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This is a Bill, not an Act. For current law, see the Acts databases.
South Australia
Burial and Cremation Bill 2012
A BILL FOR
An Act to provide for and regulate the identification, handling, storage,
transport, disposal and memorialisation of human remains; to provide for the
establishment, administration and closure of cemeteries and natural burial
grounds; to provide for the conversion of closed cemeteries into parklands or
public parks or gardens; to repeal the Cremation
Act 2000; to amend the Adelaide
Cemeteries Authority Act 2001, the Births,
Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 1996, the Local
Government Act 1934 and the Transplantation
and Anatomy Act 1983; and for other purposes.
Contents
Part 1—Preliminary
1Short
title
2Commencement
3Interpretation
4Application of
Act
5Relationship of Act with
other laws
6Human remains to be treated with dignity and
respect
Part 2—Disposal of human
remains
Division 1—Disposal by burial or
cremation
7Offence to dispose of human remains except by
burial or cremation
8Offence to dispose of non-cremated human
remains except in cemetery or natural burial ground
9Offences
relating to cremation
10Cremation
permits
11Power of
Attorney-General, State Coroner or magistrate to prohibit disposal by
cremation
Division 2—Documents to be provided
before disposal of human remains
12Documents to be provided before disposal
of human remains
Division 3—Opening of interment
sites, exhumation and re-interment
13Offences
Division 4—Miscellaneous
14Prohibition on
giving certificate of cause of death in certain circumstances
15Handling,
storage and transport of human remains
16Authority to inter at particular
site
17Religious and other
ceremonies not to be interfered with etc
18Disposal of unclaimed
cremated human remains
Part 3—Cemeteries, natural burial
grounds and crematoria
Division 1—Establishment of
cemeteries, natural burial grounds and crematoria
19Establishment of
cemeteries, natural burial grounds and crematoria
20Power of councils to establish
and manage public mortuaries
21Establishment of mausolea within
cemeteries
22Designation of natural burial grounds within
cemeteries
23Power to set apart part of cemetery or natural
burial ground for particular religions
Division 2—Closure and conversion of
cemeteries and natural burial grounds
24Closure
of cemeteries and natural burial grounds
25Dedication of closed council cemeteries
as park lands
26Conversion of closed cemeteries into public
parks or gardens
27Powers of relevant authorities in relation to
closed cemeteries
28Obligations of relevant
authorities on closure of cemeteries etc
Division 3—Interment
rights
29Interpretation
30Issue of
interment rights
31Duration of interment rights
32Renewal of
interment rights
33Transfer of interment rights
34Surrender of
interment rights
35Exercise or enforcement of interment
rights
36Interment right not required for scattering of
cremated remains
37Register of interment rights
38Re-use of interment
sites
Division 4—Memorials
39Ownership of
memorial
40Duty to maintain memorial
41Power to
require repair, removal or reinstatement of memorial
42Power of relevant authority to
dispose of unclaimed memorial
Division 5—Miscellaneous
43General powers
of relevant authority
44Multicultural needs to be
recognised
45Power to restrict interments in any part of
cemetery or natural burial ground
46Neglected cemeteries and
natural burial grounds
47Right of review
48Power of councils to accept
conveyance of cemetery or natural burial ground land from trustees
49Power of
councils to assume administration of cemeteries and natural burial
grounds
50Public access to
cemeteries, natural burial grounds and crematoria
51Disposal of surplus cemetery
land etc
52Disposal of land after closure of cemetery
etc
53Registers, records and
plans to be kept by relevant authorities
Part 4—Miscellaneous
54Minister
responsible for Crown Land Management Act 2009 to facilitate exercise
of powers, functions and duties under this Act
55Exemptions
56Power of Public Trustee to act
on behalf of holder of interment right etc
57Approvals and authorisations
58Authorised
officers
59Powers of authorised officers
60Hindering etc
persons engaged in administration of Act
61False or misleading
statement
62Statutory declarations
63Self-incrimination
64Offences by body
corporate
65Service
66Regulations
Schedule 1—Repeals, related
amendments and transitional provisions
Part 1—Repeals
1Repeal of
Cremation Act 2000
Division 1—Preliminary
2Amendment
provisions
Division 2—Amendment of Adelaide
Cemeteries Authority Act 2001
3Amendment of section 8—Special
provisions relating to Authority's powers
4Repeal of section 21
Division 3—Amendment of Births, Deaths and
Marriages Registration Act 1996
5Amendment of
section 4—Definitions
6Repeal of section 50A—Documents to
be provided before disposal of remains
Division 4—Amendment of Local Government
Act 1934
7Repeal of Part XXX
Division 5—Amendment of Transplantation
and Anatomy Act 1983
8Amendment of section 34—Regulations
for the control etc of schools of anatomy
Part 3—Transitional
provisions
9Transitional provision relating to existing
interment rights
The Parliament of South Australia enacts as
follows:
This Act may be cited as the Burial and Cremation
Act 2012.
This Act will come into operation on a day to be fixed by
proclamation.
In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears—
authorised officer means—
(a) a police officer; or
(b) a person appointed by the Minister or a council as an authorised
officer under this Act;
cemetery means a place set apart for the disposal and
memorialisation of human remains, but does not include—
(a) a place at which cremated human remains are scattered but is not
otherwise used for the disposal of human remains; or
(b) an Aboriginal site as defined in the Aboriginal
Heritage Act 1988; or
(c) a natural burial ground; or
(d) a place which consists of a single interment site where
only—
(i) the remains of 1 deceased person; or
(ii) the remains of 2 or more members of the same family,
are, or are intended to be, interred;
cemetery authority means—
(a) in the case of a cemetery administered by the Adelaide Cemeteries
Authority under the Adelaide
Cemeteries Authority Act 2001—the Adelaide Cemeteries
Authority;
(b) in any other case—the person or body for the time being
responsible for the administration of a cemetery;
certificate of cause of death means—
(a) a certificate under section 36 of the Births,
Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 1996; or
(b) a certificate of cause of foetal death under section 12 of that Act;
or
(c) a post mortem certificate of cause of death under
section 10;
close relative of a deceased person means—
(a) a spouse or domestic partner of the deceased; or
(b) a child of the deceased of or over the age of 18 years;
or
(c) a parent of the deceased; or
(d) a brother or sister of the deceased of or over the age of
18 years; or
(e) if the deceased person was an Aboriginal person or Torres Strait
Islander—a person who is an appropriate person according to the tradition
or custom of the community to which the deceased person belonged;
council has the same meaning as in the Local
Government Act 1999;
cremated human remains means human remains that have been
reduced by cremation;
cremation means a process for the reduction of human remains
involving the use of fire or heat;
cremation permit means a cremation permit granted under this
Act, and includes a cremation permit issued under the repealed
Cremation
Act 2000;
crematorium means a facility designed for the cremation of
human remains;
crematorium authority means the person or body for the time
being responsible for the administration of a crematorium;
death includes still-birth;
designated Minister means the Minister for the time being
responsible for the administration of the
Health
Care Act 2008;
disposal of human remains means—
(a) cremation of the remains; or
(b) burial of the remains (including burial at sea); or
(c) placement of the remains in a mausoleum, vault, columbarium or other
structure;
disposal authorisation means an authorisation to dispose of
human remains granted under the
Coroners
Act 2003 or a corresponding authorisation as defined in that
Act;
District Court means the Administrative and Disciplinary
Division of the District Court of South Australia;
domestic partner means a person who is a domestic partner
within the meaning of the
Family
Relationships Act 1975, whether declared as such under that Act or
not;
exhumation of human remains includes the removal of
non-cremated human remains from a mausoleum, underground vault or other
structure;
funeral director means a person who carries on the business
of arranging for the disposal of human remains;
human remains includes—
(a) the remains of a still-born child; and
(b) human remains after they have been cremated;
institution includes part of an institution;
interment of human remains means—
(a) the placement of human remains in a mausoleum, vault, columbarium or
other structure designed for the placement of such remains; or
(b) the burial in the earth of human remains (directly in the earth or in
a container);
interment right means an interment right issued under this
Act by the relevant authority for a cemetery or natural burial ground;
interment site means—
(a) a mausoleum, vault, columbarium or other structure in which human
remains are interred;
(b) a site in which human remains are buried;
lift and deepen procedure means a procedure that consists
of—
(a) opening an interment site; and
(b) recovering any human remains interred in the site; and
(c) deepening or otherwise enlarging the interment site; and
(d) re-interring the existing human remains in the place of interment,
whether contained in a receptacle or not, so as to provide space for additional
interments in the site;
mausoleum means an above-ground structure erected and
designed as a resting place for human remains without burial of the remains in
the earth, but does not include a structure designed as a resting place
exclusively for cremated human remains;
medical practitioner means a person registered under the
Health Practitioner Regulation National Law to practise in the medical
profession (other than as a student);
memorial means—
(a) a gravestone, plaque, cenotaph or other monument; or
(b) any other structure or permanent physical object used to memorialise a
deceased person;
Metropolitan Adelaide has the same meaning as in the Development
Act 1993;
natural burial of human remains means burial in the
ground—
(a) without preparation of the remains using chemical preservatives;
and
(b) by containment of the remains only in a shroud or biodegradable
coffin;
natural burial ground means a place at which human remains
are interred by natural burial but does not include a place of a prescribed
kind;
non-official record means a record that is not an official
record;
official record has the same meaning as in the State
Records Act 1997;
personal representative of a deceased person means a person
aged 18 years or more who is—
(a) the executor of the estate of the deceased person or, if there is more
than 1 executor, 1 of the executors acting with the permission of all
the other executors; or
(b) the administrator of the estate of the deceased person;
Registrar means—
(a) the Registrar of Births, Deaths and Marriages; or
(b) a Deputy Registrar of Births, Deaths and Marriages,
under the Births,
Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 1996;
relative of a deceased person means a person aged
18 years or more who is—
(a) a parent or grandparent of the deceased person; or
(b) a brother or sister of the deceased person; or
(c) a spouse or domestic partner of the deceased person; or
(d) a child, grandchild or great grandchild of the deceased person;
or
(e) a child, grandchild or great grandchild of a brother or sister of the
deceased person;
spouse—a person is the spouse of another if they are
legally married;
relevant authority—
(a) for a cemetery—means the cemetery authority; or
(b) for a natural burial ground—means the person or body for the
time being responsible for the administration of the natural burial ground;
or
(c) for a crematorium—means the person or body for the time being in
charge of the crematorium;
State Coroner has the same meaning as in the Coroners
Act 2003;
State heritage place has the same meaning as in the Development
Act 1993;
still-born child has the same meaning as in the Births,
Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 1996;
tissue has the same meaning as in the Transplantation
and Anatomy Act 1983 but does not include a tissue slide or other
tissue specimen;
township has the same meaning as in the Local
Government Act 1999;
unexercised interment right means a current interment right
pursuant to which human remains are yet to be interred;
unincorporated area means an area of the State outside the
areas of councils;
vault means an underground structure designed as a resting
place for human remains without burial of the remains in the earth, but does not
include a structure designed as a resting place exclusively for cremated human
remains.
Except as expressly provided, this Act does not apply in relation to tissue
removed from the body of a deceased person in accordance with the Coroners
Act 2003 or the Transplantation
and Anatomy Act 1983.
5—Relationship
of Act with other laws
The provisions of this Act are in addition to, and do not derogate from,
the provisions of—
(a) the Crown
Land Management Act 2009; and
(b) the Development
Act 1993; and
(c) the Heritage
Places Act 1993; and
(d) the Local
Government Act 1999; and
(e) any other Act or law.
6—Human
remains to be treated with dignity and respect
It is the intention of Parliament that human remains be treated at all
times with dignity and respect.
Part 2—Disposal
of human remains
Division 1—Disposal
by burial or cremation
7—Offence
to dispose of human remains except by burial or cremation
(1) Subject to this Act, a person must not dispose of human remains, or
cause, suffer or permit human remains to be disposed of, except by burial or
cremation.
Maximum penalty: $10 000 or imprisonment for 2 years.
(2) In this section—
burial includes the placement of non-cremated human remains
in a mausoleum, vault or other structure.
8—Offence
to dispose of non-cremated human remains except in cemetery or natural burial
ground
(1) Subject to
subsection (2), a
person must not, without the approval of the Attorney-General, inter
non-cremated human remains, or cause, suffer or permit non-cremated human
remains to be interred, except in a lawfully established cemetery or natural
burial ground.
Maximum penalty: $10 000 or imprisonment for 2 years.
(2) A person may inter
non-cremated human remains in a prescribed area on land outside a cemetery or
natural burial ground with the permission of the owner of the land
and—
(a) in the case of land within a council area—
(i) with the approval of the council for the area in which the land is
situated; and
(ii) in accordance with the regulations; or
(b) in any other case—in accordance with the regulations.
(3) A person must not, without the approval of the Attorney-General,
dispose of non-cremated human remains by burial at sea, or cause, suffer or
permit non-cremated human remains to be disposed of by burial at sea.
Maximum penalty: $10 000 or imprisonment for 2 years.
(4) In this section—
prescribed area means—
(a) an area outside a township or Metropolitan Adelaide; or
(b) an area defined by the regulations.
9—Offences
relating to cremation
(1) A person must not dispose of human remains by cremation, or cause,
suffer or permit human remains to be disposed of by cremation, unless the
Registrar has issued a cremation permit in respect of the remains.
Maximum penalty: $10 000 or imprisonment for 2 years.
(2) A person must not dispose of human remains by cremation, or cause,
suffer or permit human remains to be disposed of by cremation, except at a
lawfully established crematorium.
Maximum penalty: $10 000 or imprisonment for 2 years.
(3) A person must not dispose of human remains by cremation or cause,
suffer or permit human remains to be disposed of by cremation, if the person
knows or is aware that a personal representative or a parent or child of the
deceased objects to this method of disposal (unless the deceased directed, by a
will or some other attested instrument, that his or her remains be disposed of
by cremation).
Maximum penalty: $10 000.
(4) A person must not dispose of human remains by cremation, or cause,
suffer or permit human remains to be disposed of by cremation, in contravention
of an order made under
section 11.
Maximum penalty: $20 000 or imprisonment for 4 years.
(1) Subject to this section, the Registrar may, on application made
by—
(a) a personal representative or close relative of a deceased person;
or
(b) a person aged 18 years or more who satisfies the Registrar that
he or she is, in all the circumstances, a proper person to make the
application,
issue to the applicant a cremation permit authorising the disposal of the
remains of the deceased person by cremation.
(2) A cremation permit will be in a form approved by the
Registrar.
(3) The Registrar may, before issuing a cremation permit, question any
person who may, in the Registrar's opinion, be in a position to furnish
information relevant to the cause of death on any matter related to that
subject.
(4) An application for a cremation permit under this section must be made
in a manner and form approved by the Registrar and be accompanied by the
prescribed fee.
(5) Subject to this
section, the Registrar must not issue a cremation permit under this section
unless the application is accompanied by—
(a) in the case of an application to dispose of the body of a still-born
child—a certificate under section 12 of the Births,
Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 1996 certifying the cause of
foetal death; or
(b) in any other case—
(i) 2 certificates under section 36 of the Births,
Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 1996 certifying that the
deceased died from natural causes, 1 certificate being signed by a medical
practitioner who was responsible for the deceased's medical care immediately
before death and the other certificate being signed by another medical
practitioner; or
(ii) a certificate in a form approved by the Registrar signed by a medical
practitioner who carried out a post mortem examination of the
deceased certifying that the deceased died from natural causes; or
(iii) a disposal authorisation.
(6) The Registrar
may issue a cremation permit without the documents required by
subsection (5)
if—
(a) in the case of an application to dispose of the remains of a person
who died in another State or a Territory—the application is accompanied by
the documents that would be required under the law of that State or Territory
for the issue of a cremation permit or other authorisation for disposal of the
remains in that State or Territory by cremation; or
(b) in any other case—the Registrar is satisfied
that—
(i) the deceased's death has been registered under the Births,
Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 1996; and
(ii) the particulars entered in the register of deaths under that Act
record that the deceased died from natural causes; and
(iii) there is good reason why the documents required by
subsection (5)
cannot be produced; and
Examples—
1 If the age and condition of the body of the deceased are in such a state
that the cause of death cannot be determined, a medical practitioner would not
be able to issue a certificate as required by
subsection (5).
2 A document obtained for the purposes of
subsection (5)
may have been lost or destroyed.
(iv) the State Coroner does not require the human remains for the purposes
of an inquest or for determining whether an inquest is necessary or desirable
under the Coroners
Act 2003; and
(v) there is no other reason why the permit should not be
issued.
(7) The Registrar must not issue a cremation permit if—
(a) the Registrar knows or is aware that a personal representative or a
parent or child of the deceased objects to the disposal of the remains by
cremation (unless the deceased directed, by a will or some other attested
instrument, that his or her remains be disposed of by cremation); or
(b) an order prohibiting disposal by cremation has been made under
section 11;
or
(c) the death is a reportable death under the Coroners
Act 2003.
(8) If the Registrar becomes aware of a dispute as to who may be entitled
at law to possession of the body of a deceased person for the purposes of its
disposal, the Registrar may refrain from issuing a cremation permit in respect
of the body until the dispute is resolved.
11—Power
of Attorney-General, State Coroner or magistrate to prohibit disposal by
cremation
(1) The
Attorney-General, the State Coroner or a magistrate may, if he or she considers
that there is reasonable cause for doing so, by order in writing, prohibit the
disposal of the remains of a specified deceased person by cremation, either
absolutely or until specified parts of the body of the deceased person have been
removed and lodged in such manner and custody as the Attorney-General, State
Coroner or magistrate may require.
(2) An order under
subsection (1)
may be given personally or by post.
(3) A person who makes an order under this section must give the Registrar
notice of the order as soon as practicable.
Division 2—Documents
to be provided before disposal of human remains
12—Documents
to be provided before disposal of human remains
(1) A person must not,
without the approval of the Attorney-General, dispose of human remains, or
cause, suffer or permit human remains to be disposed of, unless he or she has
seen a certificate of identification issued in accordance with the regulations
and has recorded the prescribed particulars relating to the
certificate.
Maximum penalty: $10 000 or imprisonment for 2 years.
(2) Subject to this
section, a person must not dispose of human remains, or cause, suffer or permit
human remains to be disposed of, unless he or she has seen—
(a) a partial certificate of cause of death; or
(b) a disposal authorisation; or
(c) an authorisation to dispose of human remains granted by the Minister
or the Registrar under this section,
and has recorded the prescribed particulars relating to the certificate or
authorisation.
Maximum penalty: $10 000 or imprisonment for 2 years.
(3)
Subsections (1)
and
(2) do not apply
if—
(a) the remains are to be disposed of by cremation; and
(b) the person has received a cremation permit issued by the Registrar in
respect of the remains.
(4) An approval or authorisation issued by the Minister under this section
may be made subject to such conditions as the Minister thinks fit.
(5) The Registrar may not issue an authorisation under
subsection (2)
unless the deceased's death has been registered under the Births,
Deaths and Marriages Registration Act 1996 and the Registrar is
satisfied that—
(a) the particulars entered in the Register under that Act record that the
deceased died from natural causes; or
(b) the State Coroner does not require the deceased's remains for the
purposes of an inquest or for determining whether an inquest is necessary or
desirable under the Coroners
Act 2003.
(6) In this section—
partial, in relation to a certificate of cause of death,
means a certificate that—
(a) certifies that the deceased person to whom the certificate relates
died of natural causes; and
(b) contains all the particulars required to be stated in the certificate
other than—
(i) particulars relating to the cause of death; and
(ii) particulars relating to any illness or other medical
condition.
Division 3—Opening
of interment sites, exhumation and re-interment
(1) Subject to this
section, a person must not, without the approval of the
Attorney-General—
(a) open an interment
site in a cemetery or natural burial ground for the purpose of interring
additional human remains, or cause, suffer or permit an interment site in a
cemetery or natural burial ground to be opened for the purpose of interring
additional human remains; or
(b) exhume or remove
non-cremated human remains from their place of interment, or cause, suffer or
permit non-cremated human remains to be exhumed or removed from their place of
interment; or
(c) re-inter in a cemetery or natural burial ground non-cremated human
remains that have been exhumed or removed from their place of interment, or
cause, suffer or permit non-cremated human remains that have been exhumed or
removed from their place of interment to be re-interred in a cemetery or natural
burial ground.
Maximum penalty: $20 000 or imprisonment for 4 years.
(2)
Subsection (1)(a) does
not apply if—
(a) only cremated remains are interred at the site; or
(b) in the case of a site at which non-cremated remains are interred
(whether or not cremated remains are also interred there)—
(i) additional human remains can be interred without disturbing
non-cremated remains; or
(ii) a lift and deepen procedure is carried out in accordance with the
regulations.
(3)
Subsection (1)(b) does
not apply if the remains have been exhumed or removed pursuant to a warrant
issued under the Coroners
Act 2003.
(4) If, when an interment site in a cemetery or natural burial ground is
opened for the purpose of interring additional human remains, non-cremated human
remains are found, the relevant authority for the cemetery or natural burial
ground must ensure that the remains are—
(a) re-interred at a greater depth; or
(b) dealt with in accordance with the regulations.
Maximum penalty: $10 000 or imprisonment for 2 years.
(5) The Attorney-General must, before giving an approval for an
exhumation, make a reasonable attempt to ascertain the views of the surviving
close relatives of the deceased person in relation to the proposed exhumation of
the deceased's remains.
(6) The Attorney-General must, before giving an approval for the purposes
of
subsection (1),
consult with—
(a) in the case of human remains interred in a cemetery or natural burial
ground—the relevant authority for the cemetery or natural burial
ground;
(b) in any other case—the relevant Minister.
(7) In this section—
human remains includes—
(a) the remains of a human foetus (other than a still-born child);
and
(b) tissue removed from a body or part of a body of a deceased
person;
relevant Minister means—
(a) in relation to the remains of an Aboriginal person—the Minister
for the time being responsible for the administration of the Aboriginal
Heritage Act 1988;
(b) in any other case—the designated Minister.
14—Prohibition
on giving certificate of cause of death in certain
circumstances
(1) A medical practitioner must not give a certificate of cause of death
if the death is a reportable death under the Coroners
Act 2003.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 4 years.
(2) A medical
practitioner must not give a certificate of cause of death if—
(a) he or she, or his or her spouse or domestic partner, has a pecuniary
or proprietary interest in the hospital, nursing home or aged care facility
where the person died; or
(b) he or she, or his or her spouse or domestic partner, has a pecuniary
interest in the death of the person under a policy of life insurance or
superannuation; or
(c) he or she, or his or her spouse or domestic partner, is entitled to a
benefit in the form of property under a will or intestate
distribution.
Maximum penalty: Imprisonment for 4 years.
(3) It is a defence to a charge of an offence against
subsection (2) if
the defendant proves that he or she did not know, and could not reasonably be
expected to know, that he or she, or his or her spouse or domestic partner (as
the case may be) had a pecuniary or proprietary interest, or was entitled to a
benefit, of a kind referred to in that subsection.
15—Handling,
storage and transport of human remains
A person must comply with the provisions of the regulations relating to the
handling, storage and transport of human remains.
Maximum penalty: $10 000 or imprisonment for 2 years.
16—Authority
to inter at particular site
A person must not inter human remains, or cause, suffer or permit the
interment of human remains, in a cemetery or natural burial ground at a site in
relation to which an interment right is in force, unless the remains are those
of a deceased person entitled to be interred at that site.
Maximum penalty: $10 000.
17—Religious
and other ceremonies not to be interfered with etc
(1) A relevant authority must not, unless it is necessary to protect the
health or safety of any person, prevent or interfere with the performance of a
ceremony according to the customs and practices of a person's religion or
culture in connection with the disposal of human remains in a cemetery or
natural burial ground administered by the authority or at a crematorium that the
relevant authority is in charge of.
Maximum penalty: $5 000.
(2) The relevant authority for a cemetery or natural burial ground must
allow a member of the clergy of a religion for which a portion of a cemetery or
natural burial ground administered by the authority is set apart to have free
access and admission to that portion of the cemetery or natural burial ground in
order to exercise his or her religious functions.
Maximum penalty: $5 000.
18—Disposal
of unclaimed cremated human remains
(1) The relevant authority for a crematorium must ensure that the cremated
remains of a deceased person processed at the crematorium are not released
except to the person to whom the cremation permit authorising the disposal of
the remains was issued or a person authorised in writing by that
person.
Maximum penalty: $10 000.
(2) However, if the cremated remains of a deceased person processed at a
crematorium are not claimed within 6 months, the relevant authority for the
crematorium may dispose of them as it thinks fit.
Part 3—Cemeteries,
natural burial grounds and crematoria
Division 1—Establishment
of cemeteries, natural burial grounds and crematoria
19—Establishment
of cemeteries, natural burial grounds and crematoria
Subject to this Act, any person may establish a cemetery, natural burial
ground or crematorium.
20—Power
of councils to establish and manage public mortuaries
A council may establish and manage public mortuaries for the temporary
repose of human remains prior to their disposal.
21—Establishment
of mausolea within cemeteries
The relevant authority for a cemetery may, on its own initiative or on
application by any person, establish mausolea within the cemetery.
22—Designation
of natural burial grounds within cemeteries
The relevant authority for a cemetery may set apart any part of the
cemetery as a natural burial ground.
23—Power
to set apart part of cemetery or natural burial ground for particular
religions
The relevant authority for a cemetery or natural burial ground may set
apart any part of the cemetery or natural burial ground for the interment of
human remains in accordance with the customs and practices of a particular
religion.
Division 2—Closure
and conversion of cemeteries and natural burial grounds
24—Closure
of cemeteries and natural burial grounds
(1) Subject to this
section, the relevant authority for a cemetery or natural burial ground may
close the cemetery or natural burial ground if—
(a) the cemetery or natural burial ground is or has become unsuitable for
the disposal of human remains; or
(b) 25 or more years have elapsed since human remains were last
interred in the cemetery or natural burial ground.
(2) A relevant authority must not close a cemetery or natural burial
ground unless—
(a) notice of the proposed closure has been given in accordance with this
section; and
(b) in the case of a cemetery or natural burial ground for which a council
is the relevant authority—the Minister has approved the closure.
(3) Notice of the
proposed closure of a cemetery or natural burial ground must be
given—
(a) in a newspaper circulating throughout the State; and
(b) in the case of a cemetery or natural burial ground for which a council
is the relevant authority—in the Gazette,
on 2 separate occasions, the first being at least 18 months
before, and the second being not more than 9 months before, the date of the
proposed closure.
(4) A notice under
subsection (3) must
comply with the regulations.
(5) If a cemetery or natural burial ground is closed under this section, a
person must not dispose of human remains in the cemetery or natural burial
ground.
Maximum penalty: $10 000 or imprisonment for 2 years.
(6) If a cemetery or natural burial ground is closed under this section, a
person must not knowingly disturb human remains interred there except as may be
authorised by this Act, the Attorney-General or the State Coroner.
Maximum penalty: $10 000 or imprisonment for 2 years.
(7) If, when a cemetery or natural burial ground is closed under this
section, there are unexercised interment rights in force in relation to the
cemetery or natural burial ground, the relevant authority for the cemetery or
natural burial ground may, by agreement with the holder of such an interment
right—
(a) discharge the interment right and give the former holder a refund
equal to the current fee payable for an interment right of the same kind;
or
(b) discharge the interment right and issue to the former holder, free of
charge—
(i) a new interment right in relation to another cemetery or natural
burial ground administered by the relevant authority; or
(ii) if the closure relates only to part of the cemetery or natural burial
ground—a new interment right in relation to another part of the cemetery
or natural burial ground.
(8) If, when a cemetery or natural burial ground is closed under this
section, there are interment rights in force in relation to the cemetery or
natural burial ground pursuant to which human remains have been interred, the
relevant authority for the cemetery or natural burial ground may, by agreement
with the holder of such an interment right—
(a) discharge the interment right and issue to the former holder, free of
charge—
(i) a new interment right in relation to another cemetery or natural
burial ground administered by the relevant authority; or
(ii) if the closure relates only to part of the cemetery or natural burial
ground—a new interment right in relation to another part of the cemetery
or natural burial ground; and
(b) remove any human remains interred at the original interment site and
re-inter the remains pursuant to the new interment right; and
(c) remove any memorial erected at the original interment site and
re-position the memorial at the new interment site.
(9) If the relevant authority and the holder of an interment right cannot
reach an agreement to discharge the interment right, the relevant authority may
refer the matter to an independent party for mediation in accordance with
guidelines approved by the Minister.
(10) The costs of mediation will be borne by the relevant
authority.
(11) If a cemetery or
natural burial ground closed under this section has been lawfully consecrated
according to the rites or practices of a particular religious or ethnic
group—
(a) the owners of the
land must offer the closed cemetery or natural burial ground as a gift to that
group; and
(b) the relevant authority must not, unless the gift is refused by the
group, demolish, remove, relocate or replace any grave in the cemetery or
natural burial ground.
(12) Section 25 of the Crown
Land Management Act 2009 does not apply to a disposal of Crown land
made in accordance with
subsection (11)(a)
(and such land will, for the purposes of that Act, be taken to have been
declared surplus).
(13) Before demolishing, removing, relocating or replacing any grave or
memorial in a closed cemetery or natural burial ground, the relevant authority
must prepare an inventory that—
(a) identifies all graves and memorials that the relevant authority
proposes to demolish, remove, relocate or replace; and
(b) contains a record of all the inscriptions and other particulars
appearing on each memorial that the relevant authority proposes to demolish,
remove, relocate or replace; and
(c) contains a photograph of each such memorial.
(14) The relevant
authority must make the inventory available for inspection by members of the
public during ordinary office hours at the office of the relevant
authority.
Maximum penalty: $2 500.
(15) If a relevant authority acts in accordance with this section, it will
not be taken to be in breach of its obligations under interment rights relating
to human remains interred in the cemetery or natural burial ground.
(16) In this section, a reference to a cemetery or
natural burial ground includes a reference to a part of a cemetery
or natural burial ground.
25—Dedication
of closed council cemeteries as park lands
(1) If a cemetery closed under
section 24 is on
land held on trust by a council or includes dedicated land under the care,
control and management of a council, the council may petition the Minister
requesting that the Minister take such steps as are necessary to
have—
(a) the trust (if any) on which the land is held by the council
determined; and
(b) the land dedicated as park lands.
(2) On receipt of a
petition under this section, the Minister—
(a) must publish the substance of the petition at least twice in a
newspaper circulating in the area, and at least twice in a newspaper circulating
throughout the State, calling on any persons objecting to the exercise of the
powers under this section to state their objections to the Minister;
and
(b) must cause any inquiries the Minister may think fit to be made with a
view to ascertaining whether any interment rights exist over the land and for
otherwise ascertaining whether there is any reason why the matters requested in
the petition should not occur.
(3) If
6 months have elapsed since publication of the last notice referred to in
subsection (2)
and the Minister is satisfied that the petition should be granted, the Minister
may comply with the petition.
(4) Subject to
section 24, if a
closed cemetery is dedicated as park lands, the relevant authority for the
closed cemetery may do any of the following
(a) remove memorials to deceased persons;
(b) relocate memorials to deceased persons in the park lands;
(c) replace memorials to deceased persons with some other form of memorial
in the park lands.
(5) A council must pay the costs of any advertisement and inquiry under
this section.
(6) If a council acts in accordance with this section, it will not be
taken to be in breach of its obligations under interment rights relating to
human remains interred in the cemetery.
(7) This section does not apply in relation to a closed cemetery that is,
or forms part of, a State heritage place.
(8) In this section, a reference to a cemetery includes a
reference to a part of a cemetery.
26—Conversion
of closed cemeteries into public parks or gardens
(1) In this section, a reference to a closed cemetery is a
reference to a cemetery closed under
section 24, and
includes a part of a cemetery that has been closed under that section, but does
not include a cemetery, or part of a cemetery, that is on land held on trust by
a council or that includes dedicated land under the care, control and management
of a council.
(2) The relevant authority for a closed cemetery may convert the cemetery
into a public park or garden.
(3) A relevant
authority must not act under this section unless it has given notice of its
intention to convert the cemetery into a public park or garden by public
advertisement in a newspaper circulating throughout the State on at least
3 occasions within a period of 12 months.
(4) A notice under
subsection (3) must
comply with the regulations.
(5) If a closed cemetery is converted into a park or garden under this
section, a person must not knowingly disturb human remains interred there except
as may be authorised by this Act, the Attorney-General or the State
Coroner.
Maximum penalty: $10 000 or imprisonment for 2 years.
(6) Subject to
section 24, if a
closed cemetery is converted into a public park or garden, the relevant
authority for the closed cemetery may—
(a) remove memorials to deceased persons;
(b) relocate memorials to deceased persons in the park or
garden;
(c) replace memorials to deceased persons with some other form of memorial
in the park or garden.
(7) If a relevant authority acts in accordance with this section, it will
not be taken to be in breach of its obligations under interment rights relating
to human remains interred in the cemetery.
(8) This section does not apply in relation to a closed cemetery that is,
or forms part of, a State heritage place.
27—Powers
of relevant authorities in relation to closed cemeteries
(1) The relevant authority for a closed cemetery may, for the purpose of
converting the cemetery into park lands or a public park or
garden—
(a) construct roads and pathways on the land; and
(b) erect or construct buildings or structures on the land; and
(c) construct on or under the land any vault or other structure as a
repository for human remains that are not to be removed from the cemetery for
interment elsewhere; and
(d) erect lighting, seating and any other infrastructure or public
amenity; and
(e) take such other action as the relevant authority thinks fit for laying
out the land as park lands or a public place or garden.
(2) In this section, a reference to a cemetery includes a
reference to a part of a cemetery.
28—Obligations
of relevant authorities on closure of cemeteries etc
(1) If a cemetery or natural burial ground is closed, the relevant
authority must, within 30 days after the closure, give the Registrar notice of
the closure.
Maximum penalty: $5 000.
(2) If a crematorium is closed, the relevant authority must, within
30 days after the closure, give the Registrar and the Environment
Protection Authority notice of the closure.
Maximum penalty: $5 000.
(3) Subject to the
regulations, if a cemetery, natural burial ground or crematorium is closed, the
relevant authority must, within 60 days after the closure, forward to the
Libraries Board of South Australia any record relating to the cemetery, natural
burial ground or crematorium in the custody of the relevant authority.
Maximum penalty: $5 000.
(4)
Subsection (3) does
not apply in relation to—
(a) official records dealt with in accordance with the State
Records Act 1997; or
(b) non-official records relating to a cemetery, natural burial ground or
crematorium closed before the commencement of this section.
(5) The Libraries Board of South Australia may, with the approval of the
Minister, dispose of any records forwarded to the Board under this section if
satisfied that the records are of insignificant historical value.
In this Division—
human remains includes the remains of a human foetus (other
than a still-born child).
(1) Subject to this
section, if the relevant authority for a cemetery or natural burial ground
agrees to the interment of human remains in the cemetery or natural burial
ground, it must issue an interment right that—
(a) identifies the
person to whom the interment right is issued; and
(b) identifies the person or persons whose remains may be interred
pursuant to the interment right or provides that a specified person or person of
a specified class may, at some future time, nominate the person or persons whose
remains may be interred pursuant to the interment right; and
(c) identifies the site at which remains may be interred pursuant to the
interment right or provides for determination, in a manner set out in the
interment right, of the site at which the remains may be interred pursuant to
the interment right; and
(d) specifies the period for which the interment right is granted;
and
(e) sets out the rights to renewal of the interment right; and
(f) specifies
whether the interment right may be cancelled or transferred and sets out the
conditions (if any) governing its cancellation or transfer.
(2) Before issuing an interment right to a person, the relevant authority
must give the person a written statement in plain English that—
(a) includes the matters required by
subsection (1)
to be included in the interment right; and
(b) sets out the rights and responsibilities of the relevant authority and
relatives of a deceased person whose remains may be interred pursuant to the
interment right in relation to any memorial (including any unclaimed memorial)
to the deceased person; and
(c) specifies the cost of the interment right and any options for periodic
payment.
Maximum penalty: $2 500.
(3) An interment right may provide for the interment of such number of
deceased persons at the site in which remains are to be interred pursuant to the
interment right as the relevant authority considers to be within the capacity of
the site to hold.
(4) Subject to this Act, an interment right obliges the relevant
authority—
(a) to permit the interment of the remains of the person to whom it
relates at the site identified in, or determined in accordance with, the
interment right; and
(b) to permit a memorial to the deceased person to be erected at the site
with the approval of the relevant authority and in accordance with the terms of
the interment right; and
(c) to leave the remains undisturbed at that site for so long as the
interment right remains in force; and
(d) to leave any memorial to the deceased person lawfully erected at that
site, with the permission of the relevant authority, undisturbed (provided that
the interment right remains in force and the memorial is kept in good
repair).
(5) A relevant authority may, at the request of the holder of an interment
right, carry out a lift and deepen procedure at the site to which the interment
right relates for the purpose of interring additional human remains
there.
31—Duration
of interment rights
A relevant authority may issue an interment right—
(a) for the period specified in the interment right; or
(b) in perpetuity.
32—Renewal
of interment rights
(1) A relevant authority must, on application by the holder of an
interment right and payment of the renewal fee fixed by the relevant authority,
renew the interment right for a period of not less than 5 years.
(2) Subject to the
regulations, a relevant authority must, at least 12 months before an
interment right issued by the relevant authority is due to expire, take
reasonable steps to give the holder of the interment right a written notice in a
form approved by the Minister—
(a) setting out the holder's entitlement to renew the interment right;
and
(b) informing the holder that if the interment right is not renewed and
there is a memorial to the deceased in the cemetery or natural burial ground,
the memorial may be reclaimed from the relevant authority; and
(c) informing the holder of prescribed matters.
Maximum penalty: $2 500.
(3) If—
(a) a person other than the person to whom the interment right was
originally issued applies for the renewal of the interment right; and
(b) the applicant has not previously renewed that interment
right,
the relevant authority must give the applicant a written statement in plain
English that—
(c) includes the matters required by
section 30(1) to
be included in the interment right; and
(d) sets out the rights and responsibilities of the relevant authority and
relatives of a deceased person whose remains may be interred pursuant to the
interment right in relation to any memorial (including any unclaimed memorial)
to the deceased person; and
(e) specifies the cost of renewing the interment right and any options for
periodic payment.
Maximum penalty: $2 500.
33—Transfer
of interment rights
(1) An interment
right may be transferred but—
(a) the
consideration payable for the transfer of the interment right must not exceed
the current fee payable for the issue of an interment right of the same kind;
and
(b) the interment right may contain conditions limiting the right of
transfer to persons who adhere to a particular religion or belong to some other
specified class.
(2)
Subsection (1)(a)
does not apply to a transfer of a class determined by the Minister.
(3) A transfer of an interment right does not take effect until it is
recorded by the relevant authority in its register of interment
rights.
34—Surrender
of interment rights
(1) The holder of an interment right may surrender the interment right to
the relevant authority that issued it.
(2) On the surrender of an unexercised interment right, the relevant
authority must give the former holder of the interment right a refund equal to
the current fee payable for an interment right of the same kind, less a
reasonable fee for administration and maintenance costs.
(3) On the surrender of an unexercised interment right, that interment
right is discharged.
35—Exercise
or enforcement of interment rights
(1) If the holder of an interment right has died, the interment right may
be exercised or enforced by—
(a) the personal representative of the deceased; or
(b) if there is no personal representative—a person determined in
accordance with the regulations.
(2) If an interment right is held by more than 1 person, it may be
exercised or enforced jointly or severally.
36—Interment
right not required for scattering of cremated remains
No interment right is required for the scattering of cremated human remains
in a cemetery or natural burial ground.
37—Register
of interment rights
(1) The relevant authority for a cemetery or natural burial ground must
keep a register of all interment rights issued by the relevant
authority.
Maximum penalty: $5 000.
(2) The relevant authority for a cemetery or natural burial ground must
record in the register the location of and number allocated to, or a description
of, each site in the cemetery or natural burial ground in respect of which an
interment right has been issued.
Maximum penalty: $5 000.
(1) Subject to this
Act, if an interment right expires, the relevant authority may—
(a) re-use the interment site to which the interment right related;
and
(b) remove any memorial to a deceased person erected on or at the
site.
(2) A relevant
authority must not act under
subsection (1)
unless—
(a) the relevant authority has given notice of its intention to re-use the
interment site by public advertisement in a newspaper circulating throughout the
State; and
(b) the relevant authority has taken reasonable steps to give written
notice of its intention to re-use the interment site to the personal
representative of the deceased or 1 or more relatives of the deceased;
and
(c) either—
(i) the personal representative or a relative of the deceased has informed
the relevant authority that there is no objection on the part of the relatives
to the re-use of the interment site; or
(ii) 2 years have elapsed from the date on which notice was given under
paragraph (b) and the interment right has not been renewed during that
period.
(3) The advertisement or notice referred to in
subsection (2)
must—
(a) set out the rights to renewal of the interment right; and
(b) inform the personal representative or relative of the deceased that if
the interment right is not renewed and there is a memorial to the deceased in
the cemetery or natural burial ground, the owner of the memorial may reclaim it
from the relevant authority; and
(c) inform the personal representative or relative of the deceased of any
prescribed matters.
(1) For the purposes of the law of this State, a memorial to a deceased
person in a cemetery, natural burial ground or other place of interment is the
personal property of the person who holds the interment right in respect of the
interment site where the memorial is situated.
(2) However, the relevant authority for a cemetery or natural burial
ground in which a memorial is situated may deal with and dispose of the memorial
in accordance with this Act.
(3) This section applies to memorials whether erected before or after the
commencement of this Act.
The holder of an interment right in respect of an interment site in a
cemetery or natural burial ground is responsible for the maintenance of a
memorial at that site unless he or she has entered into an agreement with the
relevant authority for the cemetery or natural burial ground under which the
relevant authority has agreed to maintain the memorial.
41—Power
to require repair, removal or reinstatement of memorial
(1) If a memorial to a
deceased person in a cemetery becomes unsafe, the relevant authority for the
cemetery may, by notice in a form approved by the Minister given personally or
by post to the owner of the memorial, require repair, removal or reinstatement
of the memorial within the period specified in the notice.
(2) If the required work is not carried out within the time allowed in the
notice, the relevant authority may itself have the work carried out and recover
the cost of doing so as a debt from the owner of the memorial.
(3) If—
(a) a memorial to a deceased person in a cemetery becomes unsafe;
and
(b) urgent action to repair, remove or reinstate the memorial is
considered necessary by the relevant authority for the cemetery,
the relevant authority may, instead of giving a notice under
subsection (1), have
the work carried out and recover the cost of doing so as a debt from the owner
of the memorial.
(4) A notice cannot be given under this section if the relevant authority
has itself agreed to maintain the memorial.
(5) This section does not apply in relation to a cemetery that is, or
forms part of, a State heritage place.
42—Power
of relevant authority to dispose of unclaimed memorial
(1) If—
(a) 2 years or more have elapsed—
(i) since an interment site in a cemetery or natural burial ground has
expired; or
(ii) since a cemetery was dedicated as park lands or converted into a
public park or garden; and
(b) a memorial to a deceased person interred in the cemetery or natural
burial ground is situated at the interment site or elsewhere in the cemetery or
natural burial ground; and
(c) the relevant authority for the cemetery or natural burial ground has
given notice of its intention to remove and dispose of the
memorial—
(i) by public advertisement in a newspaper circulating throughout the
State; and
(ii) by written notice affixed to the memorial; and
(d) the relevant authority has taken reasonable steps to give written
notice to the owner of the memorial of its intention to remove and dispose of
the memorial; and
(e) 6 months have elapsed since the cemetery authority gave notice
under this subsection and no person has claimed the memorial within that
period,
the relevant authority may remove the memorial from the cemetery or natural
burial ground and dispose of it as it thinks fit.
(2) If a memorial is disposed of by a relevant authority under this
section, the authority must keep prescribed records in relation to the
memorial.
Maximum penalty: $5 000.
43—General
powers of relevant authority
A relevant authority for a cemetery, natural burial ground or crematorium
may—
(a) enlarge the cemetery, natural burial ground or crematorium;
and
(b) improve or embellish the cemetery, natural burial ground or
crematorium; and
(c) restrict interments in any part of the cemetery or natural burial
ground, except as may be required by interment rights granted before the
commencement of this Act; and
(d) take any other action that the relevant authority considers necessary
or desirable for the proper management and maintenance of the cemetery, natural
burial ground or crematorium.
44—Multicultural
needs to be recognised
(1) The relevant
authority for a cemetery or natural burial ground must, in the establishment,
administration, extension or improvement of the cemetery or natural burial
ground, have due regard to the customs and needs of the various ethnic and
religious communities that may resort to the cemetery or natural burial ground
for the disposal of human remains.
(2) A relevant authority is required to comply with
subsection (1)
in relation to a cemetery established before the commencement of this Act only
to the extent that is reasonably practicable.
45—Power
to restrict interments in any part of cemetery or natural burial
ground
(1) The relevant
authority for a cemetery or natural burial ground may restrict interments in any
part of the cemetery or natural burial ground.
(2)
Subsection (1) does
not authorise a relevant authority to do anything that may be in breach of the
terms of an interment right.
46—Neglected
cemeteries and natural burial grounds
(a) a council is of the opinion that a cemetery or natural burial ground
within its area—
(i) is in a neglected condition; or
(ii) fails in any manner to comply with the requirements of this Act;
or
(b) the designated Minister is of the opinion that a cemetery or natural
burial ground in an unincorporated area—
(i) is in a neglected condition; or
(ii) in any manner fails to comply with the requirements of this
Act,
the council or the Minister, as the case may be, may by notice in writing
to the relevant authority, require the relevant authority to carry out specified
work for the purpose of remedying the condition of neglect or complying with
that requirement.
(2) A notice under
subsection (1)
must—
(a) be given personally or by post to the relevant authority;
and
(b) specify a period (not being less than the prescribed period) within
which the works specified in the notice must be carried out; and
(c) include a statement setting out the right of the relevant authority to
apply to the District Court for a review of the decision to give the notice;
and
(d) include a warning that if the works specified in the notice are not
carried out within the period specified in the notice or, if relevant, within
14 days after the completion of any review, then the council or designated
Minister (as the case may be) may—
(i) carry out the works required by the notice (subject to the outcome of
any review); and
(ii) recover the costs incurred by the council or designated Minister in
carrying out the works required by the notice from the relevant
authority.
(3) If—
(a) the work required by a notice under
subsection (1) is
not carried out within the time specified in the notice; and
(b) no application for review of the decision to give the notice is made
within 14 days after the notice is given,
the council or designated Minister (as the case may be) may have the work
carried out.
(4) If—
(a) the work required by a notice under
subsection (1) is
not carried out within the time specified in the notice; and
(b) an application for review of the decision to give the notice is
determined in favour of the council or the designated Minister (as the case may
be),
the council or the designated Minister may, within 14 days after the
determination of the review, have the work carried out.
(5) The costs incurred by a council or designated Minister in carrying out
works required by a notice given under this section may be recovered as a debt
from the relevant authority to whom the notice was given.
(1) A relevant authority to which a notice is given under
section 46 may,
within 14 days after receipt of the notice, apply to the District Court for
a review of the decision of the council or designated Minister (as the case may
be) to give the notice to the relevant authority.
(2) On a review, the District Court may—
(a) confirm or reverse the decision of the council or designated Minister;
and
(b) make consequential and ancillary orders and directions.
48—Power
of councils to accept conveyance of cemetery or natural burial ground land from
trustees
(1) The trustees of land held on trust for a cemetery or natural burial
ground may convey it to the council in whose area the land is situated if the
council is willing to accept the trust.
(2) If a council accepts a trust, the council will hold the cemetery or
natural burial ground on the original trusts or such of the trusts as are
applicable.
(3) The trustees are, from the time of the conveyance, discharged from the
trusts.
(4) A council must not accept a conveyance of a cemetery or natural burial
ground under this section if, under the trusts on which the council will hold
the cemetery or natural burial ground, the use of the cemetery or natural burial
ground is confined to the interment of the remains of deceased persons who
belonged to a particular religion.
49—Power
of councils to assume administration of cemeteries and natural burial
grounds
(1) Subject to this section, a council may assume the administration of a
cemetery or natural burial ground within its area if—
(a) there is no existing relevant authority for the cemetery or natural
burial ground or the relevant authority; or
(b) the relevant authority for the cemetery or natural burial ground is
unknown and is not reasonably ascertainable; or
(c) the relevant authority for the cemetery or natural burial ground
agrees to transfer it to the council.
(2) If a council assumes the administration of a cemetery or natural
burial ground, it must observe the terms of any trust affecting the
administration or use of the cemetery or natural burial ground, except to the
extent that the Supreme Court relieves it from the obligation to do
so.
(3) A council must not assume the administration of a cemetery or natural
burial ground if, under the terms of any trust, the use of the cemetery or
natural burial ground is limited to the interment of human remains in accordance
with the usages of a particular religion.
(4) The powers of a council under this section extend to closed cemeteries
and natural burial grounds and cemeteries that have been converted to public
parks or gardens.
50—Public
access to cemeteries, natural burial grounds and crematoria
(1) Subject to this section, a relevant authority must allow a person
access, free of charge, at any reasonable time, to a cemetery, natural burial
ground or crematorium—
(a) for the purpose of visiting graves or monuments or conducting or
attending a funeral or religious service; or
(b) for any other legitimate non-commercial purpose.
Maximum penalty: $5 000.
(2) If the relevant
authority for a cemetery, natural burial ground or crematorium has reason to
suspect that a person has committed, is committing or is about to commit an
offence in the cemetery, natural burial ground or crematorium, the relevant
authority may require the person to leave the cemetery, natural burial ground or
crematorium.
(3) A person must not fail or refuse to comply with a requirement of a
cemetery authority under
subsection (2).
Maximum penalty: $2 500.
51—Disposal
of surplus cemetery land etc
(1) Subject to
subsection (2),
nothing in this Act prevents land that comprises or forms part of a cemetery or
natural burial ground that has not been used for the interment of human remains
being dealt with in the ordinary course of commerce.
(2) However, before
dealing with such land, the relevant authority for the cemetery or natural
burial ground must discharge any unexercised interment right in force in
relation to that land and—
(a) give the former holder a refund equal to the current fee payable for
an interment right of the same kind; or
(b) issue to the former holder, free of charge—
(i) a new interment right in relation to another cemetery or natural
burial ground administered by the relevant authority; or
(ii) if the land in question does not constitute the whole of the cemetery
or natural burial ground—a new interment right in relation to another part
of the cemetery or natural burial ground.
52—Disposal
of land after closure of cemetery etc
(1) If—
(a) a cemetery or natural burial ground has been closed in accordance with
this Act; and
(b) all human remains interred in the cemetery or natural burial ground,
and all memorials to deceased persons erected in the cemetery or natural burial
ground, have been removed from the cemetery or natural burial ground,
nothing in this Act prevents the land comprising that cemetery or natural
burial ground being dealt with in the ordinary course of commerce.
(2) In this section, a reference to a cemetery or
natural burial ground includes a reference to a part of a cemetery
or natural burial ground.
53—Registers,
records and plans to be kept by relevant authorities
(1) The relevant authority for a cemetery or natural burial ground must
keep—
(a) a register that—
(i) identifies (so far as possible) persons whose remains are interred in
the cemetery or natural burial ground; and
(ii) identifies the site in which the remains of each such person are
interred; and
(iii) records exhumations of human remains interred in the cemetery or
natural burial ground; and
(b) a register containing prescribed particulars of—
(i) interment rights issued by the relevant authority; and
(ii) memorials erected in the cemetery or natural burial ground;
and
(iii) any other matters specified by the regulations; and
(c) a plan of the cemetery or natural burial ground that
shows—
(i) each site at which human remains are interred; and
(ii) each site set aside for the interment of human remains.
Maximum penalty: $5 000.
(2) If an interment right in force identifies the site at which human
remains are to be interred pursuant to the interment right, the relevant
authority must include in the plan of the cemetery or natural burial ground the
number allocated to, or a description of, that site.
Maximum penalty: $5 000.
(3) The relevant authority for a crematorium must keep prescribed records
of cremations carried out at the crematorium.
Maximum penalty: $5 000.
(4) The registers kept by a relevant authority under this section must be
made available for inspection by members of the public during ordinary office
hours on payment of a fee fixed by the authority.
Maximum penalty: $5 000.
(5) A relevant authority must, at the request of an authorised person,
produce a register kept by the authority under this section for inspection by
that authorised person.
Maximum penalty: $5 000.
54—Minister
responsible for Crown Land Management
Act 2009 to facilitate exercise of powers, functions and duties under
this Act
If a power, function or duty under this Act is to be exercised or performed
in relation to land that is dedicated land under the Crown
Land Management Act 2009 or is subject to a Crown condition
agreement under that Act, the Minister responsible for the administration of
that Act must take such action under that Act as may be necessary or expedient
to facilitate the exercise or performance of the power, function or duty under
this Act.
(1) The Minister may, by instrument in writing or notice in the
Gazette—
(a) exempt a person or class of persons, subject to such conditions as the
Minister thinks fit and specifies in the instrument or notice, from specified
provisions of this Act; or
(b) vary or revoke an exemption, or a condition of an exemption, under
this section or impose a further condition.
(2) A person who contravenes, or fails to comply with, a condition of an
exemption is guilty of an offence.
Maximum penalty: $10 000.
56—Power
of Public Trustee to act on behalf of holder of interment right
etc
(1) If reasonable attempts by the relevant authority for a cemetery or
natural burial ground to ascertain or locate—
(a) the holder of an interment right in relation to the cemetery or
natural burial ground; or
(b) the owner of a memorial erected in a cemetery or natural burial
ground,
fail, the Public Trustee may, at the request of the relevant authority, act
on behalf of the holder or owner (and in that case, a reference in this Act to
the holder of an interment right, or the owner of a memorial, will be read as a
reference to the Public Trustee).
(2) Nothing in this section requires the Public Trustee to assume any
financial responsibility on behalf of the holder of an interment right or the
owner of a memorial.
57—Approvals
and authorisations
(1) An approval or authorisation given by the Attorney-General or State
Coroner under this Act—
(a) must be in writing; and
(b) may be made subject to such conditions as the Attorney-General or
State Coroner thinks fit; and
(c) may be varied or revoked.
(2) A person must not contravene, or fail to comply with, a condition of
an approval or authorisation given by the Attorney-General or State Coroner
under this Act.
Maximum penalty: $10 000 or imprisonment for 2 years.
(1) The Minister may appoint a person to be an authorised officer for the
purposes of this Act.
(2) A council may appoint as an authorised officer a specified officer or
employee of the council, or an officer or employee of the council of a specified
class.
(3) An appointment under this section may be made subject to conditions
limiting the period during which, the area within which or the purposes for
which the appointee may exercise the powers of an authorised officer.
(4) An authorised officer (other than a police officer) must be issued an
identity card—
(a) containing a photograph of the authorised officer; and
(b) stating any conditions of appointment limiting the authorised
officer's appointment.
(5) An authorised officer (other than a police officer) must produce the
identity card for inspection before exercising the powers of an authorised
officer under this Act in relation to any person.
(6) The Minister may, at any time, revoke an appointment made by the
Minister under this section, or vary or revoke a condition of such an
appointment or impose a further such condition.
(7) A council may, at any time, revoke an appointment made by the council
under this section, or vary or revoke a condition of such an appointment or
impose a further such condition.
59—Powers
of authorised officers
(1) Subject to this
section, an authorised officer may, as may reasonably be required for the
administration or enforcement of this Act, do any of the following:
(a) enter and inspect
any cemetery, natural burial ground, crematorium, mortuary or any other place or
premises;
(b) enter and inspect any vehicle used for or in connection with the
transportation of human remains, and for that purpose require a vehicle to stop,
or to be presented for inspection at a place and time specified by the
authorised officer; or
(c) give directions with respect to the stopping or movement of a vehicle,
plant, equipment or other thing used for or in connection with the handling,
storage, transportation, preparation or disposal of human remains; or
(d) require a person apparently in charge of a vehicle used for or in
connection with the transportation of human remains to facilitate entry and
inspection of the vehicle; or
(e) seize and retain anything that the authorised officer reasonably
suspects has been used in, or may constitute evidence of, a contravention of
this Act;
(f) require a person who the authorised officer reasonably suspects has
committed, is committing, or is about to commit, a contravention of this Act to
state the person's full name and usual place of residence and to produce
evidence of the person's identity;
(g) require a person who the authorised officer reasonably suspects has
knowledge of matters in respect of which information is reasonably required for
the administration or enforcement of this Act to answer questions in relation to
those matters;
(h) with the authority of a warrant issued by a magistrate, require a
person to produce specified documents or documents of a specified kind,
including a written record that reproduces in an understandable form information
stored by computer, microfilm or other process;
(i) examine, copy or take extracts from a document or information so
produced or require a person to provide a copy of such a document or
information;
(j) take photographs, films, audio, video or other recordings;
(k) give directions reasonably required in connection with the exercise of
a power conferred by any of the above paragraphs or otherwise in connection with
the administration, operation or enforcement of this Act.
(2) An authorised officer, in exercising powers under this section, may be
accompanied by such assistants as are reasonably required in the
circumstances.
(3) An authorised officer must not exercise the power conferred by
subsection (1)(a) in
relation to residential premises except with the permission of the occupier of
the premises or on the authority of a warrant issued by a magistrate.
(4) An authorised officer may, on the authority of a warrant issued by a
magistrate, use reasonable force to enter premises or a place, vessel or
vehicle.
(5) A magistrate must not issue a warrant under this section in relation
to a place, vessel or vehicle unless satisfied that there are reasonable grounds
to believe—
(a) that a contravention of this Act has been, is being, or is about to
be, committed in or on the place, vessel or vehicle; or
(b) that something may be found in or on the place, vessel or vehicle that
has been used in, or constitutes evidence of, a contravention of this Act;
or
(c) that the circumstances require immediate action.
(6) An application for the issue of a warrant under this
section—
(a) may be made either personally or by telephone; and
(b) must be made in accordance with any procedures prescribed by the
regulations.
60—Hindering
etc persons engaged in administration of Act
A person who—
(a) without reasonable excuse hinders or obstructs an authorised officer
or other person engaged in the administration of this Act; or
(b) fails to answer a question put by an authorised officer to the best of
his or her knowledge, information or belief; or
(c) produces a document or record that he or she knows, or ought to know,
is false or misleading in a material particular; or
(d) fails without reasonable excuse to comply with a requirement or
direction of an authorised officer under this Act; or
(e) uses abusive, threatening or insulting language to an authorised
officer, or a person assisting an authorised officer; or
(f) falsely represents, by words or conduct, that he or she is an
authorised officer,
is guilty of an offence.
Maximum penalty: $10 000.
61—False
or misleading statement
A person must not make a statement that is false or misleading in a
material particular (whether by reason of the inclusion or omission of any
particular) in any information provided under this Act.
Maximum penalty: $10 000 or imprisonment for 2 years.
If a person is required under this Act to furnish information to the
Minister or the Registrar, the Minister or the Registrar may require that the
information be verified by statutory declaration and, in that event, the person
will not be taken to have furnished the information as required unless it has
been verified in accordance with the requirements of the Minister or the
Registrar.
If a person is required to answer a question or to produce, or provide a
copy of, a document or information under this Act and the answer, document or
information would tend to incriminate the person or make the person liable to a
penalty, the person must nevertheless answer or produce, or provide a copy of,
the document or information, but the answer, document or information will not be
admissible in evidence against the person in proceedings for an offence other
than proceedings in respect of the making of a false or misleading statement or
declaration.
(1) If a body corporate is guilty of an offence against
section 9, each
member of the governing body of the body corporate is guilty of an offence and
liable to the same penalty as is prescribed for the principal offence unless the
member proves that he or she could not by the exercise of due diligence have
prevented the commission of the offence.
(2) If a body
corporate is guilty of any other offence against this Act (other than an offence
against the regulations), each member of the governing body of the body
corporate is guilty of an offence and liable to the same penalty as is
prescribed for the principal offence if the prosecution proves
that—
(a) the member knew, or ought reasonably to have known, that there was a
significant risk that such an offence would be committed; and
(b) the member was in a position to influence the conduct of the body
corporate in relation to the commission of such an offence; and
(c) the member failed to exercise due diligence to prevent the commission
of the offence.
(3)
Subsection (2) does
not apply if the principal offence is an offence against
section 17,
18,
24(14),
28,
50
or
61.
(4) The regulations may make provision in relation to the criminal
liability of a member of the governing body of a body corporate that is guilty
of an offence against the regulations.
(1) A notice or
document required or authorised to be given or sent to, or served on, a person
for the purposes of this Act may—
(a) be given to the person personally; or
(b) be posted in an envelope addressed to the person at the person's last
known nominated contact, residential, business or (in the case of a corporation)
registered address; or
(c) be left for the person at the person's last known nominated contact,
residential, business or (in the case of a corporation) registered address with
someone apparently over the age of 16 years; or
(d) be transmitted by fax or email to a fax number or email address
provided by the person (in which case the notice or document will be taken to
have been given or served at the time of transmission).
(2) Without limiting the effect of
subsection (1),
a notice or other document required or authorised to be given or sent to, or
served on, a person for the purposes of this Act may, if the person is a company
or registered body within the meaning of the Corporations Act 2001 of the
Commonwealth, be served on the person in accordance with that Act.
(1) The Governor
may make such regulations as are contemplated by, or necessary or expedient for
the purposes of, this Act.
(2) Without limiting the generality of
subsection (1),
the regulations may—
(a) impose special requirements in relation to the transportation,
storage, handling or disposal of human remains where the deceased person was, or
may have been, suffering from a prescribed disease at the time of his or her
death; and
(b) prescribe processes for the identification of human remains;
and
(c) regulate the construction, operation and use of mortuaries and
prescribed facilities; and
(d) regulate the construction of coffins, shrouds and other products
designed to contain human remains; and
(e) regulate the construction and use of mausolea and underground vaults;
and
(f) regulate the position, depth and maintenance of graves; and
(g) regulate natural burials; and
(h) regulate the keeping and inspection of records for the purposes of
this Act; and
(i) provide for the management of cemeteries, natural burial grounds and
crematoria; and
(j) regulate the conduct of persons in cemeteries and natural burial
grounds; and
(k) regulate the movement and parking of vehicles in cemeteries and
natural burial grounds; and
(l) prescribe fees for the purposes of this Act; and
(m) provide for the payment and recovery of fees for the purposes of this
Act; and
(n) provide for the waiver, reduction, remission and refund of fees
payable under this Act; and
(o) prescribe penalties, not exceeding $10 000, for breach of, or
non-compliance with, a regulation.
(3) The regulations may—
(a) refer to or incorporate, wholly or partially and with or without
modification, a code, standard or other document prepared or published by a
prescribed body, either as in force at the time the regulations are made or as
in force from time to time; and
(b) be of general or limited application; and
(c) make different provision according to the persons, things or
circumstances to which they are expressed to apply; and
(d) provide that a specified provision of this Act does not apply, or
applies with prescribed variations, to any person, circumstance or situation (or
person, circumstance or situation of a prescribed class) specified by the
regulations, subject to any condition to which the regulations are expressed to
be subject; and
(e) provide that any matter or thing is to be determined, dispensed with,
regulated or prohibited according to the discretion of the Minister, the
Registrar, a council or a prescribed authority; and
(f) include evidentiary provisions to facilitate proof of breaches of the
regulations for the purposes of proceedings for offences; and
(g) make provisions of a savings or transitional nature consequent on the
enactment of this Act or the commencement of specified provisions of this Act or
specified regulations under this Act.
(4) If a code, standard or other document is referred to or incorporated
in the regulations—
(a) a copy of the code, standard or other document must be kept available
for public inspection, without charge and during ordinary office hours, at an
office or offices specified in the regulations; and
(b) evidence of the contents of the code, standard or other document may
be given in any legal proceedings by production of a document apparently
certified by the Minister to be a true copy of the code, standard or other
document.
Schedule 1—Repeals,
related amendments and transitional provisions
Part 1—Repeals
1—Repeal
of Cremation
Act 2000
The Cremation
Act 2000 is repealed.
Part 2—Related amendments
Division 1—Preliminary
In this Part, a provision under a heading referring to the amendment of a
specified Act amends the Act so specified.
Division 2—Amendment of Adelaide Cemeteries
Authority Act 2001
3—Amendment
of section 8—Special provisions relating to Authority's
powers
Section 8(2)—delete subsection (2) and
substitute:
(2) The Authority may grant a right for burial purposes for any term or in
perpetuity.
Section 21—delete the section
Division 3—Amendment of Births, Deaths and
Marriages Registration Act 1996
5—Amendment
of section 4—Definitions
Section 4(1)—after the definition of Court
insert:
cremated remains means cremated human remains as defined in
the
Burial
and Cremation Act 2012;
6—Repeal
of section 50A—Documents to be provided before disposal of
remains
Section 50A—delete the section
Division 4—Amendment of Local Government
Act 1934
Part XXX—delete the Part
Division 5—Amendment of Transplantation and
Anatomy Act 1983
8—Amendment
of section 34—Regulations for the control etc of schools of
anatomy
Section 34(d)—delete "interment or cremation" and
substitute:
disposal
Part 3—Transitional
provisions
9—Transitional
provision relating to existing interment rights
If human remains were interred in a cemetery before the commencement of
this Schedule, they will be taken to have been interred pursuant to an interment
right granted under this Act (as if this Act had been in force when the remains
were interred) and the following provisions govern the term of any such
interment right:
(a) if an interment right was granted in perpetuity—the presumptive
interment right will be taken to have been granted in perpetuity;
(b) if an interment right was granted for a fixed term—the
presumptive interment right will be taken to have been granted for the same
term;
(c) in any other case—the presumptive interment right will be taken
to have been granted for a term prescribed by the regulations.