Sustainability-related Regulations Database

27 Results for "C39"

This legislation establishes a comprehensive framework for the management, protection, and conservation of public lands and waters, including their flora, fauna, and biodiversity, across the State. It creates a dedicated commission to oversee the sustainable use, preservation, and enjoyment of these natural resources. The law categorises various areas like national parks, State forests, and marine reserves, detailing processes for their vesting and ongoing management, ensuring permanent protection and considering Aboriginal cultural heritage. It outlines mechanisms for developing management plans, regulating activities such as timber harvesting, fishing, and aquaculture through permits and licences, and controlling forest diseases. The core purpose is to balance environmental conservation with community enjoyment and the sustainable use of natural assets.
It provides for the establishment of a national body responsible for coordinating environmental protection across Australia. This body develops and oversees national environment protection measures designed to ensure consistent environmental standards and prevent market distortions due to varying regional regulations. The measures cover areas like air and water quality, noise, hazardous wastes, and recycling, establishing national standards, goals, guidelines, and protocols. Their development involves public consultation and considers environmental, economic, and social impacts. The framework defines governmental responsibilities for implementing and annually reporting on the effectiveness of these national measures. Specific compliance requirements for industries, such as agriculture, are then derived from subsequent laws enacted by participating jurisdictions to give effect to these national guidelines.
A national voluntary framework is established to enhance and protect biodiversity across Australia's native species. Its core purpose is to promote ecological health, fulfill international biodiversity commitments, and contribute to preventing new extinctions. The framework encourages broad engagement from various participants, including landholders and private enterprise, with a special emphasis on supporting and integrating the unique role and knowledge of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples in conservation. It provides a means for recognizing and valuing biodiversity outcomes, fostering investment in environmental improvements. Through this system, Australia aims to build national capacity and a knowledge base crucial for achieving its long-term biodiversity goals.
This legislation establishes Australia's comprehensive regulatory system for agricultural and veterinary chemical products and their active constituents. Its purpose is to evaluate, register, and control these substances, ensuring human, animal, and environmental health and safety. It promotes ecologically sustainable development, enhances primary industry and manufacturing competitiveness, and fosters trade. The system aims to be cost-effective, efficient, predictable, and transparent, with opportunities for public involvement. It achieves uniformity across Australia, securing compliance through robust enforcement mechanisms. This framework manages product approval, manufacturing licensing, supply controls, and recalls, ensuring only safe and effective chemicals enter the market and are used responsibly.
This legislation promotes competition, fair trading, and consumer protection across Australian markets. It establishes key regulatory bodies like the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) and prohibits various anti-competitive practices, including cartel conduct, misuse of market power, and other restrictive dealings. The Act also provides frameworks for access to essential infrastructure services, regulates specific industries such as news media and the gas market, and establishes mechanisms for industry-specific codes of conduct to ensure fair business practices. Its overall purpose is to prevent behaviors that would substantially lessen competition, fostering a competitive and equitable economic environment.
This legislation supports farmers and their partners experiencing financial hardship by providing a comprehensive assistance framework. It offers a farm household allowance for up to four years within a ten-year period, contingent on an assets test and an activity test. Recipients must agree to a Financial Improvement Agreement, undertaking activities like training, seeking work, or receiving professional advice, with specified exemptions. The framework also funds these approved activities through an activity supplement and covers the cost of independent farm financial assessments to help evaluate financial options. Furthermore, it includes specific relief payments for those reaching the allowance's time limit and additional supplements for particular periods, aiming to foster long-term financial stability in the agricultural sector.
This legislation establishes a government corporation to administer financial assistance programs across the nation. Its primary purpose is to provide farm business loans and financial aid for water infrastructure projects to states and territories. Additionally, it manages other programs as prescribed by specific rules. The corporation is responsible for setting interest rates, managing loan terms, and offering advice to borrowers. Its operations are guided by an Operating Mandate from responsible ministers, ensuring efficient and effective service delivery. A Board of qualified members and a Chief Executive Officer oversee its functions. Agricultural organizations seeking assistance must meet specific lending criteria and adhere to loan terms, including payment of transaction costs. This body is designed to support agricultural resilience and water resource development by facilitating access to crucial funding.
The legislation establishes a comprehensive framework to safeguard public health and consumer confidence regarding food in Australia and New Zealand. It creates Food Standards Australia New Zealand (FSANZ) to develop and regulate food standards, ensuring food quality, safety, and clear information for consumers. The framework aims for an efficient, transparent regulatory environment, promoting consistency across both countries and with international measures while prioritizing health safeguards. Key provisions define procedures for creating and varying food standards, covering aspects like composition, production, handling, labelling, advertising, and hygiene. It also outlines review mechanisms for draft standards and specific requirements for compliance across the food industry, including agricultural organisations, ensuring adherence to rigorous food safety and quality benchmarks.
This legislation seeks to eliminate discrimination based on age across a wide range of areas, including employment, education, access to premises, and the provision of goods, services, and accommodation. It aims to ensure everyone has equal rights under the law, regardless of age, and promotes the full participation of all age groups in society. The law prohibits both direct and indirect age discrimination, as well as victimisation against those who assert their rights. It also outlaws publishing discriminatory advertisements. While establishing broad prohibitions, the legislation includes provisions for certain justified exemptions, such as those for genuine benefits provided to specific age groups or for differentiation based on sound actuarial or statistical data in areas like superannuation or insurance. Ultimately, it works to remove barriers and challenge negative stereotypes, particularly for older individuals in the workforce, fostering a more inclusive community.
This legislation aims to prevent and eliminate discrimination and harassment across various areas of public life, including work, education, housing, and services. It specifically targets discrimination based on sex, sexual orientation, gender identity, intersex status, marital or relationship status, pregnancy, breastfeeding, and family responsibilities. The law also prohibits sexual harassment, sex-based harassment, hostile workplace environments, and victimisation. It places a positive duty on employers and businesses to take proactive, reasonable, and proportionate measures to eliminate these forms of unlawful conduct. The legislation supports international human rights principles by promoting the recognition and acceptance of equality between men and women, working towards achieving substantive equality. It also outlines enforcement functions for a human rights commission to ensure compliance and understanding.
This legislation establishes a comprehensive framework for licensing and regulating providers of labour hire services. Its primary aims are to protect workers from exploitation and to promote integrity within the labour hire industry. The law mandates that all labour hire providers must hold a licence to operate, and prohibits engaging with unlicensed providers or attempting to circumvent the regulations. Applicants for a licence must demonstrate they are fit and proper persons and that their business is financially viable. Licensed providers are required to comply with all relevant laws, submit regular reports on their operations, ensure their nominated officers are available, and notify authorities of significant changes. A public register of licences is maintained for transparency.
This legislation establishes a mandatory licensing system to regulate the provision of labour hire services. Its core objective is to protect workers from exploitation by labour hire providers and host businesses, while significantly improving the transparency and integrity of the entire industry. The framework requires all providers to secure a licence, strictly prohibiting operations or arrangements with unlicensed entities. It sets out detailed application criteria, demanding declarations of legal compliance across areas like workplace, taxation, and migration laws. The law creates a dedicated Labour Hire Licensing Authority and Commissioner to manage licences, monitor adherence, and enforce regulations through inspections and civil penalties. It also mandates ongoing reporting, fee payments, accurate record-keeping, and full cooperation with regulatory bodies, ensuring high standards and accountability within the sector.
This legislation establishes a mandatory licensing scheme for labour hire services, aiming to protect workers from exploitation, safeguard licensed businesses from predatory practices, and uphold the integrity of the industry. It requires all providers to hold a licence and prohibits engaging with unlicensed services. The framework mandates licence holders to meet eligibility criteria, pay periodic fees, submit regular reports, and promptly notify authorities of significant changes. Provisions include strict requirements for responsible management, robust enforcement powers for monitoring compliance, and a public register for transparency. The legislation also prohibits false information and requires licence numbers in advertisements, ensuring accountability across the sector.
This legislation establishes a comprehensive framework for licensing and regulating providers of labour hire services. Its primary purpose is to protect workers from exploitation and ensure that labour hire businesses meet their legal and ethical obligations. It aims to foster integrity and responsible practices within the labour hire industry. A key feature is a mandatory licensing scheme, requiring all labour hire providers to obtain and maintain a licence, demonstrating their suitability and adherence to workplace laws. A public register of licensed providers enhances transparency. The legislation outlines penalties for operating without a licence, breaching conditions, or engaging unlicensed providers. It also grants powers for monitoring compliance, conducting investigations, and taking regulatory action, ensuring a fair and compliant labour hire market.
This legislation establishes a modern and robust framework for regulating apprenticeships and traineeships in Queensland. Its core purpose is to cultivate a skilled workforce that effectively meets the current and future needs of industry, government, and the community, thereby strengthening the state’s economic base. It facilitates high-quality vocational education and training directly linked to employment, supporting individuals in accessing and completing the skills training required for job readiness and personal prosperity. The legislation streamlines the system through provisions governing training contracts, outlining specific obligations for employers and training organisations, and establishing mechanisms for compliance, including inspector powers and a Training Ombudsman. It aims to support industries and employers in fostering and retaining apprentices and trainees, ensuring a responsive and flexible approach to trade training.
This legislation establishes a comprehensive framework for regulating apprenticeships and traineeships across various vocations. It outlines processes for designating recognised trades, setting training guidelines, and formalising training contracts and plans. The law defines clear duties for employers, apprentices, trainees, and training organisations to ensure appropriate training, supervision, and progress monitoring. It also includes provisions for recognising trade qualifications, managing training changes, and restricting junior employment in trades. Additionally, the legislation provides mechanisms for resolving disputes, enforcing compliance through disciplinary actions and prohibition orders, and details powers for industry training officers, including inspection rights. Employers must adhere to strict requirements for application, training delivery, notification of changes, and record-keeping.
This legislation establishes a comprehensive framework for vocational education and training in the Northern Territory. Its primary purpose is to ensure the provision of nationally recognised training that addresses current and future needs of government, industry, and the community, thereby supporting employment and economic growth. The framework aims to enhance quality, flexibility, innovation, and access within vocational education. It defines the responsibilities for employers, apprentices, trainees, and Registered Training Organisations. Key provisions include processes for employer approval, the creation and management of training contracts and plans, and the oversight of training providers. It also sets out regulations for apprentice and trainee wages, employer record-keeping, and compliance through authorised officers, ensuring a responsive and effective training system for a skilled workforce.
This legislation establishes a comprehensive vocational education and training system in Western Australia. It aims to efficiently meet industry and community skill needs by regulating training providers and courses. The framework ensures a competitive training market and promotes equality of opportunity in skill development. Key functions include registering and accrediting vocational training providers and courses, as well as overseeing and enforcing rules for training contracts, such as apprenticeships. The system is governed by a Ministerial Corporation, advised by a State Training Board, and regulated by a Training Accreditation Council. It outlines requirements for training colleges, ensuring strategic planning and accountability. Provisions also detail compliance, inspection, and enforcement measures to maintain high standards and integrity across the state's training landscape.
This legislation establishes a comprehensive framework for industrial relations in New South Wales. Its primary purpose is to ensure fair and just employment conditions, promote economic efficiency, and facilitate prompt dispute resolution across the state. It empowers the Industrial Relations Commission to set employment standards through awards and approve enterprise agreements, while also preventing discrimination and ensuring equal remuneration. The framework protects employee rights, including parental leave entitlements and remedies for unfair dismissal. It outlines employer obligations regarding remuneration and record-keeping, and regulates industrial organisations to ensure democratic control and transparent operations. The legislation also provides mechanisms for enforcement, inspections, and the recovery of unpaid wages, fostering cooperative and productive workplace relations.
This legislation broadens and updates the law to promote equal opportunity and protect against discrimination, sexual harassment, and victimisation. Its core aim is to eliminate these harmful practices to the greatest extent possible, fostering equality by addressing systemic causes and requiring reasonable adjustments for substantive equality. The law identifies specific attributes, such as age, disability, race, and sex, on which discrimination is prohibited across various domains including employment, education, and the provision of goods and services. It imposes a general duty on individuals and organisations to take proportionate measures to prevent unlawful conduct. An independent commission is established to encourage best practices, conduct investigations, and resolve disputes. The legislation also outlines a clear dispute resolution pathway, including direct access to a civil and administrative tribunal, to ensure fair treatment and uphold human rights for all.
This legislation establishes long service leave entitlements for workers based on their years of service, typically granting 13 weeks after ten years, with pro-rata payments available upon termination for workers with seven to ten years service, unless due to serious misconduct. It defines how continuity of service is maintained, even with certain breaks, and sets out conditions for taking leave, usually as a continuous period paid at the worker's ordinary rate. The law allows for payments in lieu of leave by mutual agreement. It mandates comprehensive record-keeping by employers regarding worker service and leave taken. Inspectors are empowered to ensure compliance, and the South Australian Employment Tribunal is authorized to resolve disputes, order compliance, and approve alternative long service leave arrangements that do not disadvantage workers. The overall purpose is to ensure workers receive their long service entitlements and to define employer responsibilities for their administration.
It establishes rules for long service leave entitlements for employees in Western Australia. It details how leave accrues, including specific periods for full and proportionate entitlements, and outlines the conditions for taking leave or receiving payment in lieu. The framework defines continuous employment and ordinary pay for calculation purposes. It also specifies employer obligations for maintaining comprehensive employment records, allowing employee and inspector access. Further provisions cover the transfer of entitlements during business changes and define mechanisms for dispute resolution and compliance, including requirements for written agreements when cashing out leave.
This legislation establishes a comprehensive system for granting intellectual property rights to breeders of new varieties of plants and fungi. Its primary purpose is to protect these innovations by defining the scope of Plant Breeder’s Rights (PBR), which include exclusive rights over the production, sale, import, and export of propagating material. The law outlines detailed procedures for applying for, granting, and revoking PBR, ensuring that protected varieties meet specific criteria such as distinctness, uniformity, and stability. It also extends protection to essentially derived varieties, provides exceptions for activities like farm-saved seed use, and ensures reasonable public access to protected varieties. An administrative framework is established to manage and enforce these rights, aiming to foster continued innovation in plant and fungi breeding.
This legislation establishes a framework for imposing charges, treated as customs duties, on primary industry products and goods used in animal, plant, fungi, or algae maintenance and treatment. These charges fund marketing, advertising, and promotion for primary industries, alongside essential research and development activities. They also support critical biosecurity initiatives, including health promotion, disease response, and the National Residue Survey, plus other prescribed beneficial activities. The framework enables regulations to specify charge rates, applicable products, exemptions, and the liable parties. It mandates consultation with nominated industry representative and polling bodies, ensuring their input is considered before setting or amending charge rates, reflecting industry priorities in these financial contributions.
It establishes a framework for the strategic coordination and management of the New South Wales marine estate, including marine parks and aquatic reserves, aligning with ecologically sustainable development principles. It aims to foster a biologically diverse, healthy, and productive marine environment, while facilitating economic opportunities and cultural, social, and recreational uses. Key provisions include establishing advisory bodies, requiring a comprehensive management strategy, and setting rules for declaring and managing marine parks and aquatic reserves. This involves defining zones, regulating activities, prohibiting mining, and ensuring development proposals consider environmental impacts and ministerial concurrence within or near these protected areas. It also covers enforcement and funding for marine conservation efforts.
This legislation establishes a comprehensive framework for managing livestock diseases. It aims to protect public health, safeguard domestic and export markets for livestock products, and prevent or eradicate exotic animal diseases. The Act mandates prompt notification of suspected or known diseases, implements robust livestock identification and movement controls, and empowers authorities to enforce quarantines and other disease control measures. It includes specific provisions for various livestock activities like beekeeping and artificial breeding, and establishes compensation schemes for losses caused by certain diseases. The legislation also outlines duties for livestock sales, requires extensive record-keeping, and grants inspectors broad powers for enforcement and compliance across the agricultural sector.
This legislation establishes a comprehensive system to safeguard plant health in Victoria. Its primary purpose is to prevent, monitor, control, and eradicate plant pests and diseases, ensuring biosecurity within the state and regulating the movement of plants, plant products, and associated materials. It sets out stringent requirements for importation and possession, including mandatory certifications like assurance and plant health declarations. The Act empowers inspectors to enforce controls, manage infected areas, and direct the treatment or disposal of diseased materials. It also specifies obligations for agricultural organizations and individuals, covering property identification, pest notification, and packaging standards. The framework includes provisions for compliance agreements, accreditation, cost recovery, and outlines penalties for various offenses, all designed to protect Victoria's agricultural sector.