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Australia - Announcement of Privacy Reforms - Privacy Regulation to be Simplified.

By Jamie Nettleton, Partner
4 November 2009

Executive Summary

Last month, the Federal Government announced that it will overhaul the privacy laws of Australia and implement a consistent privacy law regime. These changes will represent the most material reforms to Australian privacy law since the Privacy Act 1988 (Cth) was introduced over 20 years ago.

This announcement marks the first step in the move towards nationally consistent privacy laws across all Australian jurisdictions. When implemented, the reforms will:

Timeline

Current Privacy Laws are Outdated

The Privacy Act was implemented prior to the Internet, and the recent rapid developments in new technologies which affect mobile phones, e-commerce, social networking sites, surveillance devices and digital cameras, among others.   Concerns about the complexity of the law and confusion around the application of overlapping privacy laws at the federal and state/territory levels have led to the Government's plans to enact a single privacy regime which will apply across the private sector as well as continuing to apply to the Commonwealth public sector.

First Stage

The Australian Government's first stage response to the ALRC Report addresses 197 of the 295 recommendations. Of these, 141 recommendations are accepted fully or in effect.  

Briefly, these changes will involve a harmonised set of privacy principles, redrafting of the Privacy Act, a new comprehensive credit reporting framework, improvements in health sector information flows, and enhanced powers for the Privacy Commissioner (including a strengthening of the Privacy Commissioner's powers of investigation, compliance and enforcement).

The proposed changes will fall into the following categories:

Stage 2

The remaining 98 recommendations of the ALRC Report will be considered in Stage 2 of the Government's response to the ALRC Report. This stage, which will be addressed after legislation is passed to address Stage 1, will cover complex and contentious issues such as:

Conclusion

Extensive reforms to the privacy laws will be announced in the form of draft legislation in early 2010. It is imperative that businesses consider carefully their practices and systems in dealing with privacy issues and take steps in anticipates of the proposed privacy reforms.  

Only time will tell whether the Government's ultimate goal of making the privacy laws more simplistic and easier to comply with are achieved.

Further details of the reforms will be set out in future FocusPapers.

The assistance of Mandy Chapman, Solicitor, in writing this article is appreciated.

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