Bills Digest no. 34,
2016–17
PDF version [591KB]
Jonathan Mills
Law and Bills Digest Section
8
November 2016
Contents
Purpose of the Bills
Structure of the Bills
Background
Narcotic Drugs Amendment Act 2016
Reason for the current Bills
Committee consideration
Senate Standing Committee for the
Scrutiny of Bills
Policy position of non-government
parties/independents
Position of major interest groups
Financial implications
Statement of Compatibility with Human
Rights
Parliamentary Joint Committee on
Human Rights
Key issues and provisions
Sensitive law enforcement information
The natural justice hearing rule
Operation of the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal Act 1975
Other provisions
Special Access Scheme Approvals
Licence charges
Concluding comments
Date introduced: 14
September 2016
House: House of
Representatives
Portfolio: Health
Commencement: Schedules 1 and
2 of the Amendment Bill commence on the day the Act receives Royal Assent.
Schedule 3 commences on the later of the commencement of section 1 to the Narcotic
Drugs (Licence Charges) Act 2016, or Royal Assent.
The Licence Charges Bill commences on Royal Assent.
Links: The links to the Narcotic
Drugs Legislation Amendment Bill 2016, its Explanatory Memorandum and second
reading speech, and the Narcotic
Drugs (Licence Charges) Bill 2016, its Explanatory Memorandum and second
reading speech can be found on the Bills’ home pages, or through the Australian
Parliament website.
When Bills have been passed and have received Royal Assent,
they become Acts, which can be found at the Federal Register of Legislation
website.
All hyperlinks in this Bills Digest are correct as
at November 2016.
Purpose of
the Bills
The purpose of the Narcotic Drugs Legislation Amendment
Bill 2016 (the Amendment Bill) is to amend the Narcotic Drugs Act
1967 (the ND Act), as recently amended by the Narcotic Drugs
Amendment Act 2016, to protect ‘sensitive law enforcement information’
that is held by or provided to the Secretary of the Department of Health for
the purposes of making licensing decisions under the ND Act.
The Bill will also make amendments to the Therapeutic Goods
Act 1989 to allow regulations to be made specifying conditions and
prohibitions for Special Access Scheme approvals for otherwise unapproved
therapeutic goods, in certain circumstances.
The purpose of the Narcotic Drugs (Licence Charges) Bill
2016 (the Licence Charges Bill) is to allow charges to be levied on licences
granted under the ND Act, including those recently introduced by the Narcotic
Drugs Amendment Act 2016.
Structure
of the Bills
The Amendment Bill is divided into three Schedules.
Schedule 1 amends the ND Act to protect
sensitive law enforcement information provided to or held by the Secretary of
the Department of Health for decision making related to licences under the ND
Act. The amendments in Schedule 1 also have the effect of altering the
operation of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 to align its
operation in relation to decisions made under the ND Act with the
protection of certain law enforcement information.
Schedule 2 is divided into a number of parts:
- Parts
1 to 4 amend the ND Act for other purposes including specifying
notification requirements, guidelines and standards, authority to supply
cannabis seeds and various miscellaneous amendments.
- Part
5 amends the Therapeutic Goods Act 1989 to provide for regulations to be
made to control the making of Special Access Scheme approvals in certain
circumstances.
Schedule 3 amends the ND Act to introduce
minor amendments relating to payment arrangements for licence charges that
would be imposed under the proposed Licence Charges Bill.
The Licence Charges Bill enables charges to be imposed on ND
Act licence holders, with the amount of charge and other matters to be
prescribed by regulation.
Background
Narcotic
Drugs Amendment Act 2016
The Narcotic Drugs Amendment Act 2016 was passed by
Parliament in February 2016 and received Royal Assent on 29 February 2016.
Most of its provisions commenced on 29 October 2016. This Act amended the ND
Act to regulate the cultivation, production and manufacture of cannabis for
medical or scientific purposes, while providing the regulatory controls
necessary to fulfil Australia’s international treaty obligations.[1]
This measure provides the necessary Commonwealth
legislation to permit the cultivation and manufacture of cannabis for medicinal
or research purposes, while the supply to end users for medicinal purposes will
be within the control of states and territories.[2]
The Office of Drug Control information page states that licensees must also
conform with relevant state and territory laws.[3]
The provisions also operate in conjunction with the
existing medicines authorisation schemes in the Therapeutic Goods Act 1989,
and so will enable the authorised trial and prescription of cannabis derived
medical products. The definitions of products that may be approved are broad,
providing some discretion in the nature of approved products in response to
evidence.
The legislation restricts production to cannabis grown solely
for approved research or for medicinal products. The ND Act includes fit
and proper person tests for licensees and provides penalties for breaches of
the requirements.
Further regulatory details of the licensing and permit
scheme have been supplied by the Narcotic Drugs
Regulation 2016, tabled on 17 October 2016.
Upon commencement of the relevant amendments, on 29 October
2016, the Department of Health announced that the licensing scheme had
commenced:
Businesses can now apply for a licence to cultivate cannabis
for medicinal purposes, to manufacture medicinal cannabis products or to
conduct medicinal cannabis related research under the Medicinal Cannabis
Scheme.
The Minister for Health, Sussan Ley, said the commencement of
the Narcotic Drugs Amendment Act 2016 will give patients and
doctors access to a safe, reliable and legal source of cannabis for medicinal
use.
...
The Medicinal Cannabis Scheme is the result of extensive
consultation between the Federal Government and State and Territory authorities
in the development of regulatory regulations and security protocols for the
cultivation, production and manufacture of medicinal cannabis.
The Office of Drug Control, within the Department of Health,
regulates the medicinal cannabis framework and those interested in applying for
a licence can find detailed information at the Office
of Drug Control website.[4]
The Department of Health has also provided the following
information on the operation of the new scheme:
- Medicinal Cannabis products are therapeutic goods, which means
they must be supplied in accordance with the provisions of the Therapeutic
Goods Act 1989, either as registered goods, which are assessed for safety,
quality and efficacy, or as unregistered goods through either the Special
Access Scheme or Authorised Prescriber Schemes. Unregistered medicines are not
assessed for efficacy by the TGA.
- Therapeutic goods must also comply with relevant state/territory
drug and poisons legislation. States and territories are responsible for the
distribution of therapeutic goods through pharmacies and it is expected that,
for the most part, medicinal cannabis products will be distributed in
accordance with existing legislation. Queensland and Victoria have, however,
enacted special legislation dealing with this.
- The Commonwealth will be responsible for licensing cultivation of
cannabis for medicinal purposes and for manufacturing into medicinal cannabis
products. To hold a licence, licensees must pass strict fit and proper persons
requirements and other legislative tests relating to security.
- Access to medicinal cannabis products will be on prescription
from an appropriately qualified medical practitioner [who] is approved by the
state/territory to prescribe these products and has the appropriate TGA
approvals.[5]
Reason for
the current Bills
As discussed in the Explanatory Memorandum for the
Amendment Bill, under the licensing scheme in the ND Act the Secretary
must refuse to grant a licence if not satisfied on reasonable grounds that an
applicant and each of the applicant’s business associates is a fit and proper
person. This decision is reviewable to the Minister and then to the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal (the AAT).
The information considered by the Secretary in assessing whether
an applicant is a fit and proper person may include information and documents that
the Secretary is empowered to request from Commonwealth, state and territory
agencies, including law enforcement agencies.
Law enforcement agencies may hold information relevant to
determining if a person is a fit and proper person, but the disclosure of that
information to the person or the public may ‘prejudice law enforcement operations,
intelligence collection or the safety of certain persons’. The Amendment Bill
is intended to prevent the disclosure of such sensitive information.[6]
The reason for the Licence Charges Bill is simply to
enable charges to be levied on licences issued under the ND Act. The
Explanatory Memorandum states that the Commonwealth does not intend to impose
cost-recovery on manufacture licences ‘at this time’, but that for medicinal
cannabis and cannabis research licences the amount of the charge will be
consistent with cost recovery guidelines.[7]
Committee
consideration
Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills
reported on the Bills in its Alert Digest of October 2016.[8]
The Committee raised some concerns with the Amendment Bill. In particular, the
Committee sought the Minister’s advice regarding:
- why
the definition of ‘law enforcement agency’ should be able to be expanded by
regulation[9]
- why
the natural justice hearing rule was excluded from the provisions precluding
the sharing of sensitive law enforcement information in certain circumstances[10]
- justification
for reversing the evidential burden of proof for a person relying on an
exception to the proposed offence of disclosing sensitive law enforcement
information,[11]
and
- why
the Minister is able to make standards that incorporate matter from another
instrument or writing, thus avoiding parliamentary oversight of such matter as
it may be amended.[12]
At the date of publication of this Digest, the Committee
had not published a response from the Minister.
The Committee had no comment on the Licence Charges Bill.[13]
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
At the time of writing, no policy positions on the present
Bills had been expressed. Non-government parties and independents in the 44th
Parliament broadly supported the medicinal cannabis cultivation, licensing and
production scheme as proposed in February 2016 under the Narcotic Drugs Amendment
Act 2016.[14]
However, while Senator Richard Di Natale of the Australian
Greens ‘cautiously welcomed’ the earlier Bill he also stated that it was ‘just
the first piece of the puzzle’ and that ‘the final test for any reform is
whether it will get this medicine in the hands of everyone who needs it.’[15]
Position of
major interest groups
At the time of writing, no stakeholder views on the
present Bills were available.
However, earlier in 2016 several stakeholders commented on
the medicinal cannabis cultivation, licensing and production scheme that went
on to be introduced under the Narcotic Drugs Amendment Act 2016.
AusCann, a company that intends to become a licensed
producer of medicinal marijuana announced support for the opportunities
provided by the scheme.[16]
Others involved in the production of whole cannabis
medicinal products criticised the apparent bias towards the pharmaceutical
industry over natural products.[17]
The Pharmaceutical Society of Australia (PSA) welcomed the
scheme ‘as an important first step to allow for the safe and appropriate
therapeutic use of cannabis.’[18]
Financial
implications
The Government has indicated that while the cultivation
licensing scheme for cannabis will incur some administrative costs, these are
proposed to be funded from a cost recovery scheme of fees under the ND Act
and as proposed under the Licence Charges Bill.[19]
Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights
As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011 (Cth), the Government has assessed the
Bills’ compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or declared
in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act. The
Government considers that the Bills are compatible.[20]
Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights considers
that the Bills do not raise human rights concerns.[21]
Key issues
and provisions
Sensitive
law enforcement information
Schedule 1 of the Amendment Bill contains amendments to
the ND Act designed to protect sensitive law enforcement information that
is provided to or held by the Secretary for decision making related to the
granting of licences under the ND Act.
Item 1 of Schedule 1 introduces definitions for
‘law enforcement agency’ and ‘sensitive law enforcement information’ into
subsection 4(1) of the ND Act. A law enforcement agency is a body,
agency or organisation that is responsible for or deals with law enforcement,
criminal intelligence, criminal investigation, fraud or security intelligence
in Australia (or part of Australia) This part of the definition is the same as
the definition of ‘Australian law enforcement or intelligence agency’ in
section 503A of the Migration
Act 1958. However, the definition inserted by item 1 also allows a
further body, agency or organisation to be prescribed as a ‘law enforcement
agency’ by the regulations. As set out above, the Scrutiny of Bills Committee
has sought further information from the Minister on the appropriateness of this
approach.[22]
‘Sensitive law enforcement information’ is defined as
information which, if disclosed, is reasonably likely to prejudice Australia’s
law enforcement interests, including interests in avoiding disruption to law
enforcement and criminal intelligence, protecting technologies used to collect
and analyse criminal intelligence, and protecting the safety of witnesses or
informants.
Items 4,7,16 and 18 provide that where
notices are to be given to licence holders under sections 11, 13C, 15F and 15J
(including notices to grant, refuse, vary or revoke a medical cannabis licence
or permit), such notices must not disclose information identified as sensitive
law enforcement information.
Item 10 inserts proposed section 14LA to
deal with the identification of information as sensitive law enforcement
information. Under proposed subsection 14LA(1), if a person from a law
enforcement agency who supplies information to the Secretary knows or believes
that the information is, or includes, sensitive law enforcement information
then they must identify it as such. Similarly proposed subsection 14LA(2) requires
the Secretary to identify information that they possess from another source and
that they know or believe is sensitive law enforcement information.
Item 11 introduces, in proposed section 14MA,
offences for the unauthorised disclosure of sensitive law enforcement
information obtained under the ND Act.
The natural
justice hearing rule
The natural justice ‘hearing rule’ requires that a person should
be informed of matters adverse to them before a decision is made, giving them
an opportunity to respond.[23]
Item 20 inserts proposed section 21A that
provides that where the natural justice hearing rule would otherwise require
the disclosure of information identified as sensitive law enforcement
information under the ND Act, then the Act itself ‘is taken to be an
exhaustive statement of the requirements of the rule in relation to the
disclosure of that information.’
The Explanatory Memorandum states:
This measure is intended for consistency with the provisions
relating to non-disclosure of sensitive law enforcement information, and to
ensure that the natural justice hearing rule does not undermine the safeguards
... in relation to the non-disclosure of sensitive law enforcement information.
Thus, the non-disclosure of that information to a person
adversely affected by a decision would not result in the decision being found
by a court to be unlawful even though the person was not made aware of the
information prior to the decision being made.[24]
However, as mentioned above, the Senate Standing Committee
for the Scrutiny of Bills questioned this exclusion of the rule, commenting
that it may not be necessary and that courts would apply the rule with
sensitivity to the public interest.[25]
The Committee sought the Minister’s advice on ‘why it is necessary to exclude
the natural justice hearing rule, given that the courts apply that rule by
reference to a particular statutory scheme and its underlying purposes’. [26]
Operation
of the Administrative Appeals Tribunal Act 1975
Item 19 of Schedule 1 of the Amendment Bill introduces
proposed sections 15M and 15N which aim to prevent the disclosure
of sensitive law enforcement information when an application is made to the
Administrative Appeals Tribunal (AAT) for review of a relevant decision under
the ND Act.
Proposed section 15M allows the Secretary to apply
to the AAT for orders relating to a private hearing or restricting attendees or
the publication or disclosure of information under section 35 of the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal Act 1975 (AAT Act) if an application has been
made for review of a decision under the medicinal cannabis licensing scheme.
This information may include, but is not limited to, information identified as
sensitive law enforcement information under the ND Act.
Proposed subsection 15M(3) provides that, following
such an application, the AAT may make an order where it is satisfied that the
order is necessary to:
(a) avoid
disruption to law enforcement, criminal intelligence or investigations or
security intelligence
(b) protect the
technologies and methods of law enforcement agencies
(c) protect
and ensure the safety of informants, witnesses or their associates, or persons
involved in the protection or safety or informants or witnesses, or
(d) ensure
that intelligence and law enforcement agencies are not discouraged from giving
information to a nation’s government and government agencies.
Proposed section 15N provides that the decision-maker
is not required to supply information identified as sensitive law enforcement
information in a statement if a person applies for review of a reviewable decision
(as listed at section 15E of the ND Act).
Other provisions
Schedule 2 of the Amendment Bill is divided into a
number of parts.
Parts 1 to 4 amend the ND Act for other purposes
including specifying notification requirements, guidelines and standards,
authority to supply cannabis seeds and various miscellaneous amendments.
Part 1 of Schedule 2 introduces amendments to sections
10K and 12N of the ND Act. Section 10K requires a cannabis licence
holder to notify the Secretary if any listed matters, including a breach of the
licence, occur. Section 12N provides the same requirement for a manufacture
licence. Currently, these sections require the Secretary to be notified ‘as
soon as reasonably practical’. The amendments at items 1 to 6 provide
that licence holders must notify the Secretary of these matters ‘as soon as
reasonably practicable’ or within a period prescribed by the regulations. The Explanatory
Memorandum explains that this will ‘remove discretion from the licence holder
for matters where it is deemed important enough that the Commonwealth is
notified within a defined period’.[27]
Part 2 of Schedule 2 contains amendments relating
to guidelines and standards, primarily introducing new grounds for refusal to
grant licences and permits into the various relevant sections of the ND Act.[28]
The new grounds include where the Secretary:
- is
not satisfied that standards are or will be met, or
- is
satisfied that circumstances prescribed by regulations exist.
Item 28, however, provides the Minister with new
powers to issue standards and guidelines for the purposes of the Act. As
discussed above, the Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills raised
concerns with proposed subsection 26B(2) as inserted by item 28, questioning
why it was necessary that the standards should be able to apply, adopt or
incorporate matter contained in another instrument or writing.[29]
The Committee was concerned that the incorporation of information by reference
to other documents may create uncertainty and may allow changes to occur
without parliamentary scrutiny.[30]
Part 3 of Schedule 2 contains only item 30.
This item inserts proposed subparagraph 9D(1)(c)(ia) that would add the
supply of cannabis plants (and seeds) to the list of activities that may be
permitted under a cannabis research licence. Proposed subparagraph
9D(1)(c)(ia) would limit this supply to other holders of cannabis research
or medicinal cannabis licences. The Explanatory Memorandum states that it is
important for researchers to be able to supply other licensed growers with any
new varieties that they may produce.[31]
Part 4 of Schedule 2 contains miscellaneous
amendments to the ND Act including various technical amendments, but
also inserts provisions specifying that the Secretary must refuse to grant the
various licences where false or misleading information is provided by an
applicant.[32]
Special
Access Scheme Approvals
Part 5 of Schedule 2 will make amendments to the Therapeutic
Goods Act 1989 to allow regulations to be made specifying conditions and
prohibitions for Special Access Scheme approvals for otherwise unapproved
therapeutic goods, in certain circumstances.
Section 19 of the Therapeutic Goods Act allows for
the Secretary to grant exemptions for special and experimental uses of
therapeutic goods that are not otherwise approved.
Item 47 of Schedule 2 amends subsection 19(1A) to
permit regulations to be made specifying conditions on Special Access Scheme
approvals for treatment purposes, in addition to the existing provision in that
subsection for regulations to be made specifying conditions on Special Access
Scheme approvals for experimental purposes.
Item 48 repeals existing subsection 19(8), which
enables regulations to be made setting out circumstances in which approvals for
experimental purpose (that is, under paragraph 19(1)(b)) must not be made. It
substitutes proposed subsection 19(8) which provides that the regulations
may prescribe the circumstances in which Special Access Scheme approvals for treatment
purposes (that is, under paragraph 19(1)(a)) must not be given. These
circumstances may include, but are not limited to, circumstances relating to classes
of therapeutic goods, therapeutic goods when used to treat a specified class of
persons, and therapeutic goods when used for a particular indication.
Licence
charges
Schedule 3 of the Amendment Bill amends the ND
Act to introduce minor consequential amendments relating to payment
arrangements necessary for licence charges that would be imposed under the
proposed Narcotic Drugs (Licence Charges) Act 2016.
The Licence Charges Bill would establish a new Act that
would enable charges to be imposed on ND Act licence holders and for the
amount of charge and other matters to be prescribed by regulation.
Clause 6 of the Licence Charges Bill will allow
charges to be imposed on any licence that is in force during a financial year
or during a period prescribed by regulations. Clause 3 defines ‘licence’
to mean a licence granted under the ND Act.
Clause 7 provides that the charge is payable by the
licence holder. Clause 8 allows the amount of the charge to be
prescribed by regulation, and clause 9 provides that the
Governor-General may make regulations for that and other purposes.
Concluding comments
While some criticisms of the mechanisms proposed by the
Amendment Bill have been raised, and the future success or otherwise of the
overall medicinal cannabis scheme is unknown at this time, these Bills propose
relatively minor but necessary legislative additions to the operation of that
scheme.
[1]. Australia
has international obligations under the international
drug control conventions, particularly the Single Convention on Narcotic
Drugs 1961, to control listed narcotic drugs, including cannabis. The
Commonwealth is responsible for ensuring that Australia meets these
obligations. The Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs 1961 makes a
distinction between recreational, medical and scientific uses of drugs; nations
are allowed to permit medical or scientific use of drugs, but recreational use
is prohibited by Article 4. Article 28 requires states to place the same
controls on the cultivation of cannabis as apply to opium poppies. Article 23
requires a national agency to be established to take ‘physical possession’ of
crops, and control licencing and reporting. Such a scheme currently exists for medicinal
poppy production in Australia, also largely under the Narcotic Drugs Act
1967, operating in concert with state laws.
[2]. S
Ley (Minister for Health and Aged Care), Medicinal
cannabis scheme licence applications open, media release, 30 October
2016.
[3]. The
Office of Drug Control, Medicinal
cannabis manufacture licences and permits, version 1.0, Department of
Health, Canberra, 2 November 2016.
[4]. S
Ley (Minister for Health and Aged Care), Medicinal
cannabis scheme licence applications open, media release, 30 October
2016.
[5]. Ibid.
[6]. Explanatory
Memorandum, Narcotic Drugs Legislation Amendment Bill 2016 (the Amendment
Bill), pp. 1–3.
[7]. Explanatory
Memorandum, Narcotic Drugs (Licence Charges) Bill 2016 (the Licence Charges
Bill), p. 1.There is to be no cost recovery in relation to manufacturing at
this stage because the states/territories hold direct responsibility for
compliance monitoring of these licences.
[8]. Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills, Alert
digest, 7, 2016, The Senate, 12 October 2016, pp. 83–87,
[9]. Item
1 of Schedule 1, proposed subsection 4(1).
[10]. Items
4, 7, 16, 18, 20 and 21 of Schedule 1.
[11]. Item
11 of Schedule 1, proposed subsection 14MA(2).
[12]. Item
28 of Schedule 2, proposed subsection 26B(2).
[13]. Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills, Alert digest, 7, 2016, op.
cit., p. 88.
[14]. See
the ‘Second
reading speeches: Narcotic Drugs Amendment Bill 2016’, Senate and House of
Representatives, Debates, 2016.
[15]. R
Di Natale (Australian Greens Leader), Medicinal
cannabis bill only the first piece of the puzzle: Greens, media
release, 10 February 2016.
[16]. P
Timms, ‘Legalisation
of medicinal cannabis could create jobs’, The World Today with Eleanor
Hall, Australian Broadcasting Corporation (ABC) News, 10 February 2016.
[17]. Elixinol,
‘Are
Australia's new legal cannabis laws designed to fail?’, Newsmaker,
14 February 2016.
[18]. Pharmaceutical
Society of Australia, Medicinal
cannabis Bill an important first step, media release, 10 February 2016.
[19]. Explanatory
Memorandum, Amendment Bill, op. cit., p. 4; Explanatory Memorandum, Licence
Charges Bill, op. cit., p. 1.
[20]. The
Statements of Compatibility with Human Rights can be found at page 7 of the
Explanatory Memorandum to the Amendment Bill and page 2 of the Explanatory
Memorandum to the Licence Charges Bill.
[21]. Parliamentary
Joint Committee on Human Rights, Report,
7, 2016, The Senate, Canberra, 11 October 2016, p. 99.
[22]. Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills, Alert digest, 7, 2016, op.
cit., p. 83.
[23]. Administrative
Review Council (ARC), Decision
making: natural justice, Best practice guide, 2, Attorney-General’s
Department, Canberra, August 2007.
[24]. Explanatory
Memorandum, Amendment Bill, op. cit., p.15.
[25]. Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills, Alert digest, 7, 2016, op.
cit., pp. 84–85.
[26]. Ibid.,
p. 85.
[27]. Explanatory
Memorandum, Amendment Bill, op. cit., p.16.
[28]. Items
9–27.
[29]. Senate
Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills, Alert digest, 7, 2016, op.
cit., pp. 86–87.
[30]. Ibid.
[31]. Explanatory
Memorandum, Amendment Bill, op. cit., p. 21.
[32]. Items
36, 37, 39, 40, 42 and 43 of Schedule 2.
For copyright reasons some linked items are only available to members of Parliament.
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