Taskforce proposes court challenges for bad llaw
Taskforce proposes court challenges for bad regulation
by Pattrick Smellie
Oct 29 (BusinessWire) - New laws that offend principles of good law-making should be subject to Declarations of Incompatibility from the court system, says the report from Regulatory Responsibility Taskforce, released this afternoon by Regulatory Reform Minister Rodney Hide.
The declarations would have no practical effect beyond embarrassing a government and potentially assisting a push for reform, and are based on experience in the United Kingdom and Canada suggesting such an approach creates a more careful law-making environment.
The taskforce recommends that Ministers
and departmental chief executives be required to certify new
laws and regulations against a set of good practice
regulatory principles, and to justify any departures, to
make "the political and economic costs of new legislation
and regulations clearer".
The Bill is
philosophically similar to the Public Finance and Fiscal
Responsibility Acts, both of which create discipline on
government spending by requiring regular disclosure of the
impact of government policies, without stopping governments
from taking whatever policy decisions they wish.
Hide says he has already introduced the principles in
the taskforce's proposals into the Cabinet Manual, which
governs how policy proposals should be developed before
going to the Cabinet for decisions.
He hopes by
haveing done so to get Ministers comfortable with the
approach in time to have the taskforce's Bill adopted as
government legislation, to smooth its passage through
Parliament before the next election. If that support is not
forthcoming, it could be folded into a Members' Bill in ACT
party MPRoger Douglas's name, currently before a select
committee, Hide said.
The approach would only be
applied to local government after central government was
under the scheme, and would only apply initially to new
laws. Existing legislation could not be challenged for 10
years.
"Anyone who feels that the principles have
been breached and Ministers haven't been transparent about
it can apply to the courts for a Declaration of
Incompatibility," said Hide. "However, Parliament's
sovereignty will be totally maintained, as the courts will
not be able to stop or over-ride legislation."
Establishment of the taskforce, led by former Treasury
Secretary Dr Graham Scott, was part of the ACT-National
Party Supply and Confidence Agreement signed after the
election.
The taskforce suggests boiling regulatory
best practice down to 12 basic principles, including:
*
Clarity and accessibility, including no retrospective
law
* No loss of personal freedom or property rights, and
justification on public good grounds if over-ridden
* To
compensate when property is taken for a public good
purpose
* No new taxes unless in an Act of
Parliament
* No charges that are unreasonably high
compared with the benefit
* No new law or regulation
unless a "careful evaluation of the issue, existing law, the
public interest, options available, who does and does not
benefit, and all potential adverse consequences is
undertaken"
* No action if costs outweigh benefits
*
Effective, efficient, proportionate responses to issues.
(BusinessWire) 17:22:04