Explanatory Memorandum
(Circulated by authority of the Attorney-General, the Honourable Robert McClelland MPSchedule 1 - main amendments
Legislative Instruments Act 2003
Item 1 - Subsection 4(1) (At the end of the definition of commencing day )
1. Item 1 adds a note to the definition of "commencing day" which clarifies that the relevant date is 1 January 2005. This change has no substantive effect on the legislation. It is being made to make the Act easier to use and make it clear on the face of the legislation on which date the Act commenced.
Item 2 - Paragraph 50(4)(b)
Consistency of Terminology
2. Item 1 amends paragraph 50(4)(b) so that it reads "day of commencement" rather than "date of commencement". This change has no substantive effect on the legislation. It is being made to make the terminology of sub-section 50(4) consistent with the proposed sub-section (7) and the rest of the section.
3. This Item will also insert a number of headings to the various sub-sections in section 50. These headings do not alter the content of the law. However, they do provide more clarity for users of the Act as to which sub-section determines the sunsetting rules for various kinds of legislative instruments. This is intended to make the Act more accessible and user friendly.
Item 3 - At the end of section 50
New rule for the sunsetting of retrospectively commencing legislative instruments
4. Item 3 will add a new sub-section (7) at the end of section 50 of the LIA. It will provide that, where a legislative instrument (or a provision of a legislative instrument) commences before the day on which it is registered, references in section 50 to a day of commencement are to be read as a reference to a day of registration .
5. The practical effect of this change will be that calculation of the sunsetting date for legislative instruments which commence retrospectively will begin from their date of registration on the Federal Register of Legislative Instruments rather than their day of commencement . Similarly, where some, but not all, provisions of a legislative instrument commence retrospectively, the sunsetting date for those retrospectively commencing provisions will be calculated from the day of registration and not commencement .
6. As the law currently stands, a legislative instrument that commences retrospectively can sunset less than 10 years after it is made. Some instruments have already sunset and others are due to sunset prior to the originally anticipated start of sunsetting in 2015. This amendment will have the effect of preventing the sunsetting of any instruments (which have not already sunset) prior to the expected commencement of sunsetting in 2015.
7. In addition, this amendment would also ensure that all legislative instruments operate for 10 years from registration before sunsetting. This will have the benefit of ensuring that the original policy intention of the LIA, namely that LIs be periodically reviewed, is realised for all retrospectively commencing LIs, including those made after 2015.
Item 4 - Application
8. Item 4 is an avoidance of doubt provision. It ensures that the amendments apply only to those retrospectively commencing legislative instruments which were still in force (i.e. had not yet sunset) on the day after the Act receives Royal Assent.
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