allows the
Heritage Council to delegate its functions to the chief executive (of the
Department administering the Act).
Clause 119 establishes a general regulation-making power for the
Executive for this Act. Specific issues to be dealt with by regulation are
dealt with in the body of the Act.
Clause 120 establishes a requirement for review of the Act in 5
years, with a report to be made to the Assembly in 6 years.
Part 19 Transitional
provisions
Clause 121 defines commencement day, Heritage Objects Act, old
heritage register objects, old heritage register places, the Land Act and the
Territory Plan for this Part.
Clause 122 provides for the repeal
of the Heritage Objects Act 1991.
Clause 123 makes provision for the consequential amendments of Acts
and statutory instruments in schedule 1 of this Act.
Clause 124 deals
with the application for registration of old heritage places under the Land
Act.
Clause 125 provides that a place on the old register is to be
treated as registered under division 6.2 of the Heritage Act with relevant
details of the old registration to be entered accordingly. To overcome any
doubt the Heritage Council may amend the register to reflect the operation of
this section.
Clause 126 provides that a conservation requirement
specified in an old heritage places register is taken to be a heritage guideline
for the place.
Clause 127 provides that an object included in an
old heritage objects register is treated as registered under 6.2 of the Heritage
Act with relevant details of the old registration to be entered accordingly. To
overcome any doubt the Heritage Council may amend the register to reflect the
operation of this section.
Clause 128 provides that a conservation
requirement specified in an old heritage objects register is taken to be a
heritage guideline for the object.
Clause 129 provides that
restricted information on an old heritage places register or an old heritage
object register continues to be restricted information.
Clause 131
provides that the regulations may modify the operation of this Part to make
provision in relation to any matter that is not already or not adequately dealt
with in this Part.
Clause 132 provides that Part 19 expires one
year after the commencement day of the Heritage Act 2004.
Schedule 1 Consequential
amendments
Part 1.1 Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act
1989
Item 1.1 provides for the inclusion of the Heritage Act 2004 as a
statute in which an application for review can be made to the Tribunal under
Division 4.5.
Item 1.2 provides for the inclusion of the Heritage Act
2004 as a statute in which an application for review can be made to the Tribunal
under Division 4.5.
Part 1.2 Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review)
Act 1989
Item 1.3 omits in section 9(2)(b)(iii) the Heritage Objects Act 1991
and substitutes the Heritage Act 2004.
Part 1.3 Community Title Act 2001
Item 1.4 omits section 10(3) and substitutes the following: “the
Planning and Land Authority may refuse to approve a community title scheme if
the proposal is inconsistent with conservation requirements under the Heritage
Act or the Land Act.”
Part 1.4 Environment Protection Act 1997
Item 1.5 substitutes in section 4(1) paragraph (b) the definition of
“area of high conservation value”, the following the “a place,
other than a structure or group of structures, registered under the Heritage Act
2004; or”
Item 1.6 in section 4(1) substitutes the definition of
“heritage register” for “heritage places register” as
provided in section 18 of the Heritage Act 2004.
Item 1.7 in section
164(2) substitutes the following: “A certificate purporting to be signed
by the Planning and Land Authority stating that an area is an area in the
Territory Plan for the definition of area of high conservation value, paragraph
(a), paragraph (c), or paragraph (d) is evidence of the matters
stated.”
Part 1.5 Land (Planning and Environment) Act
1991
These amendments mainly result from omitting the Heritage Part (Part 3)
and related provisions from the Land Act.
Item 1.8 replaces in Section 5 in
the definition of background papers, paragraph (b) (iii) the following
“any recommendation or submission made under section 17 Consultation with
Heritage Council and”. The change is required because the Heritage
Register is now not part of the Land Act and because there is now a process in
which recommendations or submissions can be made to the Minister for Planning on
development proposals.
Item 1.9 replaces in Section 5 in the definition
of background papers, paragraph (c)(i) with “a direction mentioned in
paragraph (b)(i); or”
Item 1.10 replaces in Section 5 in the
definition of background papers, paragraph (c)(iii) with the following
“any recommendation or submission made under section 17 Consultation with
Heritage Council and”. The change is required because the Heritage
Register is now not part of the Land Act and because there is now a process in
which recommendations or submissions can be made to the ACT Planning and Land
Authority.
Item 1.11 Section 5 in the definition of background papers,
paragraph (d) is omitted as the process is no longer operative.
Item
1.12 provides for the renumbering of paragraphs and subparagraphs of section
5.
Item 1.13 provides for the re-naming of section 7 to be Object of
plan
Item 1.14 provides in Object of Plan for the omission of section
7(3)(d) as the heritage register is now not to be part of the Territory
Plan.
Item 1.15 provides for the renumbering of paragraphs and
subparagraphs of section 7 (3) when the Act is next published.
Item 1.16
omits subsection 9(3) as the heritage register is no longer to be part of the
Territory Plan.
Item 1.17 provides for the renumbering when the Act is
next published.
Item 1.18 omits sections 10 and 11 as the interim
heritage register will no longer exist and the heritage register is no longer to
be part of the Territory Plan.
Item 1.19 omits section 17 to be replaced
by this section which deals with consultation with the Heritage Council. It
provides that when preparing a draft variation plan ACTPLA must consult the
Heritage Council and consider any recommendation or submission made by the
Heritage Council in relation to the variation.
Item 1.20 substitutes for
section 19A(1) “A consultation notice under section 19 must state whether
or not section 9 (Effect of draft variation) applies in relation to the draft
variation.”
Item 1.21 omits from section 24(1)(e) “or the
heritage council”.
Item 1.22 omits Part 3 as provisions dealing
with heritage are now covered by the Heritage Act 2004.
Item 1.23
substitutes in the definition of development in section 222, paragraph (c)
“the carrying out of work that would affect the landscape of the land
except if the land (i) is leased for residential purposes only; and (ii) is not
registered, or nominated for provisional registration, under the Heritage Act
2004”.
Item 1.24 inserts new paragraphs 227(1)(ba) and (bb) dealing
with each notice given to the Heritage Council under section 229 of a
development application that relates to place or object that is registered, or a
nominated for provisional registration, and the giving of advice by the Heritage
Council to the ACT Planning and Land Authority about the effect of each
development.
Item 1.25 provides for the renumbering of paragraphs and
subparagraphs of section 227(1) when the Act is next published.
Item 1.26
substitutes in section 229(4)(a) the requirement that the ACTPLA must give the
Heritage Council a notice of each application, a copy of each application and a
copy of each objection or comments about the development that relates to a place
registered, or nominated for registration, under the Heritage Act
2004.
Item 1.27 inserts a new section 229(2)(1A) requiring the ACTPLA, if
an application relates to a place or object that is registered, or nominated for
provisional registration, to give a copy of the direction that applications be
submitted to the Minister, to the Heritage Council.
Item 1.28 substitutes
in section 229(2)(a) the requirement that ACTPLA must give the Minister
information and documents received by ACTPLA in relation to an application
including any advice received under the Heritage Act 2004.
Item 1.29
substitutes in section 229B(6) new provisions for dealing with the call-in
powers of the Minister in relation to development applications and ACTPLA. The
provision requires the Minister to have the advice of the Heritage Council about
the effect of a development on the heritage significance of a place and has the
comments of the ACT Planning and Land Authority.
Item 1.30 provides for
the renumbering of paragraphs and subparagraphs of section 229B(6) when the Act
is next published.
Item 1.31 substitutes a revised section 231 dealing
with matters to be considered by the ACT Planning and Land Authority. This
includes advice given by the Heritage Council to the Authority and on how the
Authority is to minimise the impact on the heritage significance of the proposed
development. It includes a requirement for ACTPLA to consult with
representative Aboriginal organisations if advice from the Heritage Council
indicates development would be affected by heritage guidelines relating to a
place or object of significance to Aboriginal people.
Item 1.32 inserts a
new section 244A which provides that if an application relates to a place
registered, or nominated for provisional registration, under the Heritage Act
2004, the Minister must tell the Heritage Council about the decision to approve
or refuse the application and give the Council a copy of the
decision.
Item 1.33 amends subsection 245(3)(g) by inserting the heritage
significance of a place registered, or nominated for provisional registration,
under the Heritage Act 2004.
Item 1.34 substitutes in section 253(b)
approval with respect to a place registered, or nominated for provisional
registration, under the Heritage Act 2004.
Item 1.35 inserts new section
254(3)(ba) to provide the ACT Planning and Land Authority to give a written
notice to the Heritage Council if the order sought relates to a place or object
registered, or nominated for provisional registration, under the Heritage Act
2004.
Item 1.36 provides for the renumbering of paragraphs of section
254(3) when the Act is next published under the Legislation Act.
Item
1.37 inserts a new section 255 (2)(ba) to require the ACT Planning and Land
Authority to give a written notice to the Heritage Council if the order sought
relates to a place or object registered, or nominated for provisional
registration, under the Heritage Act 2004.
Item 1.38 provides for the
renumbering of paragraphs of section 255(2)(ba) when the Act is next published
under the Legislation Act.
Item 1.39 inserts a new section 275(1A)
removing any doubt that the Heritage Council to apply to the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal for a review of a decision mentioned in subsection 275
(1).
Item 1.40 provides for the renumbering of subsections when the Act
is next published under the Legislation Act.
Item 1.41 substitutes in
section 282A(1) that the application may be made to the AAT for review of a
decision mentioned in subsection (3) or (4) or a decision mentioned in schedule
4,part 4.2, column 4.
Item 1.42 inserts a new section dealing with the
omission of the heritage places register through a Territory Plan Variation.
The ACT Planning and Land Authority is required to make amendments to the
Territory Plan as a result of the omission of the heritage places register
through the Heritage Act 2004. This is to be done by a disallowable instrument.
Item 1.43 omits Schedule 2 from the Land Act as it is now placed as a
section in the Heritage Act 2004.
Item 1.44 omits in schedule 4, part
4.2, items 1-9.
Item 1.45 provides for the renumbering of paragraphs and
subparagraphs of schedule 4, part 4.2 when the Act is next
published.
Item 1.46 substitutes in schedule 5, item 1 (Activities
subject to orders) the reference to the Heritage Act 2004.
Item 1.47
omits from the Dictionary the definitions of “Aboriginal place”,
“Aboriginal object”, “Aboriginal tradition”,
“chairperson”, “compensation”,
“conservation”, “deputy chairperson” and “expert
member”. These terms as no longer required.
Item 1.48 substitutes
in the Dictionary definitions of “heritage council”, “heritage
object”, “heritage objects register”, “heritage
place”, “heritage places register” and “heritage
significance” as per the Heritage Act 2004.
Items 1.49 omits the
listed terms from the Dictionary as they are now no longer
applicable.
Part 1.6 Land (Planning and
Environment)(Bushfire Emergency) Regulations 1992
Item1.50 substitutes in Regulation 7(5), definition of
specified land, paragraph (b) the following “leased for residential
purposes and is not a place registered under the Heritage Act
2004”.
Part 1.7 Land (Planning and
Environment) Regulations 1992
Item 1.51 substitutes the following in Regulation 40(4(b) of the Land
(Planning and Environment) Regulations that “(i) affects a place that is
registered or nominated for provisional registration under the Heritage Act 2004
and (ii) would be inconsistent with a heritage guideline applying to the place;
or”
Part 1.7 Legislation Act
Item 1.52 inserts new definitions of “heritage council” and
“heritage register”.
Part 1.8 Territory Plan
Item 1.53 omits the Heritage places register from the Territory
Plan.
Part 1.9 Roads and Public Places Act 1937
Item 1.54 inserts a new section 15BA which would apply if an
application under section 15B relates to the placement of an object at a place
registered, or nominated for provisional registration, under the Heritage Act
2004. It requires the Minister to give a copy of the application to the
Heritage Council and consider any written recommendations given by the
Council.
Part 1.10 Utilities Act 2000
Item 1.55 inserts a new section 110A dealing with network operations
affecting the heritage significance of a place or object whereby if a notice
under section 109 or section 110 is about network operations that affect place
or object that is registered, or nominated for provisional registration, under
the Heritage Act 2004, the utility must give the Heritage Council a copy of the
notice before the operations begin.
Item 1.56 inserts a new section 125A
requiring if a notice under section 125 is required the utility must also give a
copy of the notice to the Heritage Council as soon as
practicable.
The Dictionary as provided in section 3 of the Heritage Act
2004 sets out the definitions for the legislation.
Proposed Appendix
A
Revised
Registration Process for Heritage Places and Objects
Nomination by any member, group or
organisation, of the public and the Heritage Council
or Report from survey or discovery of Aboriginal site
Initial Assessment of Values by HC
using statutory heritage
criteria
(Including consulting with Aboriginal
people when appropriate)
AAT appeal possible - Standing to parties whose
interested are affected
Nomination rejected and statement of
reasons issued
Minister or Assembly or developer* can
seek Urgent Assessment because of a proposed development
(link to DA stop clock)
HC invites comment by ACTPLA on
proposed registration
Normal Process Urgent
Processing
Assembly involvement –
Guidelines are disallowable
Minister may request further
consideration of issues by HC
Minister refers back to HC with any views for final
registration or rejection
Registration process
completed if no appeals
Notification, advertised in
paper
Stakeholders directly
notified
Final Registration or Rejection by
HC
Implementing AAT decision to Register or not to
Register
AAT appeal possible
Standing to parties whose interests are
affected
Consideration by Minister
Consultation with community and interested
parties ACTPLA, including notification to MLAs
4 weeks, with stakeholders and public
generally
Provisional Registration by HC
Protection starts
now
(notification instrument, also advertised in
paper. Note max provision Registration 5 mths)
Application of
Guidelines
previously prepared by HC
Final assessment by council,
report on consultation and recommendation to
Minister
PROPOSED Appendix
B
REVISED DA
PROCESS
Initial Stage:
Developer contacts ACTPLA with proposed
development concept
Pre Heritage Act Statutory Process
(Regulations under Land
Act)
• Discussion with all relevant parties
(including developer, HC &ACTPLA)
• Refer
developer to heritage register entry and relevant
guidelines
• If nominated, may request urgent
decision to clarify heritage status
• Initial
consultation by developer
• Heritage impact
statement prepared by developer to HC
format
• Sign off (by HC amongst others) on
HQSD report (in principle agreement as long as the DA is consistent with
HQSD)
Formal Statutory Process
of development application
Developer lodges DA with
ACTPLA
Normal appeal process to AAT plus
Heritage Council has standing to appeal
Use of call-in power by Minister for
Planning –
Planning Minister makes
final decision taking into consideration Heritage Minister and
Heritage Council advice
DA process completed
ACTPLA makes decision
with advice of HC on heritage aspects of
DA
HC Advice taking account of impact
of the proposal and relevant guidelines
All relevant comments to
HC
Including views of ACTPLA
ACTPLA receives HC
advice
ACTPLA advertises
DA
ACTPLA Refers DA to
HC
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