Announce: Federal inquiry into state-based law enforcement integrity agencies

If you are interested in the federal powers to keep state-based law enforcement agencies honest, you might like to make a submission (by 2008-06-26) to the Inquiry into state-based law enforcement integrity agencies by the federal Parliamentary Joint Committee on the Australian Commission for Law Enforcement Integrity.

The contact email for submissions and further info is aclei.committee@aph.gov.au.

This is quite important, but I feel VERY out of my depth on this one… any decent legal types (practicing or philosophizing) out there?

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Personal property securities

The AG’s department is well advanced in its very long and comprehensive review of the law reform options in relation to ‘personal property securities’. To wit, the three-stage submissions process having concluded last year, they have released draft legislation, with commentary and announced a series of information seminars. They invite submissions up until August, so you have time.

PPS refers to the giving of personal property (ie property other than land) as security for a debt. This is an extremely common commercial practice and one which is, imho, of enormous potential economic benefit and excessively complicated law. Hence the review!

The review has produced three discusssion papers, available here:

  1. PPS discussion paper 1 - registration and search issues
  2. PPS Discussion Paper 2 - Extinguishment, Priorities, Conflict of Laws, Enforcement, InsolvencyP
  3. PPS Discussion Paper 3 - Possessory Security Interests

The evening information seminars are to be as follows, and if you are in Sydney, and you care, well, you oughta known:

Sydney 26 May 2008 Wesley Conference Centre,
220 Pitt Street
Melbourne 27 May 2008 The Hotel Windsor,
111 Spring Street
Perth 28 May 2008 Mercure Perth,
10 Irwin Street
Brisbane 29 May 2008 Eagle Street Conference Venue,
175 Eagle Street

The AG’s PPS mini-site is quite comprehensive, and if you are interested in this area then I suggest you start there.

Survey about Vic Parl Website

The Victorian Parliament Website has a current survey about how good it is.

Personally, I think the Victorian site is far inferior to the federal parliament, the survey is in a particularly closed format, and, what is surprising, is that the survey is not even hosted by government, but by surveymonkey.com.

Anyway, have a look around the Vic Parl website, form an opinion, and think about what you’d put in the survey.

Of course, I was pretty scathing.  I’ve found it particularly difficult to get a consolidated list of parliamentary inquiries in Victoria compared to the federal site.

I also giggled about the response to my freeform note, because while it usefully suggested I complete the survey, it didn’t even bother to include a direct link… perhaps they realized that the survey’s hosting outside government was embarrassing!

Livability in Victoria

The Victorian Competition and Efficiency Commission has an inquiry on enhancing Victoria’s livability, with submissions closing 2008-01-31.  There are a number of very interesting submissions, and it will be interesting to see the Brumby government response.

Important URLs include:

As expected, submissions from developers are big on focussing on more land availability for housing, while most other submissions are big on transport infrastructure and sustainability.

Unfortunately, you can’t just get an address and send in a submission: as usual with the Victorian government, there are barriers all over the place, with the need to download a special expression of interest document in proprietary MS-Word format, and the inability to view attachments (usually having the most detailed and thought-provoking data) from submissions without first requesting them from the government.

The other thing to note is though this is a very important area for inquiries, this is the only inquiry listed as "current" on the VCEC current inquiries page - and submissions closed months ago.

An extract from the terms of reference is over the fold.

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Current Tax Submissions

I am just starting here, so we are playing catch-up with the following tax enquiries which are presently open to submissions:

The Assistant Treasurer has an open invitation to submit on Australia’s tax treaty policy:

“The Government is committed to ensuring Australia’s tax treaties remain relevant to evolving business directions,” Mr Bowen said.

“In setting the future direction for Australia’s tax treaties we are interested in hearing from the public on which countries Australia should be negotiating with and the key outcomes we should be seeking with those countries.”

Public submissions are particularly invited on:

  • the countries with which it may be desirable to negotiate or update a tax treaty
  • the appropriateness of Australia’s tax treaty policy and drafting approaches as reflected in recent treaties.

The only treaty I am currently aware of which is under renegotiation is NZ, but submissions have closed on this one. Australia has recently re-negotiated treaties with France, Finland, Japan and South Africa (RSA via an amending protocol not a full-blown new treaty). Interested parties should be aware that there is a fundamental distinction in Australian tax treaty policy between US/UK treaties and ‘rest-of-the-world’ treaties, and that the trend is towards both restricted taxing rights of the source country and lower maximum tax rates.

The Board of Tax is conducting an enquiry into Managed Investment Funds:

On 22 February 2008 the Assistant Treasurer announced that he had asked the Board of Taxation to undertake a review of the tax arrangements applying to managed funds that operate as managed investment trusts.

which is somewhat hobbled by its guiding principles:

  • the tax treatment for trust beneficiaries who derive income from the trust should largely replicate the tax treatment for taxpayers as if they had derived the income directly;
  • in recognition of the tax advantages available to trusts that are not available to companies deriving business income, flow through taxation of income from widely held trusts, such as managed investment trusts, should be limited to trusts undertaking activity that is primarily passive investment;
  • beneficiaries should be assessable on their share of the net income of a trust whether it is paid or applied for their benefit, or they have a present right to call for immediate payment;
  • the trustee should be liable to tax on the net income of the trust that is not assessable to beneficiaries in a particular income year; and
  • trust losses should generally be trapped in the trust subject to limited special rules for their utilisation.

which are basically the principles applying to the present system. That’s a little snarky though, because there are genuine gains to be made by improving this area, and the enquiry appears to have a somewhat wider remit than the title suggests, because the rules they are looking at apply to all ‘public’ trusts and not just licenced Managed Investment Schemes and LAPTs.

The biggest gains to be made here are from simpler and easier-to-comply with rules that would allow flow-through taxation for ’substantially’ passive investments as opposed to the present rules which restrict flow-through treatment to solely passive investments only.

The Board of Tax is also conducting a review into the foreign income anti-deferral rules which I will post separately on.

The Assistant Treasurer has also announced an outline of the proposed new rules for ’scrip-for-scrip’ transactions, including the teaser that ‘further consultation will be undertaken with the private sector’. In case you were wondering, they won’t be listening to your submission.

The ATO always has draft rulings and such like open for comments, on which I will try and catch up soon.

New Wonkery Member

Welcome to The Wonkery Patrick!

Others who wish to note government (and departmental) consultations, and/or share thoughts about submissions in their areas of interest can comment on this post, join ozblogistan, and I’ll give you authorship privileges.

Announce: Increasing Indigenous Economic Opportunity

The Australian Government has released a discussion paper – "Increasing Indigenous economic opportunity" on the future of the CDEP and Indigenous Employment Programs, with hearings over the next two weeks, and submissions due 2008-06-12

The discussion paper focuses on how the Community Development and Employment Projects (CDEP) and the Indigenous Employment Program (IEP) can be reformed to ensure both programs meet Indigenous people’s needs into the future.

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Announce: Australia’s Future Tax System

Australia’s Future Tax System is the subject of a forthcoming public consultation, announced 2008-05-11 by the treasurer, with an initial discussion paper released by the end of July 2008, and giving the final report to the Treasurer by the end of 2009.

The Treasury has

Kosky calls for comments - very quietly

Another Clayton’s consultation in Victoria: this time Lyn Kosky, Public Transport Minister, is after comments about "train pain".

Talk about making it difficult to ensure your comments go to the right spot!  It’s almost as if the lack of organization is intentional.  Geeks would say the Minister wants all criticism directed to /dev/null (a.k.a. a black hole).

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Announce: Personal Property Securities Register Consultation

The Attorney-General announced (2008-05-16) a review of the Personal Property Securities Bill, which involves taking a security interest in all types of property other than real estate, such as for cars, boats and livestock, with submissions due 2008-08-15

The aim is to replace 70 distinct pieces of state and federal legislation as part of KRudd’s deregulation agenda.

What is odd is that tenders (Request for Tender - RFT No. 08/9769) to build the register that underpins the whole thing are due 2008-06-27 : well before the consultation process is completed that should influence decisions about what the system should do!

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