have created this guide for a few fundamental reasons:
“From 30 January to 27 February 2023, we sought feedback on an exposure draft of the Family Law Amendment Bill 2023 (the Bill). The draft Bill proposed a streamlined parenting framework, including by simplifying the ‘best interests factors’ a court must consider in determining parenting arrangements, and removing the ‘presumption of equal shared parental responsibility’ and associated time considerations.
The draft legislation also proposed to:
The release of the draft Bill was an opportunity for the community to provide feedback on the proposed amendments.
We prepared a consultation paper to explain the exposure draft and sought stakeholder views on key issues. We invited submissions in response to the wording of the proposed amendments and, in particular, to the specific consultation questions set out in the paper.
As a result of the consultation process, a number of important changes were made to the Bill to ensure the reforms best support Australian children and families:
encourage parents to consult each other about major long-term issues prior to court orders being made
> make it clear that the court can make an order for joint decision making for major long-term issues
> clarify the orders that will invoke the requirement for decisions to be made jointly, and
- Clarifying changes were made to provisions around ICLs to:
> make clear that the exception where an ICL is not required to meet with a child due to the risk of physical or psychological harm only applies where that risk cannot be safely managed
> make clear that if an ICL is not required to perform a duty to meet with a child due to exceptional circumstances, that the court must consider this before final orders are made and not as part of every court event.
> make clear that in harmful proceedings against a party, the court must make an order about whether the respondent is to be notified about any further applications filed
> allow courts to dismiss applications for leave in harmful proceedings cases without an oral hearing or in chambers instead to enable the court to deal with harmful or unmeritorious litigations more efficiently.
- reorder the list of factors in the overarching purpose so that the efficiency of proceedings does not read as being secondary to safety factors.
> references to a ‘designated report’ have been changed to make clear it is a ‘designated family report’ in relation to family report writer provisions
- further detail has been included about who is considered a regulator, to specify who may be delegated powers and functions, and to specify relevant courts for the purposes of exercising regulatory powers and civil penalties.
Further amendments were made to the Bill following the Senate Legal and Constitutional Affairs Legislation Committee Report issued on 24 August 2023 and as a result of further consultation and stakeholder submissions to the committee. These include:
We have published submissions where we have received permission from the author to do so. Some submissions have been redacted to avoid breaching section 121 of the Family Law Act, for privacy considerations and where there are concerns about copyrighted material.
The Family Law Amendment Bill 2023 passed the Senate, with amendments, on 19 October 2023. The House of Representatives agreed to the Senate amendments on 19 October 2023.
The Governor-General gave Royal Assent to the Bill on 6 November, 2023. It is now the Family Law Amendment Act 2023 (Act No. 87 of 2023). Most of the changes to the law will apply from 6 May 2024.”
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