Government Gazette of the STATE of NEW SOUTH WALES Number 97 Wednesday, 3 August 2005 Published Under Authority by Government Advertising and Information

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Government Gazette of the STATE of NEW SOUTH WALES Number 97 Wednesday, 3 August 2005 Published Under Authority by Government Advertising and Information 4059 Government Gazette OF THE STATE OF NEW SOUTH WALES Number 97 Wednesday, 3 August 2005 Published under authority by Government Advertising and Information SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT The Cabinet Office, Sydney 3 August 2005 HER Excellency the Governor directs that it be notified that she has accepted the resignation of the Honourable Robert John Carr MP as Premier, Minister for the Arts, and Minister for Citizenship, and as a Member of the Executive Council, which action involves the resignations of his colleagues from their respective offices and as Members of the Executive Council. By Her Excellency’s Command, MORRIS IEMMA, Premier HER Excellency the Governor directs it to be notified that the following persons have this day been appointed as Members of the Executive Council: The Honourable Morris Iemma MP The Honourable John Joseph Della Bosca MLC The Honourable Robert John Debus MP The Honourable Patrick Carl Scully MP The Honourable John Arthur Watkins MP The Honourable Carmel Mary Tebbutt MLC The Honourable Michael Costa MLC The Honourable John Hatzistergos MLC The Honourable Frank Ernest Sartor MP The Honourable Reba Paige Meagher MP The Honourable Sandra Christine Nori MP 4060 SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT 3 August 2005 The Honourable Ian Michael Macdonald MLC The Honourable Anthony Bernard Kelly MLC The Honourable Diane Beamer MP The Honourable Joseph Guerino Tripodi MP The Honourable David Andrew Campbell MP The Honourable Grant Anthony McBride MP The Honourable Kerry Arthur Hickey MP By Her Excellency’s Command MORRIS IEMMA, Premier HER Excellency the Governor has been pleased to appoint the following persons to the offices set out after their respective names: The Honourable Morris Iemma MP Premier, Treasurer, and Minister for Citizenship The Honourable John Joseph Della Bosca MLC Special Minister of State, Minister for Commerce, Minister for Industrial Relations, Minister for Ageing, Minister for Disability Services, Assistant Treasurer, and Vice President of the Executive Council The Honourable Robert John Debus MP Attorney General, Minister for the Environment, and Minister for the Arts The Honourable Patrick Carl Scully MP Minister for Police, and Minister for Utilities The Honourable John Arthur Watkins MP Minister for Transport, and Minister for State Development The Honourable Carmel Mary Tebbutt MLC Minister for Education and Training, and Minister for Aboriginal Affairs The Honourable Michael Costa MLC Minister for Finance, Minister for Infrastructure, Minister for the Hunter, and Minister for Ports and Waterways The Honourable John Hatzistergos MLC Minister for Health The Honourable Frank Ernest Sartor MP Minister for Planning, Minister for Redfern Waterloo, Minister for Science and Medical Research, and Minister Assisting the Minister for Health (Cancer) The Honourable Reba Paige Meagher MP Minister for Community Services, and Minister for Youth NEW SOUTH WALES GOVERNMENT GAZETTE No. 97 3 August 2005 SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT 4061 The Honourable Sandra Christine Nori MP Minister for Tourism and Sport and Recreation, Minister for Women, and Minister Assisting the Minister for State Development The Honourable Ian Michael Macdonald MLC Minister for Natural Resources, Minister for Primary Industries, and Minister for Mineral Resources The Honourable Anthony Bernard Kelly MLC Minister for Justice, Minister for Juvenile Justice, Minister for Emergency Services, Minister for Lands, and Minister for Rural Affairs The Honourable Diane Beamer MP Minister for Western Sydney, Minister for Fair Trading, and Minister Assisting the Minister for Commerce The Honourable Joseph Guerino Tripodi MP Minister for Roads, and Minister for Housing The Honourable David Andrew Campbell MP Minister for Regional Development, Minister for the Illawarra, and Minister for Small Business The Honourable Grant Anthony McBride MP Minister for Gaming and Racing, and Minister for the Central Coast The Honourable Kerry Arthur Hickey MP Minister for Local Government By Her Excellency’s Command MORRIS IEMMA, Premier NEW SOUTH WALES GOVERNMENT GAZETTE No. 97 4062 SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT 3 August 2005 Authorised to be printed ISSN 0155-6320 ROBERT J. GALLAGHER, Government Printer. NEW SOUTH WALES GOVERNMENT GAZETTE No. 97.
Recommended publications
  • NSW Legislative Assembly Hansard (Proof)
    Juvenile Offenders Legislation Amendment Bill - 18/11/2004 - NSW Legislative Assembly Hans...Page 1 of 17 Home » Hansard & Papers » Legislative Assembly » 18/11/2004 » NSW Legislative Assembly Hansard (Proof) JUVENILE OFFENDERS LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL Page: 8 Bill introduced and read at first time. Second Reading Ms DIANE BEAMER (Mulgoa—Minister for Juvenile Justice, Minister for Western Sydney, and Minister Assisting the Minister for Infrastructure and Planning (Planning Administration)) [10.56 a.m.]: I move: That this bill be now read a second time. The Government is pleased to introduce the Juvenile Offenders Legislation Amendment Bill. This Bill amends the Children (Criminal Proceedings) Act 1987, the Children (Detention Centres) Act 1987 and the Crimes (Administration of Sentences) Act 1999 to allow better management of young offenders and, where appropriate, their transfer to a juvenile correctional centre. The bill reflects recognition by the Government that some older detainees are better suited to the environment of the Department of Corrective Services, either due to the seriousness of their offence or because of their behaviour. The bill also reflects the significant changes in the profile of juvenile offenders over the past 10 years. That profile is of more sophisticated, more hardened and violent individuals, with criminal records including gang rape, aggravated assault and murder. The proposals in the bill reflect the Government's ongoing commitment to the rehabilitation of young offenders by ensuring that well behaved offenders who have committed less serious offences are not tainted by association with older, more sophisticated offenders. Further, it is the Government's view that those older, more serious offenders are best managed in the secure disciplined environment of Corrective Services.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Heat Treatment This Is a List of Greenhouse Gas Emitting
    Heat treatment This is a list of greenhouse gas emitting companies and peak industry bodies and the firms they employ to lobby government. It is based on data from the federal and state lobbying registers.* Client Industry Lobby Company AGL Energy Oil and Gas Enhance Corporate Lobbyists registered with Enhance Lobbyist Background Limited Pty Ltd Corporate Pty Ltd* James (Jim) Peter Elder Former Labor Deputy Premier and Minister for State Development and Trade (Queensland) Kirsten Wishart - Michael Todd Former adviser to Queensland Premier Peter Beattie Mike Smith Policy adviser to the Queensland Minister for Natural Resources, Mines and Energy, LHMU industrial officer, state secretary to the NT Labor party. Nicholas James Park Former staffer to Federal Coalition MPs and Senators in the portfolios of: Energy and Resources, Land and Property Development, IT and Telecommunications, Gaming and Tourism. Samuel Sydney Doumany Former Queensland Liberal Attorney General and Minister for Justice Terence John Kempnich Former political adviser in the Queensland Labor and ACT Governments AGL Energy Oil and Gas Government Relations Lobbyists registered with Government Lobbyist Background Limited Australia advisory Pty Relations Australia advisory Pty Ltd* Ltd Damian Francis O’Connor Former assistant General Secretary within the NSW Australian Labor Party Elizabeth Waterland Ian Armstrong - Jacqueline Pace - * All lobbyists registered with individual firms do not necessarily work for all of that firm’s clients. Lobby lists are updated regularly. This
    [Show full text]
  • You Can Download the NSW Caring Fairly Toolkit Here!
    A TOOLKIT: How carers in NSW can advocate for change www.caringfairly.org.au Caring Fairly is represented in NSW by: www.facebook.com/caringfairlycampaign @caringfairly @caringfairly WHO WE ARE Caring Fairly is a national campaign led by unpaid carers and specialist organisations that support and advocate for their rights. Launched in August 2018 and coordinated by Mind Australia, Caring Fairly is led by a coalition of over 25 carer support organisations, NGOs, peak bodies, and carers themselves. In NSW, Caring Fairly is represented by Mental Health Carers NSW, Carers NSW and Flourish Australia. We need your support, and invite you to join the Caring Fairly coalition. Caring Fairly wants: • A fairer deal for Australia’s unpaid carers • Better economic outcomes for people who devote their time to supporting and caring for their loved ones • Government policies that help unpaid carers balance paid work and care, wherever possible • Politicians to understand what’s at stake for unpaid carers going into the 2019 federal election To achieve this, we need your help. WHY WE ARE TAKING ACTION Unpaid carers are often hidden from view in Australian politics. There are almost 2.7 million unpaid carers nationally. Over 850,000 people in Australia are the primary carer to a loved one with disability. Many carers, understandly, don’t identify as a ‘carer’. Caring Fairly wants visibility for Australia’s unpaid carers. We are helping to build a new social movement in Australia to achieve this. Unpaid carers prop up Australian society. Like all Australians, unpaid carers have a right to a fair and decent quality of life.
    [Show full text]
  • Gazette No 106 of 25 August 2006
    6603 Government Gazette OF THE STATE OF NEW SOUTH WALES Number 106 Friday, 25 August 2006 Published under authority by Government Advertising LEGISLATION Proclamations New South Wales Proclamation under the Home Building Amendment Act 2004 No 101 MARIE BASHIR, Governor I, Professor Marie Bashir AC, CVO, Governor of the State of New South Wales, with the advice of the Executive Council, and in pursuance of section 2 of the Home Building Amendment Act 2004, do, by this my Proclamation, appoint 1 September 2006 as the day on which the uncommenced provisions of that Act commence. Signed and sealed at Sydney, this 23rd day of August 2006. By Her Excellency’s Command, DIANE BEAMER, M.P., Minister for Fair Trading L.S. Minister for Fair Trading GOD SAVE THE QUEEN! Explanatory note The object of this Proclamation is to commence the uncommenced provisions of the Home Building Amendment Act 2004. The provisions concerned amend the Home Building Act 1989 and the Fair Trading Act 1987 and relate to the Home Building Advisory Council. s06-314-30.p01 Page 1 6604 LEGISLATION 25 August 2006 Regulations New South Wales Fitness Services (Pre-paid Fees) Regulation 2006 under the Fitness Services (Pre-paid Fees) Act 2000 Her Excellency the Governor, with the advice of the Executive Council, has made the following Regulation under the Fitness Services (Pre-paid Fees) Act 2000. DIANE BEAMER, M.P., MinisterMinister forfor FairFair TradingTrading Explanatory note This Regulation remakes, with some recasting but only minor changes of substance (including the omission of superseded matter), the Fitness Services (Pre-paid Fees) Regulation 2001, which is repealed on 1 September 2006 by section 10 (2) of the Subordinate Legislation Act 1989.
    [Show full text]
  • Silanna Presentation
    Silanna Manufacturing Radiation Hardened Integrated Circuits for Space: The Journey Andy Brawley – VP of Manufacturing Presented at NSW Trade & Investment 18th June 2015 www.silanna.com [email protected] What are we? Silanna Silanna is a semiconductor component supplier to the Upstream Space Market 2 Who are we? Silanna is a semiconductor manufacturing company using a silicon-on-sapphire (SoS) process technology for high-performance RF-CMOS applications. A vertically integrated company that can design a product, manufacture the chips on its own process line, test and qualify the product, as well as provide route to market. Modern Building situated in the Australia Centre – Sydney Olympic Park NSW 150mm SoS CMOS wafer fab with 1100m2 Class 1-10 Cleanrooms 150mm Compound Semiconductor Fab with 550m2 Class 1 Cleanroom, Production Shift - 24 hrs/day, 7 days/week 3 New Compound Semiconductor Research Facility A $30M Investment in New Processes and Tool Types Deposition – Molecular Beam Epitaxy - Veeco Gen200 Dual Chamber Etch - PlasmaTherm LLC Versaline LL ICP Rapid Thermal Processor - Mattson 2800CS E-Beam Evaporator - Temescal X-ray Diffractometer - PANalytical X'Pert-PRO MRD Photoluminescence Mapping System - Nanometrics Vertex Hall Measurement System - Coherent Scientific System capable of depositing nitrides such as AlN, GaN, AlGaN etc 4 What do we do? Applications that use our chips 5 Deep Space Probes The farthest man-made object from the Earth is the Voyager 1 spacecraft, that has an RCA-built SoS microprocessor on-board. It was launched in 1977 and left our solar system in 2003. As of today it is more than 19 billion kilometres from earth and still functioning 6 Space Environment – just a little bit nasty REF: http://www.sail-world.com/index.cfm?nid=94565 In 2003 a large magnetic storm caused more than 47 satellites to malfunction, including the total loss of a scientific satellite valued at $640m.
    [Show full text]
  • Senator Amanda Vanstone Federal Minister for Immigration
    A letter addressed to: • Senator Amanda Vanstone Federal Minister for Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs, [email protected] • Tanya Plibersek, Federal Member for Sydney, [email protected] • Senator Aden Ridgeway, NSW, [email protected] • Bob Carr, Premier of NSW, [email protected] • Andrew Refshauge, NSW Minister for Education and Training, NSW Minister for Aboriginal Affairs, [email protected] • Carmel Tebbutt, NSW Minister for Community Services, [email protected] • Diane Beamer, NSW Minister for Juvenile Justice, [email protected] • Linda Burney, State Member for Canterbury, [email protected] • Meredith Burgmann, Preesident of the NSW Legislative Council [email protected] • Social Issues NSW Legislative Council Committee, [email protected] • Clover Moore, State Member for Bligh and Lord Mayor of the City of Sydney [email protected], [email protected] • City of Sydney Safe City Strategy Project Co-ordinators, [email protected], [email protected] Dear Sirs and Mesdames, I am a resident of █ Street, Darlington, a small part of Chippendale which borders Redfern. I have lived here for ten years. I am also a school teacher and by law I am required to report children at risk. I wish to draw your attention to groups of up to twenty, perhaps more, unsupervised children who, at present, are roaming the streets of our area, posing a threat to themselves and to others. These children range in age from toddlers to adolescents.
    [Show full text]
  • Thesis August
    Chapter 1 Introduction Section 1.1: ‘A fit place for women’? Section 1.2: Problems of sex, gender and parliament Section 1.3: Gender and the Parliament, 1995-1999 Section 1.4: Expectations on female MPs Section 1.5: Outline of the thesis Section 1.1: ‘A fit place for women’? The Sydney Morning Herald of 27 August 1925 reported the first speech given by a female Member of Parliament (hereafter MP) in New South Wales. In the Legislative Assembly on the previous day, Millicent Preston-Stanley, Nationalist Party Member for the Eastern Suburbs, created history. According to the Herald: ‘Miss Stanley proceeded to illumine the House with a few little shafts of humour. “For many years”, she said, “I have in this House looked down upon honourable members from above. And I have wondered how so many old women have managed to get here - not only to get here, but to stay here”. The Herald continued: ‘The House figuratively rocked with laughter. Miss Stanley hastened to explain herself. “I am referring”, she said amidst further laughter, “not to the physical age of the old gentlemen in question, but to their mental age, and to that obvious vacuity of mind which characterises the old gentlemen to whom I have referred”. Members obviously could not afford to manifest any deep sense of injury because of a woman’s banter. They laughed instead’. Preston-Stanley’s speech marks an important point in gender politics. It introduced female participation in the Twenty-seventh Parliament. It stands chronologically midway between the introduction of responsible government in the 1850s and the Fifty-first Parliament elected in March 1995.
    [Show full text]
  • Of Indigenous Health Articles in the Australian, Courier-Mail & Sydney Morning Herald 2006
    The Media and Indigenous Policy Project Index of Indigenous Health Articles in The Australian, Courier-Mail & Sydney Morning Herald 2006 Compiled by Monica Andrew University of Canberra The articles in this index were collected from the Factiva database. Further information on the methodology for collecting newspaper articles for this project is available at http://www.canberra.edu.au/faculties/arts-design/research/research- centres/news-and-media-research-centre/events/the-media-and-indigenous-policy/the- media-and-indigenous-policy-database © Monica Andrew, 2013 Andrew, Monica (2013), Index of Indigenous Health Articles in The Australian, Courier-Mail and Sydney Morning Herald, 2006, Media and Indigenous Policy Project, University of Canberra. http://www.canberra.edu.au/faculties/arts-design/research/research-centres/news-and-media- research-centre/events/the-media-and-indigenous-policy/the-media-and-indigenous-policy- database Further information about the Media and Indigenous Policy project is available at http://www.canberra.edu.au/faculties/arts-design/research/research-centres/news-and-media- research-centre/events/the-media-and-indigenous-policy The Media and Indigenous Policy project was supported under the Australian Research Council’s Discovery Projects funding scheme (DP0987457), with additional funding supplied by the Faculty of Arts and Design, University of Canberra. 2006 January 2006 Title: Not so lucky Publication: Courier Mail Publication date: Wednesday, 4 January 2006 Writer(s): Gruen, Nicholas News genre: Arts review Page number: 15 Word length: 806 News source: Academic, Medical, Publication First spokesperson: Fiona Stanley, co-author, The Children of the Lucky Country Second spokesperson: Professor Sue Richardson, National Institute for Labour Studies, Adelaide Synopsis: Review of The Children of the Lucky Country, which argues that, while there had been improvements in children's health and safety, we were still failing children.
    [Show full text]
  • Government Gazette of the STATE of NEW SOUTH WALES Number 124 Friday, 20 October 2006 Published Under Authority by Government Advertising LEGISLATION Proclamations
    8779 Government Gazette OF THE STATE OF NEW SOUTH WALES Number 124 Friday, 20 October 2006 Published under authority by Government Advertising LEGISLATION Proclamations New South Wales Proclamation under the Children and Young Persons (Care and Protection) Act 1998 JAMES JACOB SPIGELMAN, Lieutenant-Governor, Lieutenant-Governor I, the Honourable James Jacob Spigelman AC, Lieutenant-Governor of the State of New South Wales, with the advice of the Executive Council, and in pursuance of section 213 of the Children and Young Persons (Care and Protection) Act 1998, do, by this my Proclamation, appoint 1 July 2008 for the purposes of that section. SignedSigned andand sealed sealed at at Sydney, Sydney, this this 27th day ofday September of 2006. 2006. By His Excellency’s Command, REBA MEAGHER, M.P., L.S. MinisterMinister for for Community Community ServicesServices GOD SAVE THE QUEEN! Explanatory note Under the Children and Young Persons (Care and Protection) Act 1998 (the Principal Act), the provision of certain children’s services is prohibited unless the person providing the service has a licence under Part 3 of Chapter 12 of the Principal Act. Section 213 of the Principal Act provides that that Part does not apply to a prescribed children’s service, being a service for pre-school children conducted by a school within the meaning of the Education Act 1990, until a proclaimed date. The object of this Proclamation is to appoint 1 July 2008 as that date. s06-356-04.p02 Page 1 8780 LEGISLATION 20 October 2006 New South Wales Proclamation under the Fair Trading Amendment Act 2006 No 62 MARIE BASHIR, ,Governor Governor I, Professor Marie Bashir AC, CVO, Governor of the State of New South Wales, with the advice of the Executive Council, and in pursuance of section 2 of the Fair Trading Amendment Act 2006, do, by this my Proclamation, appoint 20 October 2006 as the day on which that Act (with the exception of Schedule 1 [17]–[19]) commences.
    [Show full text]
  • The Politics of Bail Reform: the New South Wales Bail Act, 1976–2013
    1 THE POLITICS OF BAIL REFORM: THE NEW SOUTH WALES BAIL ACT, 1976–2013 MAXWELL FRANCIS TAYLOR Bachelor of Arts (University of NSW), Bachelor of Laws (University of NSW), Bachelor of Arts (Honours) (Macquarie University) Macquarie University Law School 9 October 2013 This thesis is presented for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy 2 TABLE OF CONTENTS ABSTRACT: ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 6 STATEMENT: ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 8 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ……………………………………………………………………………………………….. 9 CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION 1.1 Introduction ………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 10 1.2 Background …………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 11 1.3 Research Question ………………………………………………………………………………………………. 15 1.4 Methodology ………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 18 1.5 Literature Review ………………………………………………………………………………………………… 26 1.5.1 Literature on the big picture crisis …………………………………………………………………. 26 1.5.2 Literature considering the right to bail and the erosion of the presumption in favour of bail …………………………………………………………………………………………………. 27 1.5.3 Literature concerning the effects of bail laws and other changes to bail law on disadvantaged and indigenous accused …………………………………………….. 33 1.5.4 Literature considering the role of the media in bringing about changes to bail law …………………………………………………………………………………………………………. 35 1.5.5 Literature considering public attitudes …………………………………………………………. 37 1.6 Chapter outline ………………………………………………………………………………………….. 38 CHAPTER 2. THE IMPORTANCE OF BAIL AND THE HISTORY OF BAIL IN ENGLAND AND NEW SOUTH
    [Show full text]
  • Report on Inquiry Into the Pecuniary Interests Register
    LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL PARLIAMENTARY PAPER NUMBER 218 Standing Committee on Parliamentary Privilege and Ethics Report on inquiry into the Pecuniary Interests Register Ordered to be printed 31 October 2002 Report 20 - October 2002 STANDING COMMITTEE ON PARLIAMENTARY PRIVILEGE AND ETHICS New South Wales Parliamentary Library cataloguing-in-publication data: New South Wales. Parliament. Legislative Council. Standing Committee on Parliamentary Privilege and Ethics Report on inquiry into the Pecuniary Interests Register / Legislative Council, Standing Committee on Parliamentary Privilege and Ethics. [Sydney, N.S.W.] : The Committee, 2002 – [12] p. 120; 30 cm. (Report 20, October 2002 / Standing Committee on parlaimentary Privilege and Ethics) (Parliamentary Paper; no. 218) Chair: Helen Sham-Ho. "Ordered to be printed 31 October 2002". ISBN 0 9581289 2 8 1. New South Wales. Parliament 2. Legislators—New South Wales. 3. Financial disclosure—New South Wales. 4. Conflict of interests—New South Wales. I. Title II. Sham-Ho, Helen. III. Series: New South Wales. Parliament. Legislative Council. Standing Committee on Parliamentary Privilege and Ethics. Report ; 20 IV. Series: Parliamentary paper (New South Wales. Parliament) ; 218 328.944 (DDC21) Report 20 - October 2002 iii LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL How to contact the committee Members of the Standing Committee on Parliamentary Privilege and Ethics can be contacted through the Committee Secretariat. Written correspondence and enquiries should be directed to: The Clerk Standing Committee on Parliamentary Privilege
    [Show full text]
  • Legislative Council
    16539 LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL Tuesday 11 September 2001 ______ The President (The Hon. Dr Meredith Burgmann) took the chair at 2.30 p.m. The President offered the Prayers. The PRESIDENT: I acknowledge that we are meeting on Eora land. OATH OF ALLEGIANCE The Hon. Michael Costa took and subscribed the oath of allegiance and signed the roll. PASSENGER TRANSPORT AMENDMENT (TRANSITWAYS) BILL LEGAL PROFESSION AMENDMENT (PROFESSIONAL INDEMNITY INSURANCE) BILL LEGAL PROFESSION AMENDMENT (DISCIPLINARY PROVISIONS) BILL STATUTE LAW (MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS) BILL SYDNEY OLYMPIC PARK AUTHORITY BILL WASTE AVOIDANCE AND RESOURCE RECOVERY BILL WASTE RECYCLING AND PROCESSING CORPORATION BILL CHILD PROTECTION (OFFENDERS REGISTRATION) AMENDMENT BILL WESTERN SYDNEY REGIONAL PARK (REVOCATION FOR WESTERN SYDNEY ORBITAL) BILL HOUSING BILL HOME BUILDING LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL WORKERS COMPENSATION LEGISLATION AMENDMENT BILL (No 2) Messages received from the Legislative Assembly agreeing to the Legislative Council's amendments. CRIMES AMENDMENT (AGGRAVATED SEXUAL ASSAULT IN COMPANY) BILL Bill received and read a first time. Motion by the Hon. Michael Egan agreed to: That standing orders be suspended to allow the passing of the bill through all its remaining stages during the present or any one sitting of the House. INSPECTOR OF THE POLICE INTEGRITY COMMISSION Report The President announced the receipt of the annual report for the year ended 30 June 2001, received out of session. The President announced that she had authorised that the report be made public. 16540 LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL 11 September 2001 POLICE INTEGRITY COMMISSION Report The President announced, in accordance with the Police Integrity Commission Act 1996, the receipt of the report of the Police Integrity Commission entitled "Operation Pelican", dated August 2001, received out of session.
    [Show full text]