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Native Title Amendment (Indigenous Land Use Agreements) Act 2017 (Cth) | ||
Category: | Legislation | |
Date: | 22 June 2017 | |
Sub Category: | Legislation | |
Place: | ||
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State/Country: | Australia | |
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Subject Matter: | Native Title | |
URL: | http://www.austlii.edu.au/cgi-bin/viewdb/au/legis/cth/num_act/ntaluaa2017500/ | |
Summary Information: | ||
The Native Title Amendment (Indigenous Land Use Agreements) Act 2017 (Cth) amended the Native Title Act 1993 (Cth) (the NTA) to counter the Full Federal Court's decision in McGlade v Native Title Register & Ors [2017] FCAFC 10 (McGlade). Its primary objective, as outlined in the Explanatory Memorandum to the Native Title Amendment (Indigenous Land Use Agreements) Bill 2017, was to:
Prior to Bygrave, and after McGlade, the position was that all members of an RNTC were required to sign an area ILUA. The amendments allow a native title claim group to decide who from the RNTC will be a party to an area ILUA on their behalf. The group can nominate one or more of the RNTC members or otherwise decide that a simple majority of them need to sign. | ||
Detailed Information: | ||
Litigation Background Prior to the Bygrave decision in 2010, the position was that all members of an RNTC were required to sign an area ILUA before it could be entered into the National Native Title Tribunal's Register of Indigenous Land Use Agreements. The position adopted in Bygrave was that an area ILUA signed by at least one member of the RNTC, as representative of the native title claim group, was registrable. This was decided on the basis that the NTA defines an RNTC as a singular entity. The McGlade decision, handed down on 2 February 2017, overturned Bygrave. The Full Court in McGlade agreed that an RNTC was defined as a singular entity. However, the Court found that, under s 24CD (Parties to area agreements), the reference to 'all persons in the native title group' in s 24CD(1) and the reference to 'registered native title claimants' (plural) in s 24CD(2)(a) indicated that the intention of the NTA was that every individual member of the RNTC was required to be a party to an area ILUA. Legislative Process The Native Title Amendment (Indigenous Land Use Agreements) Act 2017 (Cth) addressed the uncertain status of more than one hundred area ILUAs made between the Bygrave and McGlade decisions. However, its passage into law was marked by controversy and unusually rushed. The Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights, included in the Explanatory Memorandum, concluded that the Bill was compatible with human rights because it promotes "the right to enjoy and benefit from culture and the right to self-determination". More specifically, at [14] - [15], that the amendments will "assist area ILUAS to be made more efficiently in cases where an agreement has been validly authorised by a group which holds or may hold native title, but one or more members of the RNTC are unable or unwilling to sign the area ILUA... native title groups [will have] greater discretion to determine how decisions will be made (using traditional decision-making processes or other agreed process) and who will be a party to the area ILUA." House of Representatives The Bill was introduced into the House of Representatives on 15 February 2017. The next day, it was read for a second time, debated, and passed by that chamber. Linda Burney MP, and other members of the Opposition and the Australian Greens argued that the timing for the debate of the Bill in the House did not allow for appropriate scrutiny or for stakeholder consultation. Adam Bandt, member for the Australian Greens, argued that the reason for the rush was the Government's push to build the Adani coal mine and its willingness to "ride roughshod over Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders" (House of Representatives Hansard). Senate The following Senate Inquiry process allowed only two weeks to respond to the issues. The Report of the Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Committee recommended that the Senate pass the Bill (with minor amendments) and noted that key concerns raised were: lack of consultation; potential deficiencies in the reliance on majority decision making; possible increased complexity of the processes to remove certain applicants from an RNTC; retrospective application of the Bill; and possible unintended consequences (Report). The Australian Greens' dissenting report noted the lack of support for the amendments from among various submissions to the Senate Inquiry (see Report), including:
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