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This is a Bill, not an Act. For current law, see the Acts databases.
South Australia
Environment Protection (Waste Reform) Amendment
Bill 2017
A BILL FOR
An Act to amend the
Environment
Protection Act 1993
; and to make a consequential amendment to the
Motor
Vehicles Act 1959
.
Contents
Part 2—Amendment of Environment
Protection Act 1993
4Amendment of section
3—Interpretation
5Insertion of sections 4 to 4B
4AApproved recovered
resources
6Amendment and
redesignation of section 4—Responsibility for pollution
7Amendment of section 5—Environmental
harm
5DLiability for certain
offences from vehicles
10Amendment of section 10—Objects of
Act
11Amendment of section 13—Functions of
Authority
12Amendment of section
27—Nature and contents of environment protection policies
13Amendment of section 28—Normal procedure
for making policies
14Amendment of section 32—Certain
amendments may be made by Gazette notice only
16Amendment of section 42—Time limit for
determination of applications
17Amendment of section
45—Conditions
18Amendment of section 47—Criteria for
grant and conditions of environmental authorisations
51Conditions requiring financial
assurance
20Amendment of section 52A—Conditions
requiring closure and post-closure plans
21Amendment of section
65—Interpretation
22Amendment of section 66—Division not to
apply to certain containers
23Amendment of section 72—Certain
containers prohibited
25Amendment of section 87—Powers of
authorised officers
26Amendment of section 88—Warrants other
than special powers warrants
88APowers of senior authorised
officers to investigate illegal dumping etc
28Amendment of section 93—Environment
protection orders
29Amendment of section 93A—Environment
protection orders relating to cessation of activity
30Amendment of section 119—False or
misleading information
31Amendment of section
139—Evidentiary
32Amendment of section
140—Regulations
Part 2—Amendment of Motor Vehicles
Act 1959
2Amendment of section
139D—Confidentiality
Schedule 2—Further amendment of
Environment Protection Act 1993—penalty provisions
The Parliament of South Australia enacts as
follows:
This Act may be cited as the Environment Protection (Waste Reform)
Amendment Act 2017.
This Act will come into operation on a day to be fixed by
proclamation.
In this Act, a provision under a heading referring to the amendment of a
specified Act amends the Act so specified.
Part 2—Amendment
of Environment Protection
Act 1993
4—Amendment
of section 3—Interpretation
(1) Section 3(1), after the definition of appropriate person
insert:
approved recovered resource—see section 4A;
(2) Section 3(1), after the definition of director
insert:
disposal, of waste or other matter—see subsection
(4);
(3) Section 3(1), definition of pollutant, (d)—delete
paragraph (d) of the definition and substitute:
(d) anything declared by regulation to be a pollutant for the purposes of
this Act (following consultation by the Minister on the regulation with
prescribed bodies in accordance with the regulations); or
(e) anything declared by an environment protection policy to be a
pollutant for the purposes of this Act,
(4) Section 3(1), definition of pollutant—after "not
to be a pollutant" insert:
for the purposes of this Act
(5) Section 3(1), definition of pollute, (a)—after
"deposit" insert:
, dispose of
(6) Section 3(1), definition of pollute, (b)—after
"depositing," insert:
disposal,
(7) Section 3(1), after the definition of repealed environment
law insert:
resource recovery, in relation to waste or other matter,
means—
(a) reusing the waste or matter; or
(b) recycling the waste or matter; or
(c) recovering energy or other resources from the waste or
matter;
(8) Section 3(1), after the definition of spouse
insert:
treatment, of waste or other matter—see subsection
(4);
unauthorised stockpiling, of waste or other matter—see
subsection (5);
(9) Section 3(1), definition of vehicle—delete the
definition and substitute:
vehicle includes—
(a) any vessel or aircraft; and
(b) a vehicle within the meaning of the
Road
Traffic Act 1961
;
vessel includes a vessel within the meaning of the
Harbors
and Navigation Act 1993
;
(10) Section 3(1), definition of waste—delete the
definition and substitute:
waste—see section 4;
waste management hierarchy—see section 4B;
waste transport business means a waste transport business
(category A) or a waste transport business (category B), each within the meaning
of Schedule 1 Part A clause 3;
(11) Section 3(1), after the definition of water
insert:
water protection area—see section 61;
(12) Section 3—after subsection (3) insert:
(4) For the
purposes of this Act, unless the contrary intention appears—
(a) a reference to the disposal of waste or other matter
includes a reference to stockpiling or abandoning the waste or matter;
and
(b) a reference to the treatment of waste or other matter
includes a reference to the treatment of waste or other matter for resource
recovery; and
(c) a reference to
the treatment of waste or other matter for resource recovery is a
reference to the treatment of the waste or matter in some way—
(i) to recover material from the waste or matter that may be reused or
recycled; or
(ii) to recover energy or other resources from the waste or matter;
or
(iii) to prepare the waste for further treatment to recover material from
the waste or matter that may be reused or recycled or to recover energy or other
resources from the waste or matter,
and includes, but is not limited to, sorting, shredding, crushing,
compacting or packaging the waste or matter; and
(d) a reference to waste or matter of a particular kind
includes a reference to material that contains waste or matter of that kind to a
significant extent.
(5) For the purposes of this Act, unauthorised stockpiling
of waste or other matter will be taken to have occurred if a maximum allowable
stockpile limit imposed by or under this Act in relation to the waste or other
matter has been exceeded.
5—Insertion
of sections 4 to 4B
After section 3 insert:
4—Waste
(1) For the purposes of this Act, waste
means—
(a) any discarded, dumped, rejected, abandoned, unwanted or surplus
matter, whether or not intended for sale or for purification or resource
recovery by a separate operation from that which produced the matter;
or
(b) any matter declared by regulation to be waste for the purposes of this
Act (following consultation by the Minister on the regulation with prescribed
bodies in accordance with the regulations); or
(c) any matter declared by an environment protection policy to be waste
for the purposes of this Act,
whether or not of value.
(2) However, waste does not include—
(a) an approved recovered resource whilst it is being dealt with in
accordance with the declaration of that resource—see section 4A; or
(b) anything declared by regulation or an environment protection policy
not to be waste for the purposes of this Act,
even though the resource or the thing so declared might otherwise, but for
the declaration, fall within the definition of waste in subsection
(1).
4A—Approved recovered
resources
(1) The Authority
may, by notice in the Gazette, declare that specified matter constitutes an
approved recovered resource for the purposes of this Act and
therefore does not, while it is being dealt with in accordance with the
declaration, constitute waste for the purposes of this Act.
(2) Regulations may be made in relation to declarations under this section
and may, without limiting the generality of
subsection (1)
, provide for—
(a) the manner and form of applications for declarations; and
(b) application fees relating to declarations; and
(c) the criteria against which applications will be determined;
and
(d) the provision of further information by applicants; and
(e) the imposition of conditions of declarations; and
(f) the term and renewal of declarations; and
(g) the grounds for refusing applications; and
(h) the variation or revocation of declarations by further notice in the
Gazette; and
(i) the circumstances in which declarations may be varied or
revoked.
4B—Waste management hierarchy
In this Act, a reference to the waste management hierarchy is
a reference to an order of priority for the management of waste in
which—
(a) avoidance of the production of waste; and
(b) minimisation of the production of waste; and
(c) reuse of waste; and
(d) recycling of waste; and
(e) recovery of energy and other resources from waste; and
(f) treatment of waste to reduce potentially degrading impacts;
and
(g) disposal of waste in an environmentally sound manner,
are pursued in order with, first, avoidance of the production of waste, and
second, to the extent that avoidance is not reasonably practicable, minimisation
of the production of waste, and third, to the extent that minimisation is not
reasonably practicable, reuse of waste, and so on.
6—Amendment
and redesignation of section 4—Responsibility for
pollution
(1) Section 4—delete "or deposited" and substitute:
, deposited or disposed of
(2) Section 4—delete "or depositing" and substitute:
, depositing or disposal
(3) Section 4—redesignate the section as amended by this section as
section 5C and relocate it so that it follows section 5B
7—Amendment
of section 5—Environmental harm
Section 5(1)(b)—delete paragraph (b) and substitute:
(b) anything declared by regulation to be environmental harm for the
purposes of this Act (following consultation by the Minister on the regulation
with prescribed bodies in accordance with the regulations); and
(c) anything declared by an environment protection policy to be
environmental harm for the purposes of this Act.
After section 5C (as redesignated under
section 6
of this Act) insert:
5D—Liability for certain offences from
vehicles
(1) If—
(a) an activity is carried on—
(i) in, at or from a vehicle; or
(ii) in connection with the use of a vehicle; and
(b) the activity results in a principal offence,
the owner of the vehicle is guilty of an offence against this section and
is liable to the same penalty as is prescribed for the principal offence and the
expiation fee (if any) that is fixed for the principal offence also applies in
relation to the offence against this section.
(2) However, the owner of a vehicle and the person who committed the
principal offence (the alleged principal offender) are not both
liable through the operation of this section to be found guilty of, or to
expiate, an offence arising out of the same circumstances, and consequently a
finding of guilt in relation to, or expiation by, the owner exonerates the
alleged principal offender and conversely a finding of guilt in relation to, or
expiation by, the alleged principal offender exonerates the owner.
(3) An expiation
notice or expiation reminder notice given under the
Expiation
of Offences Act 1996
to the owner of a vehicle for an alleged offence against this section
involving the vehicle must be accompanied by a notice inviting the owner, if he
or she was not the alleged principal offender, to provide the issuing authority
specified in the notice, within the period specified in the notice, with a
statutory declaration—
(a) setting out the
name and address of the person who the owner believes to have been the alleged
principal offender; or
(b) if he or she
had transferred ownership of the vehicle to another prior to the time of the
alleged principal offence and has complied with the
Motor
Vehicles Act 1959
or the
Harbors
and Navigation Act 1993
(as the case may require) in respect of the transfer—setting out
details of the transfer (including the name and address of the
transferee).
(4) If the vehicle is owned by 2 or more persons—
(a) a prosecution for an offence against this section may be brought
against 1 of the owners or against some or all of the owners jointly as
co-defendants; and
(b) if the case for the prosecution is proved and a defence is not
established, the defendant or each of the defendants who does not establish a
defence is liable to be found guilty of an offence against this
section.
(5) Before
proceedings are commenced against the owner of a vehicle for an offence against
this section, the informant must send the owner a notice—
(a) setting out particulars of the alleged principal offence;
and
(b) inviting the owner, if he or she was not the alleged principal
offender or the owner of the vehicle at the time of the alleged principal
offence, to provide the informant, within 21 days of the date of the
notice, with a statutory declaration setting out the matters referred to in
subsection (3)(a)
and
(b)
.
(6)
Subsection (5)
does not apply to—
(a) proceedings commenced where an owner has elected under the
Expiation
of Offences Act 1996
to be prosecuted for the offence; or
(b) proceedings commenced against an owner of a vehicle who has been named
in a statutory declaration under this section as the alleged principal
offender.
(7) Subject to
subsection (8)
, in proceedings against the owner of a vehicle for an offence against this
section, it is a defence to prove—
(a) that, in consequence of some unlawful act, the vehicle was not in the
possession or control of the owner at the time of commission of the alleged
principal offence; or
(b) that the owner
provided the informant with a statutory declaration in accordance with an
invitation under this section.
(8) The defence in
subsection (7)(b)
does not apply if it is proved that the owner made the declaration knowing
it to be false in a material particular.
(9) If—
(a) an expiation notice is given to a person named as the alleged
principal offender in a statutory declaration under this section; or
(b) proceedings are commenced against such a person,
the notice or summons, as the case may be, must be accompanied by a notice
setting out particulars of the statutory declaration that named the person as
the alleged principal offender.
(10) The particulars of the statutory declaration provided to the alleged
principal offender must not include the address of the person who provided the
statutory declaration.
(11) In proceedings against a person named in a statutory declaration
under this section for the offence to which the declaration relates, it will be
presumed, in the absence of proof to the contrary, that the person was present
in or at the vehicle at the time at which the alleged principal offence was
committed.
(12) In proceedings against the owner of a vehicle or the alleged
principal offender for an offence against this Act, an allegation in the
information that a notice was given under this section on a specified day will
be accepted as proof, in the absence of proof to the contrary, of the facts
alleged.
(13) For the purposes of this section, an activity consisting of the
disposal of waste or other matter to the environment will be presumed, in the
absence of proof to the contrary, to have been carried on in connection with the
use of a vehicle if the waste or matter has been disposed of to the environment
and the vehicle was seen arriving at the place of disposal before the disposal
or leaving that place after the disposal.
(14) This section does not apply in relation to the disposal of waste or
other matter by a passenger of a taxi or a train, tram, bus, ferry, passenger
ship, or other public transport vehicle, that was being used for a public
purpose at the time.
(15) In this section—
owner of a vehicle—
(a) in the case of a vessel within the meaning of the
Harbors
and Navigation Act 1993
, has the same meaning as in section 4(1) of that Act, and includes
the operator of the vessel within the meaning of that Act;
(b) in the case of a vehicle within the meaning of the
Road
Traffic Act 1961
, has the same meaning as in section 5(1) of that Act, and includes
the operator of the vehicle within the meaning of that Act;
principal offence means—
(a) an offence against section 34 (contravening a mandatory provision of
an environment protection policy); or
(b) an offence against—
(i) Part 8 Division 2; or
(ii) Part 9; or
(c) an offence prescribed by regulation.
Section 5A—delete the section
10—Amendment
of section 10—Objects of Act
(1) Section 10(1)—after paragraph (a) insert:
(ab) to ensure that all reasonable and practicable measures are taken to
protect, restore and enhance the quality of the environment having regard to the
principles of ecologically sustainable development; and
(2) Section 10(1)(b)—delete "to ensure that all reasonable and
practicable measures are taken to protect, restore and enhance the quality of
the environment having regard to the principles of ecologically sustainable
development," and substitute:
in particular, to ensure that, as far as is reasonably practicable, the
following measures are taken:
(3) Section 10(1)(b)(i)(A)—delete subsubparagraph (A) and
substitute:
(A) by programs to encourage and assist action by industry, public
authorities and the community aimed at pollution prevention, clean production
and technologies and resource recovery; and
(AB) by programs to encourage and assist industry, public authorities and
the community to apply the waste management hierarchy; and
(4) Section 10(1)(b)(i)(B), second dot-point—delete "transportation,
treatment and disposal of waste; and" and substitute:
handling, storage, treatment, transfer, transportation, receipt or disposal
of waste and other pollutants;
(5) Section 10(1)(b)—after subparagraph (i) insert:
(iaa) to promote the circulation of materials through the waste management
process and to support a strong market for recovered resources—
(A) by programs to encourage and assist industry, public authorities and
the community to engage in resource recovery; and
(B) by regulating resource recovery; and
(C) by regulating the handling, storage, treatment, transfer,
transportation, receipt or disposal of waste or other matter; and
(D) by preventing the unauthorised stockpiling of waste or other
matter;
(6) Section 10(1)(b)(ia) to (viii) (inclusive)—delete "; and"
wherever occurring and substitute in each case:
;
11—Amendment
of section 13—Functions of Authority
Section 13(1)(f)—after "licences" insert:
or other authorisations
12—Amendment
of section 27—Nature and contents of environment protection
policies
(1) Section 27(1)—delete "in accordance with this Division" and
substitute:
as contemplated by this Act or
(2) Section 27(4)(c)—after "modification, a" insert:
code,
(3) Section 27(4)(d)—delete "or another administering agency" and
substitute:
, another administering agency, an authorised officer or a prescribed
person or body;
(4) Section 27—after subsection (4) insert:
(5) If an environment protection policy refers to a code, standard or
other document, the code, standard or other document has effect as if it formed
part of the policy.
(6) Copies of each environment protection policy and of each code,
standard or other document referred to in an environment protection policy must
be kept available for inspection by the public, without charge and during
ordinary office hours, at an office or offices specified in the
regulations.
(7) In any legal proceedings, evidence of the contents of an environment
protection policy or of a code, standard or other document referred to in an
environment protection policy may be given by production of a document certified
by the Authority as a true copy of the policy, code, standard or other
document.
13—Amendment
of section 28—Normal procedure for making policies
Section 28(8)—delete "subsection (3)" and substitute:
subsection (6)
14—Amendment
of section 32—Certain amendments may be made by Gazette notice
only
Section 32(1)—after paragraph (b) insert:
(ba) if the Minister considers it necessary to amend the policy in
consequence of—
(i) an amendment to this Act or the making, variation or revocation of
regulations under this Act or the making, amendment or revocation of another
environment protection policy; or
(ii) the commencement or amendment of a prescribed Act; or
Section 33—delete the section
16—Amendment
of section 42—Time limit for determination of
applications
Section 42—after subsection (2) insert:
(3) If an application for an authorisation involves an activity for which
a financial assurance under section 51 is required and the financial assurance
has not been obtained at the time that the application is made under this Act,
the time period under subsection (1) will not commence until the Authority
receives the prescribed details in relation to the financial
assurance.
17—Amendment
of section 45—Conditions
(1) Section 45(3)(b)—after subparagraph (ii) insert:
(iia) if, in the case of a condition imposing a maximum allowable
stockpile limit, the Authority considers it necessary to impose or vary the
condition in order to promote the circulation of materials through the waste
management process; or
(2) Section 45(5), penalty provision—delete the penalty provision
and substitute:
Maximum penalty:
(a) in the case of a body corporate—$120 000;
(b) in the case of a natural person—$60 000.
Expiation fee:
(a) for a prescribed condition—the corresponding prescribed
expiation fee;
(b) for any other condition (other than a reporting-deadline
condition)—$1 000.
(3) Section 45—after subsection (5) insert:
(6) Where the holder of
an authorisation (including the holder of an authorisation that has been
suspended) fails to comply with a reporting-deadline condition, the Authority
may, by notice in writing, require the holder to make good the default and, in
addition, to pay the Authority the amount prescribed as a penalty for
default.
(7) A penalty for default payable under
subsection (6)
is recoverable by the Authority as a debt due to the Authority.
(8) If a requirement under a provision of this Act relates to activities
carried on under an environmental authorisation, the requirement will, subject
to the terms of the provision—
(a) apply in relation to such activities, whether the environmental
authorisation authorising the activities was granted before or after the
commencement of the provision; and
(b) prevail over conditions of such an environmental authorisation to the
extent of any inconsistency.
(9) In this section—
reporting-deadline condition means a condition of a kind
referred to in section 52(1)(a) requiring a specified report on the results of
tests or monitoring to be made to the Authority before a specified
date.
18—Amendment
of section 47—Criteria for grant and conditions of environmental
authorisations
(1) Section 47(2)—before "(3) and (4)" insert:
(2b),
(2) Section 47—after subsection (2a) insert:
(2b) If an application for an environmental authorisation involves an
activity for which a financial assurance under section 51 is required, the
following provisions apply:
(a) the Authority must defer its determination of the application under
this Act until the applicant provides the Authority with the prescribed details
in relation to the financial assurance; and
(b) if those details are not provided to the Authority as required, the
Authority must, subject to the regulations, refuse the application for
environmental authorisation under this Act.
Section 51—delete the section and substitute:
51—Conditions requiring financial
assurance
(1) Subject to this
section, the Authority may, by conditions of an environmental authorisation,
require the holder of the authorisation to provide the Authority with a
financial assurance in the form of any 1 or more of the following:
(a) a bond;
(b) a specified pecuniary sum;
(c) a policy of insurance;
(d) a letter of credit or a guarantee given by a bank;
(e) any other form of security approved by the Authority,
to be used, realised or claimed against by the Authority for costs or
expenses, or for loss or damage, incurred or suffered by the Authority or any
other person in the event of—
(f) the holder of
the authorisation contravening a requirement imposed by or under this Act;
or
(g) a failure by
the holder of the authorisation to take specified action within a specified
period to achieve compliance with this Act.
(2) The Authority may impose or vary a condition under this section at any
time.
(3) The Authority must, in determining whether to impose or vary a
condition under this section or the nature, term or any other particulars of, a
financial assurance, have regard to the following:
(a) if there is a risk of—
(i) environmental harm; or
(ii) unauthorised stockpiling or abandonment of waste or other
matter,
associated with the activity authorised under the environmental
authorisation or any activity previously undertaken at the place to which the
authorisation relates—the degree of that risk;
(b) the likelihood of action being required to make good any resulting
environmental damage, to decommission, dismantle or remove stockpiled or
abandoned plant or equipment or to deal with any other stockpiled or abandoned
waste or other matter;
(c) the nature and cost of such action and the length of time such action
is likely to take (including following cessation of the activity so
authorised);
(d) whether the holder of the authorisation has previously contravened
this Act (whether or not in connection with the activity authorised under the
environmental authorisation) and if so, the nature, number and frequency of the
contraventions;
(e) the Authority's reasonable estimate of the total of the likely amounts
involved in satisfaction of the purposes for which the financial assurance is
required;
(f) the depreciation of the value of the financial assurance over
time;
(g) any other matters considered relevant by the Authority or prescribed
by regulation.
(4) The Authority may (without limitation) require a financial assurance
to extend to such time as it is satisfied that no clean up or remediation will
be required as a result of the activity undertaken under the environmental
authorisation (including following cessation of the activity).
(5) The following provisions apply in relation to a condition requiring a
financial assurance in the form of a bond or pecuniary sum:
(a) the Authority may not require the lodgement of a bond or pecuniary sum
representing an amount greater than the Authority's reasonable estimate of the
total of the likely costs, expenses, loss and damage that might be incurred or
suffered by the Authority or other persons as a result of failure by the holder
of the authorisation to satisfy the conditions of discharge or repayment of the
bond or pecuniary sum;
(b) a pecuniary sum lodged with the Authority must be paid into the
Environment Protection Fund and the amount of the pecuniary sum that has not
been repaid or forfeited to the Fund must, on satisfaction of the conditions of
repayment, be repaid to the holder of the authorisation together with an amount
representing interest calculated in accordance with the regulations;
(c) if the holder of an authorisation fails to satisfy the conditions of
discharge or repayment of the bond or pecuniary sum, the
Authority—
(i) may determine that the whole or part of the amount of the bond or
pecuniary sum is forfeited to the Environment Protection Fund;
(ii) may apply from the Fund any money so forfeited in payments for or
towards the costs, expenses, loss or damage incurred or suffered by the Crown, a
public authority or other person as a result of the failure by the holder of the
authorisation;
(iii) may, in the case of a pecuniary sum, on the expiry or termination of
the authorisation and when satisfied that there is no reasonable likelihood of
any or further valid claims in respect of costs, expenses, loss or damage
incurred or suffered as a result of the failure of the holder of the
authorisation, repay any amount of the pecuniary sum that has not been repaid or
forfeited to the Fund.
(6) The following provisions apply in relation to a condition requiring a
financial assurance in the form of a policy of insurance:
(a) the Authority may require that it be a joint insured or a beneficiary
of the insurance;
(b) the Authority will be taken to have an insurable interest in the
subject matter covered by the insurance policy.
20—Amendment
of section 52A—Conditions requiring closure and post-closure
plans
(1) Section 52A(2)—delete subsection (2) and substitute:
(2) The Authority may only impose conditions under this section on an
environmental authorisation if satisfied that the conditions are reasonably
required for the purpose of—
(a) preventing or minimising environmental harm; or
(b) dealing with stockpiled or abandoned waste or other matter,
that may result from the activity undertaken pursuant to the authorisation
after the activity has ceased.
(2) Section 52A(4)(c)—after "environmental harm" insert:
or dealing with stockpiled or abandoned waste or other matter
21—Amendment
of section 65—Interpretation
Section 65, definition of spiritous liquor—delete
"spiritous liquor" and substitute:
spirituous liquor
22—Amendment
of section 66—Division not to apply to certain
containers
Section 66—delete "spiritous liquor" and substitute:
spirituous liquor
23—Amendment
of section 72—Certain containers prohibited
Section 72(2)—delete "recovery, recycling, reprocessing or reuse" and
substitute:
resource recovery
After section 85 insert:
85A—Senior authorised officers
(1) An authorised officer holding appointment under section 85(1) may be
appointed by the Authority as a senior authorised officer for the purposes of
section 88A by endorsement to that effect in the officer's instrument of
appointment.
(2) The endorsement may
be subject to such conditions as the Authority thinks fit and specifies in the
endorsement.
(3) The Authority may, at any time, revoke the endorsement, or vary or
revoke a condition specified in the endorsement or impose a further such
condition.
25—Amendment
of section 87—Powers of authorised officers
(1) Section 87(2)—after paragraph (c) insert:
(d) construction, demolition, excavation or other earthworks, or any
activity carried out in preparation for construction, demolition, excavation or
other earthworks, is being or has been carried on at the premises
and—
(i) the works or activity has or may have disturbed, uncovered or produced
waste or pollutants of a kind prescribed by regulation; or
(ii) a potentially contaminating activity of a kind prescribed by
regulation has previously taken place there.
(2) Section 87—after subsection (9) insert:
(10) In this section—
construction includes alteration or refurbishment.
26—Amendment
of section 88—Warrants other than special powers
warrants
(1) Section 88—delete "justice" wherever occurring and
substitute:
magistrate
(2) Section 88—after subsection (8) insert:
(9) This section does not apply in relation to a special powers warrant
issued under section 88A.
After section 88 insert:
88A—Powers of senior authorised officers to
investigate illegal dumping etc
(1) A senior authorised officer appointed under section 85A may apply to a
judge of the Supreme Court for a warrant authorising the exercise of powers
under this section (a special powers warrant).
(2) Subject to
subsection (8)
, the application must be made by the senior authorised officer appearing
personally before the judge following the lodging of a written
application.
(3) The grounds of the application must be verified by
affidavit.
(4) The judge may require further information to be given in relation to
the application.
(5) The judge may issue a special powers warrant if satisfied
that—
(a) there are reasonable grounds to believe that—
(i) a contravention of this Act has been, is being, or is about to be,
committed in or in relation to premises or a vehicle; or
(ii) something may be found in premises or in or on a vehicle that
constitutes or may constitute, or will or may give rise to, evidence of a
contravention of this Act,
(whether or not committed at the premises or in connection with the
vehicle) in relation to the handling, storage, treatment, transfer,
transportation, receipt or disposal of waste or other matter; and
(b) it is reasonable to do so, taking into account—
(i) the extent to which the privacy of a person would be likely to be
interfered with by the use of powers under the warrant; and
(ii) the gravity of the criminal conduct to which the investigation
relates; and
(iii) the significance to the investigation of the information sought to
be obtained; and
(iv) the likely effectiveness of the use of the powers authorised by the
warrant in obtaining the information sought; and
(v) the availability of alternative means of obtaining the information;
and
(vi) any other warrants under this Act applied for or issued in relation
to the same matter; and
(vii) any other matter that the judge considers relevant.
(a) must specify the name of the senior authorised officer on whom the
powers under the warrant are conferred (or, if the judge considers that
specifying the name may endanger the officer's safety, a code name allocated to
the officer by the judge); and
(b) may authorise the exercise of any 1 or more of the following powers
(as specified in the warrant):
(i) the power to mark waste or other matter found in specified premises or
in or on a specified vehicle or class of vehicle by—
(A) spraying or brushing paint or any other identifying substance onto the
waste or matter; or
(B) spraying, brushing or placing microdots or similar identifying objects
onto or with the waste or matter; or
(C) placing any other identifying objects with the waste or
matter,
(to enable the subsequent identification of the waste or matter at another
place following its movement there); or
(ii) the power to install a camera in, on or in relation to, specified
premises or a specified vehicle or class of vehicle or thing and use or maintain
it or cause it to be used or maintained as so installed for a specified period;
or
(iii) the power to install a GPS device in, on or in relation to a
specified vehicle or class of vehicle or specified waste or matter or a
specified class of waste or matter and use or maintain it or cause it to be used
or maintained as so installed for a specified period; or
(iv) the power to retrieve a substance, object or equipment placed or
installed, or any waste or matter marked, under a previous subparagraph;
and
(c) must specify
the period for which the warrant will be in force (being a period not longer
than 90 days); and
(d) may specify such other conditions, limitations or matters as the judge
thinks fit; and
(e) may, on application by a senior authorised officer, be varied or
renewed (and this section will apply in relation to such an application in the
same way as if it were an application for the issue of the warrant).
(7) Subject to any
conditions or limitations specified in a special powers warrant—
(a) the warrant
will be taken to authorise the senior authorised officer to enter or interfere
with any premises, vehicle or thing as reasonably required to exercise the
powers specified in the warrant; and
(b) the authority under the warrant to enter or interfere with any
premises, vehicle or thing will be taken to include the
authority—
(i) to use reasonable force or subterfuge for that purpose; and
(ii) to take any action reasonably required in respect of the premises,
vehicle or thing for the purpose of placing, installing, using, maintaining or
retrieving a substance, object or equipment to which the warrant relates;
and
(iii) to extract and use electricity for taking that action or for the use
of the substance, object or equipment; and
(c) the authority under the warrant to enter specified premises will be
taken to include the authority—
(i) to exercise any of the powers in sections 87(1)(c) to (m) (inclusive)
and 87(6) in relation to the premises, vehicle or thing (subject to the
requirement in section 87(7)); and
(ii) to exercise non-forcible passage through adjoining or nearby premises
(but not through the interior of any building or structure) as reasonably
required for the purpose of gaining entry to those specified premises;
and
(d) the powers conferred by the warrant may be exercised by the senior
authorised officer at any time and with such assistants as the officer considers
necessary.
(8) If, in the
opinion of the applicant, a special powers warrant is urgently required and it
is impracticable in the circumstances to make the application personally, the
application may be made—
(a) by telephone in accordance with
subsection (9)
; or
(b) by fax, email or other electronic means in accordance with
subsection (10)
.
(9) If an application
is made by telephone, the following provisions apply:
(a) the applicant must inform the judge of—
(i) the applicant's name and position in the Authority
(and the judge,
on receiving that information, is entitled to assume its accuracy without
further inquiry); and
(ii) the nature of the powers proposed to be exercised under the warrant
(including details of any substance, object or equipment proposed to be used);
and
(iii) the proposed duration of the warrant; and
(iv) the circumstances giving rise to the necessity for the application to
be made by telephone; and
(v) the grounds on which the warrant, or variation or renewal of the
warrant, is sought;
(b) the judge may,
on being satisfied as to the circumstances giving rise to the necessity for the
application being made by telephone and the grounds for the issue of a special
powers warrant, and on the applicant giving an undertaking to make an affidavit
verifying the application, make out and sign the warrant;
(c) the warrant is to be taken to have been issued, and comes into force,
when signed by the judge;
(d) the judge must inform the applicant of the terms of the
warrant;
(e) the applicant
must fill out and sign a warrant form (a duplicate warrant)
that—
(i) sets out the name of the judge who issued the original warrant and the
terms of the warrant; and
(ii) complies with any other requirements prescribed by
regulation;
(f) the applicant must, as soon as practicable after the issue of the
warrant, forward to the judge an affidavit verifying the application and a copy
of the duplicate warrant.
(10) If an application
is made by fax, email or other electronic means, the following provisions
apply:
(a) the application must specify—
(i) the applicant's name and position in the Authority; and
(ii) the nature of the powers proposed to be exercised under the warrant
(including details of any substance, object or equipment proposed to be used);
and
(iii) the proposed duration of the warrant; and
(iv) the circumstances giving rise to the necessity for the application to
be made by the particular means; and
(v) the grounds on which the warrant, or variation or renewal of the
warrant, is sought;
(b) the application must be accompanied (through fax, email or other
electronic means) by an affidavit made by the applicant verifying the
application;
(c) the applicant must be available to speak to the judge by
telephone;
(d) the judge is entitled to assume, without further inquiry, that a
person who identifies himself or herself as the applicant during a telephone
conversation with the judge is indeed the applicant;
(e) the judge may, on being satisfied as to the circumstances giving rise
to the necessity for the application being made by fax, email or other
electronic means and the grounds for the issue of a special powers warrant, make
out and sign the warrant;
(f) the warrant is to be taken to have been issued, and comes into force,
when signed by the judge;
(g) the judge must forward the warrant to the applicant by fax, email or
other electronic means.
(11) In this section—
microdots means identification tags etched, coded or marked
with unique identifiers (including identifiers that are discernible only on
viewing under magnification).
28—Amendment
of section 93—Environment protection orders
Section 93—after subsection (8) insert:
(8aa) If—
(a) in the case of an offence under subsection (8) of failing to comply
with an environment protection order imposing a requirement for the purpose of
securing compliance with a condition of an environmental authorisation—the
alleged offender has expiated the offence; and
(b) the act or omission the subject of the requirement continues after
that expiation,
a continuing default penalty is payable by the person for each day on which
the act or omission continues of an amount equal to one-fifth of the expiation
fee applying in respect of the offence.
(8ab) For the purposes of the continuing default penalty under
subsection (8aa), an obligation to do something is to be regarded as
continuing regardless of the fact that any period within which, or time before
which, the act is required to be done has expired or passed.
(8ac) A continuing default penalty under this section is recoverable by
the Authority as a debt due to the Authority.
29—Amendment
of section 93A—Environment protection orders relating to cessation of
activity
(1) Section 93A(1)—delete subsection (1) and substitute:
(1) The Authority may issue an environment protection order for the
purpose of—
(a) preventing or minimising environmental harm; or
(b) dealing with stockpiled or abandoned waste or other matter,
that may result from a prescribed activity of environmental significance
after the activity has ceased.
(2) Section 93A(3)—after "minimising" insert:
or the waste or other matter that it is directed towards dealing with (as
the case may be)
30—Amendment
of section 119—False or misleading information
Section 119, penalty provision—delete the penalty provision and
substitute:
Maximum penalty:
(a) if the person made the statement knowing that it was false or
misleading—
(i) in the case of a body corporate—$120 000;
(ii) in the case of a natural person—$60 000 or imprisonment
for 2 years;
(b) in any other case—
(i) in the case of a body corporate—$60 000;
(ii) in the case of a natural person—$30 000.
31—Amendment
of section 139—Evidentiary
(1) Section 139—after subsection (3) insert:
(3a) An allegation in an information that specified matter was waste or
other matter constitutes proof, in the absence of proof to the contrary, of the
matters so alleged.
(2) Section 139—after subsection (4) insert:
(4a) In any proceedings for an offence against this Act, a certificate of
an authorised officer certifying that, at a specified time—
(a) a specified vehicle was stopped or parked in a specified place;
or
(b) a specified person was the owner of a specified vehicle,
constitutes proof, in the absence of proof to the contrary, of those
matters.
32—Amendment
of section 140—Regulations
(1) Section 140(2)(a)—delete paragraph (a) and substitute:
(a) amend Schedule 1 by—
(i) inserting a provision into, substituting a provision in, or deleting a
provision from, the Schedule; or
(ii) inserting material into, substituting material in, or deleting
material from, a provision of the Schedule;
(ab) provide for the manner in which Acts or instruments may refer to a
prescribed activity of environmental significance (eg by way of an item number
or an activity (or both));
(2) Section 140(2)—after paragraph (d) insert:
(da) provide for matters relating to the identification or tracking of
waste or other matter or the handling, storage, treatment, transfer,
transportation, receipt or disposal of waste or other matter at depots,
facilities, works or any other place including—
(i) the weighing, calculation and certification of mass or volume of the
waste or matter; and
(ii) the monitoring of the handling, storage, treatment, transfer,
transportation, receipt or disposal of the waste or matter; and
(iii) the
installation, use or maintenance of cameras at depots, facilities or works;
and
(iv) the
installation, use or maintenance of GPS devices in or in relation to vehicles of
a prescribed class (including, but not limited to, vehicles used in the course
of a prescribed activity of environmental significance); and
(v) the prevention of tampering with such cameras or GPS devices;
and
(vi) the access, use or retention by the Authority or another
administering agency of information collected by such cameras or GPS
devices;
(db) provide for the furnishing to the Authority, another administering
agency or an authorised officer, of any other reports, statements, documents or
other forms of information;
(3) Section 140(2)—delete paragraph (f) and substitute:
(f) include evidentiary provisions to facilitate proof of contraventions
of this Act for the purposes of proceedings for offences;
(g) prescribe fines (not exceeding $10 000) for offences against the
regulations;
(h) prescribe expiation fees (not exceeding $1 000) for alleged offences
against the regulations.
(4) Section 140(3)—after paragraph (b) insert:
(ba) refer to, or incorporate, wholly or partially and with or without
modification, a code, standard or other document prepared or published by a
prescribed person or body, as in force from time to time or as in force at a
specified time; and
(5) Section 140(3)(c)—after "Authority" insert:
, another administering agency, an authorised officer or a prescribed
person or body
(6) Section 140—after subsection (3) insert:
(3a) If the regulations refer to a code, standard or other
document—
(a) a copy of the code, standard or other document must be kept available
for inspection by members of the public, without charge and during normal office
hours, at an office or offices specified in the regulations; and
(b) in any legal proceedings, evidence of the contents of the code,
standard or other document may be given by production of a document purporting
to be certified by or on behalf of the Minister or the Authority or another
administering agency as a true copy of the code, standard or other document;
and
(c) the code, standard or other document has effect as if it were a
regulation made under this Act.
Part 1—Preliminary
In this Schedule, a provision under a heading referring to the amendment of
a specified Act amends the Act so specified.
Part 2—Amendment of Motor Vehicles
Act 1959
2—Amendment
of section 139D—Confidentiality
Section 139D(1)(ea)—after subparagraph (ii) insert:
(iii) section 5D of the
Environment
Protection Act 1993
; or
Schedule 2—Further
amendment of Environment Protection
Act 1993—penalty provisions
Penalty provision amended |
How amended |
---|---|
Section 34(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) for a category A offence— (i) in the case of a body corporate—$250 000; (ii) in the case of a natural person—$120 000 or imprisonment
for 2 years, or both; (b) for a category B, C, D or E offence—$30 000. |
Section 34(2) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) for a category A offence— (i) in the case of a body corporate—$150 000; (ii) in the case of a natural person—$60 000; (b) for a category B offence—$4 000; (c) for a category C offence—$2 000; (d) for a category D offence—$500; (e) for a category E offence—$100. Expiation fee: (a) for a category B offence—$300; (b) for a category C offence—$200; (c) for a category D offence—$100; (d) for a category E offence—$50. |
Section 35(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$120 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$60 000. |
Section 36(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$120 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$60 000. |
Section 57A |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $40 000. |
Section 58(5) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $40 000. |
Section 60(4) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. |
Section 69(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$60 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$30 000. |
Section 69B(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. Expiation fee: $300. |
Section 69B(2) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. Expiation fee: $300. |
Section 69B(3) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. |
Section 69C(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $30 000. |
Section 69C(3) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. Expiation fee: $300. |
Section 69C(4) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. Expiation fee: $300. |
Section 69D |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. Expiation fee: $300. |
Section 70(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. Expiation fee: $300 |
Section 71(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. Expiation fee: $300 |
Section 71A |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. Expiation fee: $300 |
Section 72(3) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. Expiation fee: $300 |
Section 72(4) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. Expiation fee: $300 |
Section 79(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$2 000 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$500 000 or imprisonment for
4 years, or both. |
Section 79(2) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$500 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$250 000. |
Section 80(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$500 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$250 000 or imprisonment for
2 years, or both. |
Section 80(2) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$250 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$150 000. |
Section 82(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$60 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$30 000. |
Section 82(2) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$15 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$4 000. Expiation fee: $300. |
Section 83(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$250 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$150 000. |
Section 83A(2) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$120 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$60 000. |
Section 89(2) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. |
Section 90(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $15 000. |
Section 90(2) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $15 000 or imprisonment for 2 years, or
both. |
Section 92 |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. |
Section 93(8) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) if the order was issued for the purpose of securing compliance with a
requirement imposed by or under this Act and a penalty is fixed by this Act for
contravention of that requirement—that penalty; (b) if the order was issued in relation to a domestic activity for the
purpose of securing compliance with the general environmental
duty—$500; (c) if the order was issued in relation to a domestic activity in
circumstances specified in an environment protection policy or for the purpose
of giving effect to an environment protection policy—$500; (d) in any other case—$4 000. Expiation fee: (a) if the order was issued for the purpose of securing compliance with a
requirement imposed by or under this Act and an expiation fee is fixed by this
Act for contravention of that requirement—that expiation fee; (b) if the order was issued in relation to a domestic activity for the
purpose of securing compliance with the general environmental
duty—$100; (c) if the order was issued in relation to a domestic activity in
circumstances specified in an environment protection policy or for the purpose
of giving effect to an environment protection policy—$100; (d) in any other case—$300. |
Section 93(9) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. |
Section 93A(5) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$120 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$60 000. |
Section 93A(8) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. |
Section 94(5) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. |
Section 96(5) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $8 000. |
Section 99(8) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$120 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$60 000. |
Section 101(6) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. |
Section 103H(6) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$120 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$60 000. |
Section 103J(11) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$120 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$60 000. |
Section 103O(6) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000. |
Section 103S(3) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $8 000. |
Section 103U |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $15 000. |
Section 103W(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $15 000. |
Section 103W(2) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $15 000. |
Section 103X(2) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $4 000 or imprisonment for 1 year. |
Section 103X(3) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$60 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$30 000 or imprisonment for
1 year. |
Section 103Y(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $8 000. |
Section 103Y(3) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $8 000. |
Section 103Z(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $8 000. |
Section 103Z(2) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $8 000. |
Section 103Z(4) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $8 000. |
Section 103ZA |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $8 000. |
Section 103ZB |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: (a) in the case of a body corporate—$60 000; (b) in the case of a natural person—$30 000. |
Section 120A(1) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $15 000. |
Section 121 |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $8 000. |
Section 135(4) |
Delete the penalty provision and substitute: Maximum penalty: $1 000. Expiation fee: $500. |