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Australian Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Delegated Legislation - Monitor |
Quality Agency Principles Amendment Principle 2016 [F2016L00830] |
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Purpose
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Removes the methods for calculation and indexation of application fees for
accrediation from the Quality Agency Principles 2013 [F2016C00652]
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Last day to disallow
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21 November 2016
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Authorising legislation
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Department
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Health
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Scrutiny principle
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Standing Order 23(3)(a)
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Previously reported in
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Delegated legislation monitor 6 of 2016
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Removing fees from a disallowable legislative instrument
The committee commented as follows:
This Quality Agency Principles Amendment Principle 2016 [F2016L00830] (the amendment principle) removes from the Quality Agency Principles 2013 [F2016C00652] (the 2013 principles) the details of how application fees for accreditation of certain aged care services are calculated and indexed. As such, the fees will no longer be set out in a disallowable legislative instrument, and instead will be determined by the Chief Executive Officer of the Australian Aged Care Quality Agency and published on that agency’s website.
The committee acknowledges that the Australian Aged Care Quality Agency Act 2013 (Quality Agency Act) does not require these fees to be included in a disallowable legislative instrument. However, the committee notes that, when considering the bill that became the Quality Agency Act, the Scrutiny of Bills committee sought a justification from the minister for including important matters relating to the accreditation of care services in the 2013 principles. The minister's response advised that the information to be included in the quality agency principles, such as application fees, was not appropriate for inclusion in primary legislation as the information needed regular updating. The minister further justified this approach by noting that the 2013 principles would be subject to oversight by this committee.[1]
The amendment principle removes the details of how application fees for accreditation of certain aged care services are calculated and indexed from the 2013 principles (a disallowable legislative instrument), and therefore from direct parliamentary oversight (including consideration by this committee).
The committee is concerned that the ES for the amendment principle does not provide a justification for the removal of the calculation and indexation of application fees for accreditation of certain aged care services from the Quality Agency Principles; nor information on whether it is appropriate to remove this process from a disallowable legislative instrument (thereby removing the process from the effective oversight of the Parliament).
The committee requests the advice of the minister in relation to this matter.
Minister's response
The Minister for Health and Aged Care advised:
In regard to your query regarding removing fees from the instrument, the Quality Agency Act 2013 does not give the Minister authority to set fees for accreditation services in the instrument. Instead, section 15 of the Quality Agency Act 2013 authorises the Chief Executive Officer of the Quality Agency to publish a document setting out accreditation fees and
re-accreditation fees. This allows a transparent approach to the setting of such fees for accreditation services which is also consistent with the legislative authority in the Quality Agency Act 2013.
Committee's response
The committee thanks the minister for her response.
The committee agrees that the Quality Agency Act authorises the Chief Executive Officer of the Quality Agency to publish a document setting accreditation and
re-accreditation fees. However, the minister's response provided to the Scrutiny of Bills committee with respect to the Quality Agency Act indicated that these fees would be included in a disallowable legislative instrument and subject to Parliamentary oversight. Therefore, the committee remains concerned that the minister's response does not provide a justification for removing from a disallowable legislative instrument the process for calculating and indexing fees for the accreditation of certain aged care services (thereby removing the process from the effective oversight of the Parliament).
The committee requests the further advice of the minister in relation to this matter.
[1] Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills, Sixth Report of 2013 (19 June 2013), Australian Aged Care Quality Agency Bill 2013 (see p. 4 of the correspondence from the minister, The Hon Mark Butler, MP, attached to the report).
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/other/cth/AUSStaCSDLM/2016/235.html