The Hansard is the report of the proceedings of the Australian parliament and its committees. This includes the Senate, House of Representatives, the Federation Chamber and all parliamentary committees.
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Main Committee;STATEMENTS BY MEMBERS;Byron Shire - 01 Dec 2005
EMPLOYMENT AND WORKPLACE RELATIONS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (WELFARE TO WORK AND OTHER MEASURES) BILL 2005;FAMILY AND COMMUNITY SERVICES LEGISLATION AMENDMENT (WELFARE TO WORK) BILL 2005;Second Reading - 30 Nov 2005
WORKPLACE RELATIONS AMENDMENT (WORK CHOICES) BILL 2005;Second Reading - 07 Nov 2005
ADJOURNMENT;Skills Shortage - 03 Nov 2005
HEALTH LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2005;Second Reading - 02 Nov 2005
Main Committee;STATEMENTS BY MEMBERS;Carers - 13 Oct 2005
MATTERS OF PUBLIC IMPORTANCE;Telstra - 07 Sep 2005
HEALTH INSURANCE AMENDMENT (MEDICARE SAFETY-NETS) BILL 2005;Second Reading - 05 Sep 2005
Main Committee;STATEMENTS BY MEMBERS;Telstra - 18 Aug 2005
HUMAN SERVICES LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL 2005;Second Reading - 09 Aug 2005
To provide an accurate, substantially verbatim account of the proceedings of the parliament and its committees which, while usually correcting obvious mistakes, neither adds to nor detracts from the meaning of the speech or the illustration of the argument. Read full mission statement
To provide an accurate, substantially verbatim account of the proceedings of the parliament and its committees which, while usually correcting obvious mistakes, neither adds to nor detracts from the meaning of the speech or the illustration of the argument. For chambers: A rendition which is accurate and readable, with minimal alterations being made only to clarify ambiguous or confusing passages and to ensure that the meaning is understandable and the argument coherent. Politically sensitive subjects require a more strictly verbatim approach. For committees: An accurate, basically verbatim rendition. Witnesses should, by and large, be given their exact words, even though these are sometimes confusing and not always strictly grammatical. Editing should be kept to a minimum and used only in circumstances where it is deemed absolutely necessary and can be justified as such.
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