CHAPTER 1
Background
Reference
1.1
On 15 October 2015, the Senate referred the Education Services for
Overseas Students Amendment (Streamlining Regulation) Bill 2015 (the bill) and
the Education Services for Overseas Students (Registration Charges) Amendment (Streamlining
Regulation) Bill 2015 (the Registration Charges bill; collectively, the bills)
to the Senate Education and Employment Legislation Committee for inquiry and
report.
Conduct of inquiry
1.2
Details of the inquiry were made available on the committee's website.
The committee also contacted a number of organisations inviting submissions to
the inquiry. Submissions were received from 27 organisations, as detailed in
Appendix 1.
Background
1.3
The bills amend respectively the Education Services for Overseas Students
Act 2000 (ESOS Act) and the Education Services for Overseas Students
(Registration Charges) Act 1997 (Registration Charges Act), with the aim of
introducing efficiency measures which will reduce the regulatory burden and
cost on education institutions.
1.4
In May 2013, Professor Kwong Lee Dow AO (former Vice Chancellor of the
University of Melbourne) and Professor Valerie Braithwaite (of the Regulatory
Institutions Network at the Australian National University) were commissioned
to undertake a review of higher education regulation. Their review was released
on 5 August 2013.[1]
1.5
The Department of Education and Training (the department) undertook a
consultation process to respond to concerns raised about the Education Services
for Overseas Students (ESOS) sector. The department released a discussion paper
in October 2014, Reform of the ESOS Framework, and received seventy
submissions in response. On the basis of those submissions, the department
organised five theme-based stakeholder workshops in February 2015; these
informed the exposure drafts of the bills, which were released in July and
August 2015. A further 32 submissions were received in response to these.[2]
1.6
Two key areas of reform were identified during the department's
consultation period:
-
streamlining the ESOS Act to better reflect changes to the
regulatory architecture since 2012—in particular the introduction of the
national regulators ASQA and TEQSA— consistent with key recommendations of the
2013 Review of Higher Education Regulation; and
-
reducing the administration associated with the Tuition
Protection Service (TPS) to remove duplicative and unnecessary reporting
requirements and to more fairly support competition in the sector and student
choice.[3]
1.7
These bills respond to those areas of reform. The department notes that
the provisions of the bills:
focus on ways to improve the alignment between the ESOS Act
and the two domestic frameworks that support quality and integrity in the
education system: the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency Act 2011
(TEQSA Act), which regulates the higher education sector, and the National
Vocational Education and Training Regulator Act 2011 (NVETR Act), which
regulates the vocational education and training (VET) sector and registered
training organisations (RTOs).[4]
Overview of the Education Services for Overseas Students Amendment
(Streamlining Regulation) Bill 2015
1.8
The bill is comprised of six schedules.
Schedule 1 – Streamlining
registration
1.9
Schedule 1 contains measures designed to improve consistency and
flexibility across existing education quality assurance frameworks by reducing
the administrative burden on education providers and quality assurance
agencies.[5]
1.10
The bill creates the role of the 'ESOS agency', which serves as the body
responsible for decision making around the registration and compliance
monitoring for all providers. This amendment removes the concept of designated
authority and therefore reduces the duplication of roles currently performed by
the Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency (TEQSA) and the Australian
Skills Quality Agency (ASQA) as both delegates of the Secretary and as
designated authorities under the ESOS Act. The regulatory powers will be vested
in those agencies directly.[6]
1.11
State and territory agencies will continue to serve as the ESOS agency
for relevant schools, but will be referred to as 'designated State
authorities'; the Secretary of the Department of Education and Training will
serve as the ESOS agency for school providers.[7]
Schedule 2 – Review of decisions
1.12
Schedule 2 provides for internal review processes for decisions made by
delegates of ESOS agencies. A provider affected by a reviewable decision made
by a delegate of an ESOS agency will be able to choose between an internal
review (by the ESOS agency) and a review conducted by the Administrative
Appeals Tribunal (AAT).[8]
1.13
The rationale for this change is that it can result in 'considerable
savings in time and resources for education providers', which may in turn allow
for the resolution of matters which the provider may not have otherwise been
willing to appeal as a consequence of the cost of AAT processes.[9]
1.14
Providers unhappy with the internal review can subsequently seek to have
that decision reviewed by the AAT.[10]
1.15
A new section of the bill includes a table listing reviewable decisions
and the providers able to seek review of those decisions. Decisions made by an
ESOS agency itself – such as ASQA, TEQSA or the Secretary personally – are not
subject to internal review, but can be reviewed by the AAT.[11]
1.16
These new review provisions were requested by ASQA and TEQSA, so that
providers under the ESOS Act would have similar processes as those under the
National Vocational Education and Training Regulator (NVETR) and TEQSA Acts.[12]
Schedule 3 – Ministerial directions
1.17
Schedule 3 amends the ESOS Act to include a power for the Minister to
make a legislative instrument issuing a direction to an ESOS agency about the
performance of its functions under the ESOS Act. This will align the ESOS Act
with the TEQSA Act and the NVETR Act, each of which allows the Minister to make
such directions[13]
1.18
This power does not extend to the Minister being able to give a
direction about a particular provider or registered provider.[14]
1.19
Any direction given under this power is subject to disallowance.[15]
Schedule 4 – Tuition Protection
Service Director
1.20
Schedule 4 aims to provide for the Tuition Protection Service Director
(TPS Director) to effectively manage the tuition protection framework and
support the work of ESOS agencies by making recommendations in relation to
enforcement action.[16]
1.21
The new measures will expand the functions of the TPS Director to enable
them to make recommendations to the ESOS agencies about taking enforcement
action against a provider. The ESOS agency must consider the TPS Director's
recommendation when deciding whether to take particular enforcement action
against a registered provider.[17]
1.22
Another measure allows the TPS Director to issue a production notice to
an education provider in their own right. This replaces the existing system
whereby the TPS Director can only access information consequent upon a notice
issued by a delegate of the Secretary. Failure to comply with an order is an
offence.[18]
Schedule 5 – Other amendments
1.23
Schedule 5 consists of other amendments which seek to increase
flexibility for students and decrease regulatory costs for providers.
1.24
The first of these removes the restriction on registered providers
receiving more than 50 per cent of the tuition fees before the course begins
for a course that is longer than 24 weeks. The amendment will allow providers
to receive more than 50 per cent of the fees if either the student chooses to
pay more, or if the course is no more than 25 weeks long.[19]
1.25
The amendment also removes the requirement that further tuition fees
must not be required by the provider until two weeks before the second study
period begins. This change will increase flexibility for students and
providers.[20]
1.26
The amendments further remove the concept of a 'study period' from the
ESOS Act, on the basis that it imposes an arbitrary and limiting requirement of
a study period being a maximum of 24 weeks in length.[21]
1.27
A further amendment introduced in Schedule 5 is to remove the
requirement that providers must maintain an account into which all tuition fees
paid by students prior to the course's commencement and in which these fees
must be kept until the student starts the course. The removal of this
requirement will create, according to the explanatory memorandum, 'a more level
playing field between public and private providers' and will encourage
'competition and innovation in the sector'.[22]
1.28
The bill also removes reporting obligations for registered providers in
cases of student defaults. Under the amendments, providers will only need to
report the outcome of student defaults where the provider has paid a refund to
the student under a legislative instrument made by the Minister (primarily
covering cases of visa refusal).[23]
1.29
The deadline for other information about students reportable by
providers to the Secretary – as set out in section 19 of the ESOS Act – will be
extended from 14 to 31 days, with the exception of cases where a student who is
under the age of 18 years has failed to start their study, or has had that
study terminated.[24]
Schedule 6 – Application, transitional
and savings provisions
1.30
This schedule sets out the application, transitional and savings
provisions for the purposes of the bill.
Overview of the Education Services for Overseas Students (Registration
Charges) Amendment (Streamlining Regulation) Bill 2015
1.31
This bill consists of one schedule.
Schedule 1 – Entry to market
charges
1.32
This schedule removes the minimum two-year period of registration which
previously applied to new providers. Consequently the bill clarifies the
application to entry charges to ensure that a provider registered under the
ESOS Act pays all entry to market charges but is not charged more than once in
cases where the provider's registration period is less than two years and it
seeks a renewal of that registration.[25]
Human rights implications
1.33
The bills engage the following human rights:
-
The right to education – Article 13 of the International
Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR);
-
The right to privacy – Article 17 of the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR); and
-
The rights of the child – Article 3 of the Convention of the
Rights of the Child (CRC).
1.34
The bills' explanatory memorandum states that the bills engage the right
of overseas students to quality education by enabling regulatory agencies to
more effectively and efficiently monitor the quality of education providers.[26]
1.35
The right to privacy is affected by the proposed amendments, since
students' information will be entered into the Department of Education and
Training's computer system (known as PRISMS) when specified events occur.
However, the explanatory memorandum notes that this information is necessary
for the effective regulation of the sector, and therefore the bill is
compatible with the right to privacy.[27]
1.36
The rights of the child are also engaged by the bill, which maintains
protections for students under the age of 18 years. Providers are required to
report within 14 days – via the PRISMS system – when students under 18 years
enrol in but do not begin, or begin but cease, a course. Thus the bill
maintains the rights of the child.[28]
Financial impact statement
1.37
The implementation of the bill will require system changes estimated at
$0.4m. These changes relate to the Provider Registration and International
Student Management System (PRISMS), the Commonwealth Register of Institutions
and Courses for Overseas Students (CRICOS) and the TPS IT system.[29]
1.38
The explanatory memorandum states that the long-term financial impact is
expected to be budget neutral, since the initial costs will be compensated for
by 'the streamlining measures and the significantly reduced data reporting
requirements for providers'.[30]
1.39
The Registration Charges bill has no related financial impact.[31]
Acknowledgement
1.40
The committee thanks those organisations and individuals who contributed
to the inquiry by preparing written submissions.
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