C2004C00173
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DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992
Compilation Information

Disability Discrimination Act 1992
Act No. 135 of 1992 as amended
This compilation was prepared on 1 July 2004 taking into account
amendments up to Act No. 52 of 2004
The text of any of those amendments not in force on that date is appended in
the Notes section
The operation of amendments that have been incorporated may be affected by
application provisions that are set out in the Notes section
Prepared by the Office of Legislative Drafting, Attorney-General's
Department, Canberra
Long Title
An Act relating to discrimination on the ground of disability
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 Part 1Preliminary
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 1 Short title [see Note 1]
This Act may be cited as the Disability Discrimination Act 1992.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 2 Commencement [see Note 1]
- (1)
- Sections 1 and 2 commence on the day on which this Act receives the
Royal Assent.
- (2)
- Subject to subsection (3), the remaining provisions of this Act
commence on a day or days to be fixed by Proclamation.
- (3)
- If a provision of this Act does not commence under subsection (2)
within the period of 12 months beginning on the day on which this Act receives
the Royal Assent, it commences on the first day after the end of that period.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 3 Objects
The objects of this Act are:
- (a)
- to eliminate, as far as possible, discrimination against persons on the
ground of disability in the areas of:
(i) work, accommodation, education, access to premises, clubs and sport;
and
(ii) the provision of goods, facilities, services and land; and
(iii) existing laws; and
(iv) the administration of Commonwealth laws and programs; and
- (b)
- to ensure, as far as practicable, that persons with disabilities have the
same rights to equality before the law as the rest of the community; and
- (c)
- to promote recognition and acceptance within the community of the
principle that persons with disabilities have the same fundamental rights as
the rest of the community.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 4 Interpretation
- (1)
- In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:
accommodation includes residential or business accommodation.
administrative office means:
- (a)
- an office established by, or an appointment made under, a law of the
Commonwealth; and
- (b)
- an office established by, or an appointment made under, a law of a
Territory; and
- (c)
- an appointment made by the Governor-General or a Minister otherwise than
under a law of the Commonwealth or of a Territory; and
- (d)
- an appointment as a director of an incorporated company that is a public
authority of the Commonwealth;
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but does not include:
- (e)
- an office of member of the Assembly, member of the Executive, or Minister
within the meaning of the Australian Capital Territory (Self-Government) Act
1988; or
- (f)
- an office of member of the Legislative Assembly, member of the Council or
Minister of the Territory, within the meaning of the Northern Territory
(Self-Government) Act 1978; or
- (g)
- an office of member of the Legislative Assembly within the meaning of the
Norfolk Island Act 1979; or
- (h)
- an office or appointment in the Australian Public Service.
associate, in relation to a person, includes:
- (a)
- a spouse of the person; and
- (b)
- another person who is living with the person on a genuine domestic basis;
and
- (c)
- a relative of the person; and
- (d)
- a carer of the person; and
- (e)
- another person who is in a business, sporting or recreational relationship
with the person.
auxiliary aid means equipment (other than a palliative or
therapeutic device) that provides assistance to a person with a disability to
alleviate the effect of the disability.
club means an association (whether incorporated or
unincorporated) of persons associated together for social, literary, cultural,
political, sporting, athletic or other lawful purposes that provides and
maintains its facilities, in whole or in part, from the funds of the
association.
Commission means the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity
Commission established by the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission
Act 1986.
commission agent means a person who does work for another person
as the agent of that other person and who is remunerated, whether in whole or
in part, by commission.
Commissioner means the Disability Discrimination Commissioner
appointed under section 113.
committee of management, in relation to a club or a registered
organisation, means the group or body of persons (however described) that
manages the affairs of that club or organisation, as the case may be.
Commonwealth agency means an agency within the meaning of the
Privacy Act 1988.
Commonwealth employee means a person who:
- (a)
- is appointed or engaged under the Public Service Act 1999;
- (b)
- holds an administrative office; or
- (c)
- is employed by a public authority of the Commonwealth; or
- (d)
- holds an office or appointment in the Commonwealth Teaching Service or is
employed as a temporary employee under the Commonwealth Teaching Service Act
1972; or
- (e)
- is employed under the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Act
1979, the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 or the Naval Defence
Act 1910; or
- (f)
- is a member of the Defence Force; or
- (g)
- is the Commissioner of the Australian Federal Police, a Deputy
Commissioner of the Australian Federal Police, an AFP employee or a special
member of the Australian Federal Police (all within the meaning of the
Australian Federal Police Act 1979).
Commonwealth law means:
- (a)
- an Act, or a regulation, rule, by-law or determination made under an Act;
or
- (b)
- an ordinance of a Territory, or a regulation, rule, by-law or
determination made under an ordinance of a Territory; or
- (c)
- an order or award made under a law referred to in paragraph (a) or
(b).
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Commonwealth program means a program conducted by or on behalf of
the Commonwealth Government.
contract worker means a person who does work for another person
under a contract between the employer of the first-mentioned person and that
other person.
Convention means the Discrimination (Employment and Occupation)
Convention, 1958 adopted by the General Conference of the International Labour
Organization on 25 June 1958, a copy of the English text of which is set
out in Schedule 1 of the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission
Act 1986.
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights means the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, a copy of the English text of which is
set out in Schedule 2 of the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity
Commission Act 1986.
Department means an Agency within the meaning of the Public
Service Act 1999.
disability, in relation to a person, means:
- (a)
- total or partial loss of the person's bodily or mental functions; or
- (b)
- total or partial loss of a part of the body; or
- (c)
- the presence in the body of organisms causing disease or illness; or
- (d)
- the presence in the body of organisms capable of causing disease or
illness; or
- (e)
- the malfunction, malformation or disfigurement of a part of the person's
body; or
- (f)
- a disorder or malfunction that results in the person learning differently
from a person without the disorder or malfunction; or
- (g)
- a disorder, illness or disease that affects a person's thought processes,
perception of reality, emotions or judgment or that results in disturbed
behaviour;
and includes a disability that:
- (h)
- presently exists; or
- (i)
- previously existed but no longer exists; or
- (j)
- may exist in the future; or
- (k)
- is imputed to a person.
disability discrimination has the meaning given by
sections 5 to 9 (inclusive).
discriminate has the meaning given by sections 5 to 9
(inclusive).
document includes any book, register or other record of
information, however compiled, recorded or stored.
educational authority means a body or person administering an
educational institution.
educational institution means a school, college, university or
other institution at which education or training is provided.
employment includes:
- (a)
- part-time and temporary employment; and
- (b)
- work under a contract for services; and
- (c)
- work as a Commonwealth employee; and
- (d)
- work as an employee of a State or an instrumentality of a State.
employment agency means any person who, or body that, whether for
payment or not, assists persons to find employment or other work or assists
employers to find employees or workers, and includes the Commonwealth
Employment Service.
enactment has the same meaning as in the Human Rights and
Equal Opportunity Commission Act 1986.
exemption means an exemption granted under section 55.
Federal Court means the Federal Court of Australia.
function includes duty.
institution of tertiary education means a university, technical
and further education institution or other institution at which tertiary
education or training is provided.
instrumentality of a State means a body or authority established
for a public purpose by a law of a State and includes a local government
body.
premises includes:
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- (a)
- a structure, building, aircraft, vehicle or vessel; and
- (b)
- a place (whether enclosed or built on or not); and
- (c)
- a part of premises (including premises of a kind referred to in
paragraph (a) or (b)).
President means President of the Commission.
principal means:
- (a)
- in relation to a commission agenta person for whom the commission agent
does work as a commission agent; and
- (b)
- in relation to a contract workera person for whom the contract worker
does work under a contract between the employer of the contract worker and the
person.
principal executive, in relation to a Commonwealth agency, has
the same meaning as in Part V of the Privacy Act 1988.
proposed enactment has the same meaning as in the Human Rights
and Equal Opportunity Commission Act 1986.
public authority of the Commonwealth means:
- (a)
- a body incorporated, whether before or after the commencement of this Act,
for a public purpose by a law of the Commonwealth or a law of a Territory,
being a body corporate employing staff on its own behalf; or
- (b)
- an authority or body, not being a body corporate, established, whether
before or after the commencement of this Act, for a public purpose by, or in
accordance with the provisions of, a law of the Commonwealth or a law of a
Territory, being an authority or body employing staff on its own behalf; or
- (c)
- an incorporated company over which the Commonwealth, or a body or
authority referred to in paragraph (a) or (b), is in a position to
exercise control.
registered organisation means an organisation within the meaning
of Schedule 1B to the Workplace Relations Act 1996.
relative, in relation to a person, means a person who is related
to the first-mentioned person by blood, marriage, affinity or adoption.
services includes:
- (a)
- services relating to banking, insurance, superannuation and the provision
of grants, loans, credit or finance; or
- (b)
- services relating to entertainment, recreation or refreshment; or
- (c)
- services relating to transport or travel; or
- (d)
- services relating to telecommunications; or
- (e)
- services of the kind provided by the members of any profession or trade;
or
- (f)
- services of the kind provided by a government, a government authority or a
local government body.
State, except in subsections 12(11) and (12), includes the
Australian Capital Territory and the Northern Territory.
technical and further education institution has the same meaning
as that expression has in the Employment, Education and Training Act
1988.
Territory, except in subsection 12(12) or in paragraph (c)
of the definition of administrative office in this subsection,
does not include the Australian Capital Territory and the Northern Territory.
this Act includes the regulations.
unjustifiable hardship has the meaning given by
section 11.
voluntary body means an association or other body (whether
incorporated or unincorporated) the activities of which are not engaged in for
the purpose of making a profit, but does not include:
- (a)
- a club; or
- (b)
- a body established by a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;
or
- (c)
- an association that provides grants, loans, credit or finance to its
members.
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- (2)
- For the purposes of this Act, refusing or failing to do an act is taken to
be the doing of an act and a reference to an act includes a reference to a
refusal or failure to do an act.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 5 Disability discrimination
- (1)
- For the purposes of this Act, a person (discriminator)
discriminates against another person (aggrieved person) on the
ground of a disability of the aggrieved person if, because of the aggrieved
person's disability, the discriminator treats or proposes to treat the
aggrieved person less favourably than, in circumstances that are the same or
are not materially different, the discriminator treats or would treat a person
without the disability.
- (2)
- For the purposes of subsection (1), circumstances in which a person
treats or would treat another person with a disability are not materially
different because of the fact that different accommodation or services may be
required by the person with a disability.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 6 Indirect disability discrimination
For the purposes of this Act, a person (discriminator)
discriminates against another person (aggrieved person) on the
ground of a disability of the aggrieved person if the discriminator requires
the aggrieved person to comply with a requirement or condition:
- (a)
- with which a substantially higher proportion of persons without the
disability comply or are able to comply; and
- (b)
- which is not reasonable having regard to the circumstances of the case;
and
- (c)
- with which the aggrieved person does not or is not able to comply.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 7 Disability discriminationpalliative and therapeutic devices and auxiliary aids
For the purposes of this Act, a person (discriminator)
discriminates against another person with a disability (aggrieved
person) if the discriminator treats the aggrieved person less
favourably because of the fact that the aggrieved person is accompanied by, or
possesses:
- (a)
- a palliative or therapeutic device; or
- (b)
- an auxiliary aid;
that is used by the aggrieved person, or because of any matter related to
that fact, whether or not it is the discriminator's practice to treat less
favourably any person who is accompanied by, or is in possession of, and is the
user of:
- (c)
- such a palliative or therapeutic device; or
- (d)
- such an auxiliary aid.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 8 Disability discriminationinterpreters, readers and assistants
For the purposes of this Act, a person (discriminator)
discriminates against another person with a disability (aggrieved
person) if the discriminator treats the aggrieved person less
favourably because of the fact that the aggrieved person is accompanied by:
- (a)
- an interpreter; or
- (b)
- a reader; or
- (c)
- an assistant; or
- (d)
- a carer;
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who provides interpretive, reading or other services to the aggrieved person
because of the disability, or because of any matter related to that fact,
whether or not it is the discriminator's practice to treat less favourably any
person who is accompanied by:
- (e)
- an interpreter; or
- (f)
- a reader; or
- (g)
- an assistant; or
- (h)
- a carer.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 9 Disability discriminationguide dogs, hearing assistance dogs and trained animals
- (1)
- For the purposes of this Act, a person (discriminator)
discriminates against a person with:
- (a)
- a visual disability; or
- (b)
- a hearing disability; or
- (c)
- any other disability;
(aggrieved person) if the discriminator treats the aggrieved
person less favourably because of the fact that the aggrieved person possesses,
or is accompanied by:
- (d)
- a guide dog; or
- (e)
- a dog trained to assist the aggrieved person in activities where hearing
is required, or because of any matter related to that fact; or
- (f)
- any other animal trained to assist the aggrieved person to alleviate the
effect of the disability, or because of any matter related to that fact;
whether or not it is the discriminator's practice to treat less favourably
any person who possesses, or is accompanied by, a dog or any other animal.
- (2)
- Subsection (1) does not affect the liability of a person with a
disability for damage to property caused by a dog or other animal trained to
assist the person to alleviate the effect of the disability or because of any
matter related to that fact.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 10 Act done because of disability and for other reason
If:
- (a)
- an act is done for 2 or more reasons; and
- (b)
- one of the reasons is the disability of a person (whether or not it is the
dominant or a substantial reason for doing the act);
then, for the purposes of this Act, the act is taken to be done for that
reason.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 11 Unjustifiable hardship
For the purposes of this Act, in determining what constitutes unjustifiable
hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case are to be taken
into account including:
- (a)
- the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue or be suffered by
any persons concerned; and
- (b)
- the effect of the disability of a person concerned; and
- (c)
- the financial circumstances and the estimated amount of expenditure
required to be made by the person claiming unjustifiable hardship; and
- (d)
- in the case of the provision of services, or the making available of
facilitiesan action plan given to the Commission under section 64.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 12 Application of Act
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- (1)
- In this section:
Australia includes the external Territories.
limited application provisions means the provisions of
Divisions 1, 2 and 3 of Part 2 other than sections 20, 29 and 30.
- (2)
- Subject to this section, this Act applies throughout Australia.
- (3)
- This Act has effect in relation to acts done within a Territory.
- (4)
- The limited application provisions have effect as provided in
subsection (3) of this section and the following provisions of this
section and not otherwise.
- (5)
- Sections 15, 16 and 17 have effect in relation to discrimination
against:
- (a)
- Commonwealth employees in connection with their employment as Commonwealth
employees; and
- (b)
- persons seeking to become Commonwealth employees.
- (6)
- Section 19 has effect in relation to discrimination by an authority
or body in the exercise of a power under a Commonwealth law to confer, renew,
extend, revoke or withdraw an authorisation or qualification.
- (7)
- The limited application provisions have effect in relation to acts done
by, or on behalf of:
- (a)
- the Commonwealth or the Administration of a Territory; or
- (b)
- a body or authority established for a public purpose by a law of the
Commonwealth or a law of a Territory;
in the exercise of a power conferred by a law of the Commonwealth or a law
of a Territory.
- (8)
- The limited application provisions have effect in relation to
discrimination against a person with a disability to the extent that the
provisions:
- (a)
- give effect to the Convention; or
- (b)
- give effect to the Covenant on Civil and Political Rights; or
- (c)
- give effect to the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights; or
- (d)
- relate to matters external to Australia; or
- (e)
- relate to matters of international concern.
- (9)
- The limited application provisions have effect in relation to
discrimination by a foreign corporation, or a trading or financial corporation
formed within the limits of the Commonwealth, or by a person in the course of
the person's duties or purported duties as an officer or employee of such a
corporation.
- (10)
- Without limiting the effect of subsection (9), the limited
application provisions have effect in relation to discrimination by a trading
or financial corporation formed within the limits of the Commonwealth, or by a
person in the course of the person's duties or purported duties as an officer
or employee of such a corporation, to the extent that the discrimination takes
place in the course of the trading activities of the trading corporation or the
financial activities of the financial corporation, as the case may be.
- (11)
- The limited application provisions have effect in relation to
discrimination in the course of, or in relation to, the carrying on of the
business of:
- (a)
- banking, other than State banking not extending beyond the limits of the
State concerned; or
- (b)
- insurance, other than State insurance not extending beyond the limits of
the State concerned.
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- (12)
- The limited application provisions have effect in relation to
discrimination in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:
- (a)
- between Australia and a place outside Australia; or
- (b)
- among the States; or
- (c)
- between a State and a Territory; or
- (d)
- between 2 Territories.
- (13)
- The limited application provisions have effect in relation to
discrimination within Australia involving persons or things, or matters arising
outside Australia.
- (14)
- The provisions of Division 3 of Part 2 have effect in relation
to acts done within Australia involving persons or things, or matters arising
outside Australia.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 12A Application of the Criminal Code
Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code (except Part 2.5) applies to
all offences against this Act.
Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the
general principles of criminal responsibility.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 13 Operation of State and Territory laws
- (1)
- A reference in this section to this Act is a reference to this Act as it
has effect because of a provision of section 12.
- (2)
- A reference in this section to a law of a State or Territory is a
reference to a law of a State or Territory that deals with discrimination on
the grounds of disability.
- (3)
- This Act is not intended to exclude or limit the operation of a law of a
State or Territory that is capable of operating concurrently with this Act.
- (4)
- If:
- (a)
- a law of a State or Territory relating to discrimination deals with a
matter dealt with by this Act; and
- (b)
- a person has made a complaint or initiated a proceeding under that law in
respect of an act or omission in respect of which the person would, apart from
this subsection, have been entitled to make a complaint under the Human
Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission Act 1986 alleging that the act or
omission is unlawful under a provision of Part 2 of this Act;
the person is not entitled to make a complaint or institute a proceeding
under the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission Act 1986
alleging that the act or omission is unlawful under a provision of Part 2
of this Act.
- (5)
- If:
- (a)
- a law of a State or Territory deals with a matter dealt with by this Act;
and
- (b)
- an act or omission by a person that constitutes an offence against that
law also constitutes an offence against this Act;
the person may be prosecuted and convicted either under that law of the
State or Territory or under this Act, but nothing in this subsection renders a
person liable to be punished more than once in respect of the same act or
omission.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 14 Extent to which Act binds the Crown
- (1)
- This Act binds the Crown in right of the Commonwealth, of each of the
States and of Norfolk Island.
- (2)
- This Act does not render the Crown in right of the Commonwealth, of a
State or of Norfolk Island liable to be prosecuted for an offence.
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DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 Part 2Prohibition of disability discrimination
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 Division 1Discrimination in work
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 15 Discrimination in employment
- (1)
- It is unlawful for an employer or a person acting or purporting to act on
behalf of an employer to discriminate against a person on the ground of the
other person's disability or a disability of any of that other person's
associates:
- (a)
- in the arrangements made for the purpose of determining who should be
offered employment; or
- (b)
- in determining who should be offered employment; or
- (c)
- in the terms or conditions on which employment is offered.
- (2)
- It is unlawful for an employer or a person acting or purporting to act on
behalf of an employer to discriminate against an employee on the ground of the
employee's disability or a disability of any of that employee's associates:
- (a)
- in the terms or conditions of employment that the employer affords the
employee; or
- (b)
- by denying the employee access, or limiting the employee's access, to
opportunities for promotion, transfer or training, or to any other benefits
associated with employment; or
- (c)
- by dismissing the employee; or
- (d)
- by subjecting the employee to any other detriment.
- (3)
- Neither paragraph (1)(a) nor (b) renders it unlawful for a person to
discriminate against another person, on the ground of the other person's
disability, in connection with employment to perform domestic duties on the
premises on which the first-mentioned person resides.
- (4)
- Neither paragraph (1)(b) nor (2)(c) renders unlawful discrimination
by an employer against a person on the ground of the person's disability, if
taking into account the person's past training, qualifications and experience
relevant to the particular employment and, if the person is already employed by
the employer, the person's performance as an employee, and all other relevant
factors that it is reasonable to take into account, the person because of his
or her disability:
- (a)
- would be unable to carry out the inherent requirements of the particular
employment; or
- (b)
- would, in order to carry out those requirements, require services or
facilities that are not required by persons without the disability and the
provision of which would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the employer.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 16 Discrimination against commission agents
- (1)
- It is unlawful for a principal to discriminate against a person on the
ground of the person's disability or a disability of any of that person's
associates:
- (a)
- in the arrangements the principal makes for the purpose of determining who
should be engaged as a commission agent; or
- (b)
- in determining who should be engaged as a commission agent; or
- (c)
- in the terms or conditions on which the person is engaged as a commission
agent.
- (2)
- It is unlawful for a principal to discriminate against a commission agent
on the ground of the commission agent's disability or a disability of any of
the person's associates:
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- (a)
- in the terms or conditions that the principal affords the commission agent
as a commission agent; or
- (b)
- by denying the commission agent access, or limiting the commission agent's
access, to opportunities for promotion, transfer or training, or to any other
benefits associated with the position as a commission agent; or
- (c)
- by terminating the engagement; or
- (d)
- by subjecting the commission agent to any other detriment.
- (3)
- Neither paragraph (1)(b) nor (2)(c) renders unlawful discrimination
by a principal against a person on the ground of the person's disability, if
taking into account the person's past training, qualifications and experience
relevant to engagement as a commission agent and, if the person is already
engaged by the principal as a commission agent, the person's performance as a
commission agent, and all other relevant factors that it is reasonable to take
into account, the person because of his or her disability:
- (a)
- would be unable to carry out the inherent requirements of a commission
agent; or
- (b)
- would, in order to carry out those requirements, require services or
facilities that are not required by persons without the disability and the
provision of which would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the principal.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 17 Discrimination against contract workers
- (1)
- It is unlawful for a principal to discriminate against a contract worker
on the ground of the contract worker's disability or a disability of any of the
contract worker's associates:
- (a)
- in the terms or conditions on which the principal allows the contract
worker to work; or
- (b)
- by not allowing the contract worker to work or continue to work; or
- (c)
- by denying the contract worker access, or limiting the contract worker's
access, to any benefit associated with the work in respect of which the
contract with the employer is made; or
- (d)
- by subjecting the contract worker to any other detriment.
- (2)
- Paragraph (1)(b) does not render it unlawful for a principal to
discriminate against a contract worker on the ground of the contract worker's
disability, if taking into account the contract worker's past training,
qualifications and experience relevant to working as a contract worker and, if
the person is already working for the principal as a contract worker, the
contract worker's performance as a contract worker, and all other relevant
factors that it is reasonable to take into account, the person because of the
contract worker's disability:
- (a)
- would be unable to carry out the inherent requirements of a contract
worker; or
- (b)
- would, in order to carry out those requirements, require services or
facilities that are not required by persons without the disability and the
provision of which would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the principal.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 18 Partnerships
- (1)
- It is unlawful for 3 or more persons who are proposing to form themselves
into a partnership to discriminate against another person on the ground of the
other person's disability or a disability of any of the other person's
associates:
- (a)
- in determining who should be invited to become a partner in the
partnership; or
- (b)
- in the terms or conditions on which the other person is invited to become
a partner in the partnership.
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- (2)
- It is unlawful for any one or more of the partners in a partnership
consisting of 3 or more partners to discriminate against another person on the
ground of the other person's disability or a disability of any of the other
person's associates:
- (a)
- in determining who should be invited to become a partner in the
partnership; or
- (b)
- in the terms or conditions on which the other person is invited to become
a partner in the partnership.
- (3)
- It is unlawful for any one or more of the partners in a partnership
consisting of 3 or more partners to discriminate against another partner in the
partnership on the ground of the other partner's disability or a disability of
any of the other person's associates:
- (a)
- by denying the other partner access, or limiting the other partner's
access, to any benefit arising from being a partner in the partnership; or
- (b)
- by expelling the other partner from the partnership; or
- (c)
- by subjecting the partner to any other detriment.
- (4)
- Neither paragraph (1)(a), (2)(a) nor (3)(b) renders unlawful
discrimination by a person against another person on the ground of the other
person's disability, if taking into account the other person's past training,
qualifications and experience relevant to the proposed partnership or the
partnership and, if the other person is already a partner, the other person's
performance as a partner, and all other relevant factors that it is reasonable
to take into account, the person because of the other person's disability:
- (a)
- would be unable to carry out the inherent requirements of a partner in the
proposed partnership or the partnership; or
- (b)
- would, in order to carry out those requirements, require services or
facilities that are not required by partners without the disability and the
provision of which would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the partnership.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 19 Qualifying bodies
- (1)
- It is unlawful for an authority or body that is empowered to confer,
renew, extend, revoke or withdraw an authorisation or qualification that is
needed for or facilitates the practice of a profession, the carrying on of a
trade or the engaging in of an occupation to discriminate against a person on
the ground of the person's disability or a disability of any of the person's
associates:
- (a)
- by refusing or failing to confer, renew or extend the authorisation or
qualification; or
- (b)
- in the terms or conditions on which it is prepared to confer the
authorisation or qualification or to renew or extend the authorisation or
qualification; or
- (c)
- by revoking or withdrawing the authorisation or qualification or varying
the terms or the conditions upon which it is held.
- (2)
- This section does not render it unlawful for an authority or body to
discriminate against a person on the ground of the person's disability, if
taking into account the person's past training, qualifications and experience
relevant to the particular profession, trade or occupation and, if the person
is already a member of the profession, carrying on the trade or engaged in the
occupation, the person's performance in the profession, trade or occupation,
and all other relevant factors that it is reasonable to take into account, the
person because of his or her disability, would be unable to carry out the
inherent requirements of the profession, trade or occupation.
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DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 20 Registered organisations under Schedule 1B to the Workplace Relations Act 1996
- (1)
- It is unlawful for a registered organisation, the committee of management
of a registered organisation or a member of the committee of management of a
registered organisation to discriminate against a person, on the ground of the
person's disability or a disability of any of the person's associates:
- (a)
- by refusing or failing to accept the person's application for membership;
or
- (b)
- in the terms or conditions on which the organisation is prepared to admit
the person to membership.
- (2)
- It is unlawful for a registered organisation, the committee of management
of a registered organisation or a member of the committee of management of a
registered organisation to discriminate against a person who is a member of the
registered organisation, on the ground of the member's disability or a
disability of any of the member's associates:
- (a)
- by denying the member access or limiting the member's access, to any
benefit provided by the organisation; or
- (b)
- by depriving the member of membership or varying the terms of membership;
or
- (c)
- by subjecting the member to any other detriment.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 21 Employment agencies
- (1)
- It is unlawful for an employment agency to discriminate against a person
on the ground of the person's disability or a disability of any of the person's
associates:
- (a)
- by refusing to provide the person with any of its services; or
- (b)
- in the terms or conditions on which it offers to provide the person with
any of its services; or
- (c)
- in the manner in which it provides the person with any of its services.
- (2)
- This section does not render it unlawful for an employment agency to
discriminate against a person on the ground of the person's disability, if
taking into account the person's past training, qualifications and experience
relevant to the work sought, and all other relevant factors that it is
reasonable to take into account, the person because of his or her disability,
would be unable to carry out the inherent requirements of the work sought.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 Division 2Discrimination in other areas
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 22 Education
- (1)
- It is unlawful for an educational authority to discriminate against a
person on the ground of the person's disability or a disability of any of the
other person's associates:
- (a)
- by refusing or failing to accept the person's application for admission as
a student; or
- (b)
- in the terms or conditions on which it is prepared to admit the person as
a student.
- (2)
- It is unlawful for an educational authority to discriminate against a
student on the ground of the student's disability or a disability of any of the
student's associates:
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- (a)
- by denying the student access, or limiting the student's access, to any
benefit provided by the educational authority; or
- (b)
- by expelling the student; or
- (c)
- by subjecting the student to any other detriment.
- (3)
- This section does not render it unlawful to discriminate against a person
on the ground of the person's disability in respect of admission to an
educational institution established wholly or primarily for students who have a
particular disability where the person does not have that particular
disability.
- (4)
- This section does not render it unlawful to refuse or fail to accept a
person's application for admission as a student at an educational institution
where the person, if admitted as a student by the educational authority, would
require services or facilities that are not required by students who do not
have a disability and the provision of which would impose unjustifiable
hardship on the educational authority.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 23 Access to premises
- (1)
- It is unlawful for a person to discriminate against another person on the
ground of the other person's disability or a disability of any of that other
person's associates:
- (a)
- by refusing to allow the other person access to, or the use of, any
premises that the public or a section of the public is entitled or allowed to
enter or use (whether for payment or not); or
- (b)
- in the terms or conditions on which the first-mentioned person is prepared
to allow the other person access to, or the use of, any such premises; or
- (c)
- in relation to the provision of means of access to such premises; or
- (d)
- by refusing to allow the other person the use of any facilities in such
premises that the public or a section of the public is entitled or allowed to
use (whether for payment or not); or
- (e)
- in the terms or conditions on which the first-mentioned person is prepared
to allow the other person the use of any such facilities; or
- (f)
- by requiring the other person to leave such premises or cease to use such
facilities.
- (2)
- This section does not render it unlawful to discriminate against a person
on the ground of the person's disability in relation to the provision of access
to premises if:
- (a)
- the premises are so designed or constructed as to be inaccessible to a
person with a disability; and
- (b)
- any alteration to the premises to provide such access would impose
unjustifiable hardship on the person who would have to provide that access.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 24 Goods, services and facilities
- (1)
- It is unlawful for a person who, whether for payment or not, provides
goods or services, or makes facilities available, to discriminate against
another person on the ground of the other person's disability or a disability
of any of that other person's associates:
- (a)
- by refusing to provide the other person with those goods or services or to
make those facilities available to the other person; or
- (b)
- in the terms or conditions on which the first-mentioned person provides
the other person with those goods or services or makes those facilities
available to the other person; or
- (c)
- in the manner in which the first-mentioned person provides the other
person with those goods or services or makes those facilities available to the
other person.
- (2)
- This section does not render it unlawful to discriminate against a person
on the ground of the person's disability if the provision of the goods or
services, or making facilities available, would impose unjustifiable hardship
on the person who provides the goods or services or makes the facilities
available.
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DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 25 Accommodation
- (1)
- It is unlawful for a person, whether as principal or agent, to
discriminate against another person on the ground of the other person's
disability or a disability of any of that other person's associates:
- (a)
- by refusing the other person's application for accommodation; or
- (b)
- in the terms or conditions on which the accommodation is offered to the
other person; or
- (c)
- by deferring the other person's application for accommodation or according
to the other person a lower order of precedence in any list of applicants for
that accommodation.
- (2)
- It is unlawful for a person, whether as principal or agent, to
discriminate against another person on the ground of the other person's
disability or a disability of any of the other person's associates:
- (a)
- by denying the other person access, or limiting the other person's access,
to any benefit associated with accommodation occupied by the other person; or
- (b)
- by evicting the other person from accommodation occupied by the other
person; or
- (c)
- by subjecting the other person to any other detriment in relation to
accommodation occupied by the other person; or
- (d)
- by refusing to permit the other person to make reasonable alterations to
accommodation occupied by that person if:
(i) that person has undertaken to restore the accommodation to its
condition before alteration on leaving the accommodation; and
(ii) in all the circumstances it is likely that the person will perform the
undertaking; and
(iii) in all the circumstances, the action required to restore the
accommodation to its condition before alteration is reasonably practicable;
and
(iv) the alteration does not involve alteration of the premises of any other
occupier; and
(v) the alteration is at that other person's own expense.
- (3)
- This section does not apply to or in respect of:
- (a)
- the provision of accommodation in premises if:
(i) the person who provides or proposes to provide the accommodation or a
near relative of that person resides, and intends to continue to reside on
those premises; and
(ii) the accommodation provided in those premises is for no more than 3
persons other than a person referred to in subparagraph (a)(i) or near
relatives of such a person; or
- (b)
- the accommodation is provided by a charitable or other voluntary body
solely for persons who have a particular disability and the person
discriminated against does not have that particular disability; or
- (c)
- the provision of accommodation in premises where special services or
facilities would be required by the person with a disability and the provision
of such special services or facilities would impose unjustifiable hardship on
the person providing or proposing to provide the accommodation whether as
principal or agent.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 26 Land
- (1)
- It is unlawful for a person, whether as principal or agent, to
discriminate against another person on the ground of the other person's
disability or a disability of any of that person's associates:
- (a)
- by refusing or failing to dispose of an estate or interest in land to the
other person; or
- (b)
- in the terms or conditions on which an estate or interest in land is
offered to the other person.
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- (2)
- This section does not apply in relation to a disposal of an estate or
interest in land by will or by way of gift.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 27 Clubs and incorporated associations
- (1)
- It is unlawful for a club or incorporated association, the committee of
management of a club or a member of the committee of management of a club or
incorporated association to discriminate against a person who is not a member
of the club or association on the ground of the person's disability or a
disability of any of that person's associates:
- (a)
- by refusing or failing to accept the person's application for membership;
or
- (b)
- in the terms or conditions on which the club or association is prepared to
admit the person to membership.
- (2)
- It is unlawful for a club or incorporated association, the committee of
management of a club or a member of the committee of management of a club or
incorporated association to discriminate against a person who is a member of
the club or association on the ground of the member's disability or a
disability of any of the member's associates:
- (a)
- in the terms or conditions of membership that are afforded to the member;
or
- (b)
- by refusing or failing to accept the member's application for a particular
class or type of membership; or
- (c)
- by denying the member access, or limiting the member's access to any
benefit provided by the club or association; or
- (d)
- by depriving the member of membership or varying the terms of membership;
or
- (e)
- by subjecting the member to any other detriment.
- (3)
- Paragraph (2)(c) does not render unlawful discrimination where,
because of the person's disability, the person requires the benefit to be
provided in a special manner and the benefit cannot without unjustifiable
hardship be so provided by the club or incorporated association.
- (4)
- Neither subsection (1) nor (2) renders it unlawful to discriminate
against a person on the ground of the person's disability if membership
(however described) of the club or incorporated association is restricted only
to persons who have a particular disability and the first-mentioned person does
not have that disability.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 28 Sport
- (1)
- It is unlawful for a person to discriminate against another person on the
ground of the other person's disability or a disability of any of the other
person's associates by excluding that other person from a sporting activity.
- (2)
- In subsection (1), a reference to a sporting activity includes a
reference to an administrative or coaching activity in relation to any sport.
- (3)
- Subsection (1) does not render unlawful discrimination against a
person:
- (a)
- if the person is not reasonably capable of performing the actions
reasonably required in relation to the sporting activity; or
- (b)
- if the persons who participate or are to participate in the sporting
activities are selected by a method which is reasonable on the basis of their
skills and abilities relevant to the sporting activity and relative to each
other; or
- (c)
- if a sporting activity is conducted only for persons who have a particular
disability and the first-mentioned person does not have that disability.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 29 Administration of Commonwealth laws and programs
It is unlawful for a person who performs any function or exercises any power
under a Commonwealth law or for the purposes of a Commonwealth program or has
any other responsibility for the administration of a Commonwealth law or the
conduct of a Commonwealth program, to discriminate against another person on
the ground of the other person's disability, or a disability of any of the
other person's associates in the performance of that function, the exercise of
that power or the fulfilment of that responsibility.
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DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 30 Requests for information
If, because of another provision of this Part (other than section 32),
it would be unlawful, in particular circumstances, for a person to discriminate
against another person on the ground of the other person's disability, in doing
a particular act, it is unlawful for the first-mentioned person to request or
require the other person to provide, in connection with or for the purposes of
the doing of the act, information (whether by completing a form or otherwise)
that persons who do not have a disability would not, in circumstances that are
the same or are not materially different, be requested or required to provide.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 31 Disability standards
- (1)
- The Minister may formulate standards, to be known as disability standards,
in relation to:
- (a)
- the employment of persons with a disability; and
- (b)
- the education of persons with a disability; and
- (c)
- the accommodation of persons with a disability; and
- (d)
- the provision of public transportation services and facilities by:
(i) the Commonwealth; and
(ii) a State; and
(iii) a Territory; and
(iv) a public authority of the Commonwealth; and
(v) an instrumentality of a State; and
(vi) a public authority of a Territory; and
(vii) any other person;
to a person with a disability; and
- (e)
- the administration of Commonwealth laws and programs in respect of persons
with a disability; and
- (f)
- the access to or the use of any premises, by persons with a disability,
that the public or a section of the public is entitled or allowed to enter or
use (whether for payment or not).
- (2)
- Disability standards formulated in accordance with this section are to be
laid before each House of the Parliament within 15 sitting days of that House
after the disability standards are formulated and take effect only as provided
by the following provisions of this section.
- (3)
- If:
- (a)
- notice of a motion to amend the disability standards is given in either
House of the Parliament within 15 sitting days after the disability standards
have been laid before that House; and
- (b)
- the disability standards, whether or not as amended, are subsequently
approved by that House; and
- (c)
- the other House approves the disability standards in the form approved by
the first-mentioned House;
the disability standards take effect in the form so approved from the day on
which that other House approves the disability standards in that form.
- (4)
- If no notice of a motion to amend the disability standards is given in the
House of Representatives or the Senate within 15 sitting days of the particular
House after the disability standards have been laid before that House, the
disability standards take effect from the day immediately after that 15th
sitting day or, where that day differs in respect of each House, the later of
those days.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 32 Unlawful to contravene disability standards
It is unlawful for a person to contravene a disability standard.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 33 Division 5 generally not to apply to disability standards
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Division 5 (other than subsections 55(1A) to (1D) and any reference in
that Division to those provisions) does not apply in relation to a disability
standard.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 34 This Part not to apply if person acts in accordance with disability standards
If a person acts in accordance with a disability standard this Part does not
apply to the person's act.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 Division 3Discrimination involving harassment
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 35 Harassment in employment
- (1)
- It is unlawful for a person to harass another person who:
- (a)
- is an employee of that person; and
- (b)
- has a disability;
in relation to the disability.
- (2)
- It is unlawful for a person to harass another person who:
- (a)
- is an employee of a person by whom the first-mentioned person is employed;
and
- (b)
- has a disability;
in relation to the disability.
- (3)
- It is unlawful for a person to harass another person who:
- (a)
- is seeking employment by the first-mentioned person or by an employer of
the first-mentioned person; and
- (b)
- has a disability;
in relation to the disability.
- (4)
- It is unlawful for a person to harass another person who:
- (a)
- is a commission agent or contract worker of that person; and
- (b)
- has a disability;
in relation to the disability.
- (5)
- It is unlawful for a person to harass another person who:
- (a)
- is a commission agent or contract worker of a person of whom the
first-mentioned person is a commission agent or contract worker; and
- (b)
- has a disability;
in relation to the disability.
- (6)
- It is unlawful for a person to harass another person who:
- (a)
- is seeking to become a commission agent or contract worker of the
first-mentioned person or of a person of whom the first-mentioned person is a
commission agent or contract worker; and
- (b)
- has a disability;
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in relation to the disability.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 36 Harassment in employmentassociates with disabilities
- (1)
- It is unlawful for a person to harass another person who:
- (a)
- is an employee of that person; and
- (b)
- has an associate with a disability;
in relation to the disability.
- (2)
- It is unlawful for a person to harass another person who:
- (a)
- is an employee of a person by whom the first-mentioned person is employed;
and
- (b)
- has an associate with a disability;
in relation to the disability.
- (3)
- It is unlawful for a person to harass another person:
- (a)
- who is seeking employment by the first-mentioned person or by an employer
of the first-mentioned person; and
- (b)
- has an associate with a disability;
in relation to the disability.
- (4)
- It is unlawful for a person to harass another person who:
- (a)
- is a commission agent or contract worker of that person; and
- (b)
- has an associate with a disability;
in relation to the disability.
- (5)
- It is unlawful for a person to harass another person who:
- (a)
- is a commission agent or contract worker of a person of whom the
first-mentioned person is a commission agent or contract worker; and
- (b)
- has an associate with a disability;
in relation to the disability.
- (6)
- It is unlawful for a person to harass another person who:
- (a)
- is seeking to become a commission agent or contract worker of the
first-mentioned person or of a person of whom the first-mentioned person is a
commission agent or contract worker; and
- (b)
- has an associate with a disability;
in relation to the disability.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 37 Harassment in education
It is unlawful for a person who is a member of the staff of an educational
institution to harass another person who:
- (a)
- is a student at that educational institution or is seeking admission to
that educational institution as a student; and
- (b)
- has a disability;
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in relation to the disability.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 38 Harassment in educationassociates with disabilities
It is unlawful for a person who is a member of the staff of an educational
institution to harass another person who:
- (a)
- is a student at that educational institution or is seeking admission to
that educational institution as a student; and
- (b)
- has an associate with a disability;
in relation to the disability.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 39 Harassment in relation to the provision of goods and services
It is unlawful for a person who, whether for payment or not, provides goods
or services, or makes facilities available, to harass another person who:
- (a)
- wants to acquire the goods or services or to make use of the facilities;
and
- (b)
- has a disability;
in relation to the disability.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 40 Harassment in relation to the provision of goods and servicesassociates with disabilities
It is unlawful for a person who, whether for payment or not, provides goods
or services, or makes facilities available, to harass another person who:
- (a)
- wants to acquire the goods or services or to make use of the facilities;
and
- (b)
- has an associate with a disability;
in relation to the disability.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 Division 4Offences
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 41 Unlawful act not offence unless expressly so provided
Except as expressly provided by this Division, nothing in this Act makes it
an offence to do an act that is unlawful because of a provision of this Part.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 42 Victimisation
- (1)
- It is an offence for a person to commit an act of victimisation against
another person.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months.
- (2)
- For the purposes of subsection (1), a person is taken to commit an
act of victimisation against another person if the first-mentioned person
subjects, or threatens to subject, the other person to any detriment on the
ground that the other person:
- (a)
- has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under this Act or the Human
Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission Act 1986; or
- (b)
- has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under this Act or the
Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission Act 1986 against any
person; or
- (c)
- has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or
proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any
power or function under this Act or the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity
Commission Act 1986; or
- (d)
- has attended, or proposes to attend, a conference held under this Act or
the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission Act 1986; or
- (e)
- has appeared, or proposes to appear, as a witness in a proceeding under
this Act or the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission Act 1986;
or
- (f)
- has reasonably asserted, or proposes to assert, any rights of the person
or the rights of any other person under this Act or the Human Rights and
Equal Opportunity Commission Act 1986; or
- (g)
- has made an allegation that a person has done an act that is unlawful by
reason of a provision of this Part;
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or on the ground that the first-mentioned person believes that the other
person has done, or proposes to do, an act or thing referred to in any of
paragraphs (a) to (g) (inclusive).
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 43 Offence to incite doing of unlawful acts or offences
It is an offence for a person:
- (a)
- to incite the doing of an act that is unlawful under a provision of
Divisions 1, 2 or 3; or
- (c)
- to assist or promote whether by financial assistance or otherwise the
doing of such an act.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 6 months.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 44 Advertisements
- (1)
- It is an offence for a person to publish or display, or cause or permit to
be published or displayed, an advertisement or notice that indicates, or could
reasonably be understood as indicating, an intention by that person to do an
act that is unlawful under a provision of Division 1, 2 or 3.
Penalty: $1,000.
- (2)
- For the purposes of subsection (1), advertisement
includes every form of advertisement or notice, whether to the public or not,
and whether in a newspaper or other publication, by television or radio, by
display of notices, signs, labels, show cards or goods, by distribution of
samples, circulars, catalogues, price lists or other material, by exhibition of
pictures, models or films or in any other way, and the reference in that
subsection to publish or display, in relation to an advertisement, is to be
construed accordingly.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 Division 5Exemptions
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 45 Special measures
This Part does not render it unlawful to do an act that is reasonably
intended to:
- (a)
- ensure that persons who have a disability have equal opportunities with
other persons in circumstances in relation to which a provision is made by this
Act; or
- (b)
- afford persons who have a disability or a particular disability, goods or
access to facilities, services or opportunities to meet their special needs in
relation to:
(i) employment, education, accommodation, clubs or sport; and
(ii) the provision of goods, services, facilities or land; or
(iii) the making available of facilities; or
(iv) the administration of Commonwealth laws and programs; or
(v) their capacity to live independently; or
- (c)
- afford persons who have a disability or a particular disability, grants,
benefits or programs, whether direct or indirect, to meet their special needs
in relation to:
(i) employment, education, accommodation, clubs or sport; or
(ii) the provision of goods, services, facilities or land; or
(iii) the making available of facilities; or
(iv) the administration of Commonwealth laws and programs; or
(v) their capacity to live independently.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 46 Superannuation and insurance
- (1)
- This Part does not render it unlawful for a person to discriminate against
another person, on the ground of the other person's disability, by refusing to
offer the other person:
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- (a)
- an annuity; or
- (b)
- a life insurance policy; or
- (c)
- a policy of insurance against accident or any other policy of insurance;
or
- (d)
- membership of a superannuation or provident fund; or
- (e)
- membership of a superannuation or provident scheme;
if:
- (f)
- the discrimination:
(i) is based upon actuarial or statistical data on which it is reasonable
for the first-mentioned person to rely; and
(ii) is reasonable having regard to the matter of the data and other relevant
factors; or
- (g)
- in a case where no such actuarial or statistical data is available and
cannot reasonably be obtainedthe discrimination is reasonable having regard
to any other relevant factors.
- (2)
- This Part does not render it unlawful for a person to discriminate against
another person, on the ground of the other person's disability, in respect of
the terms or conditions on which:
- (a)
- an annuity; or
- (b)
- a life insurance policy; or
- (c)
- a policy of insurance against accident or any other policy of insurance;
or
- (d)
- membership of a superannuation or provident fund; or
- (e)
- membership of a superannuation or provident scheme;
is offered to, or may be obtained by, the other person, if:
- (f)
- the discrimination:
(i) is based upon actuarial or statistical data on which it is reasonable
for the first-mentioned person to rely; and
(ii) is reasonable having regard to the matter of the data and other relevant
factors; or
- (g)
- in a case where no such actuarial or statistical data is available and
cannot reasonably be obtainedthe discrimination is reasonable having regard
to any other relevant factors.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 47 Acts done under statutory authority
- (1)
- This Part does not render unlawful anything done by a person in direct
compliance with:
- (b)
- an order of a court; or
- (c)
- any of the following:
(i) an order or award of a court or tribunal having power to fix minimum
wages;
(ii) a certified agreement (within the meaning of the Workplace Relations
Act 1996);
(iii) an Australian workplace agreement (within the meaning of the
Workplace Relations Act 1996);
to the extent that the order, award or agreement has specific provisions
relating to the payment of rates of salary or wages to persons, where:
(iv) if the persons were not in receipt of the salary or wages, they would
be eligible for a disability support pension; and
(v) the salary or wages are determined by reference to the capacity of the
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person.
- (2)
- This Part does not render unlawful anything done by a person in direct
compliance with a prescribed law.
- (3)
- During the period beginning at the commencement of this section and ending
3 years after the day this section commences, this Part does not render
unlawful anything done by a person in direct compliance with another law.
- (4)
- In subsection (1):
disability support pension has the same meaning as in the
Social Security Act 1991.
- (5)
- In subsection (2):
law means:
- (a)
- a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory; or
- (b)
- regulations or any other instrument made under such a law.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 48 Infectious diseases
This Part does not render it unlawful for a person to discriminate against
another person on the ground of the other person's disability if:
- (a)
- the person's disability is an infectious disease; and
- (b)
- the discrimination is reasonably necessary to protect public health.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 49 Exemption for charities
- (1)
- This Part does not:
- (a)
- affect a provision in a charitable instrument that confers charitable
benefits, or enables charitable benefits to be conferred, wholly or in part on
persons who have a disability or a particular disability; or
- (b)
- render unlawful any act done to give effect to such provision.
- (2)
- In this section:
Australia includes the external Territories.
charitable benefits means benefits for purposes that are
exclusively charitable according to the law in force in any part of
Australia.
charitable instrument means a deed, will or other document,
whether made before or after the commencement of this Act, that confers
charitable benefits or enables charitable benefits to be conferred on persons.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 50 Telecommunications
- (1)
- This Part does not render it unlawful for:
- (a)
- a carrier; or
- (b)
- a supplier of an eligible service;
to discriminate against another person on the ground of the other person's
disability in the provision of telecommunications services through payphones
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and public payphones.
- (2)
- In this section:
carrier has the same meaning as in the Telecommunications Act
1991.
eligible service has the same meaning as in the
Telecommunications Act 1991.
payphone has the same meaning as in the Telecommunications Act
1991.
public payphone has the same meaning as in the
Telecommunications Act 1991.
- (3)
- Subsection (1) ceases to be in force at the end of 3 years after the
day this section commences.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 51 Pensions and allowances
- (1)
- This Part does not affect discriminatory provisions relating to pensions,
allowances or benefits in:
- (a)
- the Defence Service Homes Act 1918; or
- (b)
- the Papua New Guinea (Member of the Forces Benefits) Act 1957; or
- (d)
- the Social Security Act 1991; or
- (e)
- the Veterans' Affairs Legislation Amendment Act 1988; or
- (f)
- the Veterans' Entitlements Act 1986; or
- (g)
- the Veterans' Entitlements (Transitional Provisions and Consequential
Amendments) Act 1986; or
- (h)
- the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004; or
- (i)
- the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation (Consequential and
Transitional Provisions) Act 2004; or
- (j)
- the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988 so far as that
Act applies to defence-related claims mentioned in Part XI of that Act.
- (2)
- This Part does not render unlawful anything done by a person in direct
compliance with a provision referred to in subsection (1).
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 52 Migration
Neither Division 1 nor 2:
- (a)
- affect discriminatory provisions in the Migration Act 1958 or any
regulation made under that Act; or
- (b)
- render unlawful anything done by a person in relation to the
administration of that Act or those regulations.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 53 Combat duties and peacekeeping services
- (1)
- This Part does not render it unlawful for a person to discriminate against
another person on the ground of the other person's disability in connection
with employment, engagement or appointment in the Defence Force:
- (a)
- in a position involving the performance of combat duties, combat-related
duties or peacekeeping service; or
- (b)
- in prescribed circumstances in relation to combat duties, combat-related
duties or peacekeeping service; or
- (c)
- in a position involving the performance of duties as a chaplain or a
medical support person in support of forces engaged or likely to be engaged in
combat duties, combat-related duties or peacekeeping service.
- (2)
- In this section:
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combat duties means such duties as are declared by the
regulations to be combat duties for the purposes of this section.
combat-related duties means such duties as are declared by the
regulations to be combat-related duties for the purposes of this section.
medical support person means:
- (a)
- a person exclusively engaged in the search for, or the collection,
transport or treatment of, the wounded or sick, or in the prevention of
disease; or
- (b)
- a person exclusively engaged in the administration of medical units and
establishments.
peacekeeping service has the same meaning as in the Veterans'
Entitlements Act 1986.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 54 Peacekeeping services by the AFP
- (1)
- This Part does not render it unlawful for a person to discriminate against
another person on the ground of the other person's disability in connection
with selection for peacekeeping duties as part of a Peacekeeping Force.
- (2)
- In this section:
AFP means the Australian Federal Police.
Peacekeeping Force means a force raised or organised for the
purpose of peacekeeping in an area outside Australia.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 55 Commission may grant exemptions
- (1)
- The Commission may, on application by:
- (a)
- a person:
(i) on that person's own behalf; or
(ii) on behalf of that person and another person or other persons; or
(iii) on behalf of another person or other persons; or
- (b)
- 2 or more persons:
(i) on their own behalf; or
(ii) on behalf of themselves and another person or other persons; or
(iii) on behalf of another person or other persons;
by instrument grant to the person or persons to whom the application
relates, as the case may be, an exemption from the operation of a provision of
Division 1 or 2 (other than section 31 or 32), as specified in the
instrument.
- (1A)
- The Commission may, on application by:
- (a)
- a person:
(i) on that person's own behalf; or
(ii) on behalf of that person and another person or other persons; or
(iii) on behalf of another person or other persons; or
- (b)
- 2 or more persons:
(i) on their own behalf; or
(ii) on behalf of themselves and another person or other persons; or
(iii) on behalf of another person or other persons;
by instrument grant to the person or persons to whom the application
relates, as the case may be, an exemption from the operation of
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section 32, as specified in the instrument.
- (1B)
- An exemption granted under subsection (1A) must be in relation to a
specified disability standard and only applies to the extent that the
disability standard deals with the provision of public transportation services
and facilities covered by paragraph 31(1)(d).
- (1C)
- If the regulations prescribe a body as a body that the Commission must
consult in relation to the kinds of public transportation services or
facilities that will be dealt with in an exemption under subsection (1A),
the Commission must consult that body before granting the exemption.
- (1D)
- The Commission may, before granting an exemption under
subsection (1A), consult any other body or person that the Commission
considers it appropriate to consult.
- (2)
- The Commission may, on application by a person to, or in respect of, whom
an exemption from a provision of Division 1 or 2 has been granted under
subsection (1) or (1A), being an application made before the expiration of
the period to which the exemption was granted, grant a further exemption from
the operation of that provision.
- (3)
- An exemption granted under subsection (1) or (1A), or further
exemption, from the operation of a provision of Division 1 or 2:
- (a)
- may be granted subject to such terms and conditions as are specified in
the instrument; and
- (b)
- may be expressed to apply only in such circumstances, or in relation to
such activities, as are specified in the instrument; and
- (c)
- are to be granted for a specified period not exceeding 5 years.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 56 Review by Administrative Appeals Tribunal
Applications may be made to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal for a review
of decisions made by the Commission under section 55.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 57 Notice of decisions to be published
- (1)
- The Commission, not later than one month after it makes a decision under
section 55, is to cause to be published in the Gazette a notice of
the making of the decision:
- (a)
- setting out its findings on material questions of facts; and
- (b)
- referring to the evidence on which those findings were based; and
- (c)
- giving the reasons for the making of the decision; and
- (d)
- containing a statement to the effect that, subject to the
Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975, application may be made to the
Administrative Appeals Tribunal for a review of the decision to which the
notice relates by or on behalf of any person or persons whose interests are
affected by the decision.
- (2)
- Any failure to comply with the requirements of subsection (1) in
relation to a decision does not affect the validity of the decision.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 58 Effect of exemptions
This Part does not render it unlawful for a person who has been granted an
exemption from a provision of Division 1 or 2, or a person in the
employment or under the direction or control of a person who has been granted
such an exemption, to do an act in accordance with the provisions of the
instrument by which the exemption was granted.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 Part 3Action plans
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 59 Interpretation
In this Part:
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service provider means a Department, a department of a State, a
public authority of the Commonwealth, an instrumentality of a State, an
educational institution or a person who:
- (a)
- provides goods or services; or
- (b)
- makes facilities available;
whether for payment or not.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 60 Action plans
A service provider may prepare and implement an action plan.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 61 Provisions of action plans
The action plan of a service provider must include provisions relating to:
- (a)
- the devising of policies and programs to achieve the objects of this Act;
and
- (b)
- the communication of these policies and programs to persons within the
service provider; and
- (c)
- the review of practices within the service provider with a view to the
identification of any discriminatory practices; and
- (d)
- the setting of goals and targets, where these may reasonably be determined
against which the success of the plan in achieving the objects of the Act may
be assessed; and
- (e)
- the means, other than those referred to in paragraph (d), of
evaluating the policies and programs referred to in paragraph (a); and
- (f)
- the appointment of persons within the service provider to implement the
provisions referred to in paragraphs (a) to (e) (inclusive).
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 62 Action plans may have other provisions
The action plan of a service provider may include provisions, other than
those referred to in section 61, that are not inconsistent with the
objects of this Act.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 63 Amendment of action plans
A service provider may, at any time, amend its action plan.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 64 Copy of action plan to be given to Commission
A service provider may give:
- (a)
- a copy of its action plan; or
- (b)
- any amendments to the plan;
to the Commission.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 65 Commission to sell action plans to public
The Commission is to sell copies of action plans or amendments to action
plans given to it under section 64 to the public for a prescribed fee.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 Part 4Functions of Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 Division 1Preliminary
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DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 67 Functions of Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission
- (1)
- The following functions are conferred on the Commission:
- (c)
- to exercise the powers conferred on it by section 55;
- (d)
- to report to the Minister on matters relating to the development of
disability standards;
- (e)
- to monitor the operation of such standards and report to the Minister the
results of such monitoring;
- (f)
- to receive action plans under section 64;
- (g)
- to promote an understanding and acceptance of, and compliance with, this
Act;
- (h)
- to undertake research and educational programs, and other programs, on
behalf of the Commonwealth for the purpose of promoting the objects of this
Act;
- (i)
- to examine enactments, and (when requested to do so by the Minister)
proposed enactments, for the purpose of ascertaining whether the enactments or
proposed enactments are, or would be, inconsistent with or contrary to the
objects of this Act, and to report to the Minister the results of any such
examination;
- (j)
- on its own initiative or when requested by the Minister, to report to the
Minister as to the laws that should be made by the Parliament, or action that
should be taken by the Commonwealth, on matters relating to discrimination on
the ground of disability;
- (k)
- to prepare, and to publish in such manner as the Commission considers
appropriate, guidelines for the avoidance of discrimination on the ground of
disability;
- (l)
- where the Commission thinks it appropriate to do so, with the leave of the
court hearing the proceedings and subject to any conditions imposed by the
court, to intervene in proceedings that involve issues of discrimination on the
ground of disability;
- (m)
- to do anything incidental or conducive to the performance of any of the
preceding functions.
Note: For the provisions about inquiries into complaints of
discrimination and conciliation of those complaints: see Part IIB of the
Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission Act 1986.
- (2)
- The Commission is not to regard an enactment or proposed enactment as
being inconsistent with or contrary to the objects of this Act for the purposes
of paragraph (1)(i) because of a provision of the enactment or proposed
enactment that is included for the purpose referred to in section 45.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 Part 5Other offences
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 107 Failure to provide actuarial data or statistical data
- (1)
- If a person has engaged in an act of discrimination that would, apart from
section 46, be unlawful, the President or the Commission may, by notice in
writing served on the person as prescribed, require the person within 28 days
after service of the notice on the person, to disclose to the President or to
the Commission, as the case may be, the source of the actuarial or statistical
data on which the act of discrimination was based and, where the President or
the Commission, as the case may be, makes such a requirement of a person, the
person must not fail to comply with the requirement.
Penalty: $1,000.
- (1A)
- Subsection (1) does not apply if the person has a reasonable excuse.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the
matter in subsection (1A) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code).
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- (1B)
- Subsection (1) is an offence of strict liability.
Note: For strict liability, see section 6.1 of
the Criminal Code.
- (2)
- Subsection 4K (2) of the Crimes Act 1914 does not apply to this
section.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 Part 6Disability Discrimination Commissioner
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 113 Disability Discrimination Commissioner
- (1)
- There is to be a Disability Discrimination Commissioner, who is to be
appointed by the Governor-General.
- (2)
- A person is not qualified to be appointed as the Disability Discrimination
Commissioner unless the Governor-General is satisfied that the person has
appropriate qualifications, knowledge or experience.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 114 Terms and conditions of appointment
- (1)
- Subject to this section, the Commissioner holds office for such period,
not exceeding 7 years, as is specified in the instrument of the person's
appointment, but is eligible for re-appointment.
- (2)
- The Commissioner holds office on such terms and conditions (if any) in
respect of matters not provided for by this Act as are determined by the
Governor-General.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 115 Remuneration of Commissioner
- (1)
- The Commissioner is to be paid such remuneration as is determined by the
Remuneration Tribunal, but, if no determination of that remuneration by the
Remuneration Tribunal is in operation, the Commissioner is to be paid such
remuneration as is prescribed.
- (2)
- The Commissioner is to be paid such allowances as are prescribed.
- (3)
- This section has effect subject to the Remuneration Tribunal Act
1973.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 116 Leave of absence
- (1)
- The Commissioner has such recreation leave entitlements as are determined
by the Remuneration Tribunal.
- (2)
- The Minister may grant the Commissioner leave of absence, other than
recreation leave, on such terms and conditions as to remuneration or otherwise
as the Minister determines.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 117 Outside employment
The Commissioner must not, except with the approval of the Minister, engage
in paid employment outside the duties of the office of Commissioner.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 118 Resignation
The Commissioner may resign from the office of Commissioner by writing given
to the Governor-General.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 119 Termination of appointment
- (1)
- The Governor-General may terminate the appointment of the Commissioner
because of:
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- (a)
- misbehaviour; or
- (b)
- a disability which renders the Commissioner incapable of performing the
inherent requirements of the office.
- (2)
- The Governor-General must terminate the appointment of the Commissioner if
the Commissioner:
- (a)
- becomes bankrupt, applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of
bankrupt or insolvent debtors, compounds with creditors or makes an assignment
of remuneration for their benefit; or
- (b)
- is absent from duty, except on leave of absence, for 14 consecutive days
or for 28 days in any period of 12 months; or
- (c)
- engages in paid employment outside the duties of the office of
Commissioner otherwise than with the approval of the Minister.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 120 Acting Commissioner
- (1)
- The Minister may appoint a person to act as Commissioner:
- (a)
- during a vacancy in the office of Commissioner, whether or not an
appointment has previously been made to the office; or
- (b)
- during any period, or during all periods, when the Commissioner is absent
from duty or from Australia, or is, for any other reason, unable to perform the
functions of the office of Commissioner.
- (2)
- The validity of anything done by a person purporting to act under an
appointment made under subsection (1) is not to be called in question on
the ground that:
- (a)
- the occasion for the person's appointment had not arisen; or
- (b)
- there is a defect or irregularity in or in connection with the
appointment; or
- (c)
- the appointment had ceased to have effect; or
- (d)
- the occasion for the person to act had not arisen or had ceased.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 Part 7Miscellaneous
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 121 Delegation
- (1)
- The Commission may, by writing under its seal, delegate to:
- (a)
- a member of the Commission; or
- (b)
- the Commissioner; or
- (c)
- a member of the staff of the Commission; or
- (d)
- another person or body of persons;
all or any of the powers conferred on the Commission under this Act, other
than powers in connection with the performance of the functions that, under
section 67, are to be performed by the Commissioner on behalf of the
Commission.
- (2)
- The Commissioner may, by writing signed by the Commissioner, delegate to:
- (a)
- a member of the staff of the Commission; or
- (b)
- any other person or body of persons;
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approved by the Commission, all or any of the powers exercisable by the
Commissioner under this Act.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 122 Liability of persons involved in unlawful acts
A person who causes, instructs, induces, aids or permits another person to do
an act that is unlawful under Division 1, 2 or 3 of Part 2 is, for
the purposes of this Act, taken also to have done the act.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 123 Conduct by directors, servants and agents
- (1)
- If, for the purposes of this Act, it is necessary to establish the state
of mind of a body corporate in relation to particular conduct, it is sufficient
to show:
- (a)
- that the conduct was engaged in by a director, servant or agent of the
body corporate within the scope of his or her actual or apparent authority;
and
- (b)
- that the director, servant or agent had the state of mind.
- (2)
- Any conduct engaged in on behalf of a body corporate by a director,
servant or agent of the body corporate within the scope of his or her actual or
apparent authority is taken, for the purposes of this Act, to have been engaged
in also by the body corporate unless the body corporate establishes that the
body corporate took reasonable precautions and exercised due diligence to avoid
the conduct.
- (3)
- If, for the purposes of this Act, it is necessary to establish the state
of mind of a person other than a body corporate in relation to a particular
conduct, it is sufficient to show:
- (a)
- that the conduct was engaged in by a servant or agent of the person within
the scope of his or her actual or apparent authority; and
- (b)
- that the servant or agent had the state of mind.
- (4)
- Any conduct engaged in on behalf of a person other than a body corporate
by a servant or agent of the person within the scope of his or her actual or
apparent authority is taken, for the purposes of this Act, to have been engaged
in also by the first-mentioned person unless the first-mentioned person
establishes that the first-mentioned person took reasonable precautions and
exercised due diligence to avoid the conduct.
- (5)
- If:
- (a)
- a person other than a body corporate is convicted of an offence; and
- (b)
- the person would not have been convicted of the offence if
subsections (3) and (4) had not been enacted;
the person is not liable to be punished by imprisonment for that offence.
- (7)
- A reference in subsection (1) or (3) to the state of mind of a person
includes a reference to:
- (a)
- the knowledge, intention, opinion, belief or purpose of the person; and
- (b)
- the person's reasons for the intention, opinion, belief or purpose.
- (8)
- A reference in this section to a director of a body corporate includes a
reference to a constituent member of a body corporate incorporated for a public
purpose by a law of the Commonwealth, of a State or of a Territory.
- (9)
- A reference in this section to engaging in conduct includes a reference to
failing or refusing to engage in conduct.
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DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 124 Commonwealth taken to be employer
For the purposes of this Act, the Commonwealth is taken to be the employer of
all Commonwealth employees.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 125 Unlawful act not basis of civil action unless expressly so provided
- (1)
- This Act does not confer on a person a right of action in respect of the
doing of an act that is unlawful under a provision of Part 2 unless a
provision of this Act expressly provides otherwise.
- (2)
- For the purposes of subsection (1), a reference to an act that is
unlawful under a provision of Part 2 includes a reference to an act that
is an offence under a provision of Division 4 of that Part.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 126 Protection from civil actions
- (1)
- The Commission, a member of the Commission, the Commissioner or a person
acting under the direction or authority of the Commission or of the
Commissioner or a delegate under section 121 is not liable to an action or
other proceeding for damages for or in relation to an act done or omitted to be
done in good faith in the performance or purported performance of any function,
or in the exercise or purported exercise of any power or authority, conferred
on the Commission or the Commissioner.
- (2)
- If a submission has been made, a document or information has been given,
or evidence has been given, to the Commission or the Commissioner, a person is
not liable to an action, suit or other proceeding in respect of loss, damage or
injury of any kind suffered by another person because only that submission was
made, the document or information was given or the evidence was given.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 127 Non-disclosure of private information
- (1)
- A person who is, or has at any time been, the Commissioner, a member of
the Commission or a member of the staff assisting the Commission or is, or has
at any time been, authorised to perform or exercise any function or power of
the Commission or the Commissioner or any function or power on behalf of the
Commission or the Commissioner, being a function or power conferred on the
Commission or on the Commissioner under this Act, must not, either directly or
indirectly:
- (a)
- make a record of, or divulge or communicate to any person, any information
relating to the affairs of another person acquired by the first-mentioned
person because of that person's office of employment under or for the purposes
of this Act or because of that person being or having been so authorised; or
- (b)
- make use of any such information as is mentioned in paragraph (a);
or
- (c)
- produce to any person a document relating to the affairs of another person
given for the purposes of this Act.
Penalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.
- (2)
- A person who is, or has at any time been, the Commissioner, a member of
the Commission or a member of the staff assisting the Commission or is, or has
at any time been, authorised to perform or exercise any function or power of
the Commission or the Commissioner or any function or power on behalf of the
Commission or the Commissioner, being a function or power conferred on the
Commission or on the Commissioner under this Act, must not be required:
- (a)
- to divulge or communicate to a court any information relating to the
affairs of another person acquired by the first-mentioned person because of
that person's office or employment under or for the purposes of this Act or
because of that person being or having been so authorised; or
- (b)
- to produce in a court a document relating to the affairs of another person
of which the first-mentioned person has custody, or to which that person has
access, because of that person's office or employment under or for the purposes
of this Act or because of that person being or having been so authorised;
except where it is necessary to do so for the purposes of this Act.
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- (3)
- This section does not prohibit a person from:
- (a)
- making a record of information that is required or permitted by an Act to
be recorded, if the record is made for the purposes of or under that Act; or
- (b)
- divulging or communicating information, or producing a document, to any
person in accordance with an arrangement in force under section 16 of the
Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission Act 1986; or
- (c)
- divulging or communicating information, or producing a document that is
required or permitted by an Act to be divulged, communicated or produced as the
case may be, if the information is divulged or communicated, or the document is
produced, for the purposes of or under that Act.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to a
matter in subsection (3) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code).
- (3A)
- Subsection (1) does not prevent a person from making a record of,
divulging, communicating or making use of information, or producing a document,
if the person does so:
- (a)
- in the performance of a duty under or in connection with this Act; or
- (b)
- in the performance or exercise of a function or power conferred on the
Commission or on the Commissioner under this Act.
Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to the
matter in subsection (3A) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal
Code).
- (4)
- Subsection (2) does not prevent a person from being required, for the
purposes of or under an Act, to divulge or communicate information, or to
produce a document, that is required or permitted by that Act to be divulged,
communicated or produced.
- (5)
- In this section:
court includes any tribunal, authority or person having power to
require the production of documents or the answering of questions.
produce includes permit access to.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 128 Information stored otherwise than in written form
If information is recorded or stored by means of a mechanical, electronic or
other device, any duty imposed by this Act to produce the document recording
that information is to be construed as a duty to provide a document containing
a clear reproduction in writing of the information.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 129 Commissioner to give information
The Commissioner must give to the Commission such information relating to the
operations of the Commissioner under this Act as the Commission from time to
time requires.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 131 Courts to ensure just terms
- (1)
- In any case where, but for this section, the application of any of the
provisions of this Act would result in an acquisition of property from any
person having been made otherwise than on just terms, the person is entitled to
such compensation from the Commonwealth as is necessary to ensure that the
acquisition is made on just terms.
- (2)
- The Federal Court has jurisdiction with respect to matters arising under
subsection (1) and that jurisdiction is exclusive of the jurisdiction of
all other courts, other than jurisdiction of the High Court under
section 75 of the Constitution.
Back to Top
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 - SECT 132 Regulations
- (1)
- The Governor-General may make regulations prescribing matters:
- (a)
- required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or
- (b)
- necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect
to this Act.
- (1A)
- Without limiting the generality of subsection (1), the
Governor-General may make regulations for the purposes of subsection 55(1C)
prescribing a body as a body that the Commission must consult in relation to
all or specified kinds of public transportation services or facilities.
- (2)
- Before making any regulations for the purposes of section 31 or 47,
the Governor-General is to take into consideration any comments made to the
Minister by a Minister of a State or Territory who is responsible for matters
relating to disability discrimination.
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION ACT 1992 Notes to the Disability Discrimination Act 1992
Note 1
The Disability Discrimination Act 1992 as shown in this compilation
comprises Act No. 135, 1992 amended as indicated in the Tables below.
All relevant information pertaining to application, saving or transitional
provisions prior to 13 October 1999 is not included in this compilation.
For subsequent information see Table A.
Table of Acts
Act
|
Number
and year
|
Date
of Assent
|
Date
of commencement
|
Application,
saving or transitional provisions
|
Disability
Discrimination Act 1992
|
135,
1992
|
5
Nov 1992
|
Ss.
1 and 2: Royal Assent Ss. 3-14, 59-65, 67(1)(d)-(m), 113-120, 126, 127,
129 and 132: 26 Nov 1992 (see Gazette 1992, No. S346) Remainder: 1
Mar 1993 (see Gazette 1992, No. S346)
|
|
Sex
Discrimination and other Legislation Amendment Act 1992
|
179,
1992
|
16
Dec 1992
|
13
Jan 1993 (a)
|
S.
4
|
Law
and Justice Legislation Amendment Act 1993
|
13,
1994
|
18
Jan 1994
|
Part 2
(ss. 3-5): Royal Assent (b)
|
S.
4(2)
|
Veterans'
Affairs (1994-95 Budget Measures) Legislation Amendment Act (No. 2) 1994
|
164,
1994
|
16
Dec 1994
|
Part 4
(s. 60): Royal Assent (c)
|
|
Human
Rights Legislation Amendment Act 1995
|
59,
1995
|
28 June
1995
|
S.
3 (item 25): 30 Oct 1992 Remainder: Royal Assent
|
Ss.
4 and 5
|
Workplace
Relations and Other Legislation Amendment Act 1996
|
60,
1996
|
25
Nov 1996
|
Schedule 11
(item 61): 31 Dec 1996 (see Gazette 1996, No. S535)
(d) Schedule 19 (item 18): Royal Assent (d)
|
S.
2(2) and (6) (am. by 77, 1996, Sch. 3 [items 1, 2])
|
as
amended by
|
|
|
|
|
Workplace
Relations and Other Legislation Amendment Act (No. 2) 1996
|
77,
1996
|
19
Dec 1996
|
Schedule 3
(items 1, 2): (e)
|
|
Defence
Legislation Amendment Act (No. 1) 1999
|
116,
1999
|
22
Sept 1999
|
Schedule 5
(item 2): 1 Jan 2001 (f)
|
|
as
amended by
|
|
|
|
|
Statute
Law Revision Act 2002
|
63,
2002
|
3 July
2002
|
Schedule 2
(item 9): (g)
|
|
Human
Rights Legislation Amendment Act (No. 1) 1999
|
133,
1999
|
13
Oct 1999
|
Ss.
1-3 and 21: Royal Assent S. 22 and Schedule 1 (items 53, 60): 10
Dec 1999 (see Gazette 1999, No. S598) Remainder: 13 Apr 2000
|
Ss.
4-22 [see Table A]
|
Public
Employment (Consequential and Transitional) Amendment Act 1999
|
146,
1999
|
11
Nov 1999
|
Schedule 1
(items 394-396): 5 Dec 1999 (see Gazette 1999, No. S584) (h)
|
|
Australian
Security Intelligence Organisation Legislation Amendment Act 1999
|
161,
1999
|
10
Dec 1999
|
Schedule 3
(items 1, 25): (i)
|
|
Australian
Federal Police Legislation Amendment Act 2000
|
9,
2000
|
7
Mar 2000
|
2 July
2000 (see Gazette 2000, No. S328)
|
Sch.
3 (items 20, 24, 34, 35) [see Table A]
|
Criminal
Code Amendment (Theft, Fraud, Bribery and Related Offences) Act 2000
|
137,
2000
|
24
Nov 2000
|
Ss.
1-3 and Schedule 1 (items 1, 4, 6, 7, 9-11, 32): Royal
Assent Remainder: 24 May 2001
|
Sch.
2 (items 418, 419) [see Table A]
|
Law
and Justice Legislation Amendment (Application of Criminal Code) Act 2001
|
24,
2001
|
6
Apr 2001
|
S.
4(1), (2) and Schedule 24: (j)
|
S.
4(1) and (2) [see Table A]
|
Disability
Discrimination Amendment Act 2002
|
62,
2002
|
3 July
2002
|
Schedule 1:
19 Aug 2002 (see Gazette 2002, No. GN32) Remainder: Royal Assent
|
|
Workplace
Relations Legislation Amendment (Registration and Accountability of
Organisations) (Consequential Provisions) Act 2002
|
105,
2002
|
14
Nov 2002
|
Schedule 3
(item 41): 12 May 2003
|
|
Age
Discrimination (Consequential Provisions) Act 2004
|
40,
2004
|
21
Apr 2004
|
Schedule
2 (item 26): [see (k) and Note 2]
|
|
Military
Rehabilitation and Compensation (Consequential and Transitional Provisions) Act
2004
|
52,
2004
|
27
Apr 2004
|
Schedule
3 (item 20): 1 July 2004 (see s. 2)
|
|
(a)
Back to Top
The Disability Discrimination Act 1992 was amended by the Sex
Discrimination and other Legislation Amendment Act 1992, subsection 2(2) of
which provides as follows:
(2) An amendment of a provision of the Disability Discrimination Act
1992 commences:
(a) on the 28th day after this Act receives the Royal Assent; or
(b) on the commencement of the relevant provision of the Disability
Discrimination Act 1992;
whichever is later.
Section 4 commenced on 26 November 1992 (see Gazette 1992,
No. S346). The remaining amended provisions commenced on 1 March 1993
(see Gazette 1992, No. S346).
(b) The Disability Discrimination Act 1992 was amended by
Part 2 (sections 3-5) only of the Law and Justice Legislation
Amendment Act 1993, subsection 2(1) of which provides as follows:
(1) Subject to this section, this Act commences on the day on which it
receives the Royal Assent.
(c) The Disability Discrimination Act 1992 was amended by
Part 4 (section 60) only of the Veterans' Affairs (1994-95 Budget
Measures) Legislation Amendment Act (No. 2) 1994, subsection 2(1) of
which provides as follows:
(1) Part 1, Divisions 1 and 11 of Part 2 and Parts 3
and 4 commence on the day on which this Act receives the Royal Assent.
(d) The Disability Discrimination Act 1992 was amended by
Schedule 11 (item 61) and Schedule 19 (item 18) only of the
Workplace Relations and Other Legislation Amendment Act 1996,
subsections 2(1) and (2) of which provide as follows:
(1) Subject to this section, this Act commences on a day on which it receives
the Royal Assent.
(2) Subject to subsection (3), the items of the Schedules, other than
Schedule 5, item 1 of Schedule 9, items 2 and 3 of
Schedule 12, item 90 of Schedule 16 and the items of Schedule19,
commence on a day or days to be fixed by Proclamation.
(e) The Workplace Relations and Other Legislation Amendment Act 1996
was amended by Schedule 3 (items 1 and 2) only of the
Workplace Relations and Other Legislation Amendment Act (No. 2)1996,
subsection 2(4) of which provides as follows:
(4) The items of Schedule 3 are taken to have commenced immediately after
the Workplace and Other Legislation Amendment Act 1996 received the
Royal Assent.
The Workplace Relations and Other Legislation Amendment Act 1996
received the Royal Assent on 25 November 1996.
(f) The Disability Discrimination Act 1992 was amended by
Schedule 5 (item 2) only of the Defence Legislation Amendment Act
(No. 1) 1999, subsection 2(4) of which provides as follows:
(4) Schedule 5 commences on 1 January 2001.
(g) Subsection 2(1) (item 38) of the Statute Law Revision Act
2002 provides as follows:
Commencement
information
|
Column
1
|
Column
2
|
Column
3
|
Provision(s)
|
Commencement
|
Date/Details
|
38.
Schedule 2, item 9
|
Immediately
after the time specified in the Defence Legislation Amendment Act
(No. 1) 1999 for the commencement of item 2 of Schedule 5 to
that Act
|
1 January
2001
|
(h)
Back to Top
The Disability Discrimination Act 1992 was amended by Schedule 1
(items 394-396) only of the Public Employment (Consequential and
Transitional) Amendment Act 1999, subsections 2(1) and (2) of which provide
as follows:
(1) In this Act, commencing time means the time when the
Public Service Act 1999 commences.
(2) Subject to this section, this Act commences at the commencing time.
(i) The Disability Discrimination Act 1992 was amended by
Schedule 3 (items 1 and 25) only of the Australian Security
Intelligence Organisation Legislation Amendment Act 1999, subsection 2(2)
of which provides as follows:
Schedule 3
(2) Subject to subsections (3) to (6), Schedule 3 commences
immediately after the commencement of the other Schedules to this Act.
The other Schedules to this Act commence on 10 December 1999.
(j) The Disability Discrimination Act 1992 was amended by
Schedule 24 only of the Law and Justice Legislation Amendment
(Application of Criminal Code) Act 2001, subsection 2(1)(a) of which
provides as follows:
(1) Subject to this section, this Act commences at the later of the
following times:
(a) immediately after the commencement of item 15 of Schedule 1
to the Criminal Code Amendment (Theft, Fraud, Bribery and Related Offences)
Act 2000;
Item 15 commenced on 24 May 2001.
(k) Subsection 2(1) (item 7) of the Age Discrimination
(Consequential Provisions) Act 2004 provides as follows:
(1) Each provision of this Act specified in column 1 of the table
commences, or is taken to have commenced, on the day or at the time specified
in column 2 of the table.
Provision(s)
|
Commencement
|
Date/Details
|
7.
Schedule 2, items 23 to 28
|
The
later of:
(a) immediately after the commencement of the Age Discrimination Act
2004; and
(b) immediately after the commencement of Schedule 1 to the Australian
Human Rights Commission Legislation Act 2004
|
[see
Note 2] (paragraph (b) applies)
|
Table of Amendments
ad.
= added or inserted am. = amended rep. = repealed rs. = repealed
and substituted
|
Provision
affected
|
How
affected
|
Part 1
|
|
S.
4
|
am.
No. 179, 1992; No. 60, 1996; No. 116, 1999 (as am. by
No. 63, 2002); Nos. 133, 146 and 161, 1999; No. 9, 2000;
No. 105, 2002
|
S.
12A
|
ad.
No. 24, 2001
|
S.
13
|
am.
No. 133, 1999
|
Part 2
|
|
Division 1
|
|
Heading
to s. 20
|
am.
No. 60, 1996; No. 105, 2002
|
Division 2
|
|
S.
31
|
am.
No. 133, 1999; No. 62, 2002
|
S.
33
|
rs.
No. 62, 2002
|
Division 4
|
|
S.
42
|
am.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
43
|
am.
No. 24, 2001
|
Division 5
|
|
S.
47
|
am.
No. 60, 1996; No. 133, 1999
|
S.
51
|
am.
No. 164, 1994; No. 52, 2004
|
S.
55
|
am.
No. 62, 2002
|
Part 4
|
|
Heading
to Part 4
|
rs.
No. 133, 1999
|
Division 1
|
|
S.
66
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
67
|
am.
No. 133, 1999
|
Note
to s. 67(1)
|
ad.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
68
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
69
|
am.
No. 179, 1992
|
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
70
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
Div.
2 of Part 4
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
Ss.
71-76
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
Div.
3 of Part 4
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
Ss.
77-88
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
Ss.
89, 90
|
rs.
No. 179, 1992
|
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
90A
|
ad.
No. 179, 1992
|
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
91
|
am.
No. 179, 1992
|
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
92
|
rs.
No. 179, 1992
|
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
Ss.
93-97
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
98
|
am.
No. 179, 1992
|
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
Ss.
99-101
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
Ss.
102, 103
|
am.
No. 179, 1992
|
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
104
|
rs.
No. 179, 1992
|
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
104A
|
ad.
No. 179, 1992
|
|
rep.
No. 59, 1995
|
S.
104B
|
ad.
No. 179, 1992
|
|
am.
No. 13, 1994
|
|
rep.
No. 59, 1995
|
S.
104C
|
ad.
No. 179, 1992
|
|
rep.
No. 59, 1995
|
S.
105
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
106
|
am.
No. 179, 1992; No. 13, 1994
|
|
rep.
No. 59, 1995
|
Div.
3A of Part 4
|
ad.
No. 59, 1995
|
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
Ss.
105A-105F
|
ad.
No. 59, 1995
|
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
106
|
ad.
No. 59, 1995
|
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
Div.
4 of Part 4
|
ad.
No. 179, 1992
|
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
Ss.
106A-106F
|
ad.
No. 179, 1992
|
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
Part 5
|
|
S.
107
|
am.
No. 133, 1999; No. 24, 2001
|
Ss.
108-111
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
112
|
am.
No. 133, 1999
|
|
rep.
No. 137, 2000
|
Part 6
|
|
S.
113
|
am.
No. 59, 1995
|
S.
116
|
am.
No. 146, 1999
|
Part 7
|
|
S.
123
|
am.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
126
|
am.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
127
|
am.
No. 24, 2001
|
Note
to s. 127(3)
|
ad.
No. 24, 2001
|
S.
130
|
rep.
No. 133, 1999
|
S.
132
|
am.
No. 62, 2002
|
Back to Top
Note 2
Note 2
Age Discrimination (Consequential Provisions) Act 2004 (No. 40,
2004)
The following amendment commences immediately after the commencement of
Schedule 1 to the Australian Human Rights Commission Legislation Act
2004 (still a Bill):
Schedule 2
26 Paragraph 67(3)(c)
Repeal the paragraph, substitute:
- (c)
- whether, in the Attorney-General's opinion, the proceedings have
significant implications for the administration of any of the following Acts:
(i) this Act;
(ii) the Age Discrimination Act 2004;
(iii) the Australian Human Rights Commission Act 1986;
(iv) the Racial Discrimination Act 1975;
(v) the Sex Discrimination Act 1984;
As at 1 July 2004 the amendment is not incorporated in this compilation.
Table A
Table A
Application, saving or transitional provisions
Human Rights Legislation Amendment Act (No. 1) 1999
(No. 133, 1999)
4 Interpretation
In this Part:
appropriate Commissioner means:
- (a)
- in relation to a complaint lodged under the old DDAthe Disability
Discrimination Commissioner; and
- (b)
- in relation to a complaint lodged under the old RDAthe Race
Discrimination Commissioner; and
- (c)
- in relation to a complaint lodged under the old SDAthe Sex
Discrimination Commissioner.
Court means the Federal Court of Australia.
holding of an inquiry means a holding of an inquiry referred to
in a notice given under:
- (a)
- section 83 of the old DDA; or
- (b)
- section 25E of the old RDA; or
- (c)
- section 63 of the old SDA.
new HREOCA means the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity
Commission Act 1986 as amended by Schedule 1 to this Act.
old DDA means the Disability Discrimination Act 1992
before being amended by Schedule 1 to this Act.
old RDA means the Racial Discrimination Act 1975 before
being amended by Schedule 1 to this Act.
old SDA means the Sex Discrimination Act 1984 before being
amended by Schedule 1 to this Act.
purported complaint means a document purporting to be a
complaint.
starting day means the day on which this Part commences.
5 Purported complaint lodged but no decision as to whether it is a
complaint
- (1)
- A purported complaint is treated in the way set out in subsection (2)
if, before the starting day:
Back to Top
- (a)
- it was lodged with the Commission; and
- (b)
- the Commission had not decided whether it was a complaint within the
meaning of the old DDA, old RDA or old SDA.
- (2)
- On the starting day:
- (a)
- the purported complaint is taken to have been lodged under
section 46P of the new HREOCA; and
- (b)
- the Commission must then decide whether it is a complaint within the
meaning of the new HREOCA.
6 Administrative appeal on Commission's decision as to whether
complaint
- (1)
- A purported complaint is treated in the way set out in subsection (2)
if:
- (a)
- before the starting day, the Commission decided that it was, or was not, a
complaint within the meaning of the old DDA, old RDA or old SDA; and
- (b)
- on or after the starting day, the Court makes an order under the
Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 to refer the matter
to which the decision relates to the Commission for further consideration.
- (2)
- On the day on which the order is made:
- (a)
- the purported complaint is taken to have been lodged under
section 46P of the new HREOCA; and
- (b)
- the Commission must then decide whether it is a complaint within the
meaning of the new HREOCA.
7 Complaint lodged but Commissioner not notified of it
- (1)
- A purported complaint is treated in the way set out in subsection (2)
if, before the starting day:
- (a)
- it was lodged with the Commission; and
- (b)
- the Commission decided that it was a complaint within the meaning of the
old DDA, old RDA or old SDA; and
- (c)
- the Commission had not notified the appropriate Commissioner of it.
- (2)
- On the starting day:
- (a)
- the purported complaint is taken to have been lodged under
section 46P of the new HREOCA; and
- (b)
- the Commission is taken to have decided that it is a complaint within the
meaning of the new HREOCA.
8 Commissioner notified of complaint but had not decided to dismiss
or refer it
- (1)
- A complaint is treated in the way set out in subsection (2) if,
before the starting day:
- (a)
- the Commission had notified the appropriate Commissioner of the complaint;
and
- (b)
- the appropriate Commissioner had not made a decision not to inquire, or
not to continue to inquire, into the complaint; and
- (c)
- the appropriate Commissioner had not referred the complaint to the
Commission.
Back to Top
- (2)
- On the starting day, the complaint is taken to have been referred to the
President under section 46PD of the new HREOCA.
9 Commissioner decided to dismiss complaint
- (1)
- A complaint is treated in the way set out in subsection (2) if:
- (a)
- before the starting day, the appropriate Commissioner decided not to
inquire, or not to continue to inquire, into the complaint; and
- (b)
- on the starting day, the complainant could have required the appropriate
Commissioner to:
(i) refer the complaint to the President under section 71 of the old
DDA if that section had not been repealed by this Act; or
(ii) refer the Commissioner's decision to the President, or refer the
complaint to the Commission, under section 24 of the old RDA if that
section had not been repealed by this Act; or
(iii) refer the Commissioner's decision to the President, or refer the
complaint to the Commission, under section 52 of the old SDA if that
section had not been repealed by this Act.
- (2)
- On the starting day, the President is taken to have terminated the
complaint under section 46PH of the new HREOCA.
Note: The President is required to give a notice of termination
of the complaint under section 14 of this Act.
10 Presidential review of Commissioner's decision to dismiss
complaint
- (1)
- A complaint is treated in the way set out in subsection (2) if,
before the starting day:
- (a)
- the appropriate Commissioner decided not to inquire, or not to continue to
inquire, into the complaint; and
- (b)
- the complainant required the appropriate Commissioner to refer the
complaint, or the Commissioner's decision, to the President; and
- (c)
- the President had not made a decision under whichever of the following
sections is applicable:
(i) section 101 of the old DDA;
(ii) section 24AA of the old RDA;
(iii) section 52A of the old SDA.
- (2)
- On the starting day, the President is taken to have terminated the
complaint under section 46PH of the new HREOCA.
Note: The President is required to give a notice of termination
of the complaint under section 14 of this Act.
11 Administrative review of President's decision
- (1)
- A complaint is treated in the way set out in subsection (2) if:
- (a)
- before the starting day, the President made a decision in relation to the
complaint under:
(i) section 101 of the old DDA; or
(ii) section 24AA of the old RDA; or
(iii) section 52A of the old SDA; and
- (b)
- on or after the starting day, the Court makes an order under the
Administrative Decisions (Judicial Review) Act 1977 to refer the matter
to which the decision relates to the Commission for further consideration.
Back to Top
- (2)
- On the day the order is made, the President is taken to have terminated
the complaint under section 46PH of the new HREOCA.
Note: The President is required to give a notice of termination
of the complaint under section 14 of this Act.
12 Complaint referred to Commission but inquiry not started
- (1)
- A complaint is treated in the way set out in subsection (2) if,
before the starting day:
- (a)
- the appropriate Commissioner referred the complaint to the Commission;
and
- (b)
- a holding of an inquiry into the complaint had not started under the old
DDA, old RDA or old SDA; and
- (c)
- the complaint had not been withdrawn under whichever of the following
sections is applicable:
(i) section 79 of the old DDA;
(ii) section 25A of the old RDA;
(iii) section 59 of the old SDA.
- (2)
- On the starting day, the President is taken to have terminated the
complaint under section 46PH of the new HREOCA.
Note: The President is required to give a notice of termination
of the complaint under section 14 of this Act.
13 Inquiry started
- (1)
- A complaint is treated in the way set out in subsection (2) if,
before the starting day:
- (a)
- a holding of an inquiry into the complaint had started under the old DDA,
old RDA or old SDA; and
- (b)
- the complaint had not been withdrawn under whichever of the following
sections is applicable:
(i) section 79 of the old DDA;
(ii) section 25A of the old RDA;
(iii) section 59 of the old SDA.
- (2)
- The amendments made by Schedule 1 to this Act do not apply in
relation to the complaint.
14 Notice of termination
- (1)
- If the President is taken to have terminated a complaint under
section 9, 10, 11 or 12, then the President must notify the complainants
in writing of the termination and the reasons for the termination.
- (2)
- Subsection (1) does not apply if all the complainants requested the
appropriate Commissioner not to inquire into the complaint.
- (3)
- The President must give a person a copy of the notice that was given to
the complainants under subsection (1) if:
- (a)
- the person was a person on whose behalf the complaint was lodged; and
- (b)
- the person requested the President for a copy of the notice.
- (4)
- The President is not required to notify any person under section 46PH
of the new HREOCA.
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15 Work done by Commissioner is taken to have been done by
President
Any thing done, or information obtained, by the appropriate Commissioner in
relation to a complaint that is referred to the President under section 8
is taken to have been done or obtained by the President.
16 Special rules apply to proceedings to enforce a
determination
Sections 46PQ, 46PR and 46PT of the new HREOCA apply for the purposes of
proceedings in the Court:
- (a)
- for an order to enforce a determination in relation to a complaint; or
- (b)
- for an order directing a Commonwealth agency (or the principal executive
of a Commonwealth agency) to comply;
if the proceedings started on or after the starting day under:
- (c)
- section 105A or 106F of the old DDA; or
- (d)
- section 25ZC or 25ZI of the old RDA; or
- (e)
- section 83A or 84F of the old SDA.
17 Protection from civil actions
The amendments made by items 30, 31, 83, 84, 119 and 120 of
Schedule 1 do not apply to a complaint lodged before the starting day
under the old DDA, old RDA or old SDA.
18 Referrals under the old SDA
The amendments made by items 1, 2, 85, 86, 97, 100, 122, 123, 124 and
125 of Schedule 1 do not apply to a complaint lodged before the starting
day under section 50A, 50C or 50E of the old SDA.
19 Inquiries started by Human Rights Commissioner
The amendment made by item 52 of Schedule 1 does not apply in
relation to an inquiry that the Human Rights Commissioner started before the
starting day.
20 When a person cannot lodge a complaint under the new
HREOCA
A person cannot lodge a complaint under section 46P of the new HREOCA if:
- (a)
- the person is a class member for a representative complaint in respect of
the same subject matter; and
- (b)
- a holding of an inquiry into the representative complaint had started
under the old DDA, old RDA or old SDA.
21 Regulations
- (1)
- The Governor-General may make regulations prescribing matters:
- (a)
- required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or
- (b)
- necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect
to this Act.
- (2)
- In particular, regulations may be made in relation to matters of a
transitional or saving nature arising out of the enactment of this Act.
22 Transitionalpowers of a Secretary
A thing done by the Commission before the commencement of this section in
exercising powers referred to in subsection 43(2) of the Human Rights and
Equal Opportunity Commission Act 1986 has effect, for the purpose of the
exercise by the President after the commencement of this section of powers
referred to in that subsection, as if the thing had been done by the President.
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Australian Federal Police Legislation Amendment Act 2000 (No. 9,
2000)
Schedule 3
20 Definition
In this Part:
commencing time means the time when this Part commences.
24 Amendment of the Disability Discrimination Act
1992
The amendment of the Disability Discrimination Act 1992 made by
Schedule 2 to this Act applies to acts done at or after the commencing
time in relation to:
- (a)
- the Commissioner of the Australian Federal Police, a Deputy Commissioner
of the Australian Federal Police, an AFP employee or a special member of the
Australian Federal Police (all within the meaning of the Australian Federal
Police Act 1979 as in force at and after the commencing time); or
- (b)
- persons seeking to become persons of the kind mentioned in
paragraph (a).
34 Warrants or writs etc. may continue to be executed
If, immediately before the commencing time, any warrant, writ, order,
permission or other instrument (the authority) issued under a law
of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory could be executed by a person who
was at that time a member, staff member or special member of the Australian
Federal Police, the authority continues to be able to be executed at and after
the commencing time by the person in his or her capacity as:
- (a)
- the Commissioner of the Australian Federal Police; or
- (b)
- a Deputy Commissioner of the Australian Federal Police; or
- (c)
- an AFP employee; or
- (d)
- a special member of the Australian Federal Police;
(all within the meaning of the Australian Federal Police Act 1979 as
in force at and after the commencing time).
Note: A person who is a member or staff member of the Australian
Federal Police immediately before the commencing time is taken to be engaged as
an AFP employee. Similarly, a person who is a special member of the Australian
Federal Police immediately before the commencing time is taken to be appointed
as a special member. See item 2 of this Schedule.
35 Regulations dealing with matters of a transitional or saving
nature
(1) The Governor-General may make regulations, not inconsistent with any
other provision of this Schedule, prescribing matters of a transitional or
saving nature in relation to the amendments made by Schedule 1 or 2.
(2) Regulations made under this item within one year after the commencement of
this item may commence on a day earlier than the day on which they are made,
but not earlier than the commencement of this item.
Criminal Code Amendment (Theft, Fraud, Bribery and Related Offences) Act
2000 (No. 137, 2000)
Schedule 2
418 Transitionalpre-commencement offences
(1) Despite the amendment or repeal of a provision by this Schedule, that
provision continues to apply, after the commencement of this item, in relation
to:
- (a)
- an offence committed before the commencement of this item; or
- (b)
- proceedings for an offence alleged to have been committed before the
commencement of this item; or
- (c)
- any matter connected with, or arising out of, such proceedings;
as if the amendment or repeal had not been made.
(2) Subitem (1) does not limit the operation of section 8 of the
Acts Interpretation Act 1901.
419 Transitionalpre-commencement notices
If:
- (a)
- a provision in force immediately before the commencement of this item
required that a notice set out the effect of one or more other provisions;
and
- (b)
- any or all of those other provisions are repealed by this Schedule; and
- (c)
- the first-mentioned provision is amended by this Schedule;
the amendment of the first-mentioned provision by this Schedule does not
affect the validity of such a notice that was given before the commencement of
this item.
Law and Justice Legislation Amendment (Application of Criminal Code) Act
2001 (No. 24, 2001)
4 Application of amendments
- (1)
- Subject to subsection (3), each amendment made by this Act applies to
acts and omissions that take place after the amendment commences.
- (2)
- For the purposes of this section, if an act or omission is alleged to have
taken place between 2 dates, one before and one on or after the day on which a
particular amendment commences, the act or omission is alleged to have taken
place before the amendment commences.
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