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Bills Digest No. 135 1997-98
Australian Capital Territory (Planning and Land Management) Amendment
Bill 1997
WARNING:
This Digest was prepared for debate. It reflects the legislation as introduced
and does not canvass subsequent amendments. This Digest does not have
any official legal status. Other sources should be consulted to determine
the subsequent official status of the Bill.
CONTENTS
Passage History
Purpose
Background
Main Provisions
Endnotes
Appendix
Contact Officer and Copyright Details
Australian Capital Territory (Planning and Land Management) Amendment
Bill 1997
Date Introduced: 4
December 1997
House: House of Representatives
Portfolio: Regional
Development, Territories and Local Government
Commencement: Royal
Assent
To extend the maximum term of a lease
in the Australian Capital Territory from 99 years to 999 years.
The principle of Commonwealth ownership of land in the
Australian Capital Territory was given expression in s125 of the Constitution
which states in part that:
The seat of Government of the Commonwealth shall be determined by Parliament
and shall be within territory which shall be granted to or acquired by
the Commonwealth and shall be vested in and belonging to the Commonwealth.
Public leasehold of land in the ACT was provided by The
Seat of Government (Administration) Act 1910 which states in s9 that
'no Crown lands in the territory shall be sold or disposed of for any
estate of freehold'.
In 1989 the ACT became self-governing. The Australian
Capital Territory (Planning and Land Management) Act 1988 provides
for land within the ACT to be 'national' land or 'territory' land. Section
29 states that the ACT Executive is responsible for the management of
territory land on behalf of the Commonwealth. Section 29(3) provides that
the term of an estate in territory land granted on and after self-government
(11 May 1989) 'shall not exceed 99 years or such longer period as is prescribed,
but the estate may be renewed'.
Reasons for Leasehold in the ACT
The original reasons for the adoption of a public leasehold
system for the ACT included:
- defraying the expenses of establishing the National Capital by allowing
unearned increments in land value to be retained by the Commonwealth
Government;
- avoiding speculation in undeveloped land; and
- ensuring orderly planned development through lease purpose clauses.
At the time of Federation, in debates on the acquisition
of land for the Seat of Government, many members of Parliament were convinced
that the only really economical method of managing land in the Territory
was to alienate it under long-term leases, with periodical reappraisals
of rent. Speaking in the House of Representatives on 22 September 1903,
Sir Edmund Barton summed up what was the prevailing view when he said:
Within the area that is chosen, the Commonwealth should be the landlord
or the proprietor of every square inch of private land...there will be
a progressive settlement which will tend to swell the revenue derivable
from the land within the federal area, and thus provide a fund, not only
for meeting interest, but also the extinction of debt...a system of leases
with periodical reappraisement, will be about the best manner in which
we can set about the meeting of any expense which we may incur in connection
with this project.(1)
There was also concern in the minds of the people framing
the legislation to establish the new National Capital about the possibility
of land speculation that might eventuate. Land scandals associated with
the grant of lands and speculative development were especially common
in Sydney and Melbourne in the 19th century and led to heightened
concern that after the long debate about the siting of the National Capital,
it would give rise to unseemly land speculation.(2)
In addition, the leasing of land was seen as a way of
ensuring orderly development by placing conditions on the granting of
leases. By leasing the land the Commonwealth Government could provide
sites at low capital cost for housing and for public and community services,
as well as for commercial activities. Leasehold provided a means of planning
the city so that it developed in a predictable fashion.(3)
Types of leasehold in the ACT
There are four categories of lease granted in the ACT
under the Land (Planning and Environment) Act (ACT) 1991 [the
Land Act (ACT)]:
- Residential leases can be for up to 99 years, and most are
for that period. These may be automatically renewed for a further 99
years without charge. The only exception to this right is if the ACT
or Commonwealth Government require the land for a public purpose [s171of
the Land Act (ACT)]:
- Commercial, industrial and community leases may also be for
up to 99 years. Renewals of these leases are governed by s172 of the
Land Act (ACT). As with residential leases, an application for
renewal may be made in the last 30 years of a lease. If the land is
not required by the ACT or Commonwealth Government for a public purpose
and if there is no change to the purpose of the lease, then it may be
renewed on payment of a 'determined fee'. On 8 January 1998 the Chief
Minister of the ACT, Kate Carnell, announced that commercial leases
which were granted for less than 99 years could be converted to 99 year
leases on the payment of $200, provided that the lease purpose remained
the same.(4)
- Rural leases are usually granted for up to 50 years. Unlike
residential or non-residential leases the Land Act (ACT) does
not provide any security of tenure by way of lease renewal for rural
leases. The reason for this relates to the gradual resumption of rural
lands for residential development as more land was required for the
building of Canberra.
- Special leases may be granted for a charge that is less than
the market value of the lease where the ACT administration is satisfied
that it is desirable and in the public interest to do so in order to
facilitate economic development or the development of business in the
ACT [s164 of the Land Act (ACT)]. Sites provided to each
church or denomination and to the Australian National University have
been granted as special leases.
Land rents were charged on residential and non-residential
leases until 1970 when they were abolished and municipal rates increased.
From January 1971 a 'betterment levy' has been charged when a lessee is
granted a change in the lease purpose.
How ACT leasehold differs from freehold
Usually (but not always) freehold permits the owner to
use the land for a particular purpose, allowed by government and planning
laws, for an indefinite period. There is no right to change the use to
a different use, unless the latter is a permissible one under land use
controls and permission is granted after an appropriate assessment. In
addition, an owner's lawful use of land is constrained by a large number
of diverse regulations relating to building, health, and environmental
concerns. A land owner is also required to pay taxes on land, eg. rates
and land tax. For land held in fee simple (that is, an estate in land
which is the most absolute in respect to the rights it confers), minerals
are usually reserved for the Crown.
The ACT leasehold system has evolved since the 1920s
to share many of the attributes of freehold. For example, leases may be
transferred with the agreement of the lessor (the ACT administration).
Transfer may be by sale or inheritance. As in a freehold system, the administration
continues to make rules about the use of its land, controls over building
etc, and levying of rates and taxes. The administration retains the right,
as with freehold tenure, to compulsorily acquire the lease upon payment
of compensation.
One of the principal differences between private freehold
and public leasehold is that the lessor is also the government and therefore
owns all of the use rights in land. By granting a lease it permits the
lessee to use the land for the use or uses specified in the lease but
no more. The lessor retains the right to use the land for any other purpose.
Normally leases are granted for a terminable period. Until 1 January 1971,
the lessor also had the right to receive rent. In this way increases in
value in land accrued, to some extent, to the lessor.(5)
In summary, the characteristics of the ACT leasehold
system which are distinct from freehold are:
- a lease is for a purpose which is specified in the lease purpose clause;
- a lease is for a specified period of time, usually 99 years;
- a lease includes covenants and conditions with which the lessee is
required to comply; and
- a lease is subject to the payment of land rent or a premium.
Reviews of ACT leasehold system
The leasehold system in the ACT has been reviewed thirteen
times in the past 25 years. A list of the thirteen reports is in the Appendix.
A number of these reports discussed the alternative of perpetual leasehold.
The Land Tenures Inquiry (1976) favoured perpetual
leasehold for home owners because of their concern for security of tenure.
However, the Inquiry did not recommend that commercial uses should have
leases of indefinite duration. It recommended that commercial leases should
be for fixed terms.(6)
The White Report (1983) rejected perpetual leasehold
as unnecessary and unjustified. It saw the notion as inconsistent with
the Commonwealth ownership of land. Perpetual leasehold had the capacity
to weaken the leasehold system and the effectiveness of the lease purpose
clause as a planning tool.(7)
The Langmore Report (1988) also rejected leases
in perpetuity as being fraught with contractual difficulties and weakening
the Government's control over the use of land.(8)
The Stein Report (1995) similarly rejected conversion
to a system of leases in perpetuity (or freehold) because of the primacy
of lease purpose clauses in controlling planning and development in the
ACT. Justice Stein of the NSW Land and Environment Court also argued that
conversion to freehold or perpetual leases would affect the ACT Government's
ability to extract a charge for development rights ('betterment') on ACT
land. He said that:
Since the Government's residual interest in the land is diminished (by
perpetual leasehold), it will be in a weaker position to exact a betterment
charge. The failure of the NSW land development legislation in the early
1970s was largely a product of the opposition of private landholders to
accepting a development rights levy within a freehold tenure system. This
experience is indicative of the lessening of political control which likely
would follow conversion to a system of perpetual leasehold in the ACT.(9)
Arguments in favour of perpetual leasehold
Australian preference for freehold
The Australian public has a general preference, understanding
and appreciation of freehold tenure. Freehold tenure is predominant throughout
Australia, so anything less than perpetual leasehold would 'severely penalise
Canberra residents'.(10) A term leasehold subject to renewal, and possibly
re-appraisal, is 'an extreme restriction on natural rights of property
ownership and family inheritance'.(11) This is also one of the arguments
in the minority report of the Joint Sub-Committee on the Canberra Leasehold
System (The Langmore Report) where four Coalition members of the sub-committee
argued in November 1988 that:
Freehold or perpetual leasehold is consistent with the very Australian
aspiration to enable each Australian to own a little piece of Australia.
There is no reason why residents of the ACT should be denied that aspiration.(12)
Control of planning and development
The main feature of Canberra's leasehold system is the
control over the land use particularly by individual purpose clauses and
building requirements which facilitates planning. However, planning in
each of Australia's six States is easily facilitated by the statutory
planning systems of State and Local governments. Canberra could adopt
the familiar statutory planning systems of the rest of Australia. The
residual role of the ACT and Commonwealth Governments would ensure that
local as well as national interests are taken fully into account.(13)
Natural progression
Perpetual leasehold would be a natural progression from
the many changes that have occurred to ACT leasehold, including:
- the method of sale of land leases which has changed gradually from
a rental bid to an outright cash premium;
- tenant rights in the improvements were introduced in 1938 to give
the lessee some long term equity in the lease;
- land rent and consequent re-appraisals were abolished from 1 January
1971.
These changes are largely irrevocable, and the logical
next step would be perpetual leasehold.(14)
Deterrent to business in Canberra
Proponents of a change to 999 year leases claim that
they would provide more certainty and security for investors in the ACT.
In his Second Reading Speech, the Minister for Regional Development, Territories
and Local Government, Hon Alex Somylay, quoted the ACT Chief Minister,
Mrs Kate Carnell in describing the 99 year limit as 'antiquated and unduly
restrictive'. The ACT Minister for Land, Planning and the Environment,
Mr Gary Humphries, is quoted as telling a meeting of the ACT Property
Council that:
I have been told constantly of overseas investment opportunities which
evaporated when the investors found they were dealing with leasehold -
and a leasehold system which is not quite like any other...one that does
not provide certainty of lease renewal.(15)
Simplification of administration
The limited leasehold system requires more administration
than is necessary. Perpetual leasehold should involve less administrative
perplexities and workload. It is much more readily understood by the public.(16)
Arguments against perpetual leasehold
Loss of control over land use
One important aspect of any change to leases would be
the effect on the Government's ability to enforce compliance with lease
terms. Its interest in land would obviously be less than in the case of
a fixed term lease. In terms of enforcement, it would be in little different
position than a local government authority in the States seeking to enforce
development approvals and statutory planning schemes. Professor Max Neutze
has argued that many of the critics of leasehold assess it in comparison
with an idealised view of what happens under freehold. 'Because the land
is owned by the community, leasehold has the potential to more adequately
protect the community interest in the way a city develops.'(17)
Loss of revenue
The beneficial ownership of land is almost the only 'resource'
of the ACT government from which it can gain revenue, and increasingly,
as the supply of suitable rural land for conversion to urban uses runs
out, the source of revenue will be from changes to use. Justice Stein
argued in his 1995 report that, if that source is given away, then it
is unlikely that the Commonwealth Grants Commission would recommend that
the ACT be compensated. He argued that:
In negotiating self government for the ACT, the Commonwealth was mindful
of the fact that the new government would have limited opportunities to
locally raise revenue. In managing the Territory land on behalf of the
Commonwealth, the ACT was given the income stream from the administration
of leases as a significant source of income...The Commonwealth could not
take lightly a self denying ordinance by the ACT Government to secure
an appropriate return on a national asset such as Territory land.(18)
In addition, he suggested that the leasehold system has
brought the following financial benefits to Canberra residents:
- lower price of land for housing;
- lower cost land for public use;
- lower cost land for community use; and
- financial return for the government.(19)
ACT is a national heritage
The Langmore Report (1988) stated that 'Canberra land
is a national heritage to be safeguarded and used for the benefit of the
nation and its capital'.(20) Leasehold tenure ensures that ownership of
the land remains in the public domain for the benefit of all Australians.
ACT residents already have secure tenure
Canberra residents have a secure tenure with residential
leases renewed automatically and without cost. According to the Stein
Report, if renewal of commercial leases was made virtually automatic,
subject to the requirement of s172 to the Land Act (ACT), and long
term rural leases were given the right of renewal, 'then the vast majority
of leaseholders will have adequate security of tenure'(21).
No evidence that leasehold is a disincentive to business
The Stein Report said that there is no evidence that
leasehold tenure inhibits investment in the ACT.
Unfortunately no one was able to give the Board any details of any investment
which did not take place in the Territory as a sole consequence of the
leasehold system. In the result we have been left with a small number
of admittedly anecdotal stories which are impossible to verify, despite
a number of attempts. Those examples able to be scrutinised by the Board
revealed a variety of complex reasons behind a decision not to invest.(22)
Professor Patrick Troy, head of the Urban Research Program
at the Australian National University, is quoted as saying that it is
'nonsense' to suggest that the leasehold system affected investment. 'Hong
Kong, Stockholm, Amsterdam and Singapore were among the "thriving and
bubbling" cities which operated with leasehold systems'.(23) Professor
Max Neutze has written that:
It is true that investors will pay somewhat less for leasehold than for
freehold land because they are buying lesser rights, but that does not
reduce the rate of return on their investments. The strongest proponents
of conversion to freehold are those who purchased leases and want to be
given the additional rights that attach to freehold tenure. Once
everyone has freehold tenure, the rate of return from investment in the
ACT would be expected to be about the same as elsewhere in Australia.(24)
Section 164 of the Land Act (ACT) enables the
Government to grant special leases at less than the market value in order
to facilitate economic development or the development of business in the
ACT. The Stein Report recommended that the ACT Government provide special
leases where it is 'satisfied that it is desirable and in the public interest
to do so'.(25)
Summary
In the various reports on changes to the ACT leasehold
system, those in favour of abolition of the leasehold system are presented
mainly as developers and as the owners of leases which had potential for
redevelopment. Those in favour of maintaining the leasehold system are
presented as representatives of residents and community groups. According
to Professor Neutze, a useful way of describing the situation in Canberra
is that leases have been increasingly treated by many lessees and land
administrators as though they were freehold. Some people believe that
this is appropriate and want to legitimise that situation; others see
it as the erosion of the community equity in and control over land and
want to see it reversed.(26)
The Process
If this Bill is passed, then it will still be necessary
for the ACT Legislative Assembly to pass its own complementary legislation
changing the current leasehold system. Prior to the ACT election on 21
February 1998, the Labor Party, the Greens and the Independent MLA Mr
Michael Moore all said that they would oppose such a change. In the previous
Legislative Assembly, those nine votes would have been sufficient to stop
the Assembly making the change.
This Bill contains only two items.
The effect of Item 1 is to enable leases in the
ACT to be granted for 999 years and to remove the provision for prescribing
longer periods. Item 2 states that the change from 99 to 999 year
leases will apply to estates granted on or after this Act receives Royal
Assent. Automatic renewal would not be possible under the proposed legislative
change. Business and other lessees wishing to obtain a lease longer than
99 years would have to surrender their old lease and apply for a new one
under the new limit of 999 years.
- House of Representatives, Debates, 22 September 1903, 5278-5281.
- Joint Sub-Committee on the Canberra Leasehold System, Report on
the Canberra leasehold system, (Chair: J.V. Langmore), AGPS, Canberra,
1988, 5.
- ibid., 7
- Canberra Times, 8 January 1998, 'ACT tempts business with $200
lease renewal deal'.
- ACT Board of Inquiry into the Administration of Leasehold, Report
into the administration of the ACT leasehold, November 1995 (Chair:
P. Stein), Publications and Public Communication, Canberra, 1995, 20-23.
- Commission of Inquiry into Land Tenures, Final report, February
1976 (Chair: R. Else-Mitchell), AGPS, Canberra, 1976.
- Committee of Review of the National Capital Development Commission,
Canberra planning and development: report of the Committee of review
of the role and functions of the NCDC, July 1983 (Chair: G.M. White),
AGPS, Canberra, 1983.
- Joint Sub-Committee on the Canberra Leasehold System, Report on
the Canberra leasehold system, (Chair: J.V. Langmore), AGPS, Canberra,
1988.
- ACT Board of Inquiry into the Administration of Leasehold, Report
into the administration of the ACT leasehold, November 1995 (Chair:
P. Stein), Publications and Public Communication, Canberra, 1995, 117.
- B.V. Raison, 'Proposal for perpetual leasehold in the Australian Capital
Territory', The Valuer, October 1979, 643.
- Ibid., 643.
- Joint Sub-Committee on the Canberra Leasehold System, op. cit., 76.
- Ibid., 74.
- B.V. Raison, 'Perpetual leasehold tenure sought for the ACT', The
Valuer, June 1988, 32.
- Canberra Times, 10 July 1997, 1-2, 'Coming soon: 999-year leases
for land in ACT'.
- Raison, 'Proposal for perpetual leasehold...' op.cit., 646; Joint
Sub-Committee on the Canberra Leasehold System, op.cit.,76.
- M. Neutze, 'The Stein Report on leasehold administration in the Australian
Capital Territory: some observations on land tenure and systems in other
States', Local Government Law Journal, 1(4), May 1996, 215.
- ACT Board of Inquiry into the Administration of Leasehold, op. cit.,
113.
- Ibid, 124-125.
- Joint Sub-Committee on the Canberra Leasehold System, op. cit., 8.
- ACT Board of Inquiry into the Administration of Leasehold, op. cit.,
116.
- Ibid., 113.
- Canberra Times, 11 July 1997, 2, 'Plan for 999-year leases
an election stunt: academic'.
- Neutze, op. cit., 212.
- ACT Board of Inquiry into the Administration of Leasehold, op. cit.,
114.
- Neutze, op. cit., 212.
List of Reports on the ACT Leasehold System 1973-1998
Commission of Inquiry into Land Tenures, First report, November
1973 (Chair: R. Else-Mitchell), Govt. Printer, Canberra, 1975.
Commission of Inquiry into Land Tenures, Final report, February
1976 (Chair: R. Else-Mitchell), AGPS, Canberra, 1976.
Joint Committee on the Australian Capital Territory, Planning in the
ACT: procedures, processes and community involvement, March 1979 (Chair:
J.W. Knight), AGPS, Canberra, 1979.
Committee of Review of the National Capital Development Commission, Canberra
planning and development: report of the Committee of review of the role
and functions of the NCDC, July 1983 (Chair: G.M. White), AGPS, Canberra,
1983.
Joint Sub-Committee on the Canberra Leasehold System, Report on the
Canberra leasehold system, (Chair: J.V.Langmore), AGPS, Canberra,
1988.
J. Mant, A further report on the planning system for the ACT,
1989.
ACT Priorities Review Board, Priorities for improved public sector
management, Canberra, 1990.
Access Economics, An economic assessment of the betterment issues
in the ACT, 1992.
R.K.Todd, Report of inquiry into planning and development proposals,
Section 22 - Braddon, ACT Government, Canberra, 1993.
R.B. Lansdown, Australian Capital Territory residential redevelopment
review: report to the Minister for the Environment, Land & Planning
(ACT), Canberra, 1994.
ACT Legislative Assembly, Standing Committee on Planning, Development
and Infrastructure, Inquiry into possible changes to planning legislation
in the ACT, Canberra, 1994.
ACT Department of the Environment, Land and Planning, Draft process
review report, December 1994.
ACT Board of Inquiry into the Administration of Leasehold, Report
into the administration of the ACT leasehold, November 1995 (Chair:
P. Stein), Publications and Public Communication, Canberra, 1995.
Rosemary Bell
26 February 1998
Bills Digest Service
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ISSN 1328-8091
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