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BASHAM, David Keith Bernard
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Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Appropriation Bill 2018
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
- Coastline Protection
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Country Cabinet
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2019-04-03
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- Economic and Finance Committee: Annual Report 2017-18
- Economic and Finance Committee: Annual Report 2018-19
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Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
- Education and Children's Services Bill
- Electoral (Prisoner Voting) Amendment Bill
- Fair Trading (Gift Cards) Amendment Bill
- Farm Debt Mediation Bill
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Finniss Electorate
- Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Free Trade Agreements
- Genetically Modified Crops Management (Designated Area) Amendment Bill
- Goolwa PipiCo
- International Day for Disaster Reduction
- James, Mr S.
- Labour Hire Licensing Repeal Bill
- Landscape South Australia Bill
- Local Government (Rate Oversight) Amendment Bill
- Mayo By-Election
- Member for Mawson
- Metropolitan Fire Service
- Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- National Agriculture Day
- National Farm Safety Week
- Natural Resources Management Committee: Management of Overabundant and Pest Species
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
- Rail Safety National Law (South Australia) (Miscellaneous No 4) Amendment Bill
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Regional South Australia
- 2018-05-10
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2018-08-01
- Residential Parks (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety
- Schoolies
- Select Committee on the Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Shop Trading Hours
- State Economy
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Statutes Amendment (Child Exploitation and Encrypted Material) Bill
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2018-11-29
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- Statutes Amendment (Mineral Resources) Bill
- Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Simplify) Bill
- Summary Offences (Trespass on Primary Production Premises) Amendment Bill
- Supply Bill 2018
- Terrorism (Police Powers) (Use of Force) Amendment Bill
- United Nations Day
- Victor Harbor Road Intersection
- Women in Agriculture
- Wooden Boat Festival
- World Environment Day
- World Milk Day
- World Tourism Day
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Questions
- Agtech
- Battery Value Chain
- Blue Carbon Strategy
- Country Fire Service
- Ecotourism
- Election Commitments
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Electricity Prices
- Emergency Services Levy
- Encounter Bay Shipwreck
- Energy Prices
- Energy Security
- Energy System Strength
- Family-Based Carers
- Federal Liberal Government
- Finniss Electorate
- Finniss Electorate Roads
- Firefighters, Interstate Deployment
- Fleurieu Peninsula
- Goolwa Surf Lifesaving Club
- Great Southern Ocean Walk
- Home Battery Scheme
- Independent Commission Against Corruption
- Kangaroo Island Meat Processing
- Major Projects Conference
- McLaren Vale Wine Industry
- Myponga Reservoir
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National Parks
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Natural Resources Management
- Nature-Based Tourism
- Pelican Lagoon
- Police and Correctional Services
- Primary Producers
- Regional Growth Fund
- Regional South Australia
- Renewable Energy
- Road Safety
- School Absenteeism
- Skilling South Australia
- Sport and Recreation Facilities
- Surf Life Saving South Australia
- Victor Harbor Road
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Speeches
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BEDFORD, Frances Ellen
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Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Apap, Mr G.
- Appropriation Bill 2018
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Appropriation Bill 2019
- Armstrong, Rev. G.
- Australian Calisthenics Federation
- Bass, Mr Rodney Piers (Sam)
- Beekeeping Industry
- Calisthenics
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Commissioner for Victims' Rights
- Dann, Ms S.
- Dunstan, Hon. D.A.
- Flinders University
- Freedom of Information (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Generations in Jazz
- Genetically Modified Crops Management (Designated Area) Amendment Bill
- Hyde, Dr J.
- Independent Commissioner Against Corruption (Investigation Powers) Amendment Bill
- Joint Committee on the 125th Anniversary of Women's Suffrage
- Jones, Dr H.
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Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- 2019-10-29
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2019-10-30
- Liquor Licensing (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Local Government (Rate Oversight) Amendment Bill
- Modbury Hospital
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New Zealand Women's Suffrage Anniversary
- 2018-09-20
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2018-11-07
- Newstart Allowance
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Parliamentary Committees (Petitions) Amendment Bill
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2019-03-20
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2019-05-01
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- Petitions, Suspension of Standing Orders
- Pooraka Cricket Club
- Real Estate Institute of South Australia Centenary
- Remembrance Day
- Retail and Commercial Leases (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- SA Pathology and SA Medical Imaging
- SA Water
- Service SA
- Shopping Centres
- Skillicorn, Mr E.K.
- South Australian Productivity Commission Bill
- Supply Bill 2018
- Transforming Health
- Universal Ambulance Cover Scheme
- Watkins, Aunty Cherie
- Welfare Rights Centre
- Women's Suffrage Anniversary
- World Teachers' Day
- Yellakka Yellakarri Student Leadership Program
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Questions
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Ambulance Ramping
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2019-06-18
- 2019-10-15
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- APY Lands
- APY Lands Visit
- Australasian Soldiers Dardanelles Cenotaph
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Beekeeping Industry
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2019-05-01
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- Bus Shelters
- Clinical Governance
- Community-Based Services
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Conservation Park Accessibility
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2018-05-17
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Council Assessment Panels
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2019-03-21
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- Datacom it Hub
- Datacom IT Hub
- Elder Abuse
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Emergency Departments
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Fuel Price Monitoring
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Gambling Regulation
- Government Contracts
- Holden Hill
- Holden Hill Magistrates Court
- Hospital Beds
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Indigenous Health Services
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2018-09-04
- 2018-10-16
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- International Education Strategy
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KordaMentha
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2019-10-31
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Lands Titles Office
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Mental Health Services
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2018-11-15
- 2019-05-16
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- Metropolitan Fire Service
- Microgrid Energy System
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Modbury Hospital
- Music Focus Schools
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National Power of Attorney Register
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2019-12-03
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National Reconciliation Week
- National Training Centre High Performance Programs
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Newstart Allowance
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2018-08-02
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Noarlunga Centre Incident
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2018-11-07
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Northern Adelaide Local Health Network
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2019-06-06
- 2019-10-15
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2019-11-12
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O-Bahn
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2018-11-07
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- O-Bahn Tunnel
- Oakden Fire Station
- Oatey, Mr R.
- Overland Train Service
- Pedal Prix
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Planning and Design Code
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2019-11-27
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- Police Animals
- Pregnancy Advisory Service
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Prison Services
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2019-09-12
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Prisoner Supervision Orders
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Prisoner Support
- Prisons, Education Programs
- Public Sector Executives
- Public Sector, Aboriginal Employment
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Public Trustee
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2019-05-14
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Quad Bikes
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2018-05-16
- 2018-07-03
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2019-09-25
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Queen Elizabeth Hospital Hydrotherapy Pool
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2019-09-11
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- Reconciliation Action Plan
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Return to Work Case Management
- SA 125 Suffrage Schools Competition
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SA Water
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2019-06-04
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School Absenteeism
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2018-06-19
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- School Curriculum
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Service SA
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2018-09-18
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2018-10-16
- 2018-11-07
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2019-02-12
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2019-07-04
- 2019-09-12
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Service SA Modbury
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2018-10-16
- 2018-10-23
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Shop Trading Hours
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2019-05-15
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South Australia Police
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Sports Facilities
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2018-09-04
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- Suburban Train Drivers
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Surgical Fees
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TAFE SA
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2018-11-06
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- Tea Tree Gully Council Area
- Transport Infrastructure
- Urban Infill Development
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Wallaroo Mining Proposal
- Wastewater Management
- Women's Suffrage Anniversary
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Woodleigh House
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Speeches
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BELL, Troy Stephen
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Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Appropriation Bill 2018
- Australian Apprentice Wage Subsidy
- Breast Cancer Support
- Brown, Senior Sergeant Peter
- Coastline Protection
- Community Visitor Scheme
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Country Cabinet
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2019-04-03
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- Cross-Border Commissioner
- Crown Land Management (Section 78b Leases) Amendment Bill
- Disability Advocacy
- DonateLife Week
- Education and Children's Services Bill
- Epilepsy Centre
- Evidence (Reporting on Sexual Offences) Amendment Bill
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Fire and Emergency Services (Volunteer Charters) Amendment Bill
- 2019-06-19
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2019-07-31
- Fossil Free SA
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Generations in Jazz
- 2018-05-09
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2018-07-04
- Homelessness Week
- International Day for Disaster Reduction
- International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women
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International Day of People with Disability
- International Epilepsy Day
- International Midwives and Nurses Days
- Justices of the Peace
- Limestone Coast Regional Sporting Academy
- Meningococcal B Strain Vaccination
- Mount Gambier Community Christmas Day Lunch
- Mount Gambier Drug and Alcohol Services
- Mount Gambier Electorate
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Mount Gambier Fringe Festival
- Mount Gambier Gold Cup
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Mount Gambier Migrant Community
- National Farm Safety Week
- National Police Remembrance Day
- Organ Donation
- Patterson, Mr N.
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Petroleum and Geothermal Energy (Ban on Hydraulic Fracturing) Amendment Bill
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2018-07-04
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2018-09-05
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- Public Education
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Regional Newspapers
- Remembrance Day
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Rock Lobster Fishing Industry
- Select Committee on the Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
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Statutes Amendment (Mineral Resources) Bill
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Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Simplify) Bill
- Stomal Therapy
- Surrogacy Bill
- TAFE SA Reviews
- The Junction, Mount Gambier
- Timber Industry
- Traineeships
- Volunteer Screening Checks
- Women in Agriculture
- World Teachers' Day
- World Tourism Day
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Questions
- Bus Services on Demand
- Carpenter Rocks Road
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Country Road Speed Limits
- Dukes Highway Duplication
- Forestry Industry
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Freedom of Information
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2018-11-28
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- Lymphoedema Compression Garment Subsidy
- Meningococcal B Strain Vaccination
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Mount Gambier Fringe Festival
- Mount Gambier High Schools
- Mount Gambier Hospital
- Patient Assistance Transport Scheme
- Police Numbers
- Port MacDonnell Breakwater
- Regional Health Boards
- Regional Hospital Car Parking
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Road Network
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2019-07-23
- 2019-09-12
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- Royalties for Regions
- South Eastern Freeway
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Speed Limits
- 2018-05-16
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2018-07-05
- STEM Education
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Speeches
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BETTISON, Zoe Lee
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Speeches
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Address in Reply
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2018-05-15
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Appropriation Bill 2018
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Appropriation Bill 2019
- Australian Space Agency
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Construction Industry Training Fund (Board) Amendment Bill
- Davy, Dr R.C.E.
- Defence Shipbuilding
- Defence Workforce Plan
- Economic and Finance Committee: Annual Report 2017-18
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
- Economic and Finance Committee: Investment Attraction Policies
- Employment Opportunities
- Equal Opportunity (Domestic Violence) Amendment Bill
- Farm Debt Mediation Bill
- Free Trade Agreements
- Goodall Youth Scholarship Fund
- Government Policies
- Health and Community Services Complaints (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Industrial Hemp
- International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Limestone Coast
- Motor Vehicles (Offensive Advertising) Amendment Bill
- National Broadband Network
- New Zealand Women's Suffrage Anniversary
- Northern Futures
- Office for the Ageing (Adult Safeguarding) Amendment Bill
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
- Ramsay Electorate
- Ramsay Electorate Public Transport
- Regional South Australia
- Residential Parks (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Salisbury Business Awards
- Salisbury Economy
- Salisbury Food and Cultural Festival
- Salisbury Plays
- Seniors Forum
- Shadow Country Cabinet
- Skilling South Australia
- Sri Lanka Terrorist Attacks
- State Budget
- Statutes Amendment (Attorney-General's Portfolio) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill
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Supply Bill 2018
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Supply Bill 2019
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Tourism
- Turtur, Mr M.
- Veterans' Health Week
- Weatherill, Hon. J.W., Retirement
- Wheels in Motion
- Women in Agriculture
- Women's Suffrage Anniversary
- World Micro, Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises Day
- World Routes Aviation Conference
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World Tourism Day
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2018-09-19
- 2018-11-07
- 2019-09-25
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Questions
- Adult Community Education
- Advanced Welder Training Centre
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Apprenticeships
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Apprenticeships and Traineeships
- Bedford Industries
- Brand South Australia
- Career Employment Services Funding
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China and Japan Country Directors
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2019-05-01
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Economic and Business Growth Fund
- Export Accelerator Grants
- Export Performance
- Export Programs
- Farm Debt Mediation
- Government Advertising
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Grant Programs
- Immigration SA Staffing Levels
- Industry and Skills Department
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Innovation and Skills Department
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2019-06-04
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Investment Attraction South Australia
- Landing Pad Program
- Machinery of Government Changes
- Manufacturing Industry
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Ministerial Expenditure
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2019-09-12
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- Ministerial Staff Travel
- National Wine Tourism Campaign
- Northern Economic Plan
- Ottoway Engineering
- Post Production, Digital and Visual Effect Rebate
- Public Sector Executives
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Shanghai and Tokyo Trade Offices
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2019-05-01
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- Shanghai Business and Investment Hub
- Skilling Australians Fund
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Skilling South Australia
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Small Business
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Small Business Commissioner
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2018-09-04
- 2019-09-25
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South Australian Tourism Commission
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Tourism
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Tourism Advertising
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Trade Missions
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Trade, Tourism and Investment Department
- 2019-05-01
- 2019-05-15
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2019-09-12
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Trade, Tourism and Investment Department Staff
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2019-09-12
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- Training and Skills Commission
- University of the Third Age
- Volunteer Screening Checks
- Worker Transitioning
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Speeches
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BIGNELL, Leon William Kennedy
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Speeches
- Address in Reply
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
-
Appropriation Bill 2019
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2019-07-02
- 2019-07-04
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- Bushfires and Emergency Services
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Commissioner for Kangaroo Island
- Cornwall, Dr J.R.
- Country Cabinet
- Downer, Ms G.
- Flinders Chase National Park
- Genetically Modified Crops Management (Designated Area) Amendment Bill
- Government Business
- Great Australian Bight
- Hawke, Hon. R.j.l.
- Kangaroo Island
- Kangaroo Island Commissioner
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Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Lifesaving World Championships
- Liquor Industry
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Local Government Elections
- Main South Road
- Mawson Electorate
- Mawson Electorate Schools
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Mayo By-Election
-
Mayo Electorate
- McLaren Vale Town Boundaries
- Ministerial Electorate Visits
- Mojo Beverages
- Motor Vehicle Registration
- Murray-Darling Basin Ministerial Council
- Rau, Hon. J.R.
- South Australian National Football League
- Standing Orders Committee
- Supply Bill 2018
- Supply Bill 2019
- Tatachilla Lutheran College
- Thoroughbred Racehorse Industry
- Timber Industry
- Weatherill, Hon. J.W., Retirement
- World Routes Aviation Conference
- World Tourism Day
-
Questions
-
Aldinga Soccer Club
- Bus Services
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Flinders Chase National Park
- Kangaroo Island Bus Service
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Kangaroo Island Commissioner
- Kangaroo Island Group Grants
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Kangaroo Island Ministerial Visit
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2019-07-02
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2019-07-03
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2019-07-04
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- Kangaroo Island Road Safety Group
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Kangaroo Island Seaport
- Kangaroo Island Slipway
- Main South Road
-
Main South Road Duplication
- Mary MacKillop
- McLaren Vale Wine Industry
- Motor Vehicle Registration
- Vehicle Registration Fees
- Victor Harbor Road Intersection
- Wine Industry Funding
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Speeches
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BOYER, Blair Ingram
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Speeches
- Aboriginal Flag
- Address in Reply
- Ambulance Ramping
- Appropriation Bill 2018
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Building Better Schools Program
- Burg, Mr C.
- Cobbler Creek Recreation Park
-
Controlled Substances (Nitrous Oxide) Amendment Bill
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2019-11-13
- 2019-11-27
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- Criminal Law Consolidation (Children and Vulnerable Adults) Amendment Bill
- Education and Children's Services Bill
- Gulfview Heights
- Hawke, Hon. R.j.l.
- Health Consumers Alliance
- Hospital Services
- International Firefighters' Day
- International Volunteer Day
- KordaMentha Report
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Limitation of Actions (Child Sexual Abuse) Amendment Bill
- Motor Neurone Disease
- Motor Vehicles (Offensive Advertising) Amendment Bill
- National Volunteer Week
- Nurses and Midwives
- Parafield Airport
- Public Works Committee: Lyell McEwin Hospital Expansion
- Public Works Committee: Modbury Hospital Upgrades and Additional Services Project
- Richardson Reserve
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State Budget
-
State Liberal Government
-
Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill
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Supply Bill 2018
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2018-05-17
-
- Supply Bill 2019
- Tea Tree Gully Sports Hub
- Weatherill, Hon. J.W., Retirement
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World Teachers' Day
- Wright Electorate
- Wright Electorate Office
- Yamba Quarantine Station
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Questions
-
Cancer Diagnosis Error
- Education Department
- Emergency Departments
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Emergency Services, Member Visit Protocol
- Fruit Fly
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Government Advertising
- 2019-02-12
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2019-09-24
- 2019-10-17
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Government Departments
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Grant Programs
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2019-02-12
- 2019-10-17
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2019-10-31
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- Incident Management Directorate
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Ministerial Expenditure
- Ministerial Staff
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Modbury Vista Soccer Club
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2018-09-04
-
-
O-Bahn Extension
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Park-and-Ride Facilities
- Park-And-Ride Facilities
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Public Sector Executives
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Public Service Employees
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2019-10-17
- 2019-10-31
- 2019-12-12
-
- Strata Titles
- Surrey Downs Kindergarten
-
Termination Payouts
- Woodleigh House
-
Yamba Quarantine Station
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Speeches
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BROCK, Geoffrey Graeme
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Speeches
- Address in Reply
- ANZAC Day Commemoration Services
- Bowel Cancer Awareness Month
- Breast Cancer Support
- Caputo, Mr D.
- Commission of Inquiry (Land Access in the Mining Industry) Bill
- Country Cabinet
- Cross-Border Commissioner
- Genetically Modified Crops Management (Designated Area) Amendment Bill
- Hughes, Ms J.
- International Day of People with Disability
- International Firefighters' Day
- Local Government (Rate Oversight) Amendment Bill
- Martlew, Ms K.
- Meningococcal B Strain Vaccination
- Mid North Christian College
- Port Pirie Sports Precinct
- SA Pathology and SA Medical Imaging
- Special Olympics Australia National Games
- World No Tobacco Day
- World Teachers' Day
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Questions
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Clare Valley Bridges
- Drought Assistance
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Financial Wellbeing Program, Port Pirie
- Goyder Highway
- Grain Classification
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Heavy Vehicle Inspection Scheme
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Horrocks Highway
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Housing Trust
- John Pirie Secondary School
- Lymphoedema Compression Garment Subsidy
- Lymphoedema Patients
- Lymphoedema Services
- Mobile Black Spot Program
- Music Education Strategy
-
Nyrstar Chemical Leaks
- Pelvic Mesh Clinic
- Port Pirie Courthouse
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Regional Growth Fund
- 2018-05-16
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2018-06-07
- Regional School Bus Services
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School Transport
- Snapper Fishery Ban
- Volunteer Bus Drivers
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-
Speeches
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BROWN, Michael Edison
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Appropriation Bill 2018
-
Australian Space Agency
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Assaults on Prescribed Emergency Workers) Amendment Bill
- Genetically Modified Crops Management (Designated Area) Amendment Bill
- Labour Hire Licensing Repeal Bill
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- New Zealand Women's Suffrage Anniversary
-
Pairing Arrangements
- Petitions, Suspension of Standing Orders
- Privileges Committee
- Recycled Water Audit
- Shopping Centre Safety
- Standing Orders Committee
- Statutes Amendment (Domestic Violence) Bill
- Supply Bill 2018
-
Valedictories
- Weatherill, Hon. J.W., Retirement
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Questions
- Consultants and Contractors
-
Government Advertising
- Government Departments
-
Grant Programs
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2019-09-24
-
2019-10-17
-
- Machinery of Government Changes
-
Ministerial Staff
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Public Sector Executives
-
Public Service Employees
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2019-09-11
-
2019-09-24
-
- Recycled Water
-
Recycled Water Audit
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2019-09-12
-
-
SA Water
- Tax Incentives
-
Termination Payouts
-
Speeches
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CHAPMAN, Vickie Ann
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Speeches
- Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: APY Lands Visit
- Address in Reply
- Adelaide Youth Training Centre
- Adjournment
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
- 2018-09-06
-
2018-10-16
-
Associations Incorporation (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
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2019-07-31
-
2019-09-10
-
- Australian Space Agency
- Bass, Mr Rodney Piers (Sam)
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
-
Children in State Care Apology
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Community Visitor Scheme
- Condous, Mr S.G.
- Controlled Substances (Drug Offences) Amendment Bill
- Controlled Substances (Nitrous Oxide) Amendment Bill
-
Controlled Substances (Youth Treatment Orders) Amendment Bill
- 2019-07-04
-
2019-10-17
- Cornwall, Dr J.R.
- Correctional Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Crime and Public Integrity Policy Committee
- Crime and Public Integrity Policy Committee: Independent Commissioner Against Corruption (Investigation Powers) Amendment Bill
-
Criminal Assets Confiscation (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
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2018-07-05
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2018-07-26
-
-
Criminal Law (High Risk Offenders) (Psychologists) Amendment Bill
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2019-02-28
-
2019-03-19
-
-
Criminal Law Consolidation (Assaults on Prescribed Emergency Workers) Amendment Bill
-
2019-05-02
- 2019-06-05
-
2019-06-06
-
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Child-Like Sex Dolls Prohibition) Amendment Bill
-
Criminal Law Consolidation (Children and Vulnerable Adults) Amendment Bill
-
2018-05-16
-
2018-06-05
-
-
Criminal Law Consolidation (Dishonest Communication with Children) Amendment Bill
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2018-05-10
-
2018-05-31
-
-
Criminal Law Consolidation (False Or Misleading Information) Amendment Bill
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2019-10-17
-
2019-11-14
-
-
Criminal Law Consolidation (Foster Parents and Other Positions of Authority) Amendment Bill
-
2018-11-28
-
2019-02-28
-
- Criminal Procedure (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- David Tonkin Scholarship
- Director of Public Prosecutions (Pension Entitlements) Amendment Bill
- Disability Inclusion Bill
- Domestic Violence
- Down Syndrome
- Dowry Abuse
- Education and Children's Services Bill
-
Electoral (Prisoner Voting) Amendment Bill
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2018-05-30
- 2018-06-05
- 2018-08-02
- 2018-12-06
- 2019-02-27
-
- Equal Opportunity (Domestic Violence) Amendment Bill
-
Evidence (Journalists) Amendment Bill
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2018-05-10
-
2018-05-30
-
-
Evidence (Reporting on Sexual Offences) Amendment Bill
-
2019-10-17
- 2019-10-29
-
2019-10-31
-
-
Fair Trading (Gift Cards) Amendment Bill
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2018-05-16
-
2018-06-05
-
- Fair Trading (Ticket Scalping) Amendment Bill
- Forensic Psychiatrists
-
Gambling Administration Bill
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2019-09-26
-
2019-11-13
-
- Gambling Regulation Review
- Goods and Services Tax
- Government Advertising Bill
- Hawke, Hon. R.j.l.
- Health and Community Services Complaints (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Housing Authority
- Housing SA
- Housing Trust Rent
- Housing Trust Triennial Review
- Independent Commission Against Corruption
-
Independent Commissioner Against Corruption (Investigation Powers) Amendment Bill
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2018-05-10
- 2018-05-30
- 2018-07-26
-
- Independent Commissioner Against Corruption (Investigation Powers) No 2 Amendment Bill
- Independent Education Inquiry
- International Day for Disaster Reduction
- International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women
- International Day of People with Disability
- Islamic State Student Conviction
- Johns, Mr M.
- Joint Committee on the 125th Anniversary of Women's Suffrage
-
Judicial Conduct Commissioner (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
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2018-06-06
-
2018-07-05
-
- Justices of the Peace
- Kangaroo Island Community Education
- Keogh Case
-
Labour Hire Licensing Repeal Bill
-
2018-11-28
- 2019-02-14
-
2019-02-27
-
-
Land Acquisition (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
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2019-09-25
- 2019-10-15
-
2019-10-16
-
-
Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- 2019-10-29
-
2019-10-30
-
2019-10-31
-
Landscape South Australia Bill
-
Legal Practitioners (Foreign Lawyers) Amendment Bill
-
2019-11-14
-
2019-11-26
-
-
Legal Practitioners (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
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2019-05-16
-
2019-08-01
-
- Legal Services Commission
-
Legislation (Fees) Bill
-
2019-09-12
-
2019-10-16
-
- Limitation of Actions (Child Sexual Abuse) Amendment Bill
-
Liquor Licensing (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
2019-07-31
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Lobbyists (Restrictions on Lobbying) Amendment Bill
-
2019-05-16
-
2019-07-23
-
- Local Government (Rate Oversight) Amendment Bill
-
Lotteries Bill
-
2019-09-26
-
2019-10-16
-
-
Married Persons (Separate Legal Status) Bill
-
2019-10-31
-
2019-11-26
-
-
Matter of Privilege
- McGowan, Dr C.
- Mineral Exploration
-
Ministerial Statement
- Ministerial Statements
-
Motor Vehicles (Compulsory Third Party Insurance) Amendment Bill
-
2019-04-04
-
2019-04-30
-
- Motor Vehicles (Offensive Advertising) Amendment Bill
- Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- Murray-Darling Basin Royal Commission
- National Disability Insurance Scheme Fraud
- National Electricity (South Australia) (Retailer Reliability Obligation) Amendment Bill
- National Police Remembrance Day
- National Redress Scheme
-
National Redress Scheme for Institutional Child Sexual Abuse (Commonwealth Powers) Bill
-
2018-07-25
-
2018-09-05
-
- New Zealand Women's Suffrage Anniversary
- Office for the Ageing (Adult Safeguarding) Amendment Bill
- Parliamentary Committees (Petitions) Amendment Bill
- Parliamentary Privilege
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
- Phoenixing
-
Public Finance and Audit (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
2018-07-31
-
-
Public Interest Disclosure Bill
-
2018-05-16
-
2018-05-31
-
- Public Works Committee: Waterfall Gully to Mount Lofty Summit Trail Restoration
- Public Works Committee: Women's and Children's Hospital Upgrade Sustainment Program
- R U OK? Day
- Remembrance Day
- Renewal SA
-
Residential Parks (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
2018-09-05
- 2018-10-25
-
2018-11-08
-
-
Retail and Commercial Leases (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
2019-07-03
- 2019-09-10
- 2019-09-24
-
- Return to Work Act Review
- Road Traffic (Drug Testing) Amendment Bill
- Road Traffic (Evidentiary Provisions) Amendment Bill
-
Royal Commissions (Extraterritorial Application) Amendment Bill
- Sentencing (Home Detention) Amendment Bill
-
Sentencing (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
2018-09-05
-
2018-10-24
-
-
Sentencing (Release on Licence) Amendment Bill
-
Sentencing (Suspended and Community Based Custodial Sentences) Amendment Bill
-
2019-02-13
-
2019-02-26
-
- Sittings and Business
-
South Australian Employment Tribunal (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- 2018-12-04
-
2018-12-06
- Sports Betting
- Standing and Sessional Orders Suspension
-
Standing Orders Suspension
- State Records of South Australia
- Statement from the Attorney-General
-
Statutes Amendment (Attorney-General's Portfolio) (No. 2) Bill
-
2019-06-06
-
2019-07-23
-
-
Statutes Amendment (Attorney-General's Portfolio) Bill
-
2018-08-01
-
2018-09-05
-
- Statutes Amendment (Child Exploitation and Encrypted Material) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Decriminalisation of Sex Work) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Domestic Violence) Bill
-
2018-10-24
- 2018-11-07
-
2018-11-08
-
-
Statutes Amendment (Drug Offences) Bill
-
2018-08-02
-
-
Statutes Amendment (Gambling Regulation) Bill
-
2019-09-26
-
2019-11-13
-
-
Statutes Amendment (Legalisation of Same Sex Marriage Consequential Amendments) Bill
-
2019-10-17
-
2019-11-26
-
-
Statutes Amendment (Liquor Licensing) Bill
-
2019-02-14
-
2019-03-20
-
- Statutes Amendment (Mineral Resources) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (SACAT) Bill
-
2019-06-06
- 2019-06-18
- 2019-06-19
-
-
Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill
- 2019-05-01
- 2019-05-02
-
2019-05-14
-
Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Budget Measures) Bill
-
2018-09-20
- 2018-10-18
-
-
Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Classification of Publications, Films and Computer Games) Bill
-
2019-10-30
-
2019-11-14
-
- Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Simplify) Bill
-
Summary Offences (Disrespectful Conduct in Court) Amendment Bill
-
2018-07-05
-
2018-09-20
-
-
Summary Offences (Liquor Offences) Amendment Bill
-
2018-09-05
-
2018-11-14
-
-
Summary Offences (Trespass on Primary Production Premises) Amendment Bill
-
2019-10-30
-
2019-11-13
-
-
Supply Bill 2018
-
Supreme Court (Court of Appeal) Amendment Bill
-
2019-10-16
-
2019-11-12
-
- Supreme Court Appointments
-
Surrogacy Bill
-
2019-08-01
- 2019-09-11
- 2019-09-26
-
- Surrogacy Reform
- TAFE SA Reviews
-
Terrorism (Police Powers) (Use of Force) Amendment Bill
- Tonkin Government
-
Victims of Crime (Offender Service and Joinder) Amendment Bill
-
2019-04-04
-
2019-06-04
-
-
Women in Agriculture
-
2018-11-28
-
- Women's Suffrage Anniversary
- World Tourism Day
-
Answers
- Aboriginal Family Support Services
-
Adelaide Youth Training Centre
-
Aged-Care Funding
- Anti-Terrorism Legislation
- Ask for Angela Scheme
-
Attorney-General
-
2018-11-15
-
2019-02-28
- 2019-10-31
-
- Auditor-General's Report
- Canine Court Companion
-
Care and Protection Orders
- CCTV Cameras
-
Changing Places Program
- Charitable and Social Welfare Fund
-
Child Protection
- Client Trust Account
-
Commissioner for Victims' Rights
- Community Care Services
- Community Connections
-
Community Services
-
2019-02-12
-
-
Concessions SA
-
2019-09-10
-
- Consumer Advocacy and Research Fund
- Courts Administration Authority
- CourtSA
- De Domenico, Mr Tony
-
Director of Public Prosecutions
-
2019-04-02
-
- Disability Services
- Domestic and Family Violence
-
Domestic Violence
- Domestic Violence Crisis Line
-
Domestic Violence Disclosure Scheme
- Duke of Edinburgh's Award Trust
- Elder Abuse
- Electoral Districts Boundaries Commission
-
Emergency Codes
- Energy Consumption
-
Equal Opportunity Commission
- Extended Supervision Laws
- Family Group Conferences
- Farm Debt Mediation
- Federal Election
- Forensic Psychiatrists
-
Forensic Science SA
- Freedom of Information
-
Fuel Price Monitoring
- Gamblers Rehabilitation Fund
- Gambling Barring Orders
- Gambling Prevalence Survey
-
Gambling Regulation
- Gambling Regulation Review
- Goods and Services Tax
-
Government Advertising
-
2018-11-06
-
-
Grandparents for Grandchildren SA
- Grant Programs
-
Grants SA
-
2019-09-10
-
- Holden Hill
- Holden Hill Magistrates Court
- Home for the Incurables Trust
- Homelessness Social Impact Bond
- Hotel Industry
-
Housing SA
-
2018-10-16
- Answers to Questions
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- 2018-10-23
- 2019-10-15
-
-
Housing SA, Eviction Application Notices
- Housing SA, Eviction Proceedings
-
Housing SA, Vacant Properties
-
2019-10-15
-
- Housing Stimulus Package
-
Housing Trust
-
2018-10-23
-
-
Housing Trust Rent
-
2018-09-19
-
-
Human Services Department
-
2018-12-06
-
2019-02-12
-
- Humphrys, Mr C.C.
-
ICAC Investigation
- Illegal Offshore Gambling
-
Independent Commission Against Corruption
- Influenza Vaccinations
- Justice System
-
Kangaroo Island Ministerial Visit
-
2019-07-03
-
-
Kaurna Electorate Ministerial Visit
-
Keogh Case
-
2018-07-04
- Question Time (14:05)
- Question Time (14:08)
- Question Time (14:10)
- Question Time (14:19)
- Question Time (14:22)
- Question Time (14:27)
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- Question Time (14:34)
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- Question Time (14:42)
- Question Time (14:42)
- Question Time (14:43)
- Question Time (14:48)
- Question Time (14:49)
- Question Time (14:51)
- 2018-07-24
-
2018-07-25
-
2018-10-17
- 2018-11-15
-
2019-05-01
- Question Time (14:04)
- Question Time (14:06)
- Question Time (14:10)
- Question Time (14:17)
- Question Time (14:20)
- Question Time (14:24)
- Question Time (14:31)
- Question Time (14:34)
- Question Time (14:36)
- Question Time (14:40)
- Question Time (14:51)
- Question Time (14:51)
- Question Time (14:52)
- Question Time (15:01)
-
- Labour Hire Licences
-
Labour Hire Practices
-
Land Tax
- Legal Services Commission
- LGBTIQ Community
- Libby's Law
-
Liberal Party, Sexual Assault Allegations
-
2019-07-31
-
2019-08-01
-
- Liquor Licensing Laws
- Lobbyists
-
Lot Fourteen
- Machinery of Government Changes
- MarionLIFE Community Services
-
McDonald, Ms S.
-
2019-04-02
-
- McGowan, Dr C.
-
Minister for Health
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-
Ministerial Staff
-
2018-07-03
-
- Ministerial Statement
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Ministers' Interests
-
2019-07-31
-
- Moderate Income
-
Murray-Darling Basin Royal Commission
-
National Power of Attorney Register
-
2019-12-03
-
-
Noarlunga Centre Incident
- 2018-11-07
-
2018-11-14
- Question Time (14:13)
- Question Time (14:16)
- Question Time (14:22)
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- Question Time (14:29)
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- Question Time (14:53)
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- Question Time (15:02)
- Question Time (15:11)
- Nukunu Native Title Determination
- Online Gambling
- Personal Alert Systems Rebate Scheme
- Polling Booths
- Port Pirie Courthouse
-
Private Email Accounts
-
2018-07-31
-
-
Private Legal Matters
-
2019-03-19
-
2019-03-21
-
2019-04-02
-
- Probate Registry
- Problem Gambling
- Provocation Defence
-
Public Sector Executives
-
2018-11-06
-
-
Public Service Employees
-
2019-09-11
-
-
Public Trustee
-
2019-05-14
-
-
Quad Bikes
-
2019-09-25
-
- Question Time
-
Real-Time Fuel Pricing
-
Register of Lobbyists
-
2018-10-16
-
-
Renewal SA
-
2018-10-16
- 2018-10-17
-
2018-10-23
-
2018-11-13
- 2018-11-15
-
- Residential Care Facility Visits
- Residential Tenancy Disputes
- Riverland Community Justice Centre
- Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety
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SA Health, ICAC Report
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Sentencing Act Reform
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- South Australia Police
- Stakeholder Submissions
- State Emergency Relief Fund
- State Government Concessions
-
State Opera South Australia
-
Supported Disability Accommodation
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-
Supreme Court Appointments
-
2019-10-31
-
- Terrorist Incidents
-
Volunteer Screening Checks
- Women's Domestic Violence Court Assistance Service
- Women's Suffrage Anniversary
- Workforce Summary
- Workplace Safety
-
Youth Justice State Plan
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Youth Justice System
-
Speeches
-
CLOSE, Susan Elizabeth
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Adelaide Dolphin Sanctuary
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
-
2018-09-18
-
2018-10-16
-
-
Appropriation Bill 2019
-
2019-06-20
- 2019-07-31
-
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Climate Change
- Coastline Protection
- Crown Land Management (Section 78b Leases) Amendment Bill
- Education and Children's Services Bill
- Environment and Water Department
- Environmental Conservation
- Flinders University (Remuneration of Council Members) Amendment Bill
- Hawke, Hon. R.j.l.
- Ikara-Flinders Ranges National Park
- International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Landscape South Australia Bill
- Minister for Environment and Water
- Motor Vehicles (Offensive Advertising) Amendment Bill
- Murray-Darling Basin Royal Commission
- National Science Week
- New Zealand Women's Suffrage Anniversary
- Port Adelaide Heritage
- Public Education
- Questions on Notice
- Remembrance Day
-
Royal Commissions (Extraterritorial Application) Amendment Bill
-
2018-06-20
- 2018-10-17
-
- South Australian Stolen Generations Reparations Scheme
- Standing Orders Committee
- Statutes Amendment (Decriminalisation of Sex Work) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill
-
Supply Bill 2018
-
Supply Bill 2019
- TAFE SA Reviews
- Teachers Registration and Standards (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Weatherill, Hon. J.W., Retirement
- World Environment Day
- World Ranger Day
-
World Teachers' Day
-
Questions
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Adelaide Botanic High School
-
2018-11-29
-
2019-03-19
-
- Adelaide Brighton Cement
- Air Quality Monitoring
- Apprenticeships
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- APY Lands
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Building Better Schools Program
-
2018-05-03
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2018-09-04
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- Bullying
- Bus Services
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Child Protection
-
2018-10-18
-
- Children's Centres
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Climate Change
- Coastline Protection
- Commissioner for Aboriginal Children and Young People
-
Desalination Plant
-
Disability Services
-
2018-11-06
-
-
Early Childhood Development
-
2018-11-07
-
2019-09-11
-
- Education Management System
-
Environment and Water Department
- 2019-03-20
-
2019-09-12
-
Environment Protection Authority
-
2019-09-12
-
-
Exceptional Resource Funding
- Family Day Care
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Female Facilities Program
- Friends of Parks
- Full-Time Equivalent Reductions
-
Glenthorne National Park
- Golden Grove High School
-
Government Advertising
- Government Contracts
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Government Departments
- Government Sector Expenses
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Grant Programs
- Grants and Subsidies
- Green Industries SA
-
Green Industry Fund
-
2018-11-06
- 2018-11-27
-
2019-09-12
-
-
Handley, Mr N.
- Heritage Protection
-
ICAC Investigation
- Le Fevre Primary School
-
Liberal Party, Sexual Assault Allegations
-
2019-07-31
-
2019-08-01
-
-
Lot Fourteen
- Marine Parks Review
- Member's Remarks
-
Minister for Child Protection
-
2018-05-10
-
- Minister for Environment and Water
-
Ministerial Staff
- Murray-Darling Basin
- Murray-Darling Basin Ministerial Council
-
Murray-Darling Basin Plan
-
2018-06-19
-
2018-07-03
-
2019-02-13
-
2019-03-20
-
2019-04-30
- 2019-06-20
-
2019-09-26
-
-
Murray-Darling Basin Royal Commission
-
2018-06-19
- 2018-11-15
-
2019-02-12
- 2019-02-13
-
2019-04-30
-
2019-06-04
-
-
National Literacy and Numeracy Online
- 2019-05-15
-
2019-05-16
-
National Park Rangers
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Natural Resources Management
- Parliamentary Sitting Program
- Phonics Checks
-
Port Pirie Fish Deaths
-
Premier's Expenditure
-
Preschool Attendance
-
2018-11-06
-
- Preschool Occasional Care
-
Preschool Services
- Preschool Staffing
-
Public Sector Executives
-
2018-11-06
-
2018-11-08
- 2019-09-11
-
2019-09-12
-
-
Public Service Employees
-
2019-09-11
-
2019-09-12
-
-
Public-Private Partnership Schools
- Real-Time Fuel Pricing
-
Renewal SA
- Reservoirs Committee
-
SA Water
-
2018-07-03
- 2018-11-06
-
2019-02-13
- 2019-03-21
-
2019-09-12
-
-
School Funding
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School Zoning
- Schools, Language Programs
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-
Schools, Year 7 Reform
-
2018-11-06
- 2019-07-02
-
-
South Australian Certificate of Education
-
2019-09-11
-
-
South-East Water Allocations
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- STEM Education
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Strathmont Pool
-
2018-12-05
-
2019-02-12
-
-
Students with Disability
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2019-09-11
-
- TAFE SA Gilles Plains
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Targeted Voluntary Separation Packages
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Technical College
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Termination Payouts
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Tramline Extension
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Waste Management
-
2018-09-18
- 2019-09-12
-
- Waste Management Grants
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Water Recovery Socio-Economic Criteria
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-
Speeches
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COOK, Natalie Fleur
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Speeches
- Address in Reply
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Appropriation Bill 2018
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Appropriation Bill 2019
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- Hawke, Hon. R.j.l.
- Health Care (Health Access Zones) (No 2) Amendment Bill
- Health Care (Health Access Zones) Amendment Bill
- Homelessness Week
- Housing Affordability
-
Housing SA
-
2019-10-16
-
- Human Services Department
-
Hurtle Vale Electorate Community Events
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-
International Day of People with Disability
- 2018-11-28
-
2019-11-13
- 2019-12-03
- International Epilepsy Day
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-
International Volunteer Day
-
2018-12-05
-
- Judicial Conduct Commissioner (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Kenihan, Mr Q.
- Labour Hire Licensing Repeal Bill
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Limitation of Actions (Child Sexual Abuse) Amendment Bill
- Mary Bywaters Memorial Kindergarten
- Minister for Human Services
- Minister's Remarks
- Modra, Mr K.
- Murray-Darling Basin Royal Commission
- National Disability Insurance Scheme
- National Volunteer Week
- Nurses and Midwives
- Office for the Ageing (Adult Safeguarding) Amendment Bill
- Organ Donation
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- Remote Area Attendance
- Reynella East College Climate Change Book
- Royal Society for the Blind
- SA Pathology and SA Medical Imaging
- Social Justice
- Special Olympics Australia National Games
- Sri Lanka Terrorist Attacks
- St John Ambulance Anniversary
- St John Ambulance SA
- State Budget
- Statutes Amendment (Decriminalisation of Sex Work) Bill
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Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill
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Supply Bill 2018
- Supply Bill 2019
- Tobacco Products Regulation (E-Cigarettes and Review) Amendment Bill
- Virtual Power Plant
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- Year 12 Student Graduation
- Youth Justice Administration (Functions of Training Centre Visitor) Amendment Bill
- Youth Parliament
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Questions
- Aboriginal Family Support Services
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Adelaide Youth Training Centre
- Aged-Care Funding
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Changing Places Program
- Charitable and Social Welfare Fund
- Child Protection
- Client Trust Account
- Community Care Services
- Community Connections
-
Community Services
-
2019-02-12
-
-
Concessions SA
-
2019-09-10
-
- Consumer Advocacy and Research Fund
- Disability Services
- Duke of Edinburgh's Award Trust
-
Emergency Codes
- Energy Consumption
- Gamblers Rehabilitation Fund
- Gambling Prevalence Survey
- Gambling Regulation Review
-
Government Advertising
-
2018-11-06
- 2019-09-12
-
- Government Departments
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Grant Programs
- 2018-11-06
-
2018-11-27
-
2019-12-05
-
Grants SA
-
2019-09-10
-
- Healthscope
- Highgate Park
- Home for the Incurables Trust
- Homelessness Social Impact Bond
-
Housing Authority
-
2019-09-12
-
-
Housing SA
-
2018-10-16
- Answers to Questions
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- 2018-10-23
- 2019-10-15
-
-
Housing SA, Eviction Application Notices
- Housing SA, Eviction Proceedings
-
Housing SA, Vacant Properties
-
2019-10-15
-
- Housing Stimulus Package
-
Housing Trust
-
2018-10-23
-
-
Housing Trust Rent
-
2018-09-19
-
-
Human Services Department
- 2018-11-06
-
2018-12-06
-
2019-02-12
- LGBTIQ Community
- Machinery of Government Changes
- Magistrates Court
- MarionLIFE Community Services
- Ministerial Business E-mails
- Ministerial Staff
- Moderate Income
- Personal Alert Systems Rebate Scheme
- Premier's Certificate for Volunteering Service
-
Public Sector Executives
-
Public Service Employees
-
2019-09-12
-
- Redundancy Payments
-
Register of Lobbyists
-
2018-10-16
-
-
Remote Aboriginal Housing
-
2018-11-06
-
- Reservoirs Security
-
Southern Expressway
- State Emergency Relief Fund
- State Government Concessions
- Supported Accommodation
-
Supported Disability Accommodation
- Supported Residential Facilities Fund
- Termination Payouts
- Tonsley Railway Station
- Transport Subsidy Scheme
-
Volunteer Screening Checks
- Volunteer Screening Fees
- Workforce Summary
-
Youth Justice State Plan
-
Youth Justice System
-
Speeches
-
COWDREY OAM, Matthew John
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Appropriation Bill 2018
-
Coastline Protection
-
Colton Electorate
- Colton Surf Lifesaving Events
- Condous, Mr S.G.
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Dishonest Communication with Children) Amendment Bill
- Defence Shipbuilding
- Disability Inclusion Bill
- Economic and Finance Committee: Annual Report 2017-18
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
- Economic and Finance Committee: Investment Attraction Policies
- Education and Children's Services Bill
- Fair Trading (Gift Cards) Amendment Bill
- Fair Trading (Ticket Scalping) Amendment Bill
- Gold Coast Commonwealth Games
- Grange Surf Life Saving Club
- Groundwater Drainage
- Health and Community Services Complaints (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Henley and Grange ANZAC Day Dawn Service
- Infrastructure SA Bill
-
International Day of People with Disability
- International Midwives and Nurses Days
- Kenihan, Mr Q.
- Landscape South Australia Bill
- Lifesaving World Championships
- Modra, Mr K.
- National Police Remembrance Day
-
Office for the Ageing (Adult Safeguarding) Amendment Bill
-
2018-11-13
-
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
- Public Works Committee: Memorial Drive Centre Court Development
-
R U OK? Day
- Remembrance Day
- South Australian Productivity Commission Bill
- Surf Life Saving South Australia
- Victims of Crime (Offender Service and Joinder) Amendment Bill
- Volunteer Screening Checks
- World Environment Day
- World Micro, Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises Day
- World Tourism Day
-
Questions
- Adelaide Film Festival
- Anti-Terrorism Legislation
- Climate Change
- Coast Protection Policy
-
Coastline Protection
- Cost of Living
- Desalination Plant
- Electricity Interconnector
- Electricity Supply
- Electronic SACE Exams
- Emergency Services Equipment
- Energy Policy
-
Euronaval
- Forensic Psychiatrists
- Fuel Price Monitoring
- Gold Coast Commonwealth Games
- Home Battery Scheme
- HomeStart Finance
- Major Projects Conference
- Memorial Drive Redevelopment
- Mortal Kombat
- North-South Corridor
- Offshore Patrol Vessel Program
- Population Growth
- Premier and Cabinet Department
-
Recreational Fishers
- Regional Mining Industry Employment
- Roadworks Legislation
- Royal Adelaide Hospital Site Redevelopment
- Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety
- Schools with Internet Fibre Technology Program
- Skills Training
- South Australian Music Awards
- South Australian Sports Institute Awards
- Sport and Recreation Facilities
- TAFE SA
- Terrorist Incidents
- Transport Subsidy Scheme
- Unemployment Figures
-
Speeches
-
CREGAN, Daniel Roy
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Adelaide Hills Hand Spinners and Weavers Guild
- Australia Day Honours
- Bowel Cancer Testing
- Crime and Public Integrity Policy Committee
- Crime and Public Integrity Policy Committee: Independent Commissioner Against Corruption (Investigation Powers) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law (High Risk Offenders) (Psychologists) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Dishonest Communication with Children) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Procedure (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Disability Inclusion Bill
- Evidence (Journalists) Amendment Bill
- Farm Debt Mediation Bill
- Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Giles, Mr B.L.
- Heysen Cultural Legacy
- Industrial Hemp
- Infrastructure SA Bill
- International Firefighters' Day
- Judicial Conduct Commissioner (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Kavel Electorate
- Meals on Wheels
- Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- Nairne Road, Woodside
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
- Pope, Mrs Doreen
- Public Interest Disclosure Bill
-
Public Works Committee
- Public Works Committee: Avenues College (Windsor Gardens Campus) Redevelopment Project
- Public Works Committee: Bolivar Dissolved Air Flotation and Filtration Plant Controls Upgrade Project
- Public Works Committee: City South Tram Line Replacement Project
- Public Works Committee: Edinburgh Parks Project
- Public Works Committee: Flinders Ports (Inner Harbour Port Adelaide Title F) Site Remediation Project
- Public Works Committee: Golden Grove Road Upgrade
- Public Works Committee: Hydrogen Park SA Project
- Public Works Committee: Joy Baluch am Bridge Duplication
- Public Works Committee: Kroemer's Crossing Roundabout Project
- Public Works Committee: Lake Bonney Battery Energy Storage System
- Public Works Committee: Lyell McEwin Hospital Expansion
- Public Works Committee: Memorial Drive Centre Court Development
- Public Works Committee: Modbury Hospital Upgrades and Additional Services Project
- Public Works Committee: Mount Gambier Airport Redevelopment Project
- Public Works Committee: Murray Bridge Soldiers' Memorial Hospital Emergency Department Upgrade Project
- Public Works Committee: Murray Bridge Wastewater Treatment Plant
- Public Works Committee: North-South Corridor Darlington Upgrade Project
- Public Works Committee: North-South Corridor Regency Road to Pym Street Project
- Public Works Committee: Old Royal Adelaide Hospital Site
- Public Works Committee: Pennington School R-7 Redevelopment Project
- Public Works Committee: Penola Northern Bypass
- Public Works Committee: Port Lincoln Wastewater Treatment Plant
-
Public Works Committee: Port Road Drainage Project
- Public Works Committee: Port Road, West Lakes Boulevard and Cheltenham Parade Intersection Upgrade
- Public Works Committee: Rebuild of the South Australian Dog Fence
- Public Works Committee: South Australian Virtual Power Plant Project
- Public Works Committee: South Eastern Freeway Managed Motorway Project
- Public Works Committee: South Plympton New Build Apartments
- Public Works Committee: Tulloch Road Intersection Upgrade
- Public Works Committee: Waterfall Gully to Mount Lofty Summit Trail Restoration
- Public Works Committee: Women's and Children's Hospital Upgrade Sustainment Program
- Public Works Committee: Yatala Labour Prison Redevelopment
- Public Works Committee: Zero Cost Energy Future
- Queen's Birthday Honours
- Renal Dialysis Services
- Road Safety
- Road Traffic (Drug Testing) Amendment Bill
- Rotary Club of Mount Barker
- Statutes Amendment (Attorney-General's Portfolio) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Mineral Resources) Bill
- Summary Offences (Disrespectful Conduct in Court) Amendment Bill
- Volunteers
- Woodside, Gold Mining
- Zonta International
-
Questions
- Aerial Firefighting
- ANZAC Spirit School Prize
- Collaborative Food and Beverage Businesses
- Defence Industries
- Emergency Services
- Emergency Services Levy
- Employment Figures
- Federal Liberal Government
- Food South Australia
-
Fruit Fly
- Future Frigate Program
- Glen Osmond Road Intersection
- Home Battery Scheme
- Horticulture Industry
- Independent Commission Against Corruption
-
Job Creation
- Lobbyists
- Mobile Phone Blackspots
- Pinery Bushfires
- Prison Infrastructure
- Problem Gambling
- Public Education Awards
- Regional Growth Fund
- Residential Tenancy Disputes
- Road Upgrades
- Rural Business Support
- Schools with Internet Fibre Technology Program
- Schools, Language Programs
- Small Business
- Strawberry Industry
- Swim Safety
- Vegetable Industry
- Volunteers
- Women's Domestic Violence Court Assistance Service
-
Speeches
-
DULUK, Samuel John
-
Speeches
- Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: APY Lands Visit
- Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: Report 2017-18
- Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: Review into the Operations of the Aboriginal Lands Trust Act 2013
- Address in Reply
- Antisocial Behaviour
- ANZAC Day Commemoration Services
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
- 2018-09-06
-
2018-10-16
-
Appropriation Bill 2019
- Australia Day
- Bangka Strait Massacre
- Bowel Cancer Awareness Month
- Breast Cancer Support
- Carols by the Creek
- Chronic Fatigue Syndrome
- Country Fire Service
- Cricket
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Dishonest Communication with Children) Amendment Bill
- Defence Workforce Plan
- Dementia Awareness
- Disability Services
- DonateLife Week
-
Economic and Finance Committee
- Economic and Finance Committee: Annual Report 2017-18
-
Economic and Finance Committee: Annual Report 2018-19
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2019-20
- Epilepsy Services
- Fair Trading (Gift Cards) Amendment Bill
- Fair Trading (Ticket Scalping) Amendment Bill
- Farm Debt Mediation Bill
- Federal Election
- Flinders University (Remuneration of Council Members) Amendment Bill
- Generations in Jazz
- Gold Coast Commonwealth Games
- Hall, Mr R.S.
- Health and Community Services Complaints (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Health Care (Governance) Amendment Bill
- Infrastructure SA Bill
- International Epilepsy Day
- International Firefighters' Day
- Invictus Games
- Joint Committee on the 125th Anniversary of Women's Suffrage
- Joint Committee on Valuation Policies and Charges on Retirement Villages
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Landscape South Australia Bill
- Liquor Licensing (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Local Government (Rate Oversight) Amendment Bill
- Member's Remarks
- Mental Health Services
- Mental Wellbeing in Sport
- Migration Policy
- Mitcham Council
- Negative Gearing
- Organ Donation
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
- R U OK? Day
-
Repatriation General Hospital
- Ruff-O'herne, Ms J.
- Scouts SA
- Skilling South Australia
- South Australian Productivity Commission Bill
- South Australian Stolen Generations Reparations Scheme
- St John Ambulance Anniversary
- Statutes Amendment (Liquor Licensing) Bill
- Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Budget Measures) Bill
- STEM Education
- Suicide Prevention
- Supply Bill 2018
- Waite Electorate
- Waite Electorate Road Upgrades
- World Environment Day
- World Hospice and Palliative Care Day
- World Ranger Day
-
Questions
- Adelaide Fringe
- Aged-Care Funding
- APY Lands Visit
- Barngarla Native Title Determination
- Belair Park Golf Course and Country Club
- Brittany Sister-State Relationship
- Bus Services on Demand
-
City Deal Funding
- City Skate Park
- Climate Change
- Electricity Prices
- Food, Tourism and Hospitality Industries
- Hartley Electorate Road Upgrades
- Home Battery Scheme
- Hydrotherapy Services
- International Contaminated Site Remediation Conference
- International Driverless Vehicle Summit
- International Koala Centre of Excellence
- Lot Fourteen
- Mining Industry
- Mitcham Hills Road Upgrade
- National Park Cities Forum
- National Reconciliation Week
-
Phonics Checks
- Public Education Awards
- Public Transport Contracts
- Rabbit Control
- Road and Rail Freight
- Road Upgrades
- Schools, Year 7 Reform
- South Australian Certificate of Education
- State Budget
- State Economy
- State Government Services
- State Liberal Government
- Teachers Dispute
- Tennis
- Traffic Management
- Waite Electorate Transport Forum
-
Speeches
-
ELLIS, Fraser John
-
Speeches
-
Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee
-
Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: APY Lands Visit
- Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: Report 2017-18
- Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: Review into the Operations of the Aboriginal Lands Trust Act 2013
- Address in Reply
- Appropriation Bill 2018
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
- Crown Land Management (Section 78b Leases) Amendment Bill
- Ebsary, Mr E.
- Economic and Finance Committee: Annual Report 2017-18
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
- Electoral (Prisoner Voting) Amendment Bill
- Evidence (Journalists) Amendment Bill
- Fair Trading (Gift Cards) Amendment Bill
- Fair Trading (Ticket Scalping) Amendment Bill
- Farm Debt Mediation Bill
- Farmland Access Rights
- Fat Farmers Rural Health Initiative
- Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Fisherman Bay
- Genetically Modified Crops Management (Designated Area) Amendment Bill
- Gold Coast Commonwealth Games
- Harry Butler Centenary
- Health Care (Governance) Amendment Bill
- Infrastructure SA Bill
- International Day for Disaster Reduction
- International Volunteer Day
- Kadina Football Club
- Kernewek Lowender Copper Coast Cornish Festival
-
Landscape South Australia Bill
-
2019-04-04
-
- Local Government (Rate Oversight) Amendment Bill
- Mary Potter Hospice
- Meningococcal B Strain Vaccination
- Movember Foundation
- Murray-Darling Basin Plan
-
Narungga Electorate
- National Agriculture Day
- National Volunteer Week
- Negative Gearing
- Office for the Ageing (Adult Safeguarding) Amendment Bill
- Paskeville Field Days
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
- Port Wakefield Overpass
- R U OK? Day
- Rail Safety National Law (South Australia) (Miscellaneous No 4) Amendment Bill
- Regional Roads
- Remembrance Day
- Residential Parks (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Road Upgrades
- South Australian Productivity Commission Bill
- St John Ambulance Anniversary
- Statutes Amendment (Liquor Licensing) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Mineral Resources) Bill
- Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Simplify) Bill
- Summary Offences (Trespass on Primary Production Premises) Amendment Bill
- Supply Bill 2018
- World Environment Day
- World Health Day
- World Teachers' Day
- World Tourism Day
- Yorke Peninsula Sand Drift
- Yorke Peninsula Tourism Awards
-
-
Questions
- Aboriginal Education Strategy
- Adelaide International Tennis Tournament
- Autonomous Vehicle Trial
- Bilby Oat Variety
- Cost of Living
- Country Fire Service
- Designated Area Migration Agreements
- Electricity Generation
-
Electricity Interconnector
- Environmental Conservation
- Farm Debt Mediation
- Flinders Chase National Park
- Food Producers
- Food South Australia
- Freight Productivity
- Genetically Modified Crops Moratorium
- Grain Industry
- Heritage Protection Policy
- Home Battery Scheme
- Illegal Offshore Gambling
- Industry Skills Councils
- Lot Fourteen
- Narungga Electorate Road Upgrades
- National Literacy and Numeracy Online
- National Park Rangers
- Nukunu Native Title Determination
-
Port Wakefield Overpass
- Regional Development Australia
- Regional Growth Fund
- Regional Roads
- Regional Roads and Infrastructure Fund
-
Regional South Australia
- Road Safety
- Road Trains
- Schools with Internet Fibre Technology Program
- Skilling South Australia
- Sports Vouchers
- Yorke Peninsula Ecotourism
-
Speeches
-
GARDNER, John Anthony William
-
Speeches
-
Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee
-
Address in Reply
-
Adjournment
- Alice Springs (Mparntwe) Education Declaration
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
- 2018-08-02
- 2018-09-06
-
2018-09-18
-
2018-09-19
-
Appropriation Bill 2019
- 2019-06-06
-
2019-07-02
-
2019-07-23
- 2019-07-31
-
Auditor-General's Report
- Australian Craniofacial Unit
- Australian Labor Party
- Australian Space Agency
- Chairman of Committees, Election
- Child Death and Serious Injury Review Committee
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Country Cabinet
-
Crime and Public Integrity Policy Committee
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Child-Like Sex Dolls Prohibition) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Procedure (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Economic and Finance Committee
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
-
Education and Children's Services Bill
-
2018-06-20
-
2018-10-25
-
2019-07-23
- 2019-08-01
-
- Education Department
-
Electoral (Prisoner Voting) Amendment Bill
- End-of-Life Choices
-
Environment, Resources and Development Committee
- Fair Trading (Ticket Scalping) Amendment Bill
-
Flinders University (Remuneration of Council Members) Amendment Bill
-
2019-09-25
-
2019-10-17
-
- Giles, Mr B.L.
- Joint Committees
- Joint Parliamentary Service Committee
- Labour Hire Licensing Repeal Bill
-
Landscape South Australia Bill
- Legislative Review Committee
- Limitation of Actions (Child Sexual Abuse) Amendment Bill
- Livestock Industry
-
Local Government (Ratepayer Protection and Related Measures) Amendment Bill
- Member for Hurtle Vale, Naming
- Member for Hurtle Vale, Suspension
- Member for Lee, Naming
- Member for Lee, Suspension
- Member for Mawson, Naming
- Member for Mawson, Suspension
- Member for West Torrens, Naming
-
Minister for Environment and Water
-
Morialta Citizenship Awards
- Morialta Electorate
- Motor Vehicles (Offensive Advertising) Amendment Bill
- Natural Resources Committee
- Pairing Arrangements
- Parliamentary Committee on Occupational Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation
- Parliamentary Committees (Petitions) Amendment Bill
- Parliamentary Sitting Program
- Parliamentary Superannuation Legislation
- Petitions, Suspension of Standing Orders
- Presentation to Governor
- Privileges Committee
- Public Education
- Public Works Committee
- Publishing Committee
- Remote Area Attendance
- Renmark High School
- Road Traffic (Evidentiary Provisions) Amendment Bill
- Schools, Random Drug Searches
- Sentencing (Suspended and Community Based Custodial Sentences) Amendment Bill
- Sessional Orders
- Sittings and Business
- Social Development Committee
- Social Workers Registration Bill
- South Australian Certificate of Education
- South Australian Stolen Generations Reparations Scheme
- Speaker's Ruling, Dissent
-
Standing and Sessional Orders Suspension
-
Standing Orders Committee
-
Standing Orders Suspension
-
Statutes Amendment (Budget Measures) Bill
-
2019-06-18
- 2019-07-23
- 2019-08-01
-
- Statutes Amendment (Child Exploitation and Encrypted Material) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Decriminalisation of Sex Work) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Drug Offences) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (SACAT Federal Diversity Jurisdiction) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Budget Measures) Bill
-
2018-09-04
- 2018-09-20
-
- Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Classification of Publications, Films and Computer Games) Bill
-
Statutory Officers Committee
- Summary Offences (Disrespectful Conduct in Court) Amendment Bill
-
Supply Bill 2019
- Surrogacy Bill
- Suspension of Standing and Sessional Orders
-
TAFE SA
- TAFE SA Reviews
- TAFE SA, ASQA Interim Report
-
Teachers Registration and Standards (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
2018-09-19
-
2018-10-16
-
- Terrorism (Police Powers) (Use of Force) Amendment Bill
- Tonkin Government
-
World Teachers' Day
-
-
Answers
- Aboriginal Education Strategy
-
Adelaide Botanic High School
-
2018-11-29
-
2019-03-19
-
-
ANZAC Spirit School Prize
- Apprenticeships and Traineeships
- APY Lands
- Aquaculture Training
-
Building Better Schools Program
-
2018-05-03
-
2018-09-04
- Answers to Questions
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-
- Bullying
-
Child and Family Support
-
2019-09-11
-
-
Child Protection
- Children's Centres
- Children's Week Awards
-
Commissioner for Aboriginal Children and Young People
-
Commissioner for Victims' Rights
- Datacom it Hub
-
Disability Services
-
2018-11-06
-
-
Early Childhood Development
-
2018-11-07
-
2019-09-11
-
- Education Department
- Education Management System
- Electronic SACE Exams
- Entrepreneurial Learning Strategy
-
Entrepreneurial Specialist Schools
-
2018-11-29
-
- F1 in Schools STEM Challenge
- Family Day Care
-
Flinders Medical Centre Food Contamination
-
2018-11-08
-
2018-12-04
-
- Full-Time Equivalent Reductions
- Golden Grove High School
-
Government Advertising
- Government Departments
-
Government Members, Crossing the Floor
-
2018-11-28
-
-
Grant Programs
- 2018-11-13
- 2018-11-28
-
2019-10-16
- Guardian for Children and Young People
- Incident Management Directorate
- International Education Strategy
- John Pirie Secondary School
-
Kangaroo Island Ministerial Visit
-
2019-07-03
-
-
Kaurna Electorate Ministerial Visit
-
2019-09-10
-
-
KordaMentha
-
2018-11-08
-
2018-12-04
-
- Land Tax
- Literacy and Numeracy Programs
- Literacy Guarantee Unit
- Ministerial Staff
- Mount Gambier High Schools
-
Murray-Darling Basin Royal Commission
-
2018-06-19
-
2018-07-05
-
- Music Education Strategy
- Music Focus Schools
-
National Literacy and Numeracy Online
- National Literacy and Numeracy Tests
-
Parliamentary Sitting Program
-
2018-11-13
-
- Pedal Prix
- Periods, Pain and Endometriosis Program
-
Phonics Checks
- Police Commissioner Protocol
-
Preschool Attendance
-
2018-11-06
-
- Preschool Occasional Care
-
Preschool Services
- Preschool Staffing
-
Public Education Awards
-
Public Sector Executives
-
2018-11-08
- 2019-09-11
-
-
Public Service Employees
-
2019-09-11
-
-
Public-Private Partnership Schools
- Question Time
- Regional School Bus Services
- SA 125 Suffrage Schools Competition
-
School Absenteeism
-
2018-06-19
- 2018-06-21
-
- School Curriculum
-
School Funding
-
School Internet Service
-
School Transport
-
School Zoning
-
Schools with Internet Fibre Technology Program
-
Schools, Language Programs
- Schools, Materials and Services Charge
- Schools, Minor Works and Maintenance Expenditure
-
Schools, Random Drug Searches
-
Schools, Year 7 Reform
-
2018-11-06
- 2019-06-05
- 2019-07-02
-
-
South Australian Certificate of Education
- 2018-06-21
-
2019-09-11
-
State Care Cases
-
State Liberal Government
-
2019-12-05
-
- STEM Education
- STEM Explorer Program
-
Strathmont Pool
-
Students with Disability
-
2019-09-11
-
- Surrey Downs Kindergarten
- Swimming and Aquatics Budget
-
TAFE SA
-
2018-09-05
- 2018-10-23
- 2018-10-24
-
2018-11-06
-
- TAFE SA Gilles Plains
-
Targeted Voluntary Separation Packages
- Tea Tree Gully Toy Library
- Teacher Literacy and Numeracy Test
-
Teachers Dispute
-
Technical College
- Termination Payouts
- Together SA
-
Tramline Extension
- Women's Suffrage Anniversary, Schools Competition
-
Speeches
-
GEE, Jonathan Peter
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
-
2018-09-18
-
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
-
Curtis Road
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Local Government Elections
- MATES in Construction
- Residential Parks (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Road Upgrades
- Supply Bill 2018
- Supply Bill 2019
- Swallowcliffe Primary School
-
Taylor Electorate
- Weatherill, Hon. J.W., Retirement
- Questions
-
Speeches
-
HARVEY, Richard Manuel
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
- Banksia Park International High School
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Colours and Circles Art Exhibition
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Assaults on Prescribed Emergency Workers) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Dishonest Communication with Children) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Throwing Objects at Vehicles) Amendment Bill
- Dementia Awareness
- Disability Inclusion Bill
-
Eastern Adelaide Domestic Violence Service
-
Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
- Education and Children's Services Bill
- Fair Trading (Gift Cards) Amendment Bill
- Fair Trading (Ticket Scalping) Amendment Bill
- Gallery 1855
- Genetically Modified Crops
- Genetically Modified Crops Management (Designated Area) Amendment Bill
-
Health and Hospital Care
- Health Care (Governance) Amendment Bill
-
Illicit Drug Use
-
2019-06-05
-
- Infrastructure SA Bill
- International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women
- Kersbrook Playground
- Landscape South Australia Bill
- Local Government (Rate Oversight) Amendment Bill
- Meningococcal B Strain Vaccination
- Modbury Hospital
- Motor Vehicles (Offensive Advertising) Amendment Bill
- Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- National Child Protection Week
- National Electricity (South Australia) (Retailer Reliability Obligation) Amendment Bill
- National Police Remembrance Day
- National Science Week
- Negative Gearing
-
Newland Electorate
- Newland Electorate Schools
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
- Public Interest Disclosure Bill
- Public Works Committee: Golden Grove Road Upgrade
- R U OK? Day
- Road Traffic (Drug Testing) Amendment Bill
- SA Pathology and SA Medical Imaging
- Sentencing (Home Detention) Amendment Bill
- Sentencing (Suspended and Community Based Custodial Sentences) Amendment Bill
- South Australian Productivity Commission Bill
- South Australian Public Health (Early Childhood Services and Immunisation) Amendment Bill
- South Australian Public Health (Immunisation and Early Childhood Services) Amendment Bill
- Sri Lanka Terrorist Attacks
- State Liberal Government
- Statutes Amendment (Domestic Violence) Bill
- Summary Offences (Liquor Offences) Amendment Bill
- Supply Bill 2018
- Tea Tree Gully Community Wastewater Management System
- Tobacco Products Regulation (E-Cigarette Regulation) Amendment Bill
-
Tobacco Products Regulation (E-Cigarettes and Review) Amendment Bill
-
2018-11-15
-
- Tonkin Government
- Transforming Health
- Universal Ambulance Cover Scheme
- Vaccine Development
- World Micro, Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises Day
- World No Tobacco Day
- World Teachers' Day
- World Tourism Day
-
Questions
- Apprenticeships and Traineeships
- Bushfire Preparedness
- Cost Reductions
- Country Fire Service
- CourtSA
- Development Assessment Pathways
- Emergency Services Levy
- Emergency Services Volunteers
- Energy Prices
- Entrepreneurial Specialist Schools
- Firefighters, International Deployment
- Forensic Science SA
- Gawler Craton Mining Exploration
- Genetically Modified Crops Moratorium
- Government Programs
- Great Wine Capitals
- Grid Scale Storage Fund
- Infrastructure Funding
- Infrastructure Projects
- Literacy Guarantee Unit
-
Lot Fourteen
- Mining Industry
- National Literacy and Numeracy Tests
- National Park Rangers
- Payroll Tax
- Phonics Checks
- Public Transport
- Rail Infrastructure
- Real-Time Fuel Pricing
- Renewable Energy
- Road Safety
- Roxby Downs Anniversary
- School Internet Service
- Schools, Language Programs
-
Skills Training
- Space Forum
-
Sports Funding
- State Emergency Service
- TAFE SA
- Traffic Management
- Training and Skills Funding
- Transport Subsidy Scheme
- Underground Mining School of Excellence
- Unemployment Figures
- Waste Management
- Wine Industry Technical Conference
- WorldSkills Australia
-
Speeches
-
HILDYARD, Katrine Anne
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- AFL National Women's League
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
- Children in State Care Apology
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Controlled Substances (Nitrous Oxide) Amendment Bill
- Disability Inclusion Bill
- Election Commitments
- Equal Opportunity (Domestic Violence) Amendment Bill
- Fair Trading (Ticket Scalping) Amendment Bill
- Federal Election
-
Female Facilities Program
- Festa Di Madonna Di Montevergine
- Gold Coast Commonwealth Games
- Grange Surf Life Saving Club
- Hackham West Community Centre
- Hawke, Hon. R.j.l.
- Hopgood Theatre
- International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women
- International Women's Day Community Awards
- Joint Committee on the 125th Anniversary of Women's Suffrage
- Kenihan, Mr Q.
- Labour Hire Licensing Repeal Bill
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Limitation of Actions (Child Sexual Abuse) Amendment Bill
- Married Persons (Separate Legal Status) Bill
- Minister for Environment and Water
- Modra, Mr K.
- Motor Vehicles (Offensive Advertising) Amendment Bill
- Multicultural Festivals
- New Zealand Women's Suffrage Anniversary
- Public Transport
- Safe Schools Anti-Bullying Initiative
- Sport and Recreation Facilities
- Sporting Organisations
- Sri Lanka Terrorist Attacks
-
State Budget
- State Economy
- State Liberal Government
- Statutes Amendment (Decriminalisation of Sex Work) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Domestic Violence) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Legalisation of Same Sex Marriage Consequential Amendments) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Rules) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (SACAT) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill
- Supply Bill 2018
- Supply Bill 2019
- Together in the South
- Weatherill, Hon. J.W., Retirement
- Women's Suffrage Anniversary
- World Refugee Day
- World Tourism Day
-
Questions
- Aboriginal Art and Cultures Gallery
- Board Member Appointments
-
Child and Family Support
-
2019-09-11
-
- Dixon, Mr B.
-
Female Facilities Program
-
2018-10-24
-
2018-10-25
- Question Time (14:12)
- Question Time (14:16)
- Question Time (14:17)
- Question Time (14:23)
- Question Time (14:23)
- Question Time (14:24)
- Question Time (14:29)
- Question Time (14:32)
- Question Time (14:37)
- Question Time (14:38)
- Question Time (14:38)
- Question Time (14:44)
- Question Time (14:56)
- Question Time (14:57)
- Question Time (15:03)
- Question Time (15:03)
-
-
Festival of Racing
-
2018-05-30
-
- Gender Equality
- Government Advertising
-
Grant Programs
- Hockey SA
-
Hopgood Theatre
-
Lifesaving World Championships
-
Minister for Recreation, Sport and Racing
-
2018-10-25
-
-
Ministerial Staff
- Multicultural Affairs Expenses and Staffing
- Multicultural Affairs Funding
-
Public Sector Executives
-
2018-11-07
-
-
Racing Industry
-
2019-09-12
-
-
Romaldi, Mr M.
-
2018-07-31
-
2018-08-01
- 2018-10-16
-
- South Australian Multicultural and Ethnic Affairs Commission
-
Sports Funding
-
2018-10-25
-
-
Thoroughbred Racing SA Appointments
- Together SA
-
Speeches
-
HUGHES, Edward Joseph
-
Speeches
- Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: APY Lands Visit
- Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: Report 2017-18
- Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: Review into the Operations of the Aboriginal Lands Trust Act 2013
- Aboriginal Lands Trust Land Disposal
- Address in Reply
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Biosecurity Management
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Coastline Protection
-
Coober Pedy District Council
- Country Cabinet
- Cross-Border Commissioner
- Defence Shipbuilding
- Drought Assistance
- Farm Debt Mediation Bill
- Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Genetically Modified Crops Management (Designated Area) Amendment Bill
-
Giles Electorate
- Giles Electorate Mining Communities
- Hawke, Hon. R.j.l.
- Hydrogen
- Industrial Hemp
-
Infrastructure SA Bill
-
2018-07-03
-
-
Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Landscape South Australia Bill
- Local Government (Administration of Councils) Amendment Bill
- Mining Industry
- Mining Investment
- Minister for Environment and Water
- National Agriculture Day
- National Electricity (South Australia) (Retailer Reliability Obligation) Amendment Bill
- National Farm Safety Week
- National Science Week
- National Volunteer Week
- Organ Donation
- Patient Assistance Transport Scheme
- Public Education
- Public Works Committee: Joy Baluch am Bridge Duplication
- Public Works Committee: Rebuild of the South Australian Dog Fence
- Public Works Committee: South Australian Virtual Power Plant Project
- Regional GP Services
- Regional South Australia
- Renewable Energy Projects
- Roxby Downs Anniversary
- SA Pathology and SA Medical Imaging
- Snapper Fishery Ban
- South Australian Stolen Generations Reparations Scheme
- State Budget
- Summary Offences (Trespass on Primary Production Premises) Amendment Bill
-
Supply Bill 2018
- Supply Bill 2019
- Surf Life Saving South Australia
- Timber Industry
- Voluntary Euthanasia Legislation
- Weatherill, Hon. J.W., Retirement
- Whyalla Hospital
- Women in Agriculture
-
World Environment Day
- World Ranger Day
- World Teachers' Day
-
Questions
-
Forestry Industry
-
2018-09-04
-
- Giant Pine Scale Eradication Program
- Government Advertising
-
Grain Industry
-
2018-11-29
-
-
Grant Programs
-
Mining Industry
-
2018-11-29
-
-
Mining Legislation
-
2018-11-29
-
-
Minister's Recreational Fishing Advisory Council
-
2019-03-21
-
-
Ministerial Staff
-
2018-06-20
-
- Overland Train Service
- Primary Industries and Regions Department
- Public Sector Executives
-
Regional Impact Statements
-
2018-09-20
-
- Regional Roads and Infrastructure Fund
-
South Australian Forestry Council
- South Australian Research and Development Institute
- Timber Production
-
-
Speeches
-
KNOLL, Stephan Karl
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Adelaide Oval
- Appropriation Bill 2019
-
Architectural Practice (Continuing Professional Development) Amendment Bill
-
2019-10-17
-
2019-11-14
-
- Barossa Wine Community
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
- Condous, Mr S.G.
-
Coober Pedy District Council
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Throwing Objects at Vehicles) Amendment Bill
- Cross-Border Commissioner
- Disability Inclusion Bill
- Electoral (Prisoner Voting) Amendment Bill
- Fair Trading (Gift Cards) Amendment Bill
- Flinders University (Remuneration of Council Members) Amendment Bill
-
Infrastructure SA Bill
- 2018-07-04
-
2018-07-05
-
Labour Hire Licensing Repeal Bill
- Land Acquisition (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Local Government (Administration of Councils) Amendment Bill
-
2019-10-31
-
2019-11-13
-
-
Local Government (Rate Oversight) Amendment Bill
-
2018-06-20
-
2018-07-24
-
- Local Government (Ratepayer Protection and Related Measures) Amendment Bill
- Ministerial Statement
- Ministerial Statements
- Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- Planning, Development and Infrastructure (Carparking Requirements) Amendment Bill
- Planning, Development and Infrastructure Act Regulations
- Public Transport
- Public Transport Privatisation
- Public Works Committee: Kroemer's Crossing Roundabout Project
-
Rail Safety National Law (South Australia) (Miscellaneous No 4) Amendment Bill
-
2019-02-14
-
2019-03-21
-
- Retirement Villages
- Road Traffic (Evidentiary Provisions) Amendment Bill
- Select Committee on the Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- South Road
- Southern Expressway
- State Budget
- Statutes Amendment (Decriminalisation of Sex Work) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (South Eastern Freeway Offences) Bill
-
2019-12-05
-
- Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Budget Measures) Bill
- Supply Bill 2019
- Transport Infrastructure
-
Answers
- Adelaide Festival Centre Car Park
-
Adelaide Oval Hotel Development
-
Aluminium Composite Cladding
- Autonomous Vehicle Trial
- Bus Contract
-
Bus Services
-
Bus Services on Demand
- Bus Shelters
- Carpenter Rocks Road
-
Cheltenham Parade Intersection
-
2019-06-18
-
2019-07-23
-
- City Skate Park
- City South Tram Stop
-
Clare Valley Bridges
- Cost of Living
-
Council Assessment Panels
-
2019-03-21
-
- Council Assets
- Council Infrastructure
- Council Members, Code of Conduct
-
Country Road Speed Limits
-
Curtis Road
-
2018-09-04
-
- Curtis Road Intersection
-
Darlington Upgrade Project
- Development Applications
- Development Approval Numbers
-
Development Assessment Pathways
- Dukes Highway Duplication
-
E-Planning System
- Economic and Finance Committee
-
Executive Travel
-
2018-11-27
-
- Eyre Peninsula Rail Network
- Finniss Electorate
- Finniss Electorate Roads
-
Flagstaff Road Upgrade
-
Flinders Link
-
Footy Express
- Fosters and North East Road Intersection
-
Freedom of Information
-
2018-11-28
-
- Freight Productivity
- Glen Osmond Road Intersection
- Glenelg Safety Bollards
-
GlobeLink
-
2019-04-03
- 2019-05-14
-
2019-10-30
-
-
Golden Grove Road
- Government Advertising
- Government Departments
- Government-Leased Buildings
- Goyder Highway
-
Hartley Electorate Road Upgrades
-
Heavy Vehicle Inspection Scheme
-
Heritage Protection
-
HomeStart Finance
-
Horrocks Highway
-
Housing Trust
- Industry 4.0
-
Infrastructure Funding
-
Infrastructure Projects
- International Driverless Vehicle Summit
- Investing Expenditure Projects
- Joy Baluch Bridge
- Kangaroo Island Bus Service
- Kangaroo Island Road Safety Group
-
Kangaroo Island Seaport
- Kangaroo Island Slipway
-
Kaurna Electorate Ministerial Visit
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Keolis Downer
-
2019-07-03
-
2019-11-13
-
- King Electorate Road Upgrades
-
Land Surveyors
- Land Tax
-
Lands Titles Office
- Leigh Creek Futures Report
- Leigh Creek Swimming Pool
-
Local Government Accountability
-
2019-11-12
-
- Local Government Elections
- Local Government Grants Commission
- Local Government Reform
-
Lot Fourteen
- Main South Road
-
Main South Road Duplication
-
Major Projects Conference
- Mary MacKillop
-
Minister for Transport, Infrastructure and Local Government
-
2018-11-29
-
- Ministerial Expenditure
-
Ministerial Staff
- Ministerial Travel
- Mitcham Hills Road Upgrade
- Mobile Phone Charging Stations
- Motor Vehicle Registration
- Mount Gambier Hospital
- Narungga Electorate Road Upgrades
-
North-South Corridor
-
O-Bahn
-
2018-11-07
-
-
O-Bahn Extension
- O-Bahn Tunnel
- O.G. Road Intersection
- Olli Bus
- Outback Communities Authority
-
Overland Train Service
- 2018-11-29
-
2019-02-26
- Paradise Park-and-Ride
-
Park-and-Ride Facilities
-
Park-And-Ride Facilities
-
Passenger Levy
-
Penola Bypass
-
Planning and Design Code
-
Planning and Development Fund
- Planning Variation Regulations
-
Planning, Transport and Infrastructure Department
- Port MacDonnell Breakwater
-
Port Wakefield Overpass
- Privatisation
- Professional Services
- Projects Pipeline Industry Briefing
- Public Sector Executives
-
Public Transport
- Public Transport Contracts
-
Public Transport Fares
-
2019-05-16
-
-
Public Transport Privatisation
-
2019-07-02
-
2019-07-03
-
2019-07-04
-
-
Quad Bikes
-
2018-05-16
- 2018-07-03
-
-
Rail Infrastructure
-
Rate Capping
- Regional Planning
-
Regional Roads
-
Regional Roads and Infrastructure Fund
-
Renewal SA
-
2018-10-23
-
2018-10-24
-
2019-09-12
-
2019-10-15
-
- Road and Rail Freight
- Road Funding
-
Road Network
-
2019-07-23
- 2019-09-12
-
- Road Trains
-
Road Upgrades
- Roadworks Legislation
- School Transport
-
Service SA
-
2018-09-18
-
2018-10-16
- 2018-10-18
-
2018-10-24
-
2018-11-07
-
2019-02-12
- 2019-06-18
-
2019-07-04
- 2019-09-12
-
-
Service SA Modbury
-
Service SA Prospect
-
South Eastern Freeway
- South Road
- South Road Intersection
-
Southern Expressway
-
Speed Limits
- 2018-05-16
-
2018-07-05
-
Springbank Road Intersection
- 2019-03-19
-
2019-05-14
- State Bicycle Fund
- State Development
-
State Planning System
- Strata Titles
-
Strathmont Pool
- Suburban Train Drivers
- Tea Tree Gully Council Area
- Termination Payouts
- Thomas Foods International
- Tonsley Railway Station
-
Traffic Management
- Traffic Management Centre
- Train Network
- Train Services
- Tram Contract
- Tramline Extension
-
Transport Infrastructure
-
Transport Subsidy Scheme
-
2019-03-21
- 2019-10-15
-
- Urban Infill Development
- Vacant Office Accommodation
- Victor Harbor Road
- Victor Harbor Road Intersection
- Waite Electorate Transport Forum
- Womma Road Intersection
-
Speeches
-
KOUTSANTONIS, Anastasious
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Aluminium Composite Cladding
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Attorney-General
-
Australian Craniofacial Unit
- 2018-07-24
-
2018-07-26
- Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute
- Brand South Australia
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Condous, Mr S.G.
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Throwing Objects at Vehicles) Amendment Bill
- Election Commitments
- Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Genetically Modified Crops Management (Designated Area) Amendment Bill
- Goh, Dr T.
- Hawke, Hon. R.j.l.
- Hellenic Presidential Guard
-
Independent Commissioner Against Corruption (Investigation Powers) No 2 Amendment Bill
-
Infrastructure SA Bill
- Keogh Case
- Kurds in Syria
-
Land Acquisition (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Land Tax Forum
-
Matter of Privilege
- Member for Badcoe, Naming
- Member for Light, Naming
- Member for West Torrens, Naming
- Minister for Environment and Water
- Minister for Transport, Infrastructure and Local Government, Minister for Planning
- National Electricity (South Australia) (Retailer Reliability Obligation) Amendment Bill
- National Gas (South Australia) (Capacity Trading and Auctions) Amendment Bill
- Pairing Arrangements
- Parliamentary Privilege
- Petroleum and Geothermal Energy (Ban on Hydraulic Fracturing) Amendment Bill
- Planning, Transport and Infrastructure Department
- Premier and Cabinet Department
- Privileges Committee
- Public Sector Employees
- Public Works Committee: City South Tram Line Replacement Project
- Rail Safety National Law (South Australia) (Miscellaneous No 4) Amendment Bill
-
School Zoning
- Sentencing (Release on Licence) Amendment Bill
- Sessional Orders
-
Sittings and Business
- St George's Day
- Standing and Sessional Orders Suspension
- Standing Orders Committee
-
Standing Orders Suspension
- State Liberal Government
- Statutes Amendment (Mineral Resources) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Binding Rate of Return Instrument) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Rules) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (South Eastern Freeway Offences) Bill
-
Supply Bill 2018
-
Supply Bill 2019
- Tonkin Government
- Weatherill, Hon. J.W., Retirement
-
Questions
-
Adc Global Blockchain Summit
- Adelaide Festival Centre Car Park
-
Adelaide Oval Hotel Development
- Ahlburg, Corey John
-
Aluminium Composite Cladding
- Apprenticeships and Traineeships
-
APY Lands Visit
-
2018-07-26
-
-
Attorney-General
- Auditor-General's Report
-
Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute
-
Australian Leadership Retreat
-
Bailey, Mr C.
-
Brand South Australia
-
Bus Services
-
Bus Services on Demand
-
Child Protection
-
2018-05-29
-
- Climate Change
-
Commissioner for Victims' Rights
- Consultants and Contractors
- Country Road Speed Limits
- Courts Administration Authority
-
Darlington Upgrade Project
- De Domenico, Mr Tony
-
Desalination Plant
-
2019-11-12
- 2019-12-03
-
-
Director of Public Prosecutions
-
2019-04-02
-
- E3Sixty
- Election Commitments
- ElectraNet
-
Electricity Generation
- Electricity Prices
-
Entrepreneurship Advisory Board
-
Exceptional Resource Funding
-
Executive Travel
-
2018-11-27
-
-
Footy Express
-
GlobeLink
-
Goh, Dr T.
- Golden Grove Road
- Government Advertising
-
Government Members, Crossing the Floor
-
2018-11-28
-
- Government Savings Target
-
Grant Programs
-
2018-11-27
- 2019-10-16
-
- Grid Scale Storage Fund
- Housing Trust Rent
-
ICAC Investigation
-
2018-10-24
-
- Infrastructure Funding
- Infrastructure South Australia
- Investing Expenditure Projects
- Joy Baluch Bridge
-
Keogh Case
-
2018-07-04
- Question Time (14:03)
- Question Time (14:07)
- Question Time (14:10)
- Question Time (14:19)
- Question Time (14:27)
- Question Time (14:27)
- Question Time (14:34)
- Question Time (14:35)
- Question Time (14:41)
- Question Time (14:42)
- Question Time (14:42)
- Question Time (14:48)
- Question Time (14:49)
- Question Time (14:51)
- 2018-07-24
-
2018-07-25
-
2018-10-17
- 2018-11-15
-
2019-05-01
-
-
Keolis Downer
-
2019-07-03
- 2019-07-04
-
2019-11-13
-
-
Land Tax
- Lot Fourteen
-
Matter of Privilege, Speaker's Statement
-
McDonald, Ms S.
-
2019-04-02
-
-
Member for Dunstan
-
2018-05-30
-
- Member for King
-
Mining Industry
-
Mining Legislation
- Minister for Environment and Water
- Ministerial Expenditure
-
Ministerial Staff
-
2018-06-20
-
2018-07-03
- 2018-07-24
- 2018-07-31
- 2019-09-12
-
- Ministerial Travel
- Mobile Phone Charging Stations
- Noarlunga Centre Incident
-
North-South Corridor
-
2019-04-03
- 2019-09-12
-
- Operating Expenses
-
Overland Train Service
-
Planning, Transport and Infrastructure Department
-
Port Augusta Power Stations
-
2018-10-18
- 2018-11-15
-
-
Premier and Cabinet Department
-
2018-06-07
-
2018-06-19
-
2019-03-21
-
-
Private Email Accounts
-
2018-07-26
- 2018-09-04
-
-
Private Legal Matters
-
2019-03-19
-
2019-03-21
-
2019-04-02
-
-
Privatisation
-
2019-07-02
-
-
Public Sector Employees
- Public Sector Executives
-
Public Service Employees
-
Public Transport
- 2019-05-14
-
2019-05-15
-
2019-05-16
-
Public Transport Fares
-
2019-05-16
-
-
Public Transport Privatisation
-
2019-07-02
-
2019-07-03
-
2019-07-04
-
- Question Time
-
Rail Infrastructure
-
2019-04-03
-
-
Renewal SA
-
2018-10-16
-
2018-10-17
-
2018-10-23
-
2018-10-24
-
2018-11-13
- 2018-11-15
-
2019-09-12
-
- Road Funding
- Royal Adelaide Hospital
-
Service SA
-
2018-10-24
- 2018-11-07
-
-
Service SA Modbury
-
Service SA Prospect
-
Solar Panels
-
2018-11-29
-
- South Road
-
Southern Expressway
- 2018-06-05
-
2018-06-21
-
Springbank Road Intersection
-
2019-05-14
-
- Stone and Chalk Visit
- Targeted Voluntary Separation Packages
-
Telstra Job Losses
-
2018-06-20
-
-
Traffic Management
- Train Network
- Tram Contract
-
Transport Infrastructure
-
2018-05-09
- 2018-05-29
-
2018-05-30
- 2018-11-06
-
-
United States, Trade and Investment
-
2019-05-02
-
- Vacant Office Accommodation
- Workforce Summary
-
Zou, Ms S.
-
-
Speeches
-
LUETHEN, Paula Maria
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- ANZAC Day Commemoration Services
- Appropriation Bill 2018
- Australian Space Agency
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
- Child Protection
- Children in State Care Apology
- Crime Stoppers SA
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Assaults on Prescribed Emergency Workers) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Child-Like Sex Dolls Prohibition) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Children and Vulnerable Adults) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Dishonest Communication with Children) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Foster Parents and Other Positions of Authority) Amendment Bill
- Defence Shipbuilding
-
Defence Workforce Plan
-
2018-06-20
-
- Disability Advocacy
- Disability Inclusion Bill
- Domestic and Family Violence
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
- Education and Children's Services Bill
- Evidence (Reporting on Sexual Offences) Amendment Bill
- Fair Trading (Ticket Scalping) Amendment Bill
- Foster and Kinship Care
- Golden Grove Football Club
- Golden Grove Road
- Hillbank Community
- Homelessness Week
- Illicit Drug Use
- Industrial Hemp
- International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women
- International Day of People with Disability
- International Midwives and Nurses Days
- Joint Committee on the 125th Anniversary of Women's Suffrage
- Junior Parliament
-
King Electorate
- King Electorate Awards
- King Electorate Councils
- King Electorate Schools
-
King Electorate Sporting Clubs
- Landscape South Australia Bill
- Limitation of Actions (Child Sexual Abuse) Amendment Bill
- Local Government (Rate Oversight) Amendment Bill
- Lyell McEwin Hospital
- Members' Behaviour
- Modbury Hospital
- Motor Neurone Disease
- Murray-Darling Basin Plan
-
National Police Remembrance Day
- National Redress Scheme for Institutional Child Sexual Abuse (Commonwealth Powers) Bill
- Neighbourhood Watch
- Office for the Ageing (Adult Safeguarding) Amendment Bill
- One Tree Hill Friendship Club
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
- Public Health System
- Public Works Committee: Golden Grove Road Upgrade
- Public Works Committee: Lyell McEwin Hospital Expansion
- Sentencing (Suspended and Community Based Custodial Sentences) Amendment Bill
- Skilling South Australia
- Social Development Committee
- South Australian Public Health (Early Childhood Services and Immunisation) Amendment Bill
- St Patrick's Technical College
- Standing Orders Committee
- Statutes Amendment (Child Exploitation and Encrypted Material) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Domestic Violence) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Binding Rate of Return Instrument) Bill
- STEM Education
- Supply Bill 2018
- Surrogacy Bill
- Tea Tree Gully Volleyball Association
- Teachers Registration and Standards (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Women's Suffrage Anniversary
- World Environment Day
- World Ranger Day
- Wright Electorate Office
-
Questions
- Almond Industry
- Ask for Angela Scheme
- Australian Space Agency
- Biosecurity Management
- Bus Contract
- Business Confidence
- Canine Court Companion
-
Child Protection
- Child Protection Regional Visits
- Community Transition and Learning Centre
- Copper Mining
- Defence Shipbuilding
-
Domestic Violence Disclosure Scheme
- Economic Advisory Council
- Election Commitments
-
Electricity Interconnector
- Employment Figures
-
Energy Policy
- Energy Prices
- Extended Supervision Laws
- Firefighters, Interstate Deployment
- Foster Care
- Friends of National Parks
-
Golden Grove Road
- Grid Scale Storage Fund
- Health and Hospital Care
- Hybrid World Adelaide
- Infrastructure Projects
- Job Creation
- King Electorate Road Upgrades
- King Electorate Sports Facilities
-
Lot Fourteen
- National Park Rangers
-
National Volunteer Week
- Northern Adelaide Irrigation Scheme
-
Northern Adelaide Plains
- O.G. Road Intersection
- Park-And-Ride Facilities
- Premier's Climate Change Council
- Project Zero
-
Reservoirs
- Royal Adelaide Hospital Site Redevelopment
- Schools with Internet Fibre Technology Program
- Skills Training
- South Australian Districts Netball Association
- South Australian Sport Hall of Fame
- Sports Vouchers
- Tea Tree Gully Toy Library
- Teachers Dispute
-
Transport Infrastructure
- Vocational Education and Training
-
Speeches
-
MALINAUSKAS, Peter Bryden
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Appropriation Bill 2018
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Australian Space Agency
- Bass, Mr Rodney Piers (Sam)
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
- Child Protection
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Condous, Mr S.G.
- Cornwall, Dr J.R.
- Defence Shipbuilding
- Defence Workforce Plan
- Federal Election
- Genetically Modified Crops Management (Designated Area) Amendment Bill
- Giles, Mr B.L.
- Hawke, Hon. R.j.l.
- Kenihan, Mr Q.
- Labour Hire Licensing Repeal Bill
- Land Tax
-
Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Livestock Industry
- Member for Lee, Naming
- Meningococcal B Strain Vaccination
- Miller, Mr T.
- Minister for Environment and Water
- Minister for Police
- New Zealand Volcano Eruption
- New Zealand Women's Suffrage Anniversary
- Parbo, Sir Arvi
- Public Transport Privatisation
- Remembrance Day
- Sentencing (Home Detention) Amendment Bill
-
Sentencing (Release on Licence) Amendment Bill
-
2018-05-29
-
- Sittings and Business
- Speaker, Election
- Sri Lanka Terrorist Attacks
-
Standing and Sessional Orders Suspension
-
State Liberal Government
- Statutes Amendment (Mineral Resources) Bill
- Stolen Generations Reparations Scheme Report
- Supply Bill 2018
-
Supply Bill 2019
-
Valedictories
- Wages Growth
- Weatherill, Hon. J.W., Retirement
-
Questions
- Aboriginal Art and Cultures Gallery
- Aboriginal Employment
- Aboriginal Heritage Act
- Aboriginal Heritage Team
-
Adelaide Remand Centre
-
Aluminium Composite Cladding
-
Ambulance Ramping
-
2019-02-27
-
2019-10-17
-
-
Attorney-General
-
Auditor-General's Report
-
2019-02-14
-
-
Australian Craniofacial Unit
-
Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute
- Australian Submarine Corporation Jobs
-
Becker Helicopters
-
Brand South Australia
- Budget Papers
-
Business Confidence
- Cabinet Solidarity
- Career Employment Services Funding
- Child Protection
-
City Deal Funding
-
2019-04-03
-
- Commercial Operations Trust
-
Commissioner for Victims' Rights
- Consultancy Fees
-
Correctional Services Monitoring Device Outage
-
2018-11-06
- 2018-12-06
-
-
Country Fire Service
-
Crime Stoppers SA
-
2018-06-21
-
- Defence SA
-
Defence Shipbuilding
-
2018-10-16
-
-
Designated Area Migration Agreements
- Eagleson Mr W.
-
Election Commitments
-
2018-05-03
-
- Emergency Services
-
Employment Figures
-
2018-05-03
-
2019-03-19
-
2019-05-16
-
- Federal Budget
-
Federal Election
-
2019-04-30
-
- Federal Liberal Government
-
Flinders Medical Centre Food Contamination
-
GlobeLink
-
2019-04-03
-
-
Goods and Services Tax
- Government Advertising
-
Government Members, Crossing the Floor
-
2018-11-28
-
- Government Policies
-
Grain Industry
-
2018-11-29
-
- Henley Beach Police Station
-
Hibbert Review
-
2019-02-26
-
-
Hospital Beds
- Hospital Funding
-
Hospital Overcrowding
-
2018-09-18
-
- Hospital Services
-
Housing Trust Rent
-
Humphrys, Mr C.C.
- I Choose SA
-
Independent Commissioner Against Corruption
- Infrastructure Projects
- Infrastructure South Australia
-
Job Creation
-
2019-09-11
- 2019-11-14
-
- Joyce Review
-
Keogh Case
-
KordaMentha
-
Land Tax
-
2019-07-23
-
2019-09-10
-
2019-09-24
- 2019-09-25
-
2019-09-26
-
2019-10-29
-
2019-10-30
-
2019-10-31
-
-
Land Tax Forum
-
Liberal Party, Sexual Assault Allegations
- Lot Fourteen
-
McGowan, Dr C.
-
Mental Health Services
- Metropolitan Fire Service
-
Mining Industry
-
2018-11-28
-
- Mining Legislation
-
Minister for Police
-
Minister's Recreational Fishing Advisory Council
- Ministerial Accountability
- Ministerial Code of Conduct
- Ministerial Responsibilities
- Ministerial Staff
- Motor Accident Commission
-
Motor Accident Commission Marketing Budget
-
2019-04-04
-
- Murray-Darling Basin Ministerial Council
-
Murray-Darling Basin Plan
-
Murray-Darling Basin Royal Commission
- New Foundations Program
-
Noarlunga Centre Incident
-
2018-11-14
-
-
North-South Corridor
-
Nurses Dispute
-
2018-10-16
-
-
Parliamentary Committees
-
2019-11-26
-
- Parliamentary Sitting Program
-
Police Air Wing
-
Police and Community Engagement Forums
-
Police Commissioner
-
Police Commissioner Protocol
- Police Media Conference
-
Police Protection Vests
-
Police Station Opening Hours
-
2018-05-08
-
2018-05-15
-
2018-05-16
-
2018-05-29
-
2018-07-03
-
2018-07-05
-
-
Police, Rewards for Information
-
Population Growth
-
2018-05-03
-
- Premier Marshall
-
Prison Staff Drug and Alcohol Testing
-
2018-05-30
-
-
Private Email Accounts
-
2018-08-02
-
-
Privatisation
- Public Sector Executives
- Public Sector, Aboriginal Employment
-
Public Transport
-
Public Transport Privatisation
- Question Time
- Rail Commissioner
- Regional Roads
- Residential Care Facility Visits
-
Romaldi, Mr M.
-
SA Ambulance Service
-
SA Health
-
SA Health, ICAC Report
-
2019-12-03
-
2019-12-04
-
2019-12-12
-
-
SA Pathology
-
SA Water
-
Schools, Random Drug Searches
-
2018-05-08
-
2018-05-15
-
-
Sentencing Act Reform
-
Service SA
-
Service SA Prospect
-
Shop Trading Hours
-
South Australian Multicultural and Ethnic Affairs Commission
-
South Australian Tourism Commission
-
Southern Expressway
-
State Budget
-
State Budget Advertising Campaign
-
2019-06-20
- Question Time (14:05)
- Question Time (14:06)
- Question Time (14:07)
- Question Time (14:18)
- Question Time (14:18)
- Question Time (14:24)
- Question Time (14:25)
- Question Time (14:26)
- Question Time (14:26)
- Question Time (14:31)
- Question Time (14:33)
- Question Time (14:37)
- Question Time (14:37)
- Question Time (14:38)
-
-
State Debt
- State Economy
- State Liberal Cabinet
-
State Liberal Government
- 2018-11-28
-
2019-12-05
- Stolen Generation Community Reparations Funds
-
Submarine Program
- Techport Common User Facility
-
Telstra Job Losses
-
Termination Payouts
-
Thomas Foods International
-
Train Services
-
Tramline Extension
-
Transport Infrastructure
-
Unemployment Figures
- Veterans Employment Program
-
Veterans SA
- Wages Growth
-
Speeches
-
MARSHALL, Steven Spence
-
Speeches
- Aboriginal Lands Trust Land Disposal
- Aboriginal Veterans Commemorative Service
- Appropriation Bill 2018
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Australian Space Agency
- Bass, Mr Rodney Piers (Sam)
- Battle of Hamel
- Battles for Fire Support Bases Coral and Balmoral Anniversary
-
Budget Papers
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
- Child Protection
-
Christchurch Mosques Attack
-
2019-03-19
-
- Condous, Mr S.G.
- Corey, Mr W.T.
- Cornwall, Dr J.R.
- Electoral (Prisoner Voting) Amendment Bill
- Electricity Costs
- Estimates Committee A
- Federal Budget
- Ford, Mr F.
- Giles, Mr B.L.
- Harris, Dr R.
- Hawke, Hon. R.j.l.
- Infrastructure SA Bill
- Kenihan, Mr Q.
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Mcdowell, Mr J., Correspondence
- Minister for Environment and Water
-
Ministerial Statement
- Ministerial Statements
- Motor Vehicle Registry
-
Murray-Darling Basin Plan
-
Murray-Darling Basin Royal Commission
- New Zealand Volcano Eruption
- Nyrstar
- Parbo, Sir Arvi
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
-
Remembrance Day
-
2018-11-08
-
- Skilling Australians Fund
-
South Australian Productivity Commission Bill
-
2018-06-07
-
2018-06-19
-
- South Australian Stolen Generations Reparations Scheme
- Speaker, Election
- Sri Lanka Terrorist Attacks
-
Standing Orders Suspension
- State Budget
- State Productivity Commission and Infrastructure South Australia
- Stolen Generations Reparations Scheme Report
- Supply Bill 2018
- Supply Bill 2019
- Tredrea, Mr J.
-
Valedictories
- Visiting Delegation from Brittany
- Water Pricing Inquiry
- Weatherill, Hon. J.W., Retirement
- Women's Suffrage Anniversary
-
Answers
-
Aboriginal Art and Cultures Gallery
- Aboriginal Employment
- Aboriginal Heritage Act
- Aboriginal Heritage Team
-
Adc Global Blockchain Summit
- Adelaide City Deal
- Adelaide Fringe
-
Adelaide Oval Hotel Development
-
2018-12-04
-
2018-12-06
- Question Time (14:25)
- Question Time (14:25)
- Question Time (14:27)
- Question Time (14:28)
- Question Time (14:33)
- Question Time (14:34)
- Question Time (14:34)
- Question Time (14:38)
- Question Time (14:39)
- Question Time (14:45)
- Question Time (14:45)
- Question Time (14:51)
- Question Time (14:53)
- Question Time (14:54)
- Question Time (15:00)
- Question Time (15:03)
- 2019-02-26
-
- Ahlburg, Corey John
-
Ambulance Ramping
- APY Lands
-
APY Lands Visit
-
2018-07-24
-
2018-07-26
-
- Arts SA
-
Attorney-General
- Auditor-General Cabinet Presentation
- Auditor-General Controls Opinion
-
Auditor-General's Report
- Australasian Soldiers Dardanelles Cenotaph
-
Australian Craniofacial Unit
-
2018-07-05
-
2018-07-24
- 2018-07-25
-
2018-07-26
-
2018-09-04
-
-
Australian Housing and Urban Research Institute
-
Australian Leadership Retreat
-
Australian Space Agency
- Australian Submarine Corporation Jobs
-
Bakewell, Jonathan
- Barngarla Native Title Determination
-
Becker Helicopters
- Board Member Appointments
-
Brand South Australia
- Brittany Sister-State Relationship
-
Budget Carryovers
-
2019-09-11
-
-
Budget Papers
- Budget Papers, Budget Paper 3
- Building Approval Values
-
Business Confidence
-
Cabinet Solidarity
-
2018-10-18
-
-
Capital Works Projects
-
2019-06-06
-
- Cardiology Services
- Carillion Briefing
- Catherine House
-
Central Adelaide Local Health Network
- Central Adelaide Local Health Network Whistleblower Hotline
-
China and Japan Country Directors
-
2019-05-01
-
- China Trade Mission
-
City Deal Funding
-
2019-04-03
- 2019-11-14
-
-
Commercial Operations Trust
-
2018-12-06
-
-
Commissioner for Victims' Rights
- Consultancy Fees
-
Consultants and Contractors
-
2018-11-06
- 2019-03-20
- 2019-09-11
-
- Correctional Services Monitoring Device Outage
-
Cost of Living
- Cost Reductions
- Council on Federal Financial Relations
- Defence Industries
- Defence SA
-
Defence Shipbuilding
-
Desalination Plant
-
Designated Area Migration Agreements
-
2019-03-21
-
2019-05-02
- Question Time (14:13)
- Question Time (14:14)
- Question Time (14:24)
- Question Time (14:26)
- Question Time (14:28)
- Question Time (14:36)
- Question Time (14:37)
- Question Time (14:37)
- Question Time (14:38)
- Question Time (14:44)
- Question Time (14:46)
- Question Time (14:52)
- Question Time (14:52)
- Question Time (14:53)
- 2019-07-04
-
- E3Sixty
- Eagleson Mr W.
- Economic Advisory Council
- Economic and Business Growth Fund
- Economic Investment
-
Election Commitments
-
Elective Surgery
-
2019-02-27
- 2019-06-04
-
-
Emergency Departments
-
2018-11-07
-
-
Emergency Services Levy
-
Employment Figures
-
Euronaval
-
Ex Gratia Payments
- Export Accelerator Grants
- Export Performance
- Family Businesses
- Federal Budget
-
Federal Election
-
2019-04-30
- 2019-06-04
-
-
Federal Liberal Government
- Fixed and Unit Trusts
- Flinders Medical Centre Food Contamination
-
Funds SA
- Future Frigate Program
-
Future Jobs Fund Program
- 2018-10-16
-
2019-05-01
-
GlobeLink
-
Goh, Dr T.
-
Goods and Services Tax
-
2018-06-05
- 2018-07-04
-
2018-07-05
-
2018-10-17
-
-
Government Advertising
- Government Applied Models
-
Government Debt
-
2019-11-28
-
-
Government Expenditure
-
2019-06-06
-
- Government Funding
-
Government Interest Costs
- Government Payments and Transfers
- Government Policies
- Government Programs
-
Government Travel Services
-
Governor of South Australia
-
Grandparents for Grandchildren SA
-
Grant Programs
-
2018-11-13
-
2018-11-27
-
2019-10-17
-
- Greaton and Marriott International Partnership
-
Hampstead Rehabilitation Centre
-
Health and Hospital Care
-
Health Budget
-
2019-06-20
-
-
Helloworld Travel
-
Hibbert Review
- HomeStart Finance
-
Hospital Beds
-
2018-11-27
- 2019-02-26
- 2019-02-27
-
2019-10-16
- Question Time (14:07)
- Question Time (14:08)
- Question Time (14:09)
- Question Time (14:15)
- Question Time (14:18)
- Question Time (14:19)
- Question Time (14:26)
- Question Time (14:27)
- Question Time (14:29)
- Question Time (14:37)
- Question Time (14:37)
- Question Time (14:38)
- Question Time (14:48)
- Question Time (14:49)
- Question Time (14:51)
-
- Hospital Funding
-
Hospital Overcrowding
-
2018-09-18
-
- Hospital Services
- Hospitals, Revenue
-
Housing Industry
-
2019-03-19
-
- Housing Trust
-
Housing Trust Rent
- Hydrotherapy Services
- I Choose SA
-
Independent Commissioner Against Corruption
-
Indigenous Health Services
-
2018-09-04
- 2018-10-16
-
- Industry Assistance
-
Infrastructure Projects
- 2018-10-16
-
2019-06-19
-
Infrastructure South Australia
-
Investment Attraction South Australia
- Job Accelerator Grants
-
Job Creation
- Joyce Review
-
Kangaroo Island Commissioner
-
2018-11-08
-
- Kangaroo Island Group Grants
-
Kangaroo Island Ministerial Visit
-
2019-07-04
-
-
Kaurna Electorate Ministerial Visit
- Keolis Downer
-
KordaMentha
-
2018-11-07
-
2018-11-08
-
2018-12-05
- 2018-12-06
-
2019-02-14
- 2019-03-19
- 2019-10-16
-
-
KordaMentha Report
-
Land Tax
- 2018-05-16
-
2019-06-19
-
2019-07-23
- Question Time (14:08)
- Question Time (14:09)
- Question Time (14:10)
- Question Time (14:15)
- Question Time (14:15)
- Question Time (14:17)
- Question Time (14:19)
- Question Time (14:25)
- Question Time (14:25)
- Question Time (14:27)
- Question Time (14:32)
- Question Time (14:34)
- Question Time (14:39)
- Question Time (14:39)
- Question Time (14:50)
- Question Time (14:51)
- Question Time (14:52)
-
2019-07-31
-
2019-08-01
-
2019-09-10
- Question Time (14:12)
- Question Time (14:15)
- Question Time (14:19)
- Question Time (14:26)
- Question Time (14:28)
- Question Time (14:29)
- Question Time (14:36)
- Question Time (14:41)
- Question Time (14:48)
- Question Time (14:49)
- Question Time (14:49)
- Question Time (14:55)
- Question Time (14:55)
- Question Time (14:57)
- Question Time (15:03)
- Question Time (15:07)
-
2019-09-12
- Question Time (14:18)
- Question Time (14:20)
- Question Time (14:23)
- Question Time (14:28)
- Question Time (14:29)
- Question Time (14:31)
- Question Time (14:38)
- Question Time (14:43)
- Question Time (14:50)
- Question Time (14:52)
- Question Time (14:54)
- Question Time (15:02)
- Question Time (15:04)
- Question Time (15:04)
-
2019-09-24
-
2019-09-25
-
2019-09-26
-
2019-10-29
- Question Time (14:11)
- Question Time (14:16)
- Question Time (14:17)
- Question Time (14:26)
- Question Time (14:28)
- Question Time (14:37)
- Question Time (14:45)
- Question Time (14:46)
- Question Time (14:55)
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
-
2019-10-30
-
2019-10-31
-
2019-11-12
-
2019-11-28
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- 2019-12-12
-
Land Tax Forum
-
Liberal Party, Sexual Assault Allegations
-
Lot Fourteen
- Lucas, Hon. R.I.
- Machinery of Government Changes
-
McGowan, Dr C.
-
2019-11-14
- Question Time (14:17)
- Question Time (14:18)
- Question Time (14:18)
- Question Time (14:19)
- Question Time (14:25)
- Question Time (14:26)
- Question Time (14:28)
- Question Time (14:33)
- Question Time (14:33)
- Question Time (14:34)
- Question Time (14:41)
- Question Time (14:42)
- Question Time (14:43)
- Question Time (14:44)
- Question Time (14:49)
- Question Time (14:50)
- Question Time (14:50)
-
2019-11-26
- Question Time (14:06)
- Question Time (14:07)
- Question Time (14:12)
- Question Time (14:13)
- Question Time (14:15)
- Question Time (14:19)
- Question Time (14:20)
- Question Time (14:20)
- Question Time (14:26)
- Question Time (14:27)
- Question Time (14:27)
- Question Time (14:28)
- Question Time (14:33)
- Question Time (14:34)
-
2019-11-27
- Question Time (14:23)
- Question Time (14:23)
- Question Time (14:25)
- Question Time (14:31)
- Question Time (14:32)
- Question Time (14:32)
- Question Time (14:37)
- Question Time (14:38)
- Question Time (14:38)
- Question Time (14:42)
- Question Time (14:50)
- Question Time (14:50)
- Question Time (14:58)
- Question Time (14:59)
- Question Time (14:59)
-
2019-11-28
-
2019-12-03
-
2019-12-05
-
- Member for Dunstan
- Member's Remarks
-
Mental Health Services
-
Mining Industry
-
2018-11-28
-
- Mining Legislation
- Minister for Environment and Water
- Minister for Human Services, Shares
- Minister for Police
-
Minister's Recreational Fishing Advisory Council
- Ministerial Accountability
- Ministerial Code of Conduct
-
Ministerial Expenditure
-
Ministerial Staff
-
Ministers' Interests
-
2019-07-31
-
2019-08-01
-
- Mitzevich, Mr Nick
-
Modbury Hospital
-
Motor Accident Commission
-
2019-10-29
-
-
Mount Gambier Fringe Festival
- Multicultural Affairs Expenses and Staffing
- Multicultural Affairs Funding
- Murray-Darling Basin
- Murray-Darling Basin Ministerial Council
-
Murray-Darling Basin Plan
-
Murray-Darling Basin Royal Commission
-
National Reconciliation Week
-
2018-05-29
- 2018-07-03
-
- National Wine Tourism Campaign
-
Newstart Allowance
-
2018-08-02
-
- North-South Corridor
-
Nurses Dispute
-
2018-10-16
-
-
Operating Budgets
-
2018-09-05
-
-
Parliamentary Committees
-
2019-11-26
-
-
Payroll Tax
-
Pearson, Mr R.
- Police Commissioner
-
Police Commissioner Protocol
-
Population Growth
-
2018-05-03
- 2019-03-20
-
-
Premier and Cabinet Department
-
2018-06-07
-
2018-06-19
-
2018-07-26
-
2018-09-04
-
2019-03-19
- 2019-03-21
- 2019-09-11
-
-
Premier Marshall
-
Premier's Expenditure
-
Private Email Accounts
-
2018-07-26
-
2018-07-31
-
2018-08-02
- 2018-09-04
-
- Private Hospital Beds
-
Privatisation
- Program and Initiative Funding
- Program Funding
-
Public Sector Employees
-
Public Sector Executives
- Public Sector Expenditure
-
Public Sector, Aboriginal Employment
-
Public Service Employees
-
2019-09-11
-
-
Public Transport
-
Public Transport Privatisation
- Rail Commissioner
- Reconciliation Action Plan
- Regional Roads
-
Regional South Australia
-
Register of Lobbyists
- Renewal SA
-
Repatriation General Hospital
- Residential Care Facility Visits
-
Residential Property Transactions
-
Return to Work Case Management
-
RevenueSA
- Roads of Strategic Importance
-
Romaldi, Mr M.
-
2018-07-31
-
2018-08-01
- 2018-10-16
-
- Royal Adelaide Hospital
-
Royal Adelaide Hospital Blackout
- Royal Adelaide Hospital Car Park
-
Royal Adelaide Hospital Site Redevelopment
-
SA Ambulance Service
-
SA Health
-
2018-06-19
- 2018-11-08
- 2018-11-27
-
2019-10-16
- 2019-10-17
-
2019-11-14
-
2019-12-03
-
2019-12-05
-
2019-12-12
-
-
SA Health, ICAC Report
- 2019-12-03
-
2019-12-04
-
2019-12-05
-
2019-12-12
-
SA Pathology
-
SA Water
- Salisbury, Mr S.
- Schools, Random Drug Searches
-
Service SA
-
Shanghai and Tokyo Trade Offices
-
2019-05-01
-
- Shanghai Business and Investment Hub
- Shanghai Trade Office
-
Shop Trading Hours
- 2018-05-09
- 2018-05-31
-
2018-06-06
-
2019-05-15
- Skills Training
- SmartSat CRC
- South Australian Government Financing Authority
-
South Australian Multicultural and Ethnic Affairs Commission
-
South Australian Tourism Commission
- Southern Expressway
- Space Forum
-
St Margaret's Hospital
- State and Federal Liberal Governments
-
State Budget
-
2018-09-05
-
2018-09-06
- 2018-09-18
-
2018-10-18
- 2018-11-06
-
2019-03-19
-
2019-07-03
-
2019-07-31
-
-
State Budget Advertising Campaign
-
2019-06-20
- Question Time (14:05)
- Question Time (14:06)
- Question Time (14:08)
- Question Time (14:08)
- Question Time (14:16)
- Question Time (14:18)
- Question Time (14:18)
- Question Time (14:24)
- Question Time (14:25)
- Question Time (14:26)
- Question Time (14:26)
- Question Time (14:31)
- Question Time (14:33)
- Question Time (14:37)
- Question Time (14:38)
- Question Time (14:38)
- Question Time (14:43)
-
-
State Debt
-
2018-09-06
- 2019-03-19
-
2019-05-02
-
2019-06-19
-
-
State Economy
- State Government Agenda
- State Government Services
- State Liberal Cabinet
-
State Liberal Government
-
State Opera South Australia
-
2019-07-04
-
- State Productivity Commission
- Stolen Generation Community Reparations Funds
- Strawberry Industry
-
Submarine Program
-
Super SA
- Superannuation Funds
-
Targeted Voluntary Separation Packages
- 2019-03-19
-
2019-04-30
-
2019-09-24
- Tasting Australia
- Tax Incentives
- Techport Common User Facility
-
Telstra Job Losses
-
Termination Payouts
- Tourism
-
Tourism Advertising
-
Trade Missions
-
Trade, Tourism and Investment Department
-
Train Services
-
Tramline Extension
-
2018-07-24
-
2018-11-08
-
-
Treasury and Finance Department
- 2018-09-05
-
2018-10-16
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- 2019-03-19
-
2019-03-20
-
2019-04-02
-
2019-04-04
- 2019-05-14
- 2019-06-04
-
Unemployment Figures
-
2018-05-03
- 2018-05-10
- 2018-07-24
-
2019-03-19
- 2019-05-16
- 2019-09-11
-
2019-09-25
-
2019-11-14
-
- United States, Cybersecurity
-
United States, Trade and Investment
-
Veterans Employment Program
- 2019-09-11
-
2019-10-15
- Veterans Organisations
-
Veterans SA
-
Veterans Services
-
2019-10-15
-
-
Veterans, Gold Card Holders
-
2019-10-15
- 2019-10-30
-
- Volunteer Screening Fees
- Wages Growth
-
Women's and Children's Hospital
- Worker Transitioning
-
Zou, Ms S.
-
-
Speeches
-
MCBRIDE, Philip Nicholas
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Biosecurity Management
- Crown Land Management (Section 78b Leases) Amendment Bill
- Defence Shipbuilding
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
- Electoral (Prisoner Voting) Amendment Bill
- Environment, Resources and Development Committee: Inquiry into Heritage Reform
- Evidence (Journalists) Amendment Bill
- Fair Trading (Ticket Scalping) Amendment Bill
- Farm Debt Mediation Bill
-
Genetically Modified Crops Management (Designated Area) Amendment Bill
-
2019-12-03
-
- Hawke, Hon. R.j.l.
- Housing SA
- Johnson, Mr B.R.
- Labour Hire Licensing Repeal Bill
- Landscape South Australia Bill
- Late Payment of Government Debts (Interest) (Automatic Payment of Interest) Amendment Bill
- Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- Naracoorte World Heritage Festival and Run
- Natural Resources Management Committee: Management of Overabundant and Pest Species
- Office for the Ageing (Adult Safeguarding) Amendment Bill
- Organ Donation
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
- Petroleum and Geothermal Energy (Ban on Hydraulic Fracturing) Amendment Bill
- Public Works Committee: Penola Northern Bypass
- Public Works Committee: Rebuild of the South Australian Dog Fence
- Rail Safety National Law (South Australia) (Miscellaneous No 4) Amendment Bill
- Regional Economy
- Statutes Amendment (Liquor Licensing) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Mineral Resources) Bill
- TAFE SA Reviews
- Timber Industry
- Triple J's One Night Stand
- World Health Day
- World Micro, Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises Day
-
Questions
- Active Club Program
- ANZAC Spirit School Prize
- Apprenticeships and Traineeships
- Coast Protection Board
- Coorong Summit
- Counterterrorism
- Crop and Pasture Report
- Dog Fence
- Employment Figures
- Energy Policy
- Environment Protection Authority Dredging Fees
- Family Businesses
- Federal Election
- Fishing Sector Compliance
-
Forestry Industry
- Genetically Modified Crops Moratorium
- Goods and Services Tax
- Great Wine Capitals
- Home Battery Scheme
- Industrial Hemp
- Mobile Phone Blackspots
-
Natural Resources Management
- Penola Bypass
-
Regional Growth Fund
- Regional Roads
-
Regional South Australia
- Road Upgrades
- School Internet Service
- Screen Makers Conference
- Skills Training
- Sport and Recreation
- Sports Facilities
- State Productivity Commission
- TAFE SA
-
Vocational Education and Training
-
Speeches
-
MICHAELS, Andrea
-
Speeches
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Foster Parents and Other Positions of Authority) Amendment Bill
- Geneva Conventions 70th Anniversary
- Kilburn Football and Cricket Club
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- National Volunteer Week
- Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill
- Supply Bill 2019
-
Questions
- Catherine House
- Mental Health Services
-
Public Service Employees
-
2019-09-11
-
- Service SA
- Service SA Prospect
-
Speeches
-
MULLIGHAN, Stephen Campbell
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Adelaide Oval
- Adelaide Oval Hotel Development
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
-
Appropriation Bill 2019
-
2019-07-02
- 2019-07-31
-
- Australian Craniofacial Unit
- Business Confidence
- Children in State Care Apology
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
-
Construction Industry Training Fund (Board) Amendment Bill
-
2018-11-06
-
- Country Cabinet
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Assaults on Prescribed Emergency Workers) Amendment Bill
- Drug-Related Crime
- Economic and Finance Committee: Annual Report 2017-18
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2019-20
- Economic and Finance Committee: Investment Attraction Policies
- Fair Trading (Gift Cards) Amendment Bill
- Gambling Administration Bill
-
Grange Surf Life Saving Club
-
2018-07-04
-
- Hawke, Hon. R.j.l.
-
Labour Hire Licensing Repeal Bill
- Land Tax
-
Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Late Payment of Government Debts (Interest) (Automatic Payment of Interest) Amendment Bill
- Legislation (Fees) Bill
- Lotteries Bill
-
Matter of Privilege
- Member for Hurtle Vale, Naming
- Member for Lee, Naming
- Minister for Environment and Water
- Modra, Mr K.
- Motor Vehicles (Compulsory Third Party Insurance) Amendment Bill
- Online Gambling
- Parliamentary Sitting Program
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
- Port Adelaide Football Club Game Day Village
- Privileges Committee
- Public Finance and Audit (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Public Interest Disclosure Bill
- Public Works Committee: Memorial Drive Centre Court Development
- Public Works Committee: Port Road Drainage Project
- Public Works Committee: Port Road, West Lakes Boulevard and Cheltenham Parade Intersection Upgrade
- Question Time
- Questions on Notice
- Residential Land Subdivisions
- Retail and Commercial Leases (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Sentencing (Release on Licence) Amendment Bill
-
Sentencing (Suspended and Community Based Custodial Sentences) Amendment Bill
-
2019-02-26
-
- South Australian Productivity Commission Bill
- Speaker's Ruling
- Speaker's Ruling, Dissent
- Standing Orders Committee
-
State Budget
-
2019-05-01
- 2019-06-20
-
- State Liberal Government
- Statutes Amendment (Budget Measures) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Decriminalisation of Sex Work) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Gambling Regulation) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill
- 2019-05-02
-
2019-05-14
- Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Budget Measures) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Simplify) Bill
-
Supply Bill 2018
-
Supply Bill 2019
-
2019-04-30
- 2019-05-15
-
- Supreme Court (Court of Appeal) Amendment Bill
- Surrogacy Bill
- Tonkin Government
- Transport Infrastructure
- Walkerville YMCA
- Weatherill, Hon. J.W., Retirement
- World Health Day
-
Questions
-
Aboriginal Art and Cultures Gallery
- Adelaide City Deal
-
Adelaide Oval Hotel Development
-
2018-11-28
- 2018-11-29
-
2018-12-06
- Question Time (14:24)
- Question Time (14:25)
- Question Time (14:26)
- Question Time (14:27)
- Question Time (14:33)
- Question Time (14:33)
- Question Time (14:34)
- Question Time (14:38)
- Question Time (14:39)
- Question Time (14:45)
- Question Time (14:45)
- Question Time (14:51)
- Question Time (14:53)
- Question Time (14:54)
- Question Time (14:59)
- Question Time (15:00)
- Question Time (15:03)
- 2019-02-26
-
- Attorney-General
- Auditor-General Cabinet Presentation
- Auditor-General Controls Opinion
- Auditor-General's Report
-
Australian Leadership Retreat
-
Budget Carryovers
-
2019-09-11
-
- Budget Contingency Provisions
-
Budget Papers
- Budget Papers, Budget Paper 3
- Building Approval Values
-
Business Confidence
- Cabinet Solidarity
-
Capital Works Projects
-
2019-06-06
-
- Carillion Briefing
- Commercial and Economics Funding
- Commercial Operations Trust
-
Consultants and Contractors
-
Conveyance Duty Revenue
- Correctional Facilities
-
Correctional Services Department
-
2018-11-06
-
- Council on Federal Financial Relations
-
Desalination Plant
-
2019-11-28
-
-
Designated Area Migration Agreements
-
Emergency Services Levy
-
2018-05-15
-
- Energy Policy
-
Ex Gratia Payments
- Fixed and Unit Trusts
-
Fleet Vehicles
-
2018-11-06
-
2019-09-11
-
- Footy Express
-
Forensic Science SA
-
2019-11-28
-
-
Funds SA
-
Future Jobs Fund Program
- 2018-10-16
-
2019-05-01
- Glenthorne Farm
-
Goh, Dr T.
-
Goods and Services Tax
-
Government Advertising
- Government Applied Models
-
Government Contracts
-
Government Debt
-
2019-11-28
-
- Government Departments
-
Government Expenditure
-
2019-06-06
-
- Government Funding
-
Government Interest Costs
- Government Payments and Transfers
- Government Policies
-
Government Programs
- Government Savings Target
-
Government Travel Services
- Government-Leased Buildings
-
Governor of South Australia
-
Grant Programs
-
2018-12-04
-
-
Grants SA
-
2019-10-15
-
- Green Industry Fund
-
Handley, Mr N.
-
2018-11-27
-
2018-11-28
-
-
Helloworld Travel
- HomeStart Finance
-
Housing Industry
-
2019-03-19
-
- Housing Trust
- Housing Trust Rents
- Industry Assistance
- Infrastructure Funding
-
Infrastructure Projects
- Insurance Claims, Average Duration
-
Investing Expenditure Projects
- Job Accelerator Grants
- Job Creation
- Keogh Case
- Labour Hire Practices
-
Land Tax
-
2019-06-19
-
2019-07-23
-
2019-07-31
-
2019-08-01
-
2019-09-10
-
2019-09-12
- Question Time (14:17)
- Question Time (14:20)
- Question Time (14:23)
- Question Time (14:28)
- Question Time (14:29)
- Question Time (14:31)
- Question Time (14:38)
- Question Time (14:43)
- Question Time (14:50)
- Question Time (14:52)
- Question Time (14:53)
- Question Time (15:02)
- Question Time (15:03)
- Question Time (15:04)
-
2019-09-24
-
2019-09-25
-
2019-09-26
-
2019-10-29
-
2019-10-30
- 2019-11-12
-
2019-11-28
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- 2019-12-12
-
- Land Tax Forum
- Legal Services Commission
- Lucas, Hon. R.I.
- Master Media Panel
- Medical Malpractice Claims
- Minister for Human Services, Shares
-
Minister for Primary Industries and Regional Development
-
Minister for Transport, Infrastructure and Local Government
-
2018-11-29
-
-
Ministerial Expenditure
-
Ministerial Staff
-
Ministers' Interests
-
Motor Accident Commission
- 2018-10-23
-
2019-09-11
-
2019-10-29
-
Motor Accident Commission Marketing Budget
-
2019-04-04
- 2019-11-12
-
- North-South Corridor
-
Operating Budgets
-
2018-09-05
-
-
Pairing Arrangements
-
2019-06-06
-
-
Passenger Levy
-
Payroll Tax
-
Premier and Cabinet Department
- 2018-07-26
-
2018-09-04
-
2019-03-19
- Premier Marshall
- Premier's Office Refurbishment
-
Professional Services
-
2018-11-06
-
- Program and Initiative Funding
- Program Funding
-
Public Sector Employees
-
2018-10-16
- 2019-02-13
-
-
Public Sector Executives
- 2018-11-08
- 2018-12-04
-
2019-09-11
- Public Sector Expenditure
-
Public Service Employees
- Public Service Enterprise Agreements
-
Public Transport Privatisation
- Rail Infrastructure
- Rate Capping
-
Regional Roads
- 2019-04-03
-
2019-06-19
- Regional South Australia
-
Register of Lobbyists
- Renewal SA
-
Residential Property Transactions
-
ReturnToWorkSA
-
RevenueSA
- Roads of Strategic Importance
- Royal Adelaide Hospital
-
SA Water
-
SafeWork SA
-
2019-09-11
-
- Salisbury, Mr S.
-
Service SA Prospect
-
2018-10-18
- 2018-11-13
-
-
Shared Services
-
2019-09-11
-
-
South Australia Police
-
South Australian Government Financing Authority
-
State Budget
-
2018-09-06
-
2019-03-19
-
2019-07-03
-
-
State Budget Advertising Campaign
-
2019-06-20
-
-
State Debt
-
Super SA
- Super SA and RevenueSA
- Super SA Contributors
- Superannuation Funds
-
Targeted Voluntary Separation Packages
- Tasting Australia
- Termination Payouts
- Transport Infrastructure
-
Treasury and Finance Department
- 2018-09-05
-
2018-10-16
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- 2019-03-19
-
2019-03-20
-
2019-04-02
-
2019-04-04
- 2019-05-14
- 2019-06-04
- 2019-09-11
- Unemployment Figures
-
Walkerville YMCA
-
2019-11-27
-
-
Water Allocations
-
Women's and Children's Hospital
-
-
Speeches
-
MURRAY, Stephen Peter
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Appropriation Bill 2018
- Bangka Strait Massacre
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Children and Vulnerable Adults) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Dishonest Communication with Children) Amendment Bill
-
Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
- Fair Trading (Ticket Scalping) Amendment Bill
- Flinders University (Remuneration of Council Members) Amendment Bill
- International Epilepsy Day
- Local Government (Rate Oversight) Amendment Bill
- Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- National Gas (South Australia) (Capacity Trading and Auctions) Amendment Bill
- Organ Donation
- Parliamentary Committee on Occupational Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation: Annual Report 2017-18
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
- Public Works Committee: North-South Corridor Regency Road to Pym Street Project
-
Public Works Committee: Port Road Drainage Project
- Public Works Committee: South Australian Virtual Power Plant Project
- Public Works Committee: Waterfall Gully to Mount Lofty Summit Trail Restoration
- Public Works Committee: Women's and Children's Hospital Upgrade Sustainment Program
- Rail Safety National Law (South Australia) (Miscellaneous No 4) Amendment Bill
- SA Pathology and SA Medical Imaging
- Statutes Amendment (Decriminalisation of Sex Work) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Drug Offences) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Mineral Resources) Bill
- Supply Bill 2018
- Surrogacy Bill
-
Questions
- Australian Research Council Centres of Excellence
- CCTV Cameras
- Darlington Upgrade Project
-
Electricity Prices
- Emergency Services Volunteers
- Energy Security
- Financial Wellbeing Program
-
Flagstaff Road Upgrade
-
Flinders Link
- Gambling Barring Orders
-
Glenthorne National Park
- Home Battery Scheme
- Infrastructure Projects
- Invictus Games
- Job Creation
- Local Government Reform
- National Park Rangers
- OZ Minerals
-
Rate Capping
- Repatriation General Hospital
- Road Safety
- Schools with Internet Fibre Technology Program
- Shop Trading Hours
- Skilling South Australia
- Smart Meters
- South Australian Chamber of Mines and Energy
- South Road Intersection
- State Government Agenda
-
Speeches
-
ODENWALDER, Lee Kenny
-
Speeches
-
Address in Reply
-
2018-05-10
-
- ANZAC Day Commemoration Services
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
- 2018-09-06
-
2018-10-16
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Australian Professional Firefighters Foundation
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
-
Controlled Substances (Drug Offences) Amendment Bill
-
2018-12-05
- 2019-05-01
-
- Correctional Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Country Policing
- Criminal Assets Confiscation (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Criminal Law Consolidation (Assaults on Emergency Workers) Amendment Bill
-
2019-06-05
- 2019-07-31
-
-
Criminal Law Consolidation (Assaults on Prescribed Emergency Workers) Amendment Bill
-
Criminal Law Consolidation (Throwing Objects at Vehicles) Amendment Bill
-
2018-06-20
- 2018-12-05
-
- Domestic Violence Disclosure Scheme
- Economic and Finance Committee: Annual Report 2017-18
- Emergency Relief Services Funding
- Equal Opportunity (Domestic Violence) Amendment Bill
-
Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Fire and Emergency Services (Volunteer Charters) Amendment Bill
- International Day for Disaster Reduction
- International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Motor Vehicles (Motor Bike Licensing) Amendment Bill
-
National Police Remembrance Day
- Public Works Committee: Yatala Labour Prison Redevelopment
- Road Traffic (Drug Testing) Amendment Bill
- Road Traffic (Evidentiary Provisions) Amendment Bill
- Select Committee on the Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Sentencing (Home Detention) Amendment Bill
- State Liberal Government
- Statutes Amendment (Domestic Violence) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Drug Offences) Bill
-
Supply Bill 2018
-
2018-05-17
-
- Supply Bill 2019
- Terrorism (Police Powers) (Use of Force) Amendment Bill
-
-
Questions
-
Adelaide Remand Centre
-
2018-09-05
- 2018-10-23
-
2018-11-13
-
2018-11-15
- 2019-03-19
-
2019-03-20
-
2019-03-21
-
2019-09-10
-
- Alert SA App
-
Aluminium Composite Cladding
-
2019-10-15
-
- APY Lands
- APY Lands Policing Model
- Association Meetings
-
Better Prisons Workforce Flexibility Project
- Cadell Training Centre
-
Correctional Facilities
- Correctional Facilities Visits
- Country Fire Service
- Country Fire Service Chief Officer
-
Crime Stoppers SA
-
Cyclist Registration Scheme
-
2018-11-27
-
- District Policing Model
- Domestic and Family Violence
- Duggan Review
-
Emergency Services
-
Emergency Services, Member Visit Protocol
- Expiation Notices
-
Fire Station PFAS Investigation
-
2019-09-12
-
-
Firearms Licences
-
2018-11-15
-
2018-11-27
-
- Freedom of Information
- Gender Equity
-
Government Advertising
-
Government Departments
-
Grant Programs
- 2018-11-06
-
2019-10-16
-
2019-11-12
- Kalangadoo Police Station
- Labour Hire Licences
- Labour Hire Practices
-
Metropolitan Emergency Services Response Times
-
Metropolitan Fire Service
-
2018-11-27
-
2019-09-12
-
-
Ministerial Staff
-
Mobilong Prison
-
Motor Accident Commission
-
2019-04-02
-
-
Motorcycle Licensing
-
Motorcycle Riders Safety
- 2019-04-02
-
2019-09-10
-
Mount Gambier Prison
-
2018-07-26
-
-
Neighbourhood Watch
-
Noarlunga Centre Incident
- Noise Management
- On the Right Track Program
-
Police Cadets
-
2019-03-19
- 2019-06-19
-
- Police Cells
- Police Commissioner Protocol
-
Police Numbers
-
Police Prosecution Staffing
-
Police Protection Vests
-
Police Review
-
2018-10-23
-
-
Police Staffing
-
2018-05-30
-
2019-04-02
-
2019-06-19
-
2019-07-23
-
-
Police Station Opening Hours
-
2018-05-16
-
-
Police Stations
-
2018-10-23
- 2019-09-12
-
-
Police Tasers
-
2018-11-13
- 2018-12-06
-
-
Police, Free Travel Entitlement
- Port Augusta Fire Station
- Prison Infrastructure
- Prison Services
-
Prison Staff Drug and Alcohol Testing
-
Prisoner Numbers
-
2018-11-13
-
2018-11-27
- 2019-03-19
- 2019-07-23
-
2019-09-10
- 2019-09-12
-
-
Probity Checks
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Public Sector Executives
-
2018-11-06
-
2019-09-12
- 2019-11-12
-
-
Public Service Employees
-
2019-09-12
-
2019-11-12
-
-
Random Drug Testing
-
Regional Capability Community Fund
-
2018-11-27
-
-
Register of Lobbyists
- Road Safety Camera Audit
-
Road Safety Program
-
2018-11-27
-
-
SAFECOM Review
-
Schools, Random Drug Searches
-
2018-05-15
-
-
Smoking in Prisons
- 2018-11-13
-
2018-11-15
-
2019-09-10
-
South Australia Police
- Southern Expressway
-
Speed Camera Audit
- Stakeholder Submissions
- Surplus Land
-
Termination Payouts
- Transport Organisations
- Yatala Labour Prison
-
-
Speeches
-
PATTERSON, Stephen John Rayden
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Australian Space Agency
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Coastline Protection
- Controlled Substances (Youth Treatment Orders) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Assaults on Prescribed Emergency Workers) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Dishonest Communication with Children) Amendment Bill
-
Criminal Law Consolidation (Foster Parents and Other Positions of Authority) Amendment Bill
-
2019-02-28
-
- Defence Shipbuilding
- Defence Workforce Plan
- Disability Inclusion Bill
- Economic and Finance Committee: Annual Report 2017-18
- Economic and Finance Committee: Annual Report 2018-19
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
- Economic and Finance Committee: Investment Attraction Policies
-
Fair Trading (Ticket Scalping) Amendment Bill
-
2018-06-07
-
- Glenelg ANZAC Day Dawn Service
- Glenelg District Cricket Club
- Glenelg Rotary Club
- Glenelg Rotary Club Cold Plunge
- Gold Coast Commonwealth Games
- Grange Surf Life Saving Club
- Homelessness Week
- Kenihan, Mr Q.
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Late Payment of Government Debts (Interest) (Automatic Payment of Interest) Amendment Bill
-
Lifesaving World Championships
-
2018-11-14
- 2018-12-04
-
- Local Government (Rate Oversight) Amendment Bill
- Local Government (Ratepayer Protection and Related Measures) Amendment Bill
- Morphett Electorate Schools
- Murray-Darling Basin Plan
-
National Electricity (South Australia) (Retailer Reliability Obligation) Amendment Bill
-
2019-04-02
-
- National Police Remembrance Day
- National Science Week
- Office for the Ageing (Adult Safeguarding) Amendment Bill
-
Parliamentary Committee on Occupational Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation
- Parliamentary Committee on Occupational Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation: Annual Report 2017-18
- Parliamentary Committee on Occupational Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation: Annual Report 2018-19
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
- Plympton International College
- Plympton Sporting and Recreation Club
- Public Works Committee: City South Tram Line Replacement Project
- Public Works Committee: Golden Grove Road Upgrade
- Public Works Committee: Hydrogen Park SA Project
- Public Works Committee: Memorial Drive Centre Court Development
- Public Works Committee: North-South Corridor Regency Road to Pym Street Project
- Public Works Committee: Old Royal Adelaide Hospital Site
- Public Works Committee: Port Lincoln Wastewater Treatment Plant
-
Public Works Committee: Port Road Drainage Project
- Public Works Committee: Port Road, West Lakes Boulevard and Cheltenham Parade Intersection Upgrade
- Public Works Committee: South Australian Virtual Power Plant Project
- Public Works Committee: Tulloch Road Intersection Upgrade
- Public Works Committee: Waterfall Gully to Mount Lofty Summit Trail Restoration
- Public Works Committee: Women's and Children's Hospital Upgrade Sustainment Program
- Public Works Committee: Zero Cost Energy Future
- R U OK? Day
- Remeljej, Mr A.
- Remembrance Day
- Residential Parks (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Road Traffic (Evidentiary Provisions) Amendment Bill
-
2018-12-04
-
- SANFL Grand Final
- South Australian Productivity Commission Bill
- South Australian Stolen Generations Reparations Scheme
- Sri Lanka Terrorist Attacks
- Statutes Amendment (Child Exploitation and Encrypted Material) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Decriminalisation of Sex Work) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Domestic Violence) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Liquor Licensing) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Rules) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (SACAT Federal Diversity Jurisdiction) Bill
- Surf Life Saving South Australia
- Surrogacy Bill
- World Environment Day
- World No Tobacco Day
- World Teachers' Day
-
World Tourism Day
-
Questions
- Australian Space Agency
- Business Confidence
- Charter Fishing Industry
- Cheliah, Mr S.
- City South Tram Stop
- Commonwealth Games
- Digital Traineeships
- Domestic Violence
- Employment Figures
- Energy Security
- Energy Storage Conference
- F1 in Schools STEM Challenge
- Glenelg Safety Bollards
- Glouftsis, Ms E.
-
Home Battery Scheme
- Industry 4.0
- Infrastructure Funding
- Labour Force Data
- Memorial Drive Redevelopment
- Mineral Exploration
- Mount Gambier Prison
-
National Energy Market Reform
- Olli Bus
- Olympic Dam
- Police Station Opening Hours
- Projects Pipeline Industry Briefing
- Public Transport
- Racing Industry
- Resources Sector
- Royal Adelaide Hospital Car Park
- Science and Innovation
- SmartSat CRC
- South Australian Film Industry
- Sports Funding
- State Economy
- State of the Environment Report
- Surf Life Saving South Australia
-
Speeches
-
PEDERICK, Adrian Stephen
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
- Commission of Inquiry (Land Access in the Mining Industry) Bill
- Construction Industry Training Fund (Board) Amendment Bill
-
Controlled Substances (Drug Offences) Amendment Bill
- Correctional Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Country Cabinet
-
Criminal Law Consolidation (Assaults on Emergency Workers) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Assaults on Prescribed Emergency Workers) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Children and Vulnerable Adults) Amendment Bill
-
Criminal Law Consolidation (Throwing Objects at Vehicles) Amendment Bill
- Cross-Border Commissioner
- Crown Land Management (Section 78b Leases) Amendment Bill
- Defence Shipbuilding
- Disability Inclusion Bill
- Economic and Finance Committee: Annual Report 2018-19
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
- Economic and Finance Committee: Investment Attraction Policies
- Education and Children's Services Bill
- Electoral (Prisoner Voting) Amendment Bill
-
Environment, Resources and Development Committee
- Environment, Resources and Development Committee: Inquiry into Heritage Reform
- Fair Trading (Gift Cards) Amendment Bill
- Fair Trading (Ticket Scalping) Amendment Bill
- Farm Debt Mediation Bill
- Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Free Trade Agreements
- Freedom of Information (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Genetically Modified Crops Management (Designated Area) Amendment Bill
-
Gladigau, Mrs K.
- Gold Coast Commonwealth Games
-
Hammond Electorate
- Illicit Drug Use
- Independent Commissioner Against Corruption (Investigation Powers) Amendment Bill
-
Industrial Hemp
-
2018-07-04
-
- Infrastructure SA Bill
- International Day for Disaster Reduction
- International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women
- International Midwives and Nurses Days
- Labour Hire Licensing Repeal Bill
- Land Acquisition (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Landscape South Australia Bill
- Late Payment of Government Debts (Interest) (Automatic Payment of Interest) Amendment Bill
- Limitation of Actions (Child Sexual Abuse) Amendment Bill
- Liquor Licensing (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Local Government (Rate Oversight) Amendment Bill
-
2018-07-24
-
- Local Government Elections
-
Motor Vehicles (Motor Bike Licensing) Amendment Bill
-
Motor Vehicles (Offensive Advertising) Amendment Bill
-
Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- National Electricity (South Australia) (Retailer Reliability Obligation) Amendment Bill
- National Farm Safety Week
- National Police Remembrance Day
- National Science Week
- Natural Resources Committee: Arid Lands Fact Finding Visit
- Natural Resources Management Committee: Management of Overabundant and Pest Species
- Negative Gearing
- Office for the Ageing (Adult Safeguarding) Amendment Bill
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
- Petroleum and Geothermal Energy (Ban on Hydraulic Fracturing) Amendment Bill
-
Planning, Development and Infrastructure (Code Amendments) Amendment Bill
- Planning, Development and Infrastructure (Reserves) Amendment Bill
- Public Interest Disclosure Bill
- Public Works Committee: Penola Northern Bypass
- Public Works Committee: Port Road Drainage Project
- Public Works Committee: Rebuild of the South Australian Dog Fence
- Public Works Committee: South Australian Virtual Power Plant Project
- Public Works Committee: Women's and Children's Hospital Upgrade Sustainment Program
- R U OK? Day
- Rail Safety National Law (South Australia) (Miscellaneous No 4) Amendment Bill
- Regional South Australia
- Retail and Commercial Leases (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Road Traffic (Drug Testing) Amendment Bill
-
Royal Commissions (Extraterritorial Application) Amendment Bill
- SA Pathology and SA Medical Imaging
-
Select Committee on the Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Sentencing (Home Detention) Amendment Bill
- Sentencing (Suspended and Community Based Custodial Sentences) Amendment Bill
- South Australian Employment Tribunal (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- South Australian Productivity Commission Bill
-
South Australian Public Health (Immunisation and Early Childhood Services) Amendment Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Child Exploitation and Encrypted Material) Bill
-
2018-11-29
-
- Statutes Amendment (Liquor Licensing) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Mineral Resources) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Binding Rate of Return Instrument) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (SACAT) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (South Eastern Freeway Offences) Bill
- Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Budget Measures) Bill
- Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Simplify) Bill
- Summary Offences (Liquor Offences) Amendment Bill
- Summary Offences (Trespass on Primary Production Premises) Amendment Bill
- Sunderland, Mr J.
- Supply Bill 2018
- Surrogacy Bill
- TAFE SA Reviews
- Terrorism (Police Powers) (Use of Force) Amendment Bill
- The Bend Motorsport Park
-
Thomas Foods International
- Tobacco Products Regulation (E-Cigarettes and Review) Amendment Bill
-
Transforming Health
- Transport Infrastructure
- Tredrea, Mr J.
- Universal Ambulance Cover Scheme
-
Valedictories
- World No Tobacco Day
- World Routes Aviation Conference
- World Teachers' Day
- World Tourism Day
-
Questions
- Biosecurity Management
-
Copper Mining
- Copper to the World Conference
- Cost of Living
- Country Fire Service
- Domestic Violence Crisis Line
- Drought Assistance
- Emergency Services
- Employment Initiatives
- Entrepreneurial Specialist Schools
- Food Waste
-
Fruit Fly
- Hartley Electorate Road Upgrades
- Heritage Agreement Program
- Home Battery Scheme
- Horticulture Industry
- Infrastructure Projects
- Labour Hire Practices
- Live Music Industry
- Livestock Industry
- Lower Lakes and Coorong
- Murray Mallee Region
-
Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- Penola Bypass
- Prisons, Community Partnerships
-
Regional Growth Fund
- Regional South Australia
- Riverland Biosecurity
- State and Federal Liberal Governments
- TAFE SA
- Thomas Foods International
- Volunteer Screening Checks
- Waste Management
- Wine Industry Funding
- Wool Industry
- Yamba Quarantine Station
-
Speeches
-
PICCOLO, Antonio
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- ANZAC Day Commemoration Services
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
-
Appropriation Bill 2019
- Architectural Practice (Continuing Professional Development) Amendment Bill
- Bangka Strait Massacre
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
- Community Engagement
- Country Cabinet
- Dementia Awareness
- Disability Employment
- Education and Children's Services Bill
-
Ey, Mr Sidney
- Farm Debt Mediation Bill
- Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Foster and Kinship Care
- Gawler Rally
- Hazara Community
- Hindmarsh Boulevard Reserve
- Homelessness Week
-
International Day of People with Disability
-
2018-11-28
- 2019-11-13
-
- International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People
- International Firefighters' Day
- International Men's Health Week
- International Volunteer Day
- Italian Community
- Labour Hire Licensing Repeal Bill
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Light Electorate
- Light Electorate Service Organisations
- Local Government (Administration of Councils) Amendment Bill
- Local Government (Rate Oversight) Amendment Bill
-
Local Government (Ratepayer Protection and Related Measures) Amendment Bill
- Local Government Accountability
- Local Government Elections
- Men's Health Networks
- Parliamentary Internship Program
-
Planning, Development and Infrastructure (Carparking Requirements) Amendment Bill
-
2019-11-13
- 2019-12-04
-
- Planning, Development and Infrastructure Act Regulations
- Public Works Committee: Golden Grove Road Upgrade
- Public Works Committee: Lyell McEwin Hospital Expansion
- Public Works Committee: Tulloch Road Intersection Upgrade
- R U OK? Day
- Reeves Plains
-
Remembrance Day
-
2018-11-07
- 2018-11-08
- 2019-11-14
-
- Residential Parks (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Road and Rail Safety
- SA Pathology and SA Medical Imaging
-
Service Club Week
- Standing Orders Committee
- Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Simplify) Bill
- Summary Offences (Trespass on Primary Production Premises) Amendment Bill
-
Supply Bill 2018
-
2018-05-17
-
- Surrogacy Bill
- Tonkin Government
- Tredrea, Mr J.
- University of the Third Age
- Volunteers
- Women in Agriculture
- World Teachers' Day
- World War II Anniversary
- Youth Advisory Panel
-
Questions
- Civilian Prosecutors
- Council Assets
- Council Infrastructure
- Council Members, Code of Conduct
-
Curtis Road
-
2018-09-04
-
- Development Applications
- Development Approval Numbers
- Development Assessment Pathways
-
E-Planning System
- Economic and Finance Committee
- Gawler Health Service
- Government Advertising
- Government Departments
-
Heritage Protection
-
HomeStart Finance
- Investing Expenditure Projects
-
Land Surveyors
- Leigh Creek Futures Report
- Leigh Creek Swimming Pool
-
Local Government Accountability
-
2019-11-12
-
- Local Government Grants Commission
-
Lot Fourteen
- Outback Communities Authority
-
Planning and Design Code
-
Planning and Development Fund
- Planning Variation Regulations
- Planning, Transport and Infrastructure Department
- Professional Services
- Public Sector Executives
- Regional Planning
-
Renewal SA
-
Road Upgrades
-
State Planning System
- Termination Payouts
-
Veterans Employment Program
-
2019-10-15
-
- Veterans Organisations
- Veterans SA
-
Veterans Services
-
2019-10-15
-
-
Veterans, Gold Card Holders
-
2019-10-15
- 2019-10-30
-
- Women's Memorial Playing Fields
-
Speeches
-
PICTON, Christopher James
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
-
Ambulance Ramping
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
-
Appropriation Bill 2019
- Assisted Reproductive Treatment (Review Recommendations) Amendment Bill
- Associations Incorporation (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Australian Craniofacial Unit
- Bowel Cancer Awareness Month
- Breast Cancer Support
- Cheltenham Place
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Controlled Substances (Nitrous Oxide) Amendment Bill
- Controlled Substances (Youth Treatment Orders) Amendment Bill
- Cornwall, Dr J.R.
- Criminal Law (High Risk Offenders) (Psychologists) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Children and Vulnerable Adults) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Dishonest Communication with Children) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (False Or Misleading Information) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Throwing Objects at Vehicles) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Procedure (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Dementia Awareness
- Director of Public Prosecutions (Pension Entitlements) Amendment Bill
- DonateLife Week
- Electoral (Prisoner Voting) Amendment Bill
- Evidence (Journalists) Amendment Bill
- Flinders University (Remuneration of Council Members) Amendment Bill
- Freedom of Information (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Hawke, Hon. R.j.l.
-
Health Care (Governance) (No 2) Amendment Bill
-
2019-07-04
-
- Health Care (Governance) Amendment Bill
- Health Consumers Alliance
- Health Services
- Hospital Beds
- Illicit Drug Use
- Independent Commissioner Against Corruption (Investigation Powers) Amendment Bill
- International Midwives and Nurses Days
- Joint Committee on the 125th Anniversary of Women's Suffrage
- KordaMentha Report
- Land Acquisition (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Legal Practitioners (Foreign Lawyers) Amendment Bill
- Legal Practitioners (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Legislative Review Committee: Health Practitioner Regulation National Law (South Australia) (Remote Area Attendance)
- Liquor Licensing (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Lobbyists (Restrictions on Lobbying) Amendment Bill
- Local Health Networks
-
McGowan, Dr C.
- Meningococcal B Strain Vaccination
-
Mental Health Services
- Murray-Darling Basin Royal Commission
- Nurses and Midwives
- Nurses Dispute
- Office for the Ageing (Adult Safeguarding) Amendment Bill
- Parliamentary Committees (Petitions) Amendment Bill
- Questions on Notice
- R U OK? Day
- Remote Area Attendance
- Residential Care Facility Visits
- Residential Parks (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Road Traffic (Evidentiary Provisions) Amendment Bill
- SA Ambulance Service
- SA Health
- SA Health, ICAC Report
- SA Pathology and SA Medical Imaging
- Sentencing (Home Detention) Amendment Bill
- Sentencing (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Sentencing (Release on Licence) Amendment Bill
- Sessional Orders
- South Australian Employment Tribunal (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- South Australian Public Health (Early Childhood Services and Immunisation) Amendment Bill
- South Australian Public Health (Immunisation and Early Childhood Services) Amendment Bill
- St John Ambulance Anniversary
- Standing Orders Committee
- State Liberal Government
- Statutes Amendment (Attorney-General's Portfolio) (No. 2) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Decriminalisation of Sex Work) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Domestic Violence) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Liquor Licensing) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (SACAT Federal Diversity Jurisdiction) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill
- Summary Offences (Disrespectful Conduct in Court) Amendment Bill
- Summary Offences (Liquor Offences) Amendment Bill
- Summary Offences (Trespass on Primary Production Premises) Amendment Bill
-
Supply Bill 2018
-
Supply Bill 2019
- Supreme Court (Court of Appeal) Amendment Bill
-
Tobacco Products Regulation (E-Cigarette Regulation) Amendment Bill
-
2018-06-20
- 2018-11-28
-
- Tobacco Products Regulation (E-Cigarettes and Review) Amendment Bill
- Unanswered Questions
- Universal Ambulance Cover Scheme
- Victims of Crime (Offender Service and Joinder) Amendment Bill
-
Weatherill, Hon. J.W., Retirement
-
2018-12-06
-
- World Health Day
- World No Tobacco Day
- World Teachers' Day
-
Questions
-
Adult Safeguarding Unit
-
Aged-Care Beds
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Aged-Care Facilities
- Aged-Care Facilities Audit
- Aged-Care Providers
- Ageing Well Directorate
-
Ageing Well Grants
- Alert SA App
- Ambulance Employees Association
-
Ambulance Ramping
-
Ambulance Station Closures
-
2018-11-14
-
- Attorney-General
- Australian Clinical Labs
-
Australian Craniofacial Unit
-
2018-07-05
-
2018-07-24
-
2018-07-25
-
2018-07-26
-
2018-09-04
-
2018-09-06
- 2018-11-27
- 2019-02-12
- 2019-02-13
-
- Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation
-
Bakewell, Jonathan
-
Barossa Hospital
- Blood Tests
-
Borderline Personality Disorder
-
2018-08-02
-
- BreastScreen SA
-
Cardiology Services
-
Central Adelaide Local Health Network
- Central Adelaide Local Health Network Whistleblower Hotline
- Central Health Department Staff
-
Cheltenham Place
- Chemotherapy
- Chief Public Health Officer
- Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services
- Chua, Dr A.
- Colonoscopy Procedures
- Colonoscopy Waiting List
-
Commission on Excellence and Innovation
-
2019-09-10
-
- Commissioner for Victims' Rights
-
Community Mental Health Service Plan
- Consultancies
- Country Ambulance Services
-
Country Health SA
-
Country Health Services
-
Country Hospitals
-
Drug and Alcohol Services
- Drug Security Project
-
Eastern Eyre Health Advisory Council
- Eating Disorder Treatment Services
-
Elective Surgery
- 2018-12-04
- 2019-02-13
-
2019-02-27
-
2019-06-04
- 2019-07-02
-
2019-09-10
-
2019-09-11
- Electoral Districts Boundaries Commission
-
Emergency Codes
-
2019-02-12
-
2019-09-11
-
2019-10-15
-
-
Emergency Departments
-
2018-11-07
- 2018-11-14
-
2018-12-04
-
2019-02-12
-
2019-02-13
- 2019-09-10
-
2019-09-11
- 2019-10-17
-
- Emergency Services
- Enterprise Patient Administration System
- Final Accreditation Reports
-
Fleet Vehicles
-
2019-09-10
-
- Flinders Brain Bank
-
Flinders Medical Centre
- Flinders Medical Centre Births
-
Flinders Medical Centre Food Contamination
- Flinders Medical Centre Immunology and Pathology Services
- Flinders Medical Centre Norovirus Patients
- Forensic Mental Health Patients
- GP Oncologist Role
- Grants
-
Hampstead Hydrotherapy Pool
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Hampstead Rehabilitation Centre
- Health and Hospital Care
-
Health and Wellbeing Department
-
Health Budget
-
Health Consumers Alliance
-
2018-09-18
- 2019-02-13
-
- Health Funding
-
Health Services
-
Hibbert Review
-
HIV Services
-
Home Care Packages
- Home Care Packages Waiting Times
-
Hospital Beds
- 2018-10-16
-
2018-11-27
- 2019-02-12
- 2019-02-13
- 2019-02-26
-
2019-05-02
- 2019-05-14
-
2019-10-16
- Hospital Presentations
- Hospital Services
-
Hospital Sleep Services
-
2019-02-13
-
-
Hospital Staff
- Hospital Stay
-
Hospitals, Hotel Services
-
Hospitals, Private Practice
- Hospitals, Revenue
-
Hospitals, Winter Demand
-
2018-08-02
-
-
Ice Taskforce
-
Independent Commissioner Against Corruption
-
Influenza Vaccinations
- 2018-06-20
-
2019-06-04
-
2019-06-19
- 2019-07-02
-
2019-09-11
- Inpatient Separations
- Kalimna
-
Kaurna Electorate Ministerial Visit
-
2019-09-10
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
-
2019-09-11
-
2019-09-12
-
2019-09-24
-
-
KordaMentha
-
2018-11-07
-
2018-11-08
- 2018-11-27
-
2018-12-04
-
2018-12-05
- 2018-12-06
-
2019-02-12
-
2019-02-14
- 2019-03-19
- 2019-09-10
- 2019-10-16
- 2019-10-17
-
-
KordaMentha Report
- Libby's Law
-
Local Health Network Governing Boards
-
Local Health Networks
-
Lyell McEwin Hospital
- 2018-06-20
- 2018-08-02
-
2018-09-06
- 2019-02-13
-
2019-09-10
-
Lymphoedema Compression Garment Subsidy
-
McGowan, Dr C.
- 2019-10-31
-
2019-11-14
- Question Time (14:17)
- Question Time (14:18)
- Question Time (14:18)
- Question Time (14:19)
- Question Time (14:25)
- Question Time (14:26)
- Question Time (14:28)
- Question Time (14:32)
- Question Time (14:33)
- Question Time (14:33)
- Question Time (14:40)
- Question Time (14:41)
- Question Time (14:42)
- Question Time (14:44)
- Question Time (14:49)
- Question Time (14:50)
- Question Time (14:50)
-
2019-11-26
-
2019-11-27
- Question Time (14:22)
- Question Time (14:23)
- Question Time (14:25)
- Question Time (14:29)
- Question Time (14:31)
- Question Time (14:32)
- Question Time (14:37)
- Question Time (14:38)
- Question Time (14:38)
- Question Time (14:41)
- Question Time (14:50)
- Question Time (14:50)
- Question Time (14:58)
- Question Time (14:59)
- Question Time (14:59)
-
2019-11-28
-
2019-12-03
-
2019-12-05
- Medical Interns
- Meningococcal B Disease
-
Meningococcal B Strain Vaccination
-
2018-08-02
-
- Mental Health Beds
-
Mental Health Commission
- Mental Health Commission and Wellbeing SA
-
Mental Health Commissioner
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Mental Health Patients
-
Mental Health Services
-
Minister for Health
- Ministerial Code of Conduct
- Ministerial Responsibilities
-
Ministerial Staff
-
Modbury Hospital
- 2018-06-19
-
2018-06-20
-
2018-08-02
-
2018-09-06
- 2019-09-10
- Mount Gambier Hospital
- Murray Bridge Soldier's Memorial Hospital
-
National Disability Insurance Scheme
- National Health Reform Agreement
-
Noarlunga Centre Incident
-
Noarlunga Hospital
- Northern Adelaide Local Health Network
- Oakden Mental Health Facility Report
-
Office for Ageing Well
- Office of the Ageing
- Operational Research in Health
- Ostomy Association
-
Outpatient Appointments
-
2018-08-02
- 2018-11-14
-
2019-02-13
- 2019-09-10
-
- Paediatric Eating Disorder Service
-
Palliative Care Services
-
Patient Care Contracts
-
Patient Transfers
-
Pearson, Mr R.
- Polling Booths
- Pregnancy Advisory Service
- Premier Marshall
- Priority Care Centres
-
Prison Health Services
-
2019-02-13
- 2019-09-10
-
-
Private Email Accounts
-
Private Health Insurance
-
2019-09-11
-
- Private Hospital Beds
- Probate Registry
- Public Sector Executives
- Pukatja Dialysis Service
-
Queen Elizabeth Hospital
-
2018-06-20
-
2018-09-06
-
2019-02-12
-
2019-02-13
-
2019-04-30
-
- Real-Time Prescription Monitoring
-
Regional GP Services
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Regional Health Funding
-
Regional Locum Services
-
Repatriation General Hospital
-
Royal Adelaide Hospital
-
2018-09-06
-
-
Royal Adelaide Hospital Blackout
- Royal Adelaide Hospital Car Park
-
Royal Adelaide Hospital Incident
-
2018-11-07
-
-
Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety
-
2019-02-12
-
-
Rural Support Service
-
SA Ambulance Service
-
2018-06-20
- 2019-02-12
-
2019-02-26
-
2019-10-17
-
- SA Biomedical Engineering
- SA Cancer Service
-
SA Dental Service
-
SA Health
-
2018-06-19
-
2018-06-20
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
-
2018-07-05
- 2018-07-25
-
2018-08-02
-
2018-09-06
- 2018-11-07
- 2018-11-08
- 2018-11-27
-
2019-02-13
- 2019-09-10
-
2019-10-16
- 2019-10-17
-
2019-11-14
-
2019-12-12
-
-
SA Health Grants
- SA Health Mental Health Triage Service
-
SA Health Staff
-
2019-09-10
-
-
SA Health, ICAC Report
-
2019-12-03
-
2019-12-04
-
2019-12-05
- 2019-12-12
-
- SA Medical Imaging
-
SA Pathology
-
2018-09-05
- 2018-09-06
-
2018-09-18
- 2018-11-13
-
2019-04-02
-
2019-09-10
-
- SA Pharmacy
- SAHMRI 2
-
Seniors Card
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Sexual Health Services Funding
-
2019-02-13
-
- SHINE SA
- Silverchain
- South Australian Medical Imaging
-
St Margaret's Hospital
- State Ageing Plan
- State Forensic Mental Health Service
- Sterilisation Services
- Stroke Service
- Suicide Prevention
-
Sunrise EMR and EPAS
-
Supreme Court Appointments
-
2019-10-31
-
- Transfer Coordination Service
- Ward 18
-
Wellbeing SA
- Whyalla Hospital
-
Women's and Children's Hospital
-
2018-06-20
- 2018-07-31
-
2018-08-02
-
2018-09-06
- 2019-02-12
- 2019-02-27
-
2019-06-20
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Women's and Children's Hospital Taskforce
- Youth Mental Health Services Review
-
-
Speeches
-
PISONI, David Gregory
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Appropriation Bill 2018
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
-
Construction Industry Training Fund (Board) Amendment Bill
-
2018-10-24
-
2018-11-06
-
- Country Cabinet
- Defence Workforce Plan
- Education and Children's Services Bill
-
Electoral (Prisoner Voting) Amendment Bill
-
Labour Hire Licensing Repeal Bill
-
Late Payment of Government Debts (Interest) (Automatic Payment of Interest) Amendment Bill
- 2018-09-19
-
2018-10-17
- New Zealand Women's Suffrage Anniversary
- Skilling South Australia
- State Budget
-
Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Simplify) Bill
-
2019-09-12
-
2019-09-25
-
- TAFE SA Reviews
- Training and Skills Commission
- World Micro, Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises Day
-
Answers
- Adelaide Film Festival
- Adult Community Education
- Advanced Welder Training Centre
-
Apprenticeships
-
Apprenticeships and Traineeships
- Australian Research Council Centres of Excellence
- Bedford Industries
-
Career Employment Services Funding
-
2018-06-20
-
- Consultants and Contractors
- Datacom IT Hub
- Digital Traineeships
-
Employment Figures
- Employment Initiatives
-
Entrepreneurship Advisory Board
- Farm Debt Mediation
- Food, Tourism and Hospitality Industries
-
Government Advertising
- Government Contracts
- Government Departments
-
Grant Programs
- 2018-11-06
-
2019-10-31
-
Handley, Mr N.
-
2018-11-27
-
2018-11-28
-
2018-12-04
-
-
Hopgood Theatre
- Hybrid World Adelaide
- iAwards
- Immigration SA Staffing Levels
- Industry and Skills Department
- Industry Skills Councils
-
Innovation and Skills Department
-
2019-06-04
-
-
Job Creation
-
Kaurna Electorate Ministerial Visit
-
2019-09-24
-
- Labour Force Data
- Live Music Industry
-
Lot Fourteen
- Manufacturing Industry
- Ministerial Staff
- Ministerial Staff Travel
- Mortal Kombat
- Northern Economic Plan
- Offshore Patrol Vessel Program
- Ottoway Engineering
-
Public Sector Executives
-
Public Service Employees
-
2019-09-12
-
- Regional South Australia
- Royal Adelaide Hospital Site Redevelopment
- Science and Innovation
- Screen Makers Conference
- Skilling Australians Fund
-
Skilling South Australia
-
Skills Training
-
Small Business
-
Small Business Commissioner
-
2018-09-04
- 2019-09-25
-
-
South Australian Film Industry
- South Australian Music Awards
- Stone and Chalk Visit
- Termination Payouts
- Tourism
- Training and Skills Commission
- Training and Skills Funding
-
Unemployment Figures
-
2019-09-11
-
- University of the Third Age
- Upper Spencer Gulf
-
Vocational Education and Training
- WorldSkills Australia
-
Speeches
-
POWER, Carolyn Laura
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- AFL National Women's League
- Al Salam Community Centre
- Bangka Strait Massacre
- Children's Week
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Child-Like Sex Dolls Prohibition) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Children and Vulnerable Adults) Amendment Bill
- Dementia Awareness
- Domestic and Family Violence
- Domestic Violence
- Domestic Violence Disclosure Scheme
- DonateLife Week
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
- Education and Children's Services Bill
- Elder Electorate Schools
- Equal Opportunity (Domestic Violence) Amendment Bill
- Fair Trading (Gift Cards) Amendment Bill
- Fair Trading (Ticket Scalping) Amendment Bill
- Foster and Kinship Care
- Homelessness Week
- International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women
-
International Firefighters' Day
-
2018-05-16
-
- International Midwives and Nurses Days
-
Joint Committee on the 125th Anniversary of Women's Suffrage
- Kenilworth Football Club
- Limitation of Actions (Child Sexual Abuse) Amendment Bill
- Lions Club of Mitcham
- Local Government (Rate Oversight) Amendment Bill
- MarionLIFE Community Services
- Member for Elder
- Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- National Police Remembrance Day
- National Science Week
- New Zealand Women's Suffrage Anniversary
- R U OK? Day
-
Repatriation General Hospital
- Southern Health Expansion Plan
- Springbank Road Intersection
- Springbank Secondary College
- Statutes Amendment (Domestic Violence) Bill
- Stretton, Dr H.
- Summary Offences (Liquor Offences) Amendment Bill
- World Teachers' Day
- World Tourism Day
-
Questions
- Aboriginal Power Cup
- Adelaide Botanic Garden Night Lighting
-
Climate Change
- Climate Leaders Awards
- Commissioner for Victims' Rights
- Community Safety
-
Domestic and Family Violence
- Domestic Violence
- Economic Investment
-
Electricity Interconnector
- Energy Prices
- Equal Opportunity Commission
- Federal Election
- Flinders Link
- Greaton and Marriott International Partnership
- Heritage Grants
- Home Battery Scheme
- Hydrogen Action Plan
- Hydrogen Industry
- Infrastructure Projects
- Infrastructure South Australia
- Land Tax
- Liquor Licensing Laws
- Lot Fourteen
- Mining Industry
-
North-South Corridor
- Paradise Park-and-Ride
- Recycling Activity Survey
- Repatriation General Hospital
- Royal Adelaide Hospital Site Redevelopment
- Skilling South Australia
- Skills Training
- Solar Energy
- Springbank Road Intersection
- State Bicycle Fund
- State Development
- State Economy
- Traffic Management Centre
- United States, Trade and Investment
- Vocational Education and Training
-
Waste Management
- Water Industry
- Water Pricing
- Women's Suffrage Anniversary, Schools Competition
- World Day of Remembrance for Road Traffic Victims
- World Environment Fair
-
Speeches
-
RAU, John Robert
-
Speeches
- Fair Trading (Gift Cards) Amendment Bill
-
Matter of Privilege
- Terrorism (Police Powers) (Use of Force) Amendment Bill
-
Weatherill, Hon. J.W., Retirement
-
2018-12-06
-
-
Questions
- Keogh Case
- Labour Hire Practices
-
Police and Community Engagement Forums
- Public Service Employees
- Return to Work Obligations
-
ReturnToWorkSA
-
2018-11-06
- 2018-11-27
-
- SafeWork SA
- Sentencing Act Reform
-
Speeches
-
SANDERSON, Rachel
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Child Protection
-
Children and Young People (Safety) (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
2018-08-01
-
2018-09-05
-
- Children in State Care Apology
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Controlled Substances (Youth Treatment Orders) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Children and Vulnerable Adults) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Foster Parents and Other Positions of Authority) Amendment Bill
- eCARL Notifications
- Foster and Kinship Care
- Grandparents for Grandchildren SA
- Homelessness Week
- Housing SA
- International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women
- Lady Mayoress' Golf Day
- Minister for Child Protection
- Ministerial Statements
- National Families Week
- National Redress Scheme for Institutional Child Sexual Abuse (Commonwealth Powers) Bill
- New Zealand Women's Suffrage Anniversary
- Open and Accountable Government
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
- Residential Care Facility Visits
- Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse
- Sri Lanka Terrorist Attacks
- Statutes Amendment (Child Exploitation and Encrypted Material) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Decriminalisation of Sex Work) Bill
- Surrogacy Bill
-
Answers
- Aboriginal Family Support Services
- Alternative Care Arrangements
-
Auditor-General's Report
-
Care and Protection Orders
- Carer Payments
-
Child Protection
-
2018-05-10
- 2018-05-15
-
2018-06-07
- 2018-08-01
-
2018-10-18
-
2019-04-04
-
2019-05-16
-
2019-06-04
-
2019-07-23
-
-
Child Protection Department
-
2019-07-23
-
2019-08-01
-
2019-09-10
-
2019-09-12
-
-
Child Protection Regional Visits
- Child Protection Stakeholders
- Child Protection Systems Royal Commission
-
Child Protection Workers
-
2019-09-10
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
-
-
Children in Care
-
Children in Care, Immunisation
-
Children in Commercial Care
-
2019-07-23
-
- Children in Out-of-Home Care
-
Children in Residential Care
-
Children in State Care
- Department for Child Protection
-
Exceptional Resource Funding
-
2019-06-18
-
2019-07-23
-
2019-08-01
- 2019-09-10
-
- Family Group Conferences
-
Family-Based Care Program
-
2019-06-04
-
2019-07-23
-
-
Family-Based Carers
-
Financial Counselling Service
-
Financial Counselling Services
-
Financial Wellbeing Counselling Service
- Financial Wellbeing Program
-
Financial Wellbeing Program, Port Pirie
-
Foster and Kinship Care
-
2019-07-23
-
-
Foster and Kinship Carer Assessments
-
Foster Care
-
Foster Carers
-
2018-06-07
-
2019-05-14
-
2019-06-04
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
-
2019-07-23
- 2019-09-12
-
-
Government Advertising
- Government Departments
- Grandparents for Grandchildren
-
Grandparents for Grandchildren SA
-
2018-05-16
-
2018-05-31
- Question Time (14:06)
- Question Time (14:06)
- Question Time (14:09)
- Question Time (14:10)
- Question Time (14:13)
- Question Time (14:14)
- Question Time (14:16)
- Question Time (14:23)
- Question Time (14:24)
- Question Time (14:28)
- Question Time (14:34)
- Question Time (14:35)
- Question Time (14:40)
- Question Time (14:47)
- Question Time (14:48)
- Question Time (14:53)
- Question Time (14:54)
- Question Time (14:55)
- Question Time (14:56)
-
-
Grant Programs
-
2018-11-07
-
2019-09-24
-
-
Guardianship Family Day Care
-
2019-07-23
-
-
Guardianship of the Chief Executive
-
2019-07-23
-
2019-08-01
-
-
Guardianship Orders
-
Influenza Vaccinations
-
Kangaroo Island Ministerial Visit
-
2019-07-04
-
-
Kaurna Electorate Ministerial Visit
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Kinship Care
-
Kinship Carers
- Land Tax
-
Meningococcal Disease
-
Minister for Child Protection
-
Ministerial Staff
-
2018-06-19
- 2019-09-24
-
- National Volunteer Week
-
Non-Family Based Care
-
2019-07-23
-
-
Public Sector Executives
-
2018-11-06
- 2019-09-24
-
-
Public Service Employees
-
2019-09-24
-
-
Residential Care
-
2019-07-23
-
-
Residential Care Facilities
-
2018-11-06
-
2019-07-23
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Residential Care Facility Open Days
-
2018-06-07
-
-
Residential Care Facility Visits
-
2018-08-01
-
2018-08-02
- Question Time (14:12)
- Question Time (14:12)
- Question Time (14:13)
- Question Time (14:18)
- Question Time (14:19)
- Question Time (14:28)
- Question Time (14:28)
- Question Time (14:29)
- Question Time (14:37)
- Question Time (14:38)
- Question Time (14:44)
- Question Time (14:45)
- Question Time (14:55)
- Question Time (14:56)
-
-
Service SA Prospect
-
2018-10-18
- 2018-11-07
-
- Termination Payouts
-
Tregenza House
-
Walkerville YMCA
-
2019-11-27
-
- Working with Children Checks
- Young People in Care, Sexually Transmitted Diseases
-
Speeches
-
SPEIRS, David James
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Coastline Protection
-
Crown Land Management (Section 78b Leases) Amendment Bill
-
2019-10-16
-
2019-11-14
-
-
Hallett Cove Football Club
- Ikara-Flinders Ranges National Park
-
Landscape South Australia Bill
-
2019-03-20
- 2019-05-16
- 2019-06-04
- 2019-10-17
- 2019-11-14
-
- Lifesaving World Championships
-
Ministerial Statement
- Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- Small Business
-
Surrogacy Bill
- World Environment Day
- World Ranger Day
-
Answers
- Adelaide Botanic Garden Night Lighting
- Adelaide Brighton Cement
- Air Quality Monitoring
-
Bailey, Mr C.
- Belair Park Golf Course and Country Club
- Blue Carbon Strategy
- Bushfire Preparedness
- City Deal Funding
-
Climate Change
- Climate Leaders Awards
- Coast Protection Board
- Coast Protection Policy
-
Coastline Protection
-
Conservation Park Accessibility
-
2018-05-17
-
- Coorong Summit
-
Desalination Plant
- Ecotourism
- Encounter Bay Shipwreck
-
Environment and Water Department
- 2019-03-20
-
2019-09-12
-
Environment Protection Authority
-
2019-09-12
-
- Environment Protection Authority Dredging Fees
- Environmental Conservation
-
Flinders Chase National Park
- Flinders Ranges World Heritage Listing
- Friends of National Parks
- Friends of Parks
- Glenthorne Farm
-
Glenthorne National Park
-
Government Advertising
- Government Contracts
- Government Departments
- Government Sector Expenses
-
Grant Programs
- Grants and Subsidies
- Great Southern Ocean Walk
- Green Industries SA
-
Green Industry Fund
-
2018-11-06
- 2018-11-27
-
2019-09-12
- 2019-10-15
-
- Heritage Agreement Program
- Heritage Grants
- Heritage Protection
- Heritage Protection Policy
- International Contaminated Site Remediation Conference
- International Koala Centre of Excellence
-
Kaurna Electorate Ministerial Visit
-
2019-09-11
-
- Le Fevre Primary School
- Lower Lakes and Coorong
- Marine Parks Review
- Minister for Environment and Water
-
Ministerial Staff
- Murray-Darling Basin Ministerial Council
-
Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- 2018-05-08
-
2018-06-19
-
2018-07-03
-
2019-02-13
-
2019-03-20
- 2019-04-30
-
2019-06-20
-
2019-09-26
-
Murray-Darling Basin Royal Commission
-
2018-06-19
-
2019-02-12
- 2019-02-13
-
2019-04-30
-
- Myponga Reservoir
- National Park Cities Forum
-
National Park Rangers
-
National Parks
- Native Vegetation
-
Natural Resources Management
- Nature-Based Tourism
- Nyrstar Chemical Leaks
- Pelican Lagoon
- Port Pirie Fish Deaths
- Premier and Cabinet Department
- Premier's Climate Change Council
- Project Zero
- Public Sector Employees
-
Public Sector Executives
-
Public Service Employees
- Recycled Water
-
Recycled Water Audit
-
2019-09-12
-
- Recycling Activity Survey
- Regional South Australia
-
Reservoirs
- Reservoirs Committee
- Reservoirs Security
-
SA Water
-
2018-07-03
- 2018-11-06
-
2019-02-13
- 2019-03-21
-
2019-06-04
-
2019-09-12
-
-
South-East Water Allocations
- State of the Environment Report
-
Termination Payouts
-
Waste Management
- Waste Management Grants
- Wastewater Management
-
Water Allocations
- Water Industry
- Water Pricing
-
Water Recovery Socio-Economic Criteria
- World Environment Fair
- Yorke Peninsula Ecotourism
-
Speeches
-
STINSON, Jayne Marion
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
-
Appropriation Bill 2018
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Arts and Culture Plan
-
Arts Sector
- Australian Broadcasting Corporation
- Badcoe Electorate
- Badcoe Housing Development
- Boothby Electorate
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
- Children and Young People (Safety) (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Children in Care
- Children in State Care
- Children in State Care Apology
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Child-Like Sex Dolls Prohibition) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Foster Parents and Other Positions of Authority) Amendment Bill
- Evidence (Reporting on Sexual Offences) Amendment Bill
- Foster and Kinship Care
- Generations in Jazz
- Grandparents for Grandchildren SA
- Heysen Cultural Legacy
- International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women
-
Land Acquisition (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
2019-10-15
-
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Limitation of Actions (Child Sexual Abuse) Amendment Bill
- Matter of Privilege
- National Redress Scheme for Institutional Child Sexual Abuse (Commonwealth Powers) Bill
- National Science Week
- Public Transport
- Remembrance Day
- Residential Care Facility Visits
-
School Zoning
- Sentencing (Suspended and Community Based Custodial Sentences) Amendment Bill
- Sri Lanka Terrorist Attacks
- State Budget
- Statutes Amendment (Child Exploitation and Encrypted Material) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill
- Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Classification of Publications, Films and Computer Games) Bill
- Supply Bill 2018
- Supply Bill 2019
- Surrogacy Bill
- Universal Children's Day
- Weatherill, Hon. J.W., Retirement
- World Teachers' Day
-
Questions
- Aboriginal Family Support Services
- Alternative Care Arrangements
- Arts SA
-
Auditor-General's Report
-
Care and Protection Orders
- Carer Payments
-
Child Protection
-
2018-05-10
- 2018-05-15
-
2018-06-07
- 2018-08-01
-
2019-04-04
-
2019-05-16
-
2019-06-04
-
2019-07-23
-
-
Child Protection Department
-
2019-07-23
-
2019-08-01
-
2019-09-10
-
2019-09-12
-
- Child Protection Stakeholders
- Child Protection Systems Royal Commission
-
Child Protection Workers
-
2019-09-10
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
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- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
-
-
Children in Care
-
Children in Care, Immunisation
-
Children in Commercial Care
-
2019-07-23
-
- Children in Out-of-Home Care
-
Children in Residential Care
-
Children in State Care
-
Commissioner for Aboriginal Children and Young People
- Department for Child Protection
-
Exceptional Resource Funding
-
2019-06-18
-
2019-07-23
-
2019-08-01
- 2019-09-10
-
-
Family Group Conferences
-
Family-Based Care Program
-
2019-06-04
-
2019-07-23
-
-
Family-Based Carers
-
Financial Counselling Service
-
Financial Counselling Services
-
Financial Wellbeing Counselling Service
-
Foster and Kinship Care
-
2019-07-23
-
-
Foster and Kinship Carer Assessments
-
Foster Care
-
Foster Carers
-
2018-06-07
-
2019-05-14
-
2019-06-04
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
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- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
-
2019-07-23
- 2019-09-12
-
- Grandparents for Grandchildren
-
Grandparents for Grandchildren SA
-
2018-05-16
-
2018-05-31
- Question Time (14:06)
- Question Time (14:06)
- Question Time (14:08)
- Question Time (14:09)
- Question Time (14:12)
- Question Time (14:14)
- Question Time (14:15)
- Question Time (14:16)
- Question Time (14:23)
- Question Time (14:23)
- Question Time (14:28)
- Question Time (14:33)
- Question Time (14:34)
- Question Time (14:39)
- Question Time (14:40)
- Question Time (14:40)
- Question Time (14:47)
- Question Time (14:47)
- Question Time (14:53)
- Question Time (14:53)
- Question Time (14:55)
- Question Time (14:56)
- 2018-08-01
-
- Guardian for Children and Young People
-
Guardianship Family Day Care
-
2019-07-23
-
-
Guardianship of the Chief Executive
-
2019-07-23
-
2019-08-01
-
-
Guardianship Orders
-
Influenza Vaccinations
-
Kinship Care
-
Kinship Carers
-
Meningococcal Disease
-
Minister for Child Protection
-
Ministerial Staff
-
2018-06-19
-
-
Non-Family Based Care
-
2019-07-23
-
- Premier and Cabinet Department
-
Residential Care
-
2019-07-23
-
-
Residential Care Facilities
-
2018-11-06
-
2019-07-23
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Residential Care Facility Open Days
-
2018-06-07
-
-
Residential Care Facility Visits
-
2018-08-01
-
2018-08-02
- Question Time (14:11)
- Question Time (14:12)
- Question Time (14:13)
- Question Time (14:18)
- Question Time (14:18)
- Question Time (14:19)
- Question Time (14:28)
- Question Time (14:28)
- Question Time (14:29)
- Question Time (14:36)
- Question Time (14:37)
- Question Time (14:38)
- Question Time (14:43)
- Question Time (14:44)
- Question Time (14:45)
- Question Time (14:55)
- Question Time (14:56)
-
-
State Budget
-
State Care Cases
-
State Opera South Australia
-
Tregenza House
- Working with Children Checks
- Young People in Care, Sexually Transmitted Diseases
-
Speeches
-
SZAKACS, Joseph Karl
-
Speeches
- Aged Care
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Causby, Mr J.
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Foster Parents and Other Positions of Authority) Amendment Bill
- International Workers' Day
- Land Tax (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Motor Vehicles (Offensive Advertising) Amendment Bill
- Remembrance Day
- State Budget
- Statutes Amendment (Decriminalisation of Sex Work) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill
-
Questions
-
Cheltenham Parade Intersection
-
2019-06-18
-
2019-07-23
-
- Consultants and Contractors
- Government Advertising
- Government Departments
-
Grant Programs
-
2019-10-31
-
-
Labour Hire Practices
-
2019-05-01
-
- Ministerial Staff
-
Pregnancy Advisory Centre
-
2019-06-18
-
- Public Sector Executives
-
Public Service Employees
-
2019-09-11
-
2019-09-12
-
-
Queen Elizabeth Hospital Car Park
-
2019-12-03
-
-
Return to Work Disputes
-
2019-09-11
-
-
ReturnToWorkSA
-
SafeWork SA
- Termination Payouts
-
-
Speeches
-
TARZIA, Vincent Anthony
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Australian Craniofacial Unit
- Broadcast Use on Social Media Platforms
-
Chamber Photography
- Facebook Live Streaming
- Hawke, Hon. R.j.l.
- Local Health Networks
-
Matter of Privilege
-
Matter of Privilege, Speaker's Statement
-
Matters of Privilege, Speaker's Statement
- Members for Cheltenham and Enfield, Resignation
- Members, New
- Members' Behaviour, Speaker's Statement
- Members' Remarks
- Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- Pairing Arrangements
- Parliament House Broadcast
- Parliament House Vandalism
- Presentation to Governor
- Public Sector Employees
- Questions on Notice
- Residential Care Facility Visits
- Royal Commissions (Extraterritorial Application) Amendment Bill
- Sessional Orders
-
Sittings and Business
- Speaker, Election
-
Speaker's Ruling
- Sri Lanka Terrorist Attacks
- Standing Orders Committee
- Sub Judice Rule
-
Tabling of Documents
- Universal Ambulance Cover Scheme
-
Answers
-
Land Tax
-
2019-09-24
-
-
Matter of Privilege, Speaker's Statement
-
-
Speeches
-
TEAGUE, Joshua Baden
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- Appropriation Bill 2018
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
- Camping and Mooring, Mid Murray Council
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
-
Construction Industry Training Fund (Board) Amendment Bill
-
2018-11-06
-
- Correctional Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Assets Confiscation (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law (High Risk Offenders) (Psychologists) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Assaults on Prescribed Emergency Workers) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Children and Vulnerable Adults) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Dishonest Communication with Children) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Foster Parents and Other Positions of Authority) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Throwing Objects at Vehicles) Amendment Bill
- Criminal Procedure (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Disability Inclusion Bill
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
- Education and Children's Services Bill
- Electoral (Prisoner Voting) Amendment Bill
- Evidence (Reporting on Sexual Offences) Amendment Bill
-
Farm Debt Mediation Bill
- Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Generations in Jazz
- Genetically Modified Crops Management (Designated Area) Amendment Bill
- Hawke, Hon. R.j.l.
- Heysen Cultural Legacy
- Heysen Electorate Road Upgrades
- Illicit Drug Use
- Independent Commissioner Against Corruption (Investigation Powers) Amendment Bill
- International Firefighters' Day
- International Volunteer Day
- Judicial Conduct Commissioner (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Kuitpo Forest
- Labour Hire Licensing Repeal Bill
- Landscape South Australia Bill
- Late Payment of Government Debts (Interest) (Automatic Payment of Interest) Amendment Bill
- Legal Practitioners (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
Legislative Review Committee
- 2018-05-16
- 2018-06-20
- 2018-07-04
- 2018-07-25
- 2018-09-05
- 2018-09-19
- 2018-10-16
- 2018-10-17
- 2018-10-24
- 2018-11-07
- 2018-11-14
- 2018-12-05
- 2019-02-13
- 2019-02-27
- 2019-03-20
- 2019-04-03
- 2019-05-01
- 2019-05-15
- 2019-06-05
- 2019-06-19
- 2019-07-02
- 2019-07-31
- 2019-09-11
- 2019-09-25
- 2019-10-16
- 2019-10-30
- 2019-11-13
- 2019-11-27
- 2019-12-04
- Legislative Review Committee: Annual Report 2017
- Legislative Review Committee: Health Practitioner Regulation National Law (South Australia) (Remote Area Attendance)
- Limitation of Actions (Child Sexual Abuse) Amendment Bill
- Local Government (Rate Oversight) Amendment Bill
- Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- National Electricity (South Australia) (Retailer Reliability Obligation) Amendment Bill
-
National Farm Safety Week
- National Police Remembrance Day
- National Science Week
-
Natural Resources Committee
- Natural Resources Committee: Arid Lands Fact Finding Visit
- Natural Resources Management Committee: Management of Overabundant and Pest Species
- Office for the Ageing (Adult Safeguarding) Amendment Bill
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
-
Planning, Development and Infrastructure Act Regulations
- Public Interest Disclosure Bill
- Public Works Committee: Rebuild of the South Australian Dog Fence
- Public Works Committee: South Eastern Freeway Managed Motorway Project
- Public Works Committee: Women's and Children's Hospital Upgrade Sustainment Program
- Rail Safety National Law (South Australia) (Miscellaneous No 4) Amendment Bill
- Remembrance Day
- Road Traffic (Drug Testing) Amendment Bill
- Road Traffic (Evidentiary Provisions) Amendment Bill
- Select Committee on the Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Sentencing (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Sentencing (Release on Licence) Amendment Bill
- South Australian Employment Tribunal (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
-
South Australian Stolen Generations Reparations Scheme
-
2019-02-14
-
- Statutes Amendment (Attorney-General's Portfolio) (No. 2) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (Attorney-General's Portfolio) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Budget Measures) Bill
-
2019-07-23
-
- Statutes Amendment (Child Exploitation and Encrypted Material) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Decriminalisation of Sex Work) Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Mineral Resources) Bill
-
2018-11-27
-
- Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Binding Rate of Return Instrument) Bill
- Statutes Amendment (SACAT) Bill
- Statutes Amendment and Repeal (Simplify) Bill
- SteamRanger Heritage Railway
- Summary Offences (Disrespectful Conduct in Court) Amendment Bill
- Summary Offences (Liquor Offences) Amendment Bill
- Supply Bill 2018
- Supreme Court (Court of Appeal) Amendment Bill
- TAFE SA Reviews
- Terrorism (Police Powers) (Use of Force) Amendment Bill
- Tobacco Products Regulation (E-Cigarettes and Review) Amendment Bill
- Tonkin Government
- Tour Down Under
- Type 1 Diabetes
- Victims of Crime (Offender Service and Joinder) Amendment Bill
- Women in Business
- Women's Suffrage Anniversary
-
World Teachers' Day
-
Questions
- Australian Energy Market Operator
- Australian Space Agency
- Bushfire Preparedness
- Children in Care
- Children's Week Awards
- Defence Shipbuilding
- Domestic Violence
- Electricity Prices
- Entrepreneurial Learning Strategy
- Equal Opportunity Commission
- Flinders Ranges World Heritage Listing
- Glenthorne National Park
- Home Battery Scheme
- Hotel Industry
- iAwards
- Justice System
- Local Government Elections
- Local Sport and Recreation
- Lot Fourteen
- Ministerial Statement
- Mitzevich, Mr Nick
- Mobile Black Spot Program
- Mobile Phone Blackspots
- Native Vegetation
- Natural Resources Management
- Online Gambling
- Periods, Pain and Endometriosis Program
- Prison Infrastructure
- Project Renew
- Provocation Defence
- Public Education Awards
- Public Transport Privatisation
- Renewable Energy
- Riverland Community Justice Centre
- Skilling South Australia
- Small Amount Credit Contracts
-
South Australian Film Industry
- South Eastern Freeway
- Special Olympics Australia National Games
- STEM Explorer Program
- Strawberry Industry
- Teacher Literacy and Numeracy Test
- United States, Cybersecurity
-
Wine Industry
- Workplace Safety
-
Speeches
-
TRELOAR, Peter Andrew
-
Speeches
- Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: Report 2017-18
- Address in Reply
- ANZAC Day Commemoration Services
- Appropriation Bill 2018
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Barngarla Language Book
- Bass, Mr Rodney Piers (Sam)
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
- Cleve
- Country Cabinet
- Country Health
-
Crown Land Management (Section 78b Leases) Amendment Bill
-
2019-11-14
-
- Defence Shipbuilding
- Duck Ponds Bushfire
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
- Electoral (Prisoner Voting) Amendment Bill
- Eyre Peninsula Aboriginal History
- Eyre Peninsula Electricity Supply
- Farm Debt Mediation Bill
- Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Flinders Electorate Football Clubs
- Free Trade Agreements
- Genetically Modified Crops Management (Designated Area) Amendment Bill
- Infrastructure SA Bill
- International Day for Disaster Reduction
-
Landscape South Australia Bill
-
2019-05-16
-
- Livestock Industry
- Modra, Mr K.
- National Science Week
- Natural Resources Management Committee: Management of Overabundant and Pest Species
- Public Works Committee: Flinders Ports (Inner Harbour Port Adelaide Title F) Site Remediation Project
- Public Works Committee: Port Lincoln Wastewater Treatment Plant
- Public Works Committee: Rebuild of the South Australian Dog Fence
- Rail Safety National Law (South Australia) (Miscellaneous No 4) Amendment Bill
- Regional Rail Closure
- Regional South Australia
- Remembrance Day
-
Select Committee on the Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- State Government Agenda
- Statutes Amendment (Mineral Resources) Bill
-
Summary Offences (Liquor Offences) Amendment Bill
-
2018-11-14
-
- Summary Offences (Trespass on Primary Production Premises) Amendment Bill
- TAFE SA Reviews
- Tunarama Festival
- Wild Dogs
- Women in Agriculture
- World War II Anniversary
-
Questions
- Agricultural Industries
- Aquaculture Training
- Child Protection Regional Visits
- China Trade Mission
-
Dog Fence
-
Drought Assistance
- Duck Ponds Bushfire
- Energy Made Easy Website
- Energy Policy
- Eyre Peninsula Rail Network
- Fisheries Cost Recovery Policy
- Giant Australian Cuttlefish
- Grid Scale Storage Fund
- Home Battery Scheme
- Job Creation
- Kangaroo Numbers
- Multi-Peril Crop Insurance
- National Drought Summit
- Natural Resources Management
- Oyster Industry
- Pastoral Economic Growth
- Police Constable Development Program
- Prison Services
- Recreational Fishers
- Regional Development Australia
- Regional Jobs
-
Regional Roads
-
Regional South Australia
- School Internet Service
- Seafood Industry
- Shanghai Trade Office
- Skills Training
- Sports Facilities
- Tourism
- Upper Spencer Gulf
- Vocational Education and Training
- Waste Management
-
Wild Dogs
-
Speeches
-
VAN HOLST PELLEKAAN, Daniel Cornelis
-
Speeches
- Aboriginal Lands Parliamentary Standing Committee: APY Lands Visit
- Address in Reply
- Adjournment
- Appropriation Bill 2018
-
Australian Craniofacial Unit
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
- Cheltenham Place
- Christchurch Mosques Attack
- Criminal Law Consolidation (Child-Like Sex Dolls Prohibition) Amendment Bill
- Economic and Finance Committee: Emergency Services Levy 2018-19
-
Electoral (Prisoner Voting) Amendment Bill
- Electricity Metering Services
- Fire and Emergency Services (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- Gayle's Law Regulations
- Genetically Modified Crops Management (Designated Area) Amendment Bill
-
Health and Community Services Complaints (Miscellaneous) Amendment Bill
- 2018-11-15
-
2018-11-27
- Health Care (Governance) (No 2) Amendment Bill
-
Health Care (Governance) Amendment Bill
-
2018-07-25
- 2018-07-26
-
- Health Consumers Alliance
-
Home Battery Scheme
- Ikara-Flinders Ranges National Park
- International Day of People with Disability
- Labour Hire Licensing Repeal Bill
- Livesey Report into Generator Acquisition
- Medical Mesh
- Member for West Torrens
- Modbury Hospital
- Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- NAIDOC Week
- National Electricity (South Australia) (Retailer Reliability Obligation) Amendment Bill
- National Electricty (South Australia) (Retailer Reliability Obligation) Amendment Bill
-
National Gas (South Australia) (Capacity Trading and Auctions) Amendment Bill
-
2018-08-02
-
2018-09-05
-
- National Police Remembrance Day
- Oakden Mental Health Facility
-
Office for the Ageing (Adult Safeguarding) Amendment Bill
- 2018-10-25
-
2018-11-13
- Payroll Tax (Exemption for Small Business) Amendment Bill
- Petroleum and Geothermal Energy (Ban on Hydraulic Fracturing) Amendment Bill
- Public Works Committee: Golden Grove Road Upgrade
- Public Works Committee: Joy Baluch am Bridge Duplication
- Public Works Committee: Lake Bonney Battery Energy Storage System
- Public Works Committee: Rebuild of the South Australian Dog Fence
- Public Works Committee: Women's and Children's Hospital Upgrade Sustainment Program
- Questions on Notice
- Remote Area Attendance
- Road Traffic (Drug Testing) Amendment Bill
- Road Traffic (Evidentiary Provisions) Amendment Bill
- Royal Flying Doctor Service
- SA Ambulance Service
- SA Pathology and SA Medical Imaging
- Sittings and Business
- South Australian Public Health (Early Childhood Services and Immunisation) Amendment Bill
-
Statutes Amendment (Mineral Resources) Bill
-
2018-08-02
- 2018-11-27
-
2019-07-03
-
-
Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Binding Rate of Return Instrument) Bill
-
2018-08-02
-
2018-11-06
-
-
Statutes Amendment (National Energy Laws) (Rules) Bill
-
2018-06-07
-
2018-07-04
-
- Statutes Amendment (SACAT Federal Diversity Jurisdiction) Bill
-
Stuart Electorate
- Temporary Generators
-
Tobacco Products Regulation (E-Cigarettes and Review) Amendment Bill
-
2018-11-15
-
- Wild Dogs
- World Environment Day
-
Answers
-
Adult Safeguarding Unit
-
Aged-Care Beds
-
2019-09-10
-
- Aged-Care Facilities
- Aged-Care Facilities Audit
- Aged-Care Providers
- Ageing Well Directorate
-
Ageing Well Grants
- Ambulance Employees Association
-
Ambulance Ramping
-
Ambulance Station Closures
-
2018-11-14
-
- Australian Clinical Labs
-
Australian Craniofacial Unit
-
2018-07-24
-
2018-07-25
-
2018-07-26
-
2018-09-06
- 2019-02-12
- 2019-02-13
-
- Australian Energy Market Operator
- Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation
-
Barossa Hospital
- Battery Value Chain
- Blood Tests
-
Borderline Personality Disorder
-
2018-08-02
-
- BreastScreen SA
-
Cancer Diagnosis Error
-
Cardiology Services
-
Central Adelaide Local Health Network
- Central Health Department Staff
-
Cheltenham Place
- Chemotherapy
- Chief Public Health Officer
- Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services
- Chua, Dr A.
- Clinical Governance
- Colonoscopy Procedures
- Colonoscopy Waiting List
-
Commission on Excellence and Innovation
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Community Mental Health Service Plan
- Consultancies
- Consultants and Contractors
-
Copper Mining
- Copper to the World Conference
- Country Ambulance Services
-
Country Health SA
-
Country Health Services
-
Country Hospitals
-
2018-06-20
- 2018-08-02
- 2018-09-06
-
2018-10-16
- 2019-04-02
-
-
Drug and Alcohol Services
- Drug Security Project
-
Eastern Eyre Health Advisory Council
- Eating Disorder Treatment Services
-
Elective Surgery
- ElectraNet
-
Electricity Generation
-
Electricity Interconnector
-
Electricity Prices
- Electricity Supply
-
Emergency Codes
-
2019-02-12
-
2019-09-11
-
2019-10-15
-
-
Emergency Departments
- 2018-11-14
-
2018-12-04
-
2019-02-12
-
2019-02-13
- 2019-04-04
- 2019-09-10
-
2019-09-11
- 2019-10-15
- 2019-10-17
- Emergency Services
- Energy Made Easy Website
-
Energy Policy
-
Energy Prices
-
Energy Security
- Energy Storage Conference
- Energy System Strength
- Enterprise Patient Administration System
- Final Accreditation Reports
-
Fleet Vehicles
-
2019-09-10
-
- Flinders Brain Bank
-
Flinders Medical Centre
- Flinders Medical Centre Births
- Flinders Medical Centre Immunology and Pathology Services
- Flinders Medical Centre Norovirus Patients
- Forensic Mental Health Patients
- Gawler Craton Mining Exploration
- Gawler Health Service
- Government Advertising
- Government Savings Target
- GP Oncologist Role
-
Grant Programs
-
2018-11-27
- 2019-10-16
-
- Grants
-
Grid Scale Storage Fund
-
Hampstead Hydrotherapy Pool
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Hampstead Rehabilitation Centre
-
Health and Wellbeing Department
-
Health Budget
-
Health Consumers Alliance
-
2018-09-18
- 2019-02-13
-
- Health Funding
-
Health Services
-
HIV Services
-
2018-09-18
-
-
Home Battery Scheme
-
Home Care Packages
- Home Care Packages Waiting Times
-
Hospital Beds
- Hospital Presentations
- Hospital Services
-
Hospital Sleep Services
-
2019-02-13
-
-
Hospital Staff
- Hospital Stay
-
Hospitals, Hotel Services
-
Hospitals, Private Practice
-
Hospitals, Winter Demand
-
2018-08-02
-
- Hydrogen Action Plan
- Hydrogen Industry
-
Ice Taskforce
- Independent Commissioner Against Corruption
-
Influenza Vaccinations
- 2018-06-20
-
2019-06-04
-
2019-06-19
- 2019-07-02
-
2019-09-11
- Inpatient Separations
- Investing Expenditure Projects
- Kalimna
-
Kangaroo Island Ministerial Visit
-
Kaurna Electorate Ministerial Visit
-
2019-09-10
-
2019-09-12
-
-
KordaMentha
-
Local Health Network Governing Boards
-
Local Health Networks
-
Lyell McEwin Hospital
- 2018-06-20
- 2018-08-02
-
2018-09-06
- 2019-02-13
-
2019-09-10
-
Lymphoedema Compression Garment Subsidy
- Lymphoedema Patients
- Lymphoedema Services
- McGowan, Dr C.
- Medical Interns
- Meningococcal B Disease
-
Meningococcal B Strain Vaccination
-
2018-08-02
- 2018-09-04
-
- Meningococcal Disease
- Mental Health Beds
- Mental Health Commission
- Mental Health Commission and Wellbeing SA
-
Mental Health Commissioner
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Mental Health Patients
-
Mental Health Services
- Microgrid Energy System
- Mineral Exploration
-
Mining Industry
-
Mining Legislation
-
Ministerial Staff
-
Modbury Hospital
- 2018-06-19
-
2018-06-20
-
2018-08-02
-
2018-09-06
- 2019-09-10
- Mount Gambier Hospital
- Murray Bridge Soldier's Memorial Hospital
-
National Disability Insurance Scheme
-
National Energy Market Reform
- National Health Reform Agreement
-
Noarlunga Hospital
-
Northern Adelaide Local Health Network
- 2019-02-12
-
2019-06-06
- 2019-10-15
-
2019-11-12
- Oakden Mental Health Facility Report
-
Office for Ageing Well
- Office of the Ageing
- Olympic Dam
- Operating Expenses
- Operational Research in Health
- Ostomy Association
-
Outpatient Appointments
-
2018-08-02
- 2018-11-14
-
2019-02-13
- 2019-09-10
-
- OZ Minerals
- Paediatric Eating Disorder Service
-
Palliative Care Services
- Patient Assistance Transport Scheme
-
Patient Care Contracts
- Patient Transfers
- Pelvic Mesh Clinic
-
Port Augusta Power Stations
-
2018-10-18
- 2018-11-15
-
-
Pregnancy Advisory Centre
-
2019-06-18
-
- Pregnancy Advisory Service
- Priority Care Centres
-
Prison Health Services
-
2019-02-13
- 2019-09-10
-
-
Private Health Insurance
-
2019-09-11
-
- Public Sector Executives
-
Public Service Employees
- Pukatja Dialysis Service
-
Queen Elizabeth Hospital
-
2018-06-20
-
2018-09-06
-
2019-02-12
-
2019-02-13
-
2019-04-30
-
-
Queen Elizabeth Hospital Car Park
-
2019-12-03
-
-
Queen Elizabeth Hospital Hydrotherapy Pool
-
2019-09-11
-
- Real-Time Prescription Monitoring
-
Regional GP Services
-
2019-09-10
-
- Regional Health Boards
-
Regional Health Funding
- Regional Hospital Car Parking
-
Regional Locum Services
- Regional Mining Industry Employment
-
Renewable Energy
-
Repatriation General Hospital
- Resources Sector
- Roxby Downs Anniversary
-
Royal Adelaide Hospital
-
2018-09-06
-
- Royal Adelaide Hospital Blackout
- Royal Adelaide Hospital Car Park
-
Royal Adelaide Hospital Incident
-
2018-11-07
-
-
Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety
-
2019-02-12
-
- Royalties for Regions
-
Rural Support Service
-
SA Ambulance Service
- SA Biomedical Engineering
- SA Cancer Service
-
SA Dental Service
-
SA Health
-
2018-06-20
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
- Answers to Questions
-
2018-07-05
- 2018-07-25
-
2018-08-02
-
2018-09-06
- 2018-11-07
-
2019-02-13
- 2019-09-10
-
-
SA Health Grants
- SA Health Mental Health Triage Service
-
SA Health Staff
-
2019-09-10
-
- SA Medical Imaging
-
SA Pathology
-
2018-09-05
-
2018-09-18
- 2018-11-13
-
2019-04-02
-
2019-09-10
-
- SA Pharmacy
- SAHMRI 2
-
Seniors Card
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Sexual Health Services Funding
-
2019-02-13
-
- SHINE SA
- Silverchain
- Smart Meters
- Solar Energy
-
Solar Panels
-
2018-11-29
-
- South Australian Chamber of Mines and Energy
- South Australian Medical Imaging
- State Ageing Plan
- State Forensic Mental Health Service
- Sterilisation Services
- Stroke Service
-
Sunrise EMR and EPAS
-
Surgical Fees
- Targeted Voluntary Separation Packages
- Transfer Coordination Service
- Underground Mining School of Excellence
- Volunteer Bus Drivers
-
Wallaroo Mining Proposal
-
Wellbeing SA
- Whyalla Hospital
-
Women's and Children's Hospital
-
2018-06-20
-
2018-08-02
-
2018-09-06
- 2019-02-12
-
2019-09-10
-
-
Women's and Children's Hospital Taskforce
-
Woodleigh House
- Workforce Summary
- Youth Mental Health Services Review
-
-
Speeches
-
WEATHERILL, Jay Wilson
-
WHETSTONE, Timothy John
-
Speeches
- Address in Reply
- ANZAC Day Commemoration Services
- Appropriation Bill 2018
- Appropriation Bill 2019
- Bushfires and Emergency Services
-
Chaffey Electorate
- Country Cabinet
- Country Health Services
- Cross-Border Commissioner
- Electoral (Prisoner Voting) Amendment Bill
- EML Game Changer Program
- Fair Trading (Ticket Scalping) Amendment Bill
-
Farm Debt Mediation Bill
-
2018-06-06
-
2018-06-21
-
- Free Trade Agreements
-
Genetically Modified Crops Management (Designated Area) Amendment Bill
- Glossop High School
- Great Wine Capitals
- Industrial Hemp
- Labour Hire Licensing Repeal Bill
- Landscape South Australia Bill
- Legislative Review Committee
- Minister for Environment and Water
- Mobile Black Spot Program
- Moorook Anniversary
- Murray-Darling Basin Plan
- National Drought Summit
- National Electricity (South Australia) (Retailer Reliability Obligation) Amendment Bill
- National Farm Safety Week
- National Police Remembrance Day
- National Volunteer Week
- Nyrstar
- Nyrstar Chemical Leaks
- Project Ice Riverland
- Public Works Committee: Rebuild of the South Australian Dog Fence
- Rail Safety National Law (South Australia) (Miscellaneous No 4) Amendment Bill
- Regional South Australia
- Riverland Award Winners
- Riverland Field Days
- Riverland Italian Community
- Riverland Sportsperson of the Year Awards
- Riverland Tourism
- Riverland West Citrus Fest
-
SA Tourism Awards
- Statutes Amendment (Liquor Licensing) Bill
- Strawberry Industry
- Summary Offences (Trespass on Primary Production Premises) Amendment Bill
- TAFE SA Reviews
- Timber Industry
- Vegetable Industry
- Volunteers
- Waikerie Football Club
- Women in Agriculture
- World Routes Aviation Conference
-
World Teachers' Day
-
Answers
- Agricultural Industries
- Agtech
- Almond Industry
-
Beekeeping Industry
-
2019-05-01
-
- Bilby Oat Variety
-
Biosecurity Management
- Charter Fishing Industry
- Collaborative Food and Beverage Businesses
- Crop and Pasture Report
-
Dog Fence
-
Drought Assistance
- Fisheries Cost Recovery Policy
- Fishing Sector Compliance
- Fleurieu Peninsula
- Food Producers
-
Food South Australia
- Food Waste
-
Forestry Industry
-
2018-09-04
- 2018-11-27
-
2019-04-30
-
-
Fruit Fly
-
Genetically Modified Crops Moratorium
- Giant Australian Cuttlefish
- Giant Pine Scale Eradication Program
-
Government Advertising
- 2018-11-06
-
2019-09-24
- Government Departments
- Grain Classification
-
Grain Industry
-
Grant Programs
- 2018-11-06
- 2018-11-07
-
2019-10-31
-
Great Wine Capitals
-
Horticulture Industry
- Industrial Hemp
- Kangaroo Island Meat Processing
- Kangaroo Numbers
-
Kaurna Electorate Ministerial Visit
-
2019-09-10
-
- Livestock Industry
-
McLaren Vale Wine Industry
-
2018-11-29
-
- Member for Dunstan
-
Mining Industry
-
2018-11-29
-
- Mining Legislation
-
Minister for Primary Industries and Regional Development
-
Minister's Recreational Fishing Advisory Council
-
Ministerial Expenditure
-
Ministerial Staff
-
2018-06-20
-
-
Mobile Black Spot Program
-
Mobile Phone Blackspots
- Multi-Peril Crop Insurance
- Murray Mallee Region
- National Drought Summit
- Northern Adelaide Irrigation Scheme
-
Northern Adelaide Plains
- Nyrstar Chemical Leaks
- Overland Train Service
- Oyster Industry
- Pastoral Economic Growth
-
Port Pirie Fish Deaths
-
2019-10-31
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Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill
Committee Stage
In committee (resumed on motion).
Clause 17.
Ms COOK: In regard to progress through these clauses, could the Deputy Premier give any advice about what advice was sought, and from whom, regarding the email from minister Lensink to members of the house outlining a determination to finalise debate by 5.30pm today?
The CHAIR: Could you repeat the question, please.
Ms COOK: During the week, members were sent an email from the minister in the other place—
The CHAIR: As in members of this house?
Ms COOK: —yes—outlining that there had been a determination and advice that we need to finalise debate on this bill by 5.30pm today. I can table a copy of the email, if you wish.
The CHAIR: I am not aware of that email.
Ms COOK: I was just asking about that judgement.
The CHAIR: I rule that out of order, member for Hurtle Vale. I have had no suggestion to me as committee Chair that that is the case, so I am going to suggest that we move on to the next question.
Ms COOK: Given that then, could the Deputy Premier explain the rationale of changes to the clause 17 countenances?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: The deletion of subsection (1) of section 43. I am advised that the transitional arrangements, which are what we are dealing with, require the new amendment to remove two amendments to be made to the Child Safety (Prohibited Persons) Act 2016, which made bestiality a prescribed offence.
Australian jurisdictions initially agreed to the national standards for working with children checks that bestiality should be considered a disqualifying offence known as a category 1 offence with no right of appeal. Jurisdictions also took the same approach in the NDIS Workers Screening IGA (that is, the intergovernmental agreement).
However, since these standards and IGA were agreed, jurisdictions have been working through specific and detailed offence mapping for each offence category for the purpose of the NDIS worker screening. As a result of this work, jurisdictions have identified specific instances of offending that may be captured by the offence of bestiality that should not result in the person being prohibited indefinitely.
For example, jurisdictions have encountered instances where a young adult offender may have been found guilty of a bestiality offence; however, the young offender may have engaged in that behaviour while drunk or through a dare, not amounting to sexual intercourse, and since that time has not engaged in the same type of offending.
Jurisdictions are mindful that these offenders would be excluded from ever being permitted to undertake child-related work because of an offence committed as a young adult when the individual has not engaged in any other offending over subsequent years and no longer poses a risk to children. As a result, an amendment is required to ensure that bestiality is not considered a prescribed offence to allow for these circumstances, which is a bit more expanded than I advised earlier in the committee. I hope that covers it.
Clause passed.
Clause 18.
Ms COOK: Again, I ask about the rationale for the changes at clause 18.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: This clause makes a consequential amendment to the long title of the Disability Inclusion Act 2018 to enable the act to provide for the NDIS Worker Check Scheme.
The CHAIR: A comprehensive answer. Any further questions?
Clause passed.
Clause 19 passed.
Clause 20.
Ms COOK: In the other place the minister said:
The advice I have received is that in terms of the logistics, explaining to people who contact the screening unit, it is relatively easy to explain to people about seven days; if you try to explain to them about the 150 hours, that is going to be quite an extensive operation to even get people to understand that.
My question is directly related to what the reason is that we cannot have a period of hours of work provided so that it is very clear for people within the act as opposed to what is loose and days where hours are not prescribed within those days.
We have not been able to get an answer at this point regarding any definitive number of hours to be worked by somebody, and it puts people at risk of breaching the act, whereas if there are a prescribed number of hours to be worked it would be very simple for them and leave nothing to chance. Why is it so difficult for the unit to do an hour count versus a day count? Why can people not understand it, according to the minister?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I think all the reasons that were traversed in the other place when an alternative proposal was put by the Labor Party representatives to consider having the 150-hour option make it very clear that the capacity for ease of understanding is to be able to be employed on the seven-day rule. Why? As I say, apart from all the reasons that are put there, the seven-day period is not an uncommon feature in relation to other legislation and has an ordinary meaning for the purposes of its employment.
Certainly, there has been exposure in the debates as to whether a day is a full day or just an hour on a day, and all that debate has taken place. From the government's point of view, we are satisfied that, for the purposes of making it as easy as possible, it is fair to apply the seven-day arrangement rather than the 150 hours. We are persuaded by the arguments that have been put on keeping some kind of log of the number of hours over a period of time. That is why we are maintaining that position, and clearly most of the Legislative Council thought the same.
Ms COOK: It is all well and good for the Legislative Council to think the same, but people are still making presentations, to me at least, regarding the worry about getting caught inadvertently and unwillingly in a trap of suddenly being in breach of an act where there is quite a hefty penalty. I believe it is right for us to challenge this to the extreme so that we look after the best interests of people. That is why we are doing it.
Also, the case presented to us in regard to this clause was that there are people who will transition from being volunteer contributors in the community to suddenly working within a non-government organisation, for example, and getting paid. The case was put to us that the reason that this needed to happen, that they then paid for a screening, was that people would take advantage of the circumstances, apply for a volunteer screening and then just wait—get their volunteer screening, go for a job and not have to then pay for this said screening. An individual would do that and would plan to do that. Is it still the case that the government thinks that is why we have to charge all people, because they cannot be trusted to go from volunteering to paid work legitimately?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I will try to be as brief as I can on this. Prior to this proposed legislation, as is operational today—except for a policy initiative of the new government from November last year giving relief to volunteers—everyone had to pay, volunteer or working. We have accepted an idea formulated into policy that volunteers ought to be able to have those checks for free. What the government have been alerted to is that it could be exploited by those who might want to avoid the payment by registering as a volunteer and then going on to paid employment just to avoid the fee.
I would hope—and I think it is the view of the government—if this occurs, it would be at a minimal level, but it may not be. We have to be alert to the fact that, good idea as it may be, we have to protect the taxpayer against any inappropriate use and exploitation of the offer that we have made. That is why it is there.
We have tried working a model of how that might apply and most easily be managed, particularly by the volunteer who might transfer to work on a day's basis. Obviously, the opposition has a different view as to how that should be applied. It has been debated, the merits have been considered and the government maintains its position that we are committed to giving volunteers a free check, but we also maintain a position that you pay for the check if it is for employment. If there is a circumstance where someone might abuse that, they will be caught. We consider that to be a responsible approach without there being any unfair impediment on volunteers or any unrealistic evasion of that by someone who is actually working.
Ms COOK: Just to clarify, if somebody gets a clearance to volunteer with children and then in the crossover they go to work, perhaps for a disability support organisation, which is where our concern lies—there are those very short shifts of one hour when they just pop in and out of a house to provide some minor assistance—does that qualify them as a worker within the context of the same screening? Do they need to reapply? What do they need to do? What are the instructions for those people?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: No, you do not have to apply for your working with children check in those circumstances.
Ms COOK: For working with a disability—
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: Correct.
Ms COOK: So it just transfers across and you have to pay.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: They are separate checks; is that understood? As I say, we are now on the disability workers' side of things and they have a different origin. Their law is set out in the Disability Inclusion Act 2018 and has an entirely different origin. That is why there are some complications with having two separate checks, but we are updating both of them.
Ms COOK: To be able to share information with people in the public, there is no separate different application process with a waiting period that would need to happen? They would just alert the department to the fact that they are working once they get that trigger point, and it then converts; is that what would happen?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: An NDIS volunteer commences working, gives notice, pays the fee and is able to continue working, but they have simply paid the fee at that point. Ultimately, they get their notice of that being approved.
Ms COOK: As we said before, there will be an education process we will go through and an instruction process for organisations. This week, I have had four emails from organisations that I have referred on to the department. One of them was from a large organisation, Lions, who are quite confused about the new process, and I have explained to them that it is not actually in place at this stage.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I look forward then to the progressing of this bill so we can start the advertising campaign.
Clause passed.
Clause 21.
Ms COOK: In regard to clause 21, how will the government internally ensure that the unique identifier numbers are not able to be used or accessed by staff to identify a person involved in a screening application unless it specifically relates to the provision of a screening? How will that be protected?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: It seems to me that there is a concern that the unique identifier in some way is a number that might carry information that, in the wrong hands, could be made available to someone else. The unique identifier number, I am advised, is a bit like a driver's licence number: it does not actually carry any data about how hopeless or good a driver you are; it simply provides a number for identification purposes. It is a number that is utilised for the purposes of the recipient being able to access information themselves and to provide to their employer for the purposes of their doing the check that the proper screening has occurred. That is the idea of it. It does not carry on its code any relevant data in relation to that person.
The information about a person in the unit is, as I explained earlier in the committee, protected by all the obligations in relation to public sector confidentiality and privacy and their obligations to maintain that material on a confidential basis. Just as any other person in the public sector or health department is not allowed to go in and look at other people's notes and use them for purposes other than the provision of health services, this is exactly the same scenario. The identifier itself is really just an access code for that person to be identified and to access information for themselves.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: Where will the information be stored?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: It will be stored in the departmental secure systems, which includes the assessment unit, where it is stored now and has been for as long as I have been around.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: The Attorney informs the committee that it is not stored at a data centre anywhere external from government through contract. It is stored on site on your own servers and in your own databases. That is news to me. It is a fascinating revelation. The question then becomes: what capacity—
The Hon. V.A. Chapman interjecting:
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: You are talking about a unique identifier. It could be—
The Hon. V.A. Chapman interjecting:
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: Getting frustrated is not an excuse for poor manners. I know that the government regularly buys space to store its information at external data centres, but the Attorney has informed the house that all that data will be stored on site, so my second question is: what is the size of the data management capability of the department?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: As the member would well know—I have referred to the data previously and I will confirm again—it is secured in the public sector server systems. A lot of this data is in the iCloud, as the member well knows, but that does not mean that, because it is in that format, it is in some way insecure.
The unique identifier is an entirely independent issue. It does not carry data in itself. It is simply a number that is given to the client for the purposes of them being able to access information themselves or to provide that information to their employer, which is part of the regime here to make sure that you have a check—you do not work with children unless you have one—and that your employer has obligations to make sure that you have that check before they employ you.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: I just asked for the size of the agency's capability to store this on site. The Attorney-General just said that they are not storing it on site: they are storing it at a data centre or in the cloud. That was my initial question, which the Attorney scoffed at, saying, 'No, we are storing that inside the department.' Now we realise that we are not. My third question from the uncomfortable laughter of the Attorney-General is: what security measures has the department put in place around this information on top of the ordinary measures in place for government data that is held?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: It is exactly the same security system that operated pre-March 2018.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: What is that?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I do not have the details of that, but I am sure that—
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: Perhaps you can get a briefing back to the committee rather than laughing it off arrogantly.
The CHAIR: The Member for West Torrens is called to order. The Attorney has the call.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: The information that is stored in this unit is potentially very sensitive. It is being accumulated and made available for assessment for very good reason, namely, the protection of children and the vulnerable. It is a position that the government maintains is imperative to that. There is nothing to my knowledge that suggests that this information—which has been collected not just since this bill or the legislation in 2016; it has been around for a very long time—has not been maintained securely. We have no reason to doubt that it will continue to be.
If the member has any information to suggest that there is some release of or access to this data that is unlawful, I urge him to report it to the relevant authorities. I am happy for him to forward correspondence to me if he is concerned about that or has any indication that is occurring. It would be a very serious breach, and it would be a matter that we as a government would take very seriously.
Ms COOK: With respect to the unique identifier, what modelling was undertaken, and from where, regarding the creation of this system that has been established?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I do not have particulars of that. The unique identifier was established under the 2016 legislation, so there was a previous government at that time. I do not think that it is anything particularly different from the processes operating in other states, but it predated our time, so I cannot—
The Hon. A. Koutsantonis interjecting:
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: Such an idiot. I do not have that information for the member.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: Point of order, sir: I ask the Attorney to withdraw and apologise for calling me an idiot.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I will withdraw it.
The CHAIR: I did not hear what the Attorney said.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: Apologise.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I have withdrawn it.
Members interjecting:
The CHAIR: Order, member for West Torrens and Minister for Education! I am asking the committee to come to order. Member for West Torrens, you have been called to order once. You have had three questions. I did not hear what the Attorney supposedly said. I will ask her to return to her answer to the question put by the member for Hurtle Vale.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I have finished the answer.
The CHAIR: Any further questions on clause 21? The member for Lee.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: Who develops the unique identifier?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: Again, I was not in government at the time this was established. My adviser does not have particulars on specifically who does that, but I imagine it is similar to someone who is allocated a number on their driver's licence. I expect that it would be a random allocated number. Once it has been allocated to a person, it would be recorded as their identifier. It is a key for that person to access electronic information. Importantly, it is something that they are able to utilise, as I have explained earlier in the committee, for complying with any request from a prospective employer to check that they have had their screening check to avoid any consequences themselves.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: On the basis that this is an automatically generated number, similar to a driver's licence number, as the Deputy Premier advises us, it must be done by some information technology system, some computer-based system. My question is: who manages this computer system and who manages the cloud-based service in which this information is stored?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I am advised the registrar of the unit.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: Just to clarify, the government wholly administers and curates this database and the cloud data services to which the Deputy Premier has made reference.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: Correct.
Clause passed.
Clause 22.
Ms COOK: In regard to the process to establish the process in this clause, was there any consultation with private companies—businesses, small businesses and the like?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I am advised that the provision here, which is to identify what steps employers have to take when they are employing a prescribed person, is exactly the same as already exists under the protection of children regimes. Really, all we are doing is adding it in under the NDIS structure. This is not new to employers; it is simply that we have created under the Disability Inclusion Act 2018 a new structure to deal with the vulnerability of those in that category, and that is then being transferred into the legislation.
Ms COOK: Are you able to expand and elaborate on what the prescribed positions are that we are referring to in the clause?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: The prescribed position under section 19 of the Disability Inclusion Act is:
(a) a position in which a person works, or is likely to work, with people with disability; or
(b) any other position, or a position of a class, prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this definition;
The Hon. A. Koutsantonis interjecting:
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: It is both (a) and (b), as I have just read out.
Ms COOK: Sorry, I did not hear because there was talking.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: No, I did not talk about paragraph (a) because that is not regulation. It provides here:
prescribed position means—
(a) a position in which a person works, or is likely to work, with people with disability; or
(b) any other position, or a position of a class, prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this definition;
So it is two categories: one is those who already work with people with a disability, and obviously that is all in the principal act, in section 19.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: If you do not meet the criteria of the two subsections the Attorney introduced—that is, an employer who does not necessarily work with disabled people in terms of delivering a service but is contracted to deliver a service—are they then required before they contract with any potential provider to undertake a series of checks before they can deliver that service, or is that the responsibility of the person who is contracting the service?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I did not understand the question. If the question is about who has the obligation, this section clearly sets out 'the employer'. If the employer is going to employ somebody in a prescribed position, which is basically someone who has worked in disability, or regulations can enhance that, then they have to do all these things, and that is what we are adding into the act.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: My question then is: do contractors who are brought in to do work for agencies, where their employees would come into contact with disabled persons or minors before contracting or tendering, have to undergo these checks and services before they are eligible to apply?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: In this area, we are working with two checks: one is in relation to an NDIS check, where there is a provider through that system, and the other is generally in relation to disability. They are obliged to be provided if you are working with somebody with a disability, however you are paid.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: I understand that the Attorney said earlier in her remarks that this was the case already and that this amendment seeks to strengthen current provisions. In the intervening time since March 2018 until now, has the minister undertaken any consultation with Business SA or any employer groups regarding this clause?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I cannot be certain about this clause, but it is fair to say that there has been comprehensive and continuing negotiation to develop both this bill and the regulations that are proposed to go with it to enable its effective introduction come 1 July. At the moment, because this new level of standard of screening, both expanded and to apply at a higher level, is going to affect thousands of people, it is important that it is carefully developed in a manner that is achievable for the legislation to be completed this week, to enable that advertising campaign.
I think the member for Hurtle Vale is a prime example of a member who is receiving inquiries and would like to have some capacity to give answers to very frequently asked questions, which commonly comes with these things. That will need to happen over the next number of weeks. We effectively have six weeks until the end of the financial year and we need to get on with it if we are to achieve that deadline. I think the indications from all the contributors to this debate is that they agree that it is a matter that needs to be progressed. Its legislation starts back in 2016. We do need to get on with this; the public does expect us to actually progress this.
I hope, in answering that, that it is clear there are agencies, there are NGOs, there are people in the disability field, there are people who work in child protection, there are industry providers of a number of these services. We want to get it right to ensure that children, vulnerable and disabled people in our community are protected.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: As a preamble to my question, I reflect briefly on the questions and answers we had on clause 21 regarding the unique identifier that is, again, mentioned in the current clause 22 we are discussing.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: Is it?
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: Yes, it is. In response to a number of questions, the Deputy Premier advised us that the unique identifier is one that is automatically generated, not dissimilar to other automatically generated identification numbers in other government databases and for other government purposes, that this was a cloud-based data management system.
You will recall, Chair, that I asked a question about whether this was a data management cloud-based service that was one of the government's or whether it was some other arrangement. The Deputy Premier replied that it was a government cloud-based system, and, in fact, advised that it was the registrar, I think, who was responsible for it. Reading a little further on this clause, we see the requirements of new section 22D, which require a records management system to be provided and administered by the registrar.
First, I just want to check that the previous discussion about the unique identifier and the answers given pertain to that records management system and not to some other cloud-based service. Is that correct?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: There is an existing system, which has been referred to by the member. The obligation here—bearing in mind that we are enhancing this service and it is going to an expanded group, etc.—is that the registrar must establish and maintain a records management system for this new regime. It will basically be using the same data system that operates in the department in respect of the information collated. This is just setting out an obligation that the registrar has to maintain that as a specific records management system.
The Hon. S.C. Mullighan: And that relates to the identifier as well?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: The identifier is just the number that operates to get access to some of the information in it, yes.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: I appreciate the Deputy Premier's explanation. My second question is in light of the provisions of 22E. Moving on from the requirement to provide a records management system and its superintendence by the registrar, new section 22E provides the capacity for a person to inspect the records management system. I gather that the rationale behind that, from the government's perspective, is that a person should have an ability to check what has been recorded about them to see whether what has been recorded about them aligns with their understanding of their personal information.
However, I would have thought that the information being stored in the records management system as it relates to screening checks, and indeed the unique identifiers, would be very sensitive information. Unfortunately, and I know this will provide fertile opportunity for the Deputy Premier to wax lyrical about Shannon McCoole and so on—
The Hon. V.A. Chapman interjecting:
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: Well, in fact, not just once. It is not beyond the realms of possibility that, unfortunately, we might find a government employee who is motivated to become involved in horrendous and nefarious activities and seek to exploit children. In the provisions of this bill, it appears that we have a records management system, which is important and necessary, of course, but which can be freely inspected by a person. I have made the assumption that it is for the purpose of somebody being able to check their own personal information. I might be wrong, and I am happy to be corrected by the Deputy Premier.
My question is whether there are protocols for an individual to access this database and what restrictions there are on individuals who seek to access the database. Can the Deputy Premier outline some assurances that there are fairly tight restrictions on what people can access when individuals take advantage of the abilities conferred on them in this clause?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: For the benefit of the member, who obviously has not been listening attentively to all the contributions in this committee, I will repeat the following about access to information and who gets to see it and for what purpose. I would like to indicate to the committee that this whole records management system is identical to section 34 of the prohibited persons act, which is legislation passed under the member's former government which establishes the central assessment unit records management system for the purposes of the screening.
The purpose of having an identifier number allocated to the worker or volunteer, paid or otherwise, is that they can access material, maybe for the reasons that the member has highlighted as an example—that is, to check whether information is correct or updated—but also to provide to their prospective employer for them to check it. It is a means by which an access is obtained for the prospective employer to check that that person has actually done the screening test, remembering that the employer also faces very significant penalties—significantly increased in 2016, post the Nyland inquiry—if they employ anybody without having that check if they propose to be in a circumstance of working with children.
So it is twofold: it is a replica of what has already been there for the purposes of the aspect that we are adding to, which relates to people with a disability and it works on the basis that the employee or volunteer gets the number and that that is an access point and they can provide it. Therefore, proposed section 22E sets out the inspection arrangements for that purpose.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: To be clear, it is the bill which requires a records management system to be established and maintained. Yes, there is a provision in the bill, under 22D(7), that the records management system required in this bill may be combined with the prohibited persons act.
The Hon. V.A. Chapman: No, it is the same as.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: Is it 'the same as' or is it the same?
The Hon. V.A. Chapman: It is the same. It is the exact replica.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: Is it a replica or is it the same database?
The CHAIR: Is that your question, member for Lee?
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: No, I was responding to an interjection.
The CHAIR: Do not be tempted to do that, member for Lee. There is a discussion going on here, but you should continue with your contribution and questions.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: While the Deputy Premier works out whether it is the same database or a replica of the database—and I look forward to her advice there—in any event we have an established database, which either is being used or is the model for the operation of the database required under this act. Given that we have a database in operation, the protocols that currently exist for access to this database should be clear to the Deputy Premier, or indeed her adviser, and so I ask the Deputy Premier to provide the committee some advice about the protocols for access to the database, and in particular what the restrictions are in terms of accessing information within that database.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: This records management system that is proposed in this clause is identical to section 34 of the prohibited persons act and establishes the central assessment unit's records management system for the purposes of the part 6 screening, which can be combined with the same records management system established under the prohibited persons act. So the law is identical. That is what is proposed, so there are exactly the same access obligations, recording and provision of the unique identifier, etc.
The database, I am told, electronically is one system that operates within the unit. I think it is clear that the identical replication is of the law, and that is designed to ensure that this central assessment unit, which has the job, as you say, of having the practical application of this and having protocols to do it, is set out in these divisions.
That is why we have specific provision for what the employers have to do, the advice they have to give and, in addition to that, who can inspect the records and in what circumstances. That is what they are there for. If it helps the member, the records management system must include:
a part recording by name, date of birth and unique identifier, if any;
persons who are prohibited from working with children;
a part recording by unique identifier persons to whom a prohibition notice has been issued;
a part recording by unique identifier the date on which each working with children check is conducted in respect of a person;
a part recording by a unique identifier persons in relation to whom a prohibition notice has been revoked; and
a part recording identifying a person to whom a unique identifier has been issued.
I hope to make it abundantly clear that if the member for Lee were on it, the list would not read ‘Stephen Mullighan’: it would have the identifier number.
The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON: As a point of clarification for this same area in new section 22E, new section 22E(2) provides: 'The records management system may be inspected (without charge) by any person.' Can the Deputy Premier just clarify for me what process will be required to enable any person to inspect the records?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: In addition to everything I have just said, my understanding is that if a person comes in and seeks to have access to what is proposed here, the protocol in relation to that has not yet been determined. That is still being worked through as to how it will apply and what information will be made available.
The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON: I have to say that that is very concerning to me because this is incredibly sensitive information that we are going to hold for South Australians. We should remind ourselves that more than 22 per cent of South Australians have a working with children check, so this is a very significant proportion.
Following on from this, if a person is accessing and looking at this record system, how are they restricted from altering information on the system? Obviously, if they are looking at it, it is not a printed copy they are looking at. They are going to look at it as a database.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I do not really understand why the member, who has been a former minister in this space—perhaps she did not ever avail herself of the opportunity to find out how this operates—but we have a unit—
The Hon. Z.L. Bettison interjecting:
The CHAIR: Member for Ramsay, I will direct the Attorney to the answer.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I appreciate that the member says she is concerned. I am concerned that she does not know about this. Nevertheless, let's be clear for the benefit of others in the committee as to how this is going to operate.
The Hon. A. Koutsantonis interjecting:
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I have just read out a very comprehensive—
The CHAIR: Attorney, do not respond to interjections, please.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: No, I am ignoring him.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: Point of order: why is it appropriate for the Attorney to impute improper motives of members and insult them and then, when the member fights back, the Chair of the committee attacks the opposition? How is that appropriate?
The CHAIR: What I said, member for West Torrens, if you recall, is that I asked the Attorney not to respond to interjections and to return to answer. I am going to ask her to do that again. Thanks, Attorney.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: The inspection of records is not like some public register where everybody can just walk in like they are at a library and plug in and just read everyone's history. This list, which I read out, sets out those who are prohibited. It does not have the details of the circumstances or whatever, but it is a list for the purposes, particularly for prospective employers, of checking whether someone who is proposing to come and work or volunteer with them actually has already been identified by virtue of a conviction under previous offences, the presumptive disqualification that is going to come into effect, etc. That is an important tool.
The member's government brought into this parliament a regime that severely penalises anyone who employs someone, paid or volunteer, in their industry or workplace or government or non-government organisation, that utilises services in working with children. That is why it is there. It is there to ensure that any prospective employer, who could be very severely penalised if they do not, checks and is able to do that.
We have to have a system like that because this is not just a system where we are punishing those who are convicted and then try to work with children. We have introduced a regime and tightened it under the former government to ensure that as much as possible we impose a very severe obligation on the employer not just on the employee. That big increase in penalty has got to have a means by which the prospective employer is able to carry out their responsibility to diligently employ that.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: I have a point of order. It is very simple: the member asked if, when inspecting this list, it can be altered while inspecting. It was a very simple question.
The Hon. V.A. Chapman interjecting:
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: No, she did not.
The CHAIR: And the Attorney is continuing her answer.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: When this occurs, it will show a person who is the subject of the search's name, the date of birth and the unique identifier number, where available. For example, where there are multiple John Smiths, the date of birth and UIs help ensure the result is the correct person as provided. So, if there are 15 Stephen Mullighans out there (hopefully not; one is bad enough), each of those will have a unique identifier number to ensure that that is the reference the applicant viewer can see to ensure that that is done. They then have the capacity to say, 'I have checked the register. The checks been done. They are not a prohibited person and I am satisfied for the purposes of taking this person on that I have complied with my applications as an employer.'
The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON: Following on from some of my earlier questions on the bill, I understand that in the past a requesting organisation would identify people within the system to have a working with children check and that an individual in that organisation would have the ability to check for a unique identifier. What is the process of that individual in an organisation being registered to be able to identify and log onto the system? Can you detail that?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: There are two things; one is the process I have just outlined. The employer in that scenario will have accessed that material and have the capacity to continually update that, which is another important initiative in that regard. I think what you are saying is that, as an example, if the Burnside Lions has a regular person who wants to check whether their volunteers are in order, not prohibited and still current, can they in some way register as an organisation that can just check whenever it likes? Is that what you are asking me?
The Hon. Z.L. BETTISON: What is the process not just of the company or organisation registering but of the officer within that company? Within the Lions Club, it may well be the secretary or the president. What is the process under this amended act for that person to be identified?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: There is no statutory regulation around how they appoint somebody or who it is. Remember, this is the process. If the person wants to work or volunteer, they are issued a number because they have gone through the right process. They go along to the Lions Club or prospective employer, and that person then has an obligation to check. They cannot just fill out a form and say, 'I've done my check.'
That has to be checked if you are going to employ these people because this is the new regime that we have introduced for employers, and so on. They then follow that up and register interest in that person, but they cannot register in a block forever. That is, you cannot go in and say, 'I'm with the Burnside Lions and I now want to check on Zoe Bettison.' You cannot just get in the door and then look at whatever you like. You can only look in to check whether that number of your worker is there.
The CHAIR: Member for Ramsay, I am not going to give you the call. You have had four questions, and I concede that one was a point of clarification. The member for Playford has the call.
Mr BROWN: Under new section 22A, the new act will require employees to provide their full name, address, date of birth and unique identifier, which comes from the check they have previously performed. Knowing that this information allows employers not only to check people's information on the register but to potentially get other information from the department, what protections exist for employees that their unique identifier will not be disclosed to third parties by their employer?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: There is not a regulatory regime in this legislation to say what information may be disclosed. Obviously, if your employer now keeps a copy of your driver's licence in the file they might have on you, a record of your employment, your number is on that. I suppose that could be accessible to other people who work in that business or that NGO or church group, whatever the organisation is. What is perhaps being misunderstood here, and I want to make it absolutely clear, is that it is just a number. A code of details about personal information does not come with it.
It is not a code that you go into and get all this personal information. The purpose of it is to be able to access whether you are on a list. We have to have it because we are making it a penalty for people who are in an employment situation if they do not do it. They can be prosecuted and fined severely; I think there is even a prison term under the new rule in some areas. You cannot just come along and say, 'I didn't know. He told me he had a check and I just took him on the next Monday.' You are not allowed to do that.
As a parliament, in 2016 we imposed a much higher standard in relation to this matter. So, firstly, we have to be able to provide a means by which the information about this is kept in a secure repository, which has been the basis of questions by other members of the committee, and, secondly, we have to make it accessible to those who have the legal obligation in relation to this matter.
That is the process. Some of that information—that is, the identifier number once it is provided by the worker to the prospective employer—will presumably be on their file of some kind. It might be scanned into some computer file on the employer's records—Burnside Lions, if we want to still use the same organisation—for the purpose of then doing that check.
Mr BROWN: Obviously, there are no additional protections?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: Not in this legislation.
Mr BROWN: The legislation sets out a process for how data will be matched against the register. What, if any, controls will be taken on those who actually perform the match on behalf of organisations? Is there any recording and checking with other third parties, for example, the police, on who is actually doing these checks?
I might clarify that to assist the Attorney. New subsection (1)(c)(ii) says that they must provide the name and contact details of the person who verified the matters referred to in paragraph (b), which is that the screening check was conducted and the person is not a prohibited person. Are any third parties—for example, the police—going to be checking those names to make sure that nothing untoward is occurring?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I do not think so. I think I understand the question. The central assessment unit is the repository of information. It gets it from other sources, and it may be from the police. We have been through that before. Importantly, the information that is there, accessible via this number, has to be able to be continually accessed. The reason for that is that the central assessment unit needs to have registered who the Burnside Lions are, or some employer, because, if that person becomes a prohibited person, they need to be able to say, 'I will now contact that employer and advise them.' In the real-time upgrading of this, they are immediately notified and then there are certain processes that they can undertake in respect of suspension from employment or whatever.
The important thing here is that it is a list in a secure repository of information. You cannot just go in there and look it up, like on a library computer. We have to make it available to the person who is seeking to do the volunteer work and/or employed work and we need to make it available for the prospective employer or supervisor of the volunteer service. It needs to be ongoing for both so that that information can be real time, which is exactly what we are all trying to achieve.
Mr BROWN: I note that new section 22A talks about the fact that the screening check needs to be verified in accordance with the regulations under 22A(1)(b). Will those regulations enable, for example, a third party provider to do that or does it need to be the central unit that does that verification? Could a private provider do those verifications?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: The provision for the screening check under new section 22A(1)(b)(i) is that it is exclusively by the central assessment unit.
Ms HILDYARD: Attorney, can you please outline how information about these new requirements will be communicated to NDIS LAC personnel?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: If the member is referring to how the local area coordinators under the new scheme will be informed, essentially, if and when this legislation passes, there will be a communications package. I have referred to that earlier in the committee. In addition to that, the NDIS will have its own communications arrangements to ensure that it is followed through. In fairness, some members have had inquiries. Certainly, the member for Hurtle Vale has indicated that she has had inquiries from, I assume, constituents who are saying, 'How is this going to work for me? What do I have to do?', etc.
Obviously, we are not in a position to go out with that communications package, the website material and the details that I referred to earlier in the committee until legislation has passed. Assuming it does, that will go out almost forthwith so that we can ensure that we have the transition in the next six weeks. There will need to be a concentrated communications program and website information to ensure that is done, but I understand that, as the commonwealth is obviously involved in the NDIS aspect of it, they will also have their own direct communication.
Ms HILDYARD: Attorney, given that LAC personnel often have roles as direct employers, as advisers to employers in a particular area and right across the state, as advisers to carers and as advisers to NDIS participants themselves, what additional responsibilities does the Attorney see coming about through these new requirements? What additional supports would be provided to LAC personnel given the complexity of their role and, often, the duality of their role in relation to these new requirements?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: The local area coordinators are commonwealth-funded positions. I think that they have a very strategic and important role in the rollout of the new system, but they are not really participants in relation to the obligations under this legislation.
Ms HILDYARD: But they are. They absolutely are. They are often direct employers as well as advisers.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: They are staff, maybe, but I am simply making—
Ms HILDYARD: They are.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: The member can argue the point in that sense. The obligations here relate to the working with children checks as to the volunteer or employee and the employer, whereas the coordinators are employees of the commonwealth structure.
Ms HILDYARD: They are also employers. That is my point. They are also direct employers and advisers.
The CHAIR: Member for Reynell, you are called to order.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: If the question is, in fact, as an employer—
The CHAIR: Attorney, just a moment. I am going to talk to the member for Reynell. You have asked your question, and you are repeatedly interjecting. I am calling you to order. Attorney.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: If the question is, as an employer, do the local area coordinators have any obligation other than under this legislation, the answer is no. They are the same as every other employer. Do they have any other resources to undertake their obligations in relation to this? This is the law. The reason we are doing this is to protect children. Every employer has to do this, whether they are going to pay them or have them as volunteers. They have to comply with the law. Local area coordinators, if they employ somebody in this area, have to comply with the law. It is as simple as that.
Ms HILDYARD: Given that they are direct employers, advisers to employers, advisers to participants and advisers to carers, they have an incredibly complex role as well as being direct employers, as you state. Will there be any additional communication or any additional support provided to these lacks, particularly given the issues that were experienced over some time due to the federal government's lack of speed with which they appointed those local area coordinators?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I am not sure that the rapidity with which someone was employed is relevant to the question, but they are not paid for or provided by the state. It is not proposed to give them any extra money or resources to do this job, the same as we are not going to give it to the Burnside Lions and we are not going to be giving it to employers anywhere else in the state. This is the law; it is going to be national law. It was actually introduced by the member's government and we supported it. We have been working hard to try to bring the practical aspects to ensure that it actually comes into effect and we will be doing everything possible to ensure that it commences on 1 July this year.
Mr BOYER: New section 22A(1)(b) talks about a screening check being required for the preceding five years. Does a screening check from another jurisdiction in Australia qualify under that?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I think it has been clear in the debate on this and on previous legislation that each state has its own screening process. They are not all exactly the same. Obviously, everyone is trying to work to all be in real time and I think that has been occurring over a number of years. I will check as to whether that is transferable or inter-recognisable between the jurisdictions
I am advised that as a result of the fact that they are still not all exactly the same, the transfer of that will not be adequate. Therefore, we impose South Australian standards for those in South Australia. We think it is going to be pretty good. We will not necessarily be recognising others as an immediate transfer and what we call mutual recognition of other jurisdictions at this point, but we are working on it. Once the NDIS screening nationally is mirrored, then we will get on with it.
Mr BOYER: You spoke about mutual recognition from other jurisdictions. Will there be no mutual recognition from any other Australian jurisdictions recognised or provided at this point?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I am advised that no-one has actually started this yet because this is the NDIS regime we are talking about here. We are aiming for 1 July 2019. We understand that New South Wales is looking at 1 July 2020. As they come online, I expect, if there has been an advancement in relation to the harmonisation of this sort of matter around the country, we will see recognition come into place. At the moment, none of them have even started yet, so we are going to get them started and as others catch up, in the sense of a standard of some harmonisation, then we can look at some mutual recognition.
Mr BOYER: Am I right in thinking, then, that if this bill were to be passed and come into effect at this point in time, we still accept screening checks from other Australian jurisdictions that potentially do not have the same veracity as the South Australian one that will be conducted out of the central assessment unit?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: At the moment, we do not accept those as a standard that obviates them to undertake a state South Australian one but, in the future, that may come to pass.
Ms COOK: On new sections 22A, B and C, can I ask you for clarification on the final notations in each of those sections, that the proceeding direction 'does not apply in relation to a prospective employee who is an excluded person'? Can you clarify what that means? I believe it is the same in all of them.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: The meaning of an excluded person under the Child Safety (Prohibited Persons) Act 2016 is:
(a) a person who undertakes child-related work in the same capacity as the child or children to whom the work relates;
(b) a person who employs a child, or who supervises an employed child, where the work undertaken by the child is not child-related work;
(c) a member of South Australia Police or the Australian Federal Police;
(d) a person to whom subsection (3) applies—
I will come back to that in a minute. The meaning also includes:
(e) any other person of a class declared by the regulations to be included in the ambit of this subsection.
Subsection (3) relates to persons under the seven-day arrangement, if I can paraphrase that. That is what is in the act. It is proposed that exactly the same definition for 'excluded person' will be part of the disability aspect, and that is why it is in each of those.
The Hon. A. Koutsantonis interjecting:
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: No, unfortunately, or fortunately, whichever way you look at it.
Ms COOK: To clarify, that is people who are not required to go through the screening process?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: Correct.
The CHAIR: The member for Cheltenham may have a question. Before I give the member for Cheltenham the call, I am going to—
Members interjecting:
The CHAIR: Order! I am just going to speak briefly. I know the member for Reynell feels that she may have had only two questions. However, she had the call three times and, although she made the point that it was a point of clarification, to my mind at least it was a separate question. I just thought I would make that clear.
Members interjecting:
The CHAIR: No, there is another question. The member for Cheltenham.
Mr SZAKACS: Attorney, given the slow pace at which the LACs were implemented in South Australia and given this new set of requirements that LACs will now have to contemplate, did the minister advocate at the most recent ministerial council for additional resources to enable them to be equipped to provide advice to the NDIS employers and their participants?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: First, I did not attend the council referred to, so I cannot tell you about the detail of that; it is not an Attorney-General's agenda item. However, I am advised that all of that process relating to the obligations of the coordinators that are part of the new process, the new model, is really all within the commonwealth framework and a matter I am not privy to. As far as I know, they have been appointed, a full complement for South Australia, but I do not know about the other jurisdictions yet. I think we are a bit ahead of the curve in South Australia because we had the benefit of having a trial for the children's disability aspect as one of the early uptakes of that.
Nevertheless, as I said, I cannot answer that in relation to what else has been canvassed there, but they are in place and we are trying, as best we can, to make sure that our end of the deal is fulfilled, including getting this legislation through so that we have a suitable regime for the purpose of implementing the protections set out herein.
Clause passed.
Clause 23.
Ms COOK: I have a general request for clarification around what this clause actually does in the bill.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: This is a provision equivalent to section 18 of the prohibited persons act and is included to ensure consistency with that act. This clause requires that an employer must not continue to employ a person working with people with disability unless a screening check has been conducted in relation to that work in the preceding five years. So it is to be consistent and just repeats that obligation in this bill.
Clause passed.
Clause 24.
Ms COOK: In regard to increasing the fine, the expiation, from $10,000 to $50,000, what modelling and consultation happened around that increase?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: Regarding the insertion here for fines now to be set at $50,000 for offences against regulations, the amount is necessarily raised to $50,000 because the regulations that will operationalise aspects of part 6 of the screening regime that are not required in the act will likely incorporate similar offences that are contained in the prohibited persons act that attract penalties of up to $50,000. In short, the former government thought it was a pretty good idea to set those penalties: so do we, and that is why they are there.
Ms COOK: Just to clarify it, there was no additional consultation regarding that at all?
The Hon. V.A. Chapman: Well, I did not come back to ask if they wanted it even higher.
Ms COOK: There are a number of clauses in the uncommenced Child Safety (Prohibited Persons) Act 2016 that place obligations upon employers—part 4, division 2. I understand the Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill seeks to amend the prohibited persons act. How then does the Deputy Premier see this operating for those individuals who are undertaking child-related work but who are not employed?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: Can the member be a bit more specific? I am struggling to find the sections she is referring to.
Ms COOK: They are in the prohibited persons act, part 4, division 2. I do not actually have it in front of me; I shredded it, sadly.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I have a copy of it here. You say that part 4, division 2, is the part that has not yet been proclaimed—and therefore what?
Ms COOK: How does that operate for people who are undertaking child-related work but who are not employed?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: Do you mean that they are just not at work; is that what you are saying?
Ms COOK: If they are volunteers and such.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I think the law is pretty clear. If you are working with children, whether you are paid or not, you are caught by this regime. The provisions of part 4, division 2, give the steps employers must take in relation to employing a person under the prohibited persons act. As best as I understand it, all that commences on 1 July. You are right that parts of the prohibited persons act were held back until we had sorted out what the regulation was, and we then added this bill in here. You are right in the sense that some regulations have not been proclaimed to commence yet, but they are ready to go. Everything is designed to start on 1 July, if we can. Obviously, completing this bill will help that.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: When will the government publish the regulations before proclaiming them?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: Can I say that I know that I have signed off on regulations. I know that it was the practice of the previous government sometimes not to even have regulations drafted, most often until after the bill was passed. We have been working very hard in the last 14 months or so (and the same people have been doing this for two years before that) to try to make sure that the law, in statute form, and the regulations are all ready to go. I am advised that the Child Safety (Prohibited Persons) Regulations 2019, which I have in front of me, are the ones that are effective on 1 July 2019 and that the balance, to go with the Disability Inclusion Act 2018, is yet to be finalised.
Ms COOK: Can the Deputy Premier advise the committee about who provided submissions in relation to the draft regulations and how many were received?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I am not sure that we provided that but, if we have not, we will get a list of those in relation to the regulations. It was a very long list, I know that.
Ms COOK: I looked on the Attorney-General's website—
The Hon. V.A. Chapman: I am glad that somebody does.
Ms COOK: —it's very nice—to look for submissions in this round of consultation, but there is not any information there. Is there an intent to post those types of lists, or is that not something the Attorney will be doing?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: No. I think I have said this before, and I will make it clear for the purposes of this legislation, that whilst we provide a list of and are agreeable to information being provided as to who is consulted, the particulars of those consultations, if they are government agencies, are not made available.
Certainly, I invite members to look at independent stakeholders in relation to matters. Groups such as the Law Society of South Australia often provide comprehensive and useful submissions in relation to a lot of our law down here, and they go online on their own sites. A lot of this work was done across departments and across agencies.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: What is left to be drafted of the regulations pertaining to the Disability Inclusion Act?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I do not know.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: What is the time estimate of when that drafting will be completed and those regulations will be available?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I am advised that we do not know the answer to that, but they are on their way.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: Is it the government's expectations that the regulations will be finalised and available before the sought commencement date of the act?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I think we are going to be pretty much ready to go on 1 July in relation to the prohibited persons legislation. We have the regulations ready. They are out, published and ready to go.
The national scheme in relation to the NDIS, which we are aiming in South Australia to commence on 1 July, we cannot be certain of yet. They are still working through some of the aspects of it. So, we are a little bit held up with the advance at that level as well being part of the national scheme. However, it has started, and, as I say, rather than waiting until legislation is passed, we are getting on with trying to make sure as best we can that that is ready.
For example, if the disability aspects do not actually commence, if the scheme does not commence on 1 July 2019, we will still have achieved everything in relation to the prohibited persons legislation because that regime is complete and ready to go. Actually, that is not through the commonwealth parliament yet, so I suspect it will be a little while before it gets through there.
Ms HILDYARD: Attorney, what consultation was undertaken about the regulations with unions who represent workers in the disability sector?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: In relation to the disability sector, because they have not yet been completed, nobody.
Ms HILDYARD: Are you saying that no unions were consulted about the regulations?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: They have not actually been completed to be drafted to actually consult on yet.
Ms HILDYARD: You said that there was a comprehensive list of agencies that you spoke with about the regulations in drafting them.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: There are two sets of regulations. Perhaps the member was not listening to that. We have the prohibited persons act regulations. They are out there and they have been consulted on. There is a long list. We have been working on them for years, blah, blah, blah. They are out there ready to go on the basis that the act commences there on 1 July 2019. Disability is not yet completed to be drafted, so it has not actually gone out to anybody to consult on yet, including a union.
Ms HILDYARD: Will the Attorney consult those unions who represent workers in the disability sector when consulting about those regulations?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I am happy for the member to refer any list of people that she thinks should be consulted in relation to those matters. They can be sent to my office. I will ensure that they are passed on to the Minister for Human Services.
Ms HILDYARD: In the rollout of the NDIS, and given the last group of participants were those who were impacted by mental illness, and they were the last group of participants to transition to the NDIS, can you speak a little bit about the consultation in relation to the regulations with those organisations that advocate for people with mental illness?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I am not sure what regulations are being sought, but I did mention during the course of the committee on this that last week I actually attended at the Public Advocate's office and met with a number of people, including the new disability advocate, Mr David Cowdrey, who is consulting with and coordinating discussion with the Department of Human Services personnel and Public Advocate personnel to ensure that all of this is in place. I did not have any indication in the discussions I had with him that there were difficulties in relation to that.
As you know, the Public Advocate has a strong role in relation to disability and mental health—obviously people with cognitive impairment and other aspects as well. For the area you are particularly focused on, I am not aware of any concerns, but you are right to the extent that in due course we need to look at how we are going to manage and make provision for the mental health sector. At the moment, that is not before us.
Clause passed.
Clause 25 passed.
Title.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: I have a question on the title. It is not unprecedented, sir. I understand that the Chair has made a ruling, which I will adhere to. I received an email from the Hon. Michelle Lensink from another place advising this house—this committee—that if this bill does not pass the committee stage and house by 5.30pm this Tuesday 14 May the bill cannot commence as the government outlined.
I ask the Attorney-General to explain that email to the house because the house is the master of its own destiny. The idea that a member of the Legislative Council can dictate to this committee the timing of our conduct and our examinations of legislation is highly disrespectful. There should be no quarrel between the houses, but this minister has sought fit to email all members of the House of Assembly, demanding that we pass a bill by a certain date or time. In past parliaments, that could be considered a contempt of parliament. I do not think that will occur here, because of the iron laws of arithmetic, as Malcolm Turnbull would say, but I find this message strange, offensive and not in keeping with the good conduct—
Mr Duluk: Is this a speech or a question on the title?
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: Both. It is a committee. You are entitled to. I know you are new, but perhaps you can learn.
The CHAIR: Member for West Torrens—
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: So I put to the government that I would like for them to explain—
The CHAIR: Member for West Torrens, can I just respond to the member for Waite and to members more broadly. On page 89, standing order 364 states:
a Member other than the Member in charge of the Bill, motion or amendment may not speak more than three times on any one question, nor for more than fifteen minutes on any one occasion;
So the member for West Torrens and any other member is entitled to do that.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: Perhaps he lost wisdom when he shaved his beard. That was the problem.
An honourable member: Yours?
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: Mine was a thing of beauty, though. That is the difference.
The CHAIR: Back to the matter at hand, member for West Torrens.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: There was never any question of bipartisan support for this legislation, but the idea that the house cannot inquire into it and to have a junior member of the cabinet tell this parliament when it can and cannot conduct itself or when it should be completed by is offensive. I cannot think of another time in my 21 years here when a minister of either persuasion, other than the Hon. Michelle Lensink, has done this.
I do not remember any time under the Brown-Olsen government or the Kerin government when they ever demanded of the then opposition that a bill be passed by a certain time or date. I do not remember any demands on us. I stand to be corrected on this, but I do not recall demanding that the house or the Legislative Council consider a bill or motion by a certain date or time. It is the height of arrogance and I think it demeans not only what we are attempting to do here but the minister herself.
The Hon. Michelle Lensink, I think, devalues the role we have in a bicameral parliament where we have two houses considering a measure. Both houses are independent, and both houses are able to go through a bill, clause by clause, as set out by standing orders, so that members can get a good understanding of what the bill does and whether there are any unintended consequences. Indeed, there have been some very good amendments made in committee on the basis of questioning from crossbenchers and sometimes by learned government members who have asked questions of their own executive about the implementation of a bill.
So I will not be taking any advice from the Hon. Michelle Lensink. To try to play politics with a bill like this I think is appalling. Again, every member in this entire parliament comes to this bill and comes to this committee with the intent of trying to get the best outcome possible. Why? Because we all want to protect the most vulnerable in our community: those little ones and the people who need protecting. The idea that there has to be a set deadline, given the fact that there have been delays since coming into office in having to consider this bill, and given that the bill that we are amending was passed in 2016, is a bit rich indeed.
The minister in the other place should have a long, hard look at herself for what she is demanding of this house. All we have done is to execute our duties to the best of our abilities. Not one member, including the Attorney-General, who has answered our questions, has done anything other than attempt to do the right thing by the committee of this parliament. To have this member email everyone en masse, as if she is some authority from on high, and demand of us that we pass a bill should upset every member of this committee, not just the opposition members, because it does an injustice to government members who may have questions of their own bill and their own executive.
It is a great tradition in this parliament to have crossbenchers. Indeed, I remember the former father of the house Graham Gunn would speak at length on every clause of every measure of a bill because he believed it was his right, and he would not have been lectured to by anyone about having to sit down and be quiet and to pass a bill by a certain time. I ask members opposite who are not in the executive to consider this email and what it represents. It represents the height of arrogance from a member of the executive trying to impose their will on the parliament. Parliaments are established to keep the executive in check, not the other way around.
We do not answer to the executive in this chamber: the executive answers to this chamber and this parliament. It works differently, and this minister clearly misunderstands her responsibilities. It behoves her to apologise to members of the parliament for attempting to somehow set a deadline on us in executing our duties. We have executed our duties diligently. We have asked appropriate questions, we have been given answers and we are satisfied. That is how the process should work—not by some sort of edict from the honourable member in the other place to the members of this house about how we conduct ourselves.
It has other repercussions because it could aid the disorderly conduct of this parliament to have the other place dictate to us when we should and should not complete our deliberations on a bill that they have sent to us. It goes to show the inexperience of this minister, the inexperience in this minister's conduct of her duties and the arrogance, already 14 months in, of this minister and the processes of the parliament.
The CHAIR: Before I call the Attorney to respond, I am going to suggest to the committee that the Attorney is responsible for the carriage of this bill. She is not necessarily responsible for an email sent by another minister. Attorney.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I am going to read the email that went out on 9 May, which I am presuming went to all members of parliament. It states:
Dear colleagues
Please be advised the Government has sought advice regarding the timing of debate on the Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill 2019. To allow commencement of this legislation as soon as possible, the House of Assembly debate needs to be concluded by 5.30pm this Tuesday 14 May. If you have any concerns about this proposition, please contact me.
Michelle Lensink
Minister for Human Services
I utterly reject the statements made by the member that some kind of issued demand has come from the minister as to how we conduct our practice in this house. I agree with the member that it is entirely up to the house to have the conduct of its own affairs here and we are entitled to maintain that. It is perfectly appropriate for the minister to alert members to the time frames that we are working to, and she has done that by the email that she has issued. That is not a demand: it is a piece of information that has been circulated to us.
The Hon. A. Koutsantonis: That is false.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: The member asserts that it is false but, in any event, that is the information she has made available to us as members for us to consider in our deliberation of the bill. I do not know, perhaps I was waiting for some sort of valedictory speech or something from the member for West Torrens in that little missive, but I utterly reject what he said in relation to this matter. We are in control of the destiny of this house. If members in this house do want us, though, to progress this matter to give it its best possible chance of being implemented and effective from 1 July 2019, which will be three years since we passed the law on this matter, then I would urge them to bear that in mind and maintain a position of the swift passage of the matter in this house.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: I would ask the Deputy Premier if she can advise the house who set this arbitrary time line and why was it deemed necessary?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I suggest these matters be taken up with the author of the note. I am just indicating the way I read it. I thought it was helpful information, but if other members want to take it up, do as she suggests: get in touch with her.
The CHAIR: As I indicated earlier, member for Lee, my feeling is that the Attorney is responsible for the bill that we are in committee on now, not for an email sent by another minister.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: Yes, the Deputy Premier has taken on the responsibility to bring the bill before the house and we are discussing the timeliness of its proclamation and when its contents come into effect. This house, indeed this whole parliament, has been advised that there is an issue of timeliness in the passage of the bill. I do not think it is too much to ask that we put to the minister responsible for the passage of the bill through this place why this deadline was set and on what basis it was set.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: Ask her.
The Hon. A. Koutsantonis: You just read it out.
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: And it says, if you have any questions or concerns about it, ask her.
The CHAIR: Yes, I think the member for Lee and the member for West Torrens have made their point and now the member for Kaurna is going to make his point on this matter, on the title.
Mr PICTON: My question is to the Attorney-General. Has the Attorney-General had any advice given to her in regard to when the bill needs to be proceeded through this house to allow proper implementation?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: Only from the advisers I have here today and had on the preceding day. I think I have repeated this many times. To facilitate the commencement on 1 July, the communications program, which the member for Hurtle Vale has asked diligent questions about, and the program of completion of regulations, etc., would require us to pass this today on the basis that it gets back to the Legislative Council.
On the information I have, we put at risk the orderly progression of the bill as of 1 July, when it currently proclaims to commence the residue of the act. I am advised that we need to move it along if we are to achieve that. If the house decides that they want to hold it up, or you have more questions or whatever, then so be it, but you are on notice.
Mr PICTON: That is an interesting turn of phrase. Given the Attorney says that she has received advice in terms of the need to pass it today, has the Attorney received any advice as to what particular time today the bill needs to be passed in order for those processes the Attorney outlined to be put into effect?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: It is now 5.30pm. It may well be that the other place has risen, but I do not know. We do not know yet.
The Hon. A. Koutsantonis: Only the government could adjourn the council. Did you adjourn it?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: For goodness sake, Mr Chairman—
The CHAIR: Order! The member for West Torrens does not have the call. Attorney, do you have anything else to say?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: I do not have anything else to contribute to the committee. Obviously, if they do, and it is a contribution of positive information, we will sit here and listen to it.
Ms HILDYARD: So that I am really clear and understand your explanation about a particular program of communication and regulations needing to be developed to meet a particular deadline, could you specifically talk about the consequences of passing it by 5.30pm today, as opposed to 5.30pm tomorrow, 11am tomorrow, or whenever it might be? Why 5.30pm particularly today? It seems to me that there must be a very, very tight time frame to have such a specific time of 5.30pm on a particular day suggested to us. Could you talk about what the consequences are between 5.30pm today and, for example, 5.30pm tomorrow or 11am tomorrow or Thursday.
The CHAIR: Member for Reynell, we have your question and your point. We have just heard word that the council is up. Attorney?
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN: Well, then there is not much point in my answering.
Title passed.
Bill reported without amendment.
Third Reading
The Hon. V.A. CHAPMAN (Bragg—Deputy Premier, Attorney-General) (17:32): I move:
That this bill be now read a third time.
Ms COOK (Hurtle Vale) (17:32): I rise to speak again on the Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill. Firstly, I want to put on record how disappointed I am with the conduct of the minister in the other place in regard to the email discussed during the committee stage and also some of the other conduct around the bill. After the last sitting week, allegations were made on radio and social media that the opposition was, in fact, unduly wasting time or trying to delay the passage of the bill. Nothing could be further from the truth.
We merely sought to apply scrutiny to the bill, based on the consultation and questions that had been offered to us during the course of events leading up to the stage when the bill came up for debate, while we were deliberating on it between being given our briefings by the government. Between times, they were made aware of a whole range of consequences that we felt, and had heard, and raised ourselves about the change to conditions around screening for volunteers. The perception of people who came to us was that this would be a breach or a broken promise by the government.
To reiterate what members said earlier, to receive an email this week demanding that we have this bill dealt with by 5.30pm today was surprising and in pretty bad taste, to be honest. We have gone through this bill deeply. We raised valid questions, I believe, about how and why the money will be paid by volunteers once they become employed. We raised some valid questions, I believe, around how that will be scrutinised by the department and how it will be policed by the department. Through committee, we managed to really dig into the data sharing and a whole plethora of other issues.
From my personal position, I would like to thank the Attorney-General, members of the department and advisers who assisted during that process because it provided us with a huge amount of information that we did not have before out of briefings. When you are in a chamber across from the person you are opposing in terms of a portfolio, it is very difficult to have that opportunity and to have the Attorney and advisers be able to provide such a range of answers to us. I appreciate that and thank them. One of the issues to raise when we are accused of delaying—
The DEPUTY SPEAKER: Member for Hurtle Vale, I remind you that this is a third reading speech and that the content of your contribution really needs to pertain to the bill itself and the clauses within the bill. I have given you some latitude thus far, but I bring you back to the bill itself.
Ms COOK: Thank you for your guidance on that. What we were trying to do throughout the course of our questioning was to ensure, for example, that someone who volunteered 3,000 hours a year did not have to pay for a working with children check if they undertook a few hours of employment. We have been told that that constitutes delaying the bill, and I disagree. I think through the range of questions we asked we have been able to confirm exactly what is happening so that we can better inform the thousands of volunteers who live in our community.
When the bill came into this house two weeks ago, the government did the second reading explanation and then adjourned the debate. We went through, expecting that we were going to do our contributions at that time, but we had to wait until the next day. That is the last point I will make on delays.
In terms of the substance of this bill, the opposition still remains concerned about the ability, and the pathway, to get the money back from people who translate from volunteer to even a tiny amount of paid employment. We hold that that is a break of the election commitment to ensure that there are free screening checks. There was never a statement that the free screening checks will only be for people who are unemployed. We find out now that that is not the case, and we believe that the scrutiny we applied to the clauses was valid.
In terms of linking some of the election commitments with the bill itself (and I understand that the bill is complex because it ties together a whole range of other complicated legislation), a document was released 18 months or so ago by the now government saying that volunteers are a vital part of the non-government and non-for-profit sector and that we need to foster an environment that encourages the next generation of volunteers to get involved, particularly young and new retirees. I could not agree with that more.
However, when we then look at what has happened within this bill, where volunteers who undertake a few hours of paid work—and, potentially, they are the young people going into paid work—I am not sure that that does encourage the next generation of volunteers to get involved. I have received correspondence from clubs, community groups and members of the public who are not happy about these changes. I thank them for that.
There are questions around the $315 expiation notice, which is spoken about in this bill. In many circumstances, a person who undertakes a few hours of paid employment and has that volunteer check could have to pay, on top of the screening fee, a $315 expiation fee if they go over seven days of work, which is not clearly defined.
It is pretty gobsmacking, to be honest, but I am sure that we will see the hurly-burly advertising campaign and marketing come out to explain to the people exactly how this seven-day trigger will happen and how they will be notified. As you have heard today and last week, Mr Deputy Speaker, we asked a lot of questions about that. We are not satisfied with that warning. In fact, during debate, I believe that the Attorney was not able to get advice that people would be given a warning or some sort of notification that they were about to be in breach or had entered the 28-day period.
I hope that the government's reflection on that part of the debate happens and that, through regulation, they make some commitment to people that a sufficient warning will be provided before they get hit with the $315 fine, which they can ill afford if they have only had seven or eight hours of work. I believe that is vital in terms of people's fear and anxieties around this bill and how it changes the commitment to free checking. Mr Deputy Speaker, I am sure you know that, for many families, this $100, $200 or $300 will take food off their table. It is a lot of money for some people to have to pay, and it worries me that they are not going to get any warning of that.
I think that the government should have consulted a little more proactively on this bill prior to setting some of these rules in place within the legislation. I know that there was no broad consultation because the people who I expected would have been consulted came to me after the bill was tabled in the upper house and said that they had not been spoken to. I will not relate directly to those people or reflect on them or leave it open for anyone to question their honesty or integrity. I will just say that they came, and it worries me that that did not happen. The impact on the community in regard to their expectation around the free screenings has not yet been fully appreciated.
There has been repeated questioning about the payment and the process. Some of the innuendo that has been thrown around has veered into territory that is, frankly, a little insulting. Implications have been made about people deliberately taking out a volunteer check so that they can rort or extort, or whatever term you want to use, a free screening for employment. The notion is that someone would say 'I'm going to get a free volunteer check and then go for a job in two months' time once my check comes through' to avoid paying $107.20 or $108 or whatever it is. I do not know how people think like that.
It would never cross my mind that somebody who intends to work in a caring sector—and, let's be honest, most of the sectors that we do screening checks for are caring sectors—would pre-emptively go and scab a free volunteer check so that they do not have to pay for it when they work. It is beyond me. I find that pretty insulting. I find it a bit strange that people who come into this place and who want to serve the community and work with the community have that type of view of people. It just shows that they do not trust the people of South Australia in relation to this matter.
The government thinks that people are out to do the wrong thing in that respect, and that is unfortunate. I hope that we have pointed out clearly enough that at least the people on the our side of the chamber would never intend to do that and that by asking many questions on the legislation through the committee stage we have been able to provide some accountability to our constituents and show that we are standing up for them.
Many of the people who came to me and said they had not been consulted, and who said that they did not like the changes that were happening, actually did not want to be named. They felt that they would be punished by a vengeful minister and that it might put some of their funding at risk. However, I have assured them that they have not been named in the speech or during the committee stage of the bill. I thank them for all the hours of conversations that I have had with them, and all the questions that they provided for us to ask the government.
The government is meant to be for all the people, not against any people. The South Australians I know are not out to get cheap or free volunteer screenings and not pay the bucks. They are not out to deliberately extort $100 from the government. That being said, the opposition does support the original intent of the bill, to streamline the screening process and to ensure that it is nationally consistent.
We understand the time frame for when it has to get through. We understand that this is the next logical step in making the screening system easier to understand for everyday South Australians navigating employment with vulnerable people and also potentially simpler for the department to administer. We want to make sure that screening does not inhibit the work of volunteers so that they can keep doing their fabulous work, giving up their time for their community, but most importantly it will keep children, NDIS participants and vulnerable people much safer. Without any further words, I commend the bill.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN (Lee) (17:47): I rise to make my customary brief contribution on the bill. Like the member for West Torrens, I was at the very least surprised to learn of the minister's urgency in seeing through the passage of this bill, in particular because the bill was first presented to the parliament, as I understand it, on 14 February—or Valentine's Day as some people might be coerced into believing that date to be—and it sat in the other place until it arrived here on 1 May, so a good 2½ months.
The DEPUTY SPEAKER: Member for Lee, as I indicated to the member for Hurtle Vale, the scope of the debate is more restricted in third reading speeches and limited to the contents of the bill. You are coming to that, I am sure.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: Indeed, yes.
The Hon. S.K. Knoll interjecting:
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: I am sorry, did the Minister for Transport have some interjection or disorderly conduct he wished to furnish upon us? No, back to his ministerial complaining about—
The DEPUTY SPEAKER: Member for Lee, you know as well as everyone else that it is disorderly to interject—
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: It is.
The DEPUTY SPEAKER: —and it is also disorderly to respond, so continue.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: Thank you, sir. I consider both of us warned. I found it interesting that despite there being 2½ months to consider all 25 clauses of the bill, all 41 pages of the bill, we were only afforded the opportunity from Thursday 2 May, the last sitting date preceding today's sitting date, and, if my memory serves me properly, we were given up until 7pm. In one instance, that would make one think that we had many hours to canvass the bill but it was only slightly over four, and now here we are today given approximately the same amount of time. I realise things do not move at a great pace upstairs, if indeed they move or sit at all. We find ourselves the only house sitting at the moment in the South Australian parliament, which is not an unusual circumstance, unfortunately.
The expectations of the minister about dealing with all 25 clauses of this bill might be slightly different from that perspective than it is from this particular perspective. When it has come to those clauses in particular where I have sought further and better information from the Deputy Premier—I am specifically talking about the discussions that we have had today with regard to clauses 20, 21 and 22, regarding the requirements for the establishment of a records management system—on not so much just the information that is held within it but more particularly the security of that records management system.
Given how important these screening checks are, and given the capacity under the terms of this bill in clause 22 for anyone to access that records management system, I feel like there have been some parts of the bill, particularly with regard to the records management system in clause 22, that have not been adequately worked up.
We have had so much time for the bill to be developed. We have had from 19 March 2018, when the government was formed. We were promised that within the first 100 days all the election commitments, including introducing free screening checks for volunteers, were going to be enacted. Here we are, 14 or so months down the track, and we are still grappling with the terms of this bill and we are grappling with the terms of the provisions of the clauses in this bill within a very tight window in this place.
As the member for West Torrens said, when it comes to those clauses, like clause 22, with regard to the records management system, or when it comes to some of the earlier clauses that we were discussing on the last day in the committee stage, when we were talking about clauses 7, 8 and 9, I think the responsibilities of this place are most important in making sure that the law we are seeking to enact is sufficiently robust. We have concerns, despite our commitment to support this bill and its passage through both houses, that not a lot of this has been sufficiently worked through. We have had the Deputy Premier tell us that there are still regulations that need to be drafted with regard to the Disability Inclusion Act.
Surprisingly, we were told that, while the bill itself might be ready to be proclaimed and enacted by 1 July, which is the target date, we have no such confirmation that these regulations will be necessary. I refer specifically back to the line of questioning today about the records management system, where the Deputy Premier advised us that we do not have any protocols yet that have been established for—and I am quoting from the bill here and from the clause—any person's access to this records management system.
We know, because we are treated to the Deputy Premier's frequent recollections of her thoughts on the Shannon McCoole case, that unfortunately there are some members in our community, including some people who end up working in child protection agencies, who are the last people who should be accessing this sort of information and who are the absolute last people who should be given access to a records management system.
We do not know from the line of questioning on clause 22 whether there will be any restrictions on what information—again, I quote from the clause—any person can access in this records management system. We do not know from the line of questioning to the Deputy Premier whether there is any control over whether somebody accessing a records management system can edit the information in that records management system.
We are talking about screenings for the purposes of the National Disability Insurance Scheme. We are all aware that there is a deluge of new organisations which are seeking to be service providers to those deemed by the NDIA to have a disability and so are entitled to support from the government. That deluge of organisations has an even larger deluge of employees who either are or are seeking to work for those organisations in the future which need to avail themselves of the terms of this bill.
The last thing we want to see is an environment where a new organisation with a body of employees has some sort of capacity to check not just the bona fides of their employees and whether they have the appropriate screening checks or whether indeed the opposite is true and they are prohibited people but whether one of those employers seeks to amend that information to try to ensure that to all other people the perception is that all of their employees are fit to be working with disabled people or indeed fit to be working with children. That is not beyond the realms of possibility.
What we should be seeking to do here is make sure we are enacting law that is as tight and robust as possible to minimise the chances of people engaging in such behaviour. We do not have that because we do not have the regulations and we do not have the protocols established. This place cannot be satisfied that even when those regulations are made and those protocols are developed, they will be robust enough because apparently they are still in progress, according to the Deputy Premier.
If the department is still yet to turn its mind to completing these regulations, then I do not see why the hurry is on for 5.30 today, when in fact the other place could not even make it to 5.30. Maybe not enough 20¢ coins went into the slot to keep the lights on up there; who knows?
The Hon. A. Koutsantonis: It is a full two-hour day.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: It is a full two-hours day's work, that's right. So I wonder why that deadline was set. Of course, the challenge will now be that we are in the uncharted territory of the minister still working beyond 5.30 and still contemplating her bill, contemplating whether she can still, in the six or seven weeks left to us, avail herself of enacting this legislation and all the clauses within it, to which I am making specific reference.
I would also say that one thing that is most unsatisfactory about the terms of this bill, and the subject of a lot of the questioning during the last brief opportunity we were provided to contemplate this bill, was the circumstance under which a volunteer might be required to repay fees. We were promised that volunteers—any volunteers—would be able to have a free screening check; they would abolish the fees. That was the now government's commitment at the last state election, and now we see this attempt to claw back people who are subsequently deemed to be doing work.
The only problem is that the government cannot tell this place what constitutes work. The Deputy Premier said it was remunerated employment. We know that is not the case because the term 'renumerated employment' is not in the bill. It is quite likely, for example, that we will see volunteers at community clubs, sporting clubs and so on, who are exerting energy in an effort to derive a specific outcome, which I believe is a reasonable definition of work, and who might be provided with some sort of recompense for their efforts.
It might not be money; it might be something else. It might be a slab of beer. It might be some other goods or services that are able to be conferred on that person who has conducted some level of work. That leaves them open to an allegation from somebody else at that organisation that they have conducted paid work, and we have a bill here with clauses within it that do not sufficiently stipulate how we are going here.
Sitting suspended from 17:59 to 19.30.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: We were canvassing some of the important clauses that had arisen during the second reading and the committee stage of the Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill 2019. Prior to the break, I placed on the record my surprise at the missive we all received from the minister about the necessity to expedite the passage of this bill far speedier through this place, where there are far more resident members of parliament than there are in the other place, which, of course, is furnished with many more days to consider the bill than we have been.
I left my comments at clause 9 and the unsatisfied questions and concerns that the opposition raised about the requirement for a volunteer, who is deemed to have conducted work for more than seven days in any 12-month period, to repay the fees for the volunteer screening, which they had hitherto received free of charge. Not only were we unable to unearth a definition of 'work', but we have also been unable to unearth how the department would assess whether somebody had conducted work, other than being advised that the screening unit would essentially rely on other people dobbing in volunteers who were perceived to have conducted work.
This then raises a whole other series of questions about how the department can then make an assessment about who is to be believed in this matter, whether it is the volunteer or whether it is the person who has drawn the department's attention to the fact that that volunteer may not have been able to avail themselves of a free volunteer screening.
We are talking, presumably in the majority of cases, about a $315 expiation fee, but there is a maximum penalty of $5,000, and this is important for us to contemplate. This is an enormous impost that people could be threatened with, let alone be liable for, if there is a determination by the department that they have been conducting work other than as a volunteer beyond which the soon to be act provides for.
It is important that we settle these matters, and we have been unable to settle these matters. Nonetheless, the opposition has indicated its support for this bill. We understand that the minister is most, most anxious for the speedy passage of this bill regardless of these unanswered questions. Notwithstanding the fact that we have not met the hard deadline of 5.30 from the minister in the other place, that thus far we have breached this drop-dead date by two hours and four minutes, that perhaps, among some gnashing of teeth, knitting of brow and wringing of hands, the minister and her—
The Hon. J.A.W. Gardner: Furrowing.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: Furrowing? What did I say?
The Hon. J.A.W. GARDNER: Furrowing of brow.
The Hon. S.C. MULLIGHAN: Well, there can be knitting and furrowing of brows. Perhaps the minister can somehow see fit to divert the attentions and resources of her vast bureaucracy to ensure that this bill is given effect by 1 July.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS (West Torrens) (19:34): Mr Speaker, it is an honour and a pleasure to have you in the parliament again.
The Hon. V.A. Chapman: Is this a valedictory speech?
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: Are you resigning?
The Hon. V.A. Chapman: No, you.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: No, why would I resign? I am in my prime. I am deeply disappointed in the government's conduct on this bill. I think what they are attempting to do is meritorious and, having gone through a robust committee stage of the bill, I think it is fair to say that there is a great deal of commitment on both sides of the parliament to keep the most vulnerable in our community safe from those who mean to do them harm.
What disappoints me is the manner in which the government has conducted itself. I think the Minister for Human Services has done her party and this state a huge disservice in the way she attempted to politicise this issue by calling into question the motives and the operation of the House of Assembly committee on the bill. The minister informed the public that the Labor Party, the opposition, was attempting to delay the passage of the bill. Let's unpack that.
This government was elected in March 2018, ministers were sworn in shortly after that, the bill that this seeks to amend was passed in 2016 and the amendments were brought into the parliament nearly 12 months later. Yet, because we dared to ask questions on two or three occasions on this bill, somehow the delay belongs to us and not government members. It is offensive to me because I have two daughters. It is offensive, I think, to all members of this house and discourteous to the good conduct of this house that the minister would make such an assertion.
To make it worse, the minister, a member of the executive, took it upon herself to inform members of this house that if the bill did not pass by 5.30pm today it could not be enacted in time. I think that claim is false, that claim is not accurate and, in fact, I say that that claim is misleading. It is not backed up with any evidence, it is not backed up with any fact and the truth is that this house is the master of its own destiny.
As to the idea that a member of the executive would inform this chamber and a previous committee that examined the bill that if the bill had not passed by a certain date and time—and time—it could not be enacted, in days gone by that would have been considered a contempt of parliament. I make no such assertion today because I suspect, as I said in my remarks during the committee stage, that it would be ignored by government members to protect their minister.
We have gone through a number of issues in the bill that I think were worthy of examination by a committee of the parliament. What were they? For example, the government went to the election as an opposition promising the people of South Australia that if they were volunteers they would receive free screening checks—free. There was never any qualification of that commitment about having to reimburse the cost of that screening if you did some work later; indeed, if you did do some work later, you would be in breach of the law if you did not pay it back. We know how these things cascade. It was worthy of us to go through that committee stage.
I think that there are far too many examples of the government saying one thing before an election and another afterwards. I think our examination here of what the definition of work actually is shows how difficult it will be for the government to administer this. In effect, the government is criminalising people who may be forgetful and whose only crime is to have received a free screening check—which they thought they would get under this government—but then later on, in a certain time frame, received payment for work they have done. That is not a very good message to encourage people to volunteer.
I do not think the government has thought this through. I think the message we send out to people is important. The message we give people about the value of volunteering is very, very important. I am a former minister for volunteers, and to this day my mother still volunteers. She volunteers for Greek Welfare and prepares hundreds of meals per week that she delivers herself to a number of people in the western suburbs of Adelaide.
That sort of community spirit is alive and well across South Australia. You only have to speak to our Governor about all the agencies and volunteer groups he visits on behalf of all of us to thank them for their contribution. Indeed, as the Speaker would know, there are hundreds if not thousands of volunteers within his own community.
All we wanted to do was make sure that people who volunteer are not turned into criminals because they forget to declare to the government that they have been lucky enough to get some work in very difficult economic times. Often people who find themselves unemployed, or not working, find solace and comfort in volunteering; it is one of the things they do to keep themselves active.
I see it all the time. I see people who are no longer working—actively looking for work but no longer working—who volunteer to keep busy. If I am lucky enough to reach the milestone set by the Deputy Premier, I may consider retirement, but I am still a young man in my 40s—
Mr Picton: A whippersnapper.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: —in comparison to some, yes—and then I might like to volunteer my time for the Australian Labor Party in the seat of Bragg.
The Hon. V.A. Chapman interjecting:
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: I could; there are plenty of Independents who would like my support in the seat of Bragg.
The Hon. V.A. Chapman interjecting:
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: I would have to vote for you? It's compulsory, is it? Democracy Vickie Chapman-style: you can vote for anyone you like as long as it is me.
The SPEAKER: Order!
An honourable member interjecting:
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: Did we? I hope not. I would hate to lose the Deputy Premier. If we lost her, we would have to invent her. We would have to have someone else to take her place.
The Hon. V.A. Chapman: You had Rick Sarre—
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: Rick Sarre—
The Hon. V.A. Chapman interjecting:
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: That is the difference between me and the member for Bragg: I do not think that putting yourself up for election and not being elected is a failure; I see it as participating in the democratic process. What a great service people who run in safe Labor or Liberal seats for the opposing party do for democracy. For example, we run in seats in some regional centres where the Labor Party has no chance of winning, but what a great service we are doing for democracy. Of course, the member for Bragg sees it as a form of treachery for anyone to stand against her—
The Hon. V.A. Chapman: I invited him to our declaration of the poll party: he came.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: 'Our declaration of the poll party'. So what are we now? 'We are pleased we have been elected. We have invited you to our morning tea.' Wow! How very cute, the coronation. I would love to be in a backbench committee to hear the explanations, but back to the bill.
In the email sent out to members by the other minister responsible for this act, the Minister for Human Services, we were told that it had to pass by 5.30 today. The explanation we were given by the Attorney-General was that the Legislative Council may rise by 5.30. In my experience, it is the government that adjourn either house and it is the minister who moves the adjournment, and if the government wanted to wait for this bill to pass tonight—as we have done previously, waiting on the Legislative Council to pass legislation—they could have sat, but the Marshall government decided to adjourn the Legislative Council and not sit to receive this bill tonight.
Mr Picton: They could have brought on the rate capping bill.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: There are many things the Legislative Council could debate, but it chose not to. Yet the government wrote to House of Assembly members telling us that we had to pass it by 5.30, and the explanation we were given was that the house may adjourn. That destiny is in the control of the government, and I thought it was a poor excuse and a poor reflection on the conduct of the Hon. Michelle Lensink in trying to bully this house into passing legislation and then giving us information that was false, just not true. It is not true.
The passage of this bill at 5.30 today, or 9 o'clock tonight, or 10.30 tonight will make no difference to the commencement of this bill, and every member of this house knows it. The question then is: why send that email? Why? If that statement had been made in this house, I would be on my feet a minute later moving a matter of privilege because it is just not true. Then you have to ask yourself: what does the opposition do when a member of the executive who has coverage of this bill writes to us and says that unless it passes by this date and time, the bill cannot be enacted by 1 July?
We know it is not true. Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition has only one option other than to accept what we are told by the executive is truthful. We have to accept it. There is no other option for us. We cannot accuse them of lying. We have to accept that what they tell us on these matters is true, yet we know what we were told is not true. All I can surmise is that in a clumsy, childish, adolescent way, the Minister for Human Services has attempted to make a political point about the passage of this bill, which we all support unanimously. Why? What is in it for her? What is in it for the Liberal Party, other than to demean them? I think it was a poor reflection of the way that minister conducts herself in one of the most important portfolios in government.
Mr Speaker, I just want to quote from a document that you, and indeed every member here in the parliament opposite on the government benches, published in February 2018. It states:
If elected in March 2018, a Marshall Liberal Government will abolish all fees payable by volunteers for screening…
The same document goes on to say:
Volunteers are a vital part of the non-government and not-for-profit sector and we need to foster an environment that encourages the next generation of volunteers to get involved, particularly the young and new retirees.
There is nothing in that statement that says 'and, by the way, if 11 months later you get any paid employment and you don't notify us, you could be guilty of a criminal offence, so repay that money'.
Mr Picton: And a $5,000 fine.
The Hon. A. KOUTSANTONIS: And a $5,000 fine. Thank you for your efforts volunteering, but you have this definition we call 'work' that will be given to us through the regulations. I think it is a very poor message. The truth is that reality hit the government in the face when they were elected. They made this commitment before the election, thinking that through the power of the personality of the Premier they could make it work. They get into office, the Treasury gives the incoming briefs, and then the government realises the cost of their policy, so they begin tinkering with it around the edges.
All it has done now, in truth, is give people cause for concern the next time they make commitments in Newland, in Colton, in King. It will give them cause to consider, 'You didn't tell us this last time. Why should we believe you this time?' Imagine you are a volunteer who wants to get work but has not got work. You have a free screening, you are offered a job in the intervening period and one of the first things you have to do to avoid a $5,000 fine is pay that money back or the government will accuse you of being a criminal. That is what the government has done.
Marginal members on the backbench, who rely on the front bench to give them policy that they can go out and campaign on, have to sell this. They have to go out to the public and volunteers in their community—lifesaving clubs and other organisations that have volunteers—and tell them, 'By the way, there's a clause that we didn't tell you about at the last election. If you do volunteer but then find work, you have to pay the money back. If you don't pay the money back, there's a fine.' If members opposite do not tell them that, have no fear: we will. We will.
I have to say that the outrage from clubs and volunteer organisations about this move by the government is justified. They did not see it coming. There was no anticipation that this is what would occur. They were not warned and I think the consultation was token. I do not think that the government can relate to the economic impact this will have on people who overwhelmingly volunteer. Again, it is a misreading of the public mood and the public sentiment towards volunteers and the way they view what they do. Members are going to be hit in the face with a lot of these decisions in the upcoming budget, when they will have to go out and sell things like privatising our trams and trains, which we have just learned about today.
I also think it will have the impact of dissuading people from entering the workforce. Those of us who are here and on $180,000 a year or more might not think that repaying $315 for a screening test is a lot of money, but if you are unemployed and volunteering and you apply for a job and the pay cheque is prospective rather than retrospective, and you have a certain period of time in which to pay that money back, it can be a burden. Again, it shows how quickly out of touch the government have become with those people they are attempting to serve. While the government claims that they are fulfilling an election promise here, they are not.
I also question the government's narrowing of the scope captured by this screening. The legislation that we have amended overwhelmingly had broader interpretations and allowed a wider catchment of people to be screened or checked. The government has deliberately narrowed that right down and has been very prescriptive about who is tested, who requires a test and who pays or does not pay for a test.
The legislation passed in 2016 was a lot broader. It gave more room for a broader scope of test and check to make sure that anyone who could potentially be working with children or vulnerable people would have to undergo a check. It gave the police commissioner a broader scope. The government has narrowed that right down. Basically, I think they have been overly prescriptive, and the regulations will bear that out. I am sure a lot of members opposite who consider themselves to be liberals would be very surprised at that. I support a broader scope for assessment, and I am disappointed that the government has attempted to narrow that.
In my concluding remarks I will say that there were a lot of contradictions in the answers given to us by the Deputy Premier—contradictory remarks that did not make real sense. I suspect she was not well briefed on the subject matter, but I give her this: her intent was there and she tried. However, I think the committee was let down by some of the answers it received. With that, I commend the bill to the house.
Mr PICTON (Kaurna) (19:54): I rise to give a third reading contribution in relation to the Statutes Amendment (Screening) Bill 2019. As per what the member for West Torrens was saying, on the face of it you would think that this might be an attempt by the government to implement their election promise, when they said to the people of South Australia that they will be introducing free volunteer screening checks for South Australians. Nowhere in that discussion, nowhere in the election campaign, was there ever a mention that a part of that was going to be the sting in the tail, which was presented in this bill, in clause 9—insertion of section 33A—which is the employment test.
The employment test put in place by this government is going to rule out so many volunteers from being able to get access to this supposedly free screening. I think about clubs in my electorate. Whether they be football clubs or surf lifesaving clubs or other community organisations that do voluntary work, there are not many people who do not do some level of work. They might be predominantly retired but they might have a very part-time job or a small business where they do some work, or they might be people who work full-time or part-time in the community and also volunteer in those clubs. Based on the election promises presented by the Liberal Party before the last election, those people would have been thinking that they would be able to access free volunteer screening.
What we are now presented with is that that is not the case at all. Those people who undertake work, and it is a very low bar in terms of employment—seven days in any 12-month period—will have to pay for a screening check. They will not get a free volunteer screening check at all. Even if you are volunteering a huge amount of time in the community and working a very small amount of time, you are still not able to access this check. I think that is very disappointing. It is something that we in this chamber have been trying to get to the bottom of in our assessment of this bill, and we have done that not only today but also on the last day of sitting prior to this, in examining this legislation and how it was put together.
There are a lot of unanswered questions in terms of how this test is going to be applied, how this test was devised, what the criteria are going to be and what the penalties are going to be in terms of how they are going to be applied. But we do know, because the government has made it clear in their legislation, that there will be an offence. They are creating an offence against volunteers in this legislation, an offence with a maximum penalty of $5,000. For instance, if you are at the Moana Surf Life Saving Club, and you are one of the many volunteers there who works hard patrolling the beach, you also have a job to feed your family, pay your bills—
Mr SZAKACS: Point of order, Mr Speaker: I draw your attention to the state of the house.
A quorum having been formed:
Mr PICTON: I welcome so many members of the government here to hear my contribution, where I will talk about the new section 33A(4) that is being inserted by the government into this act.
Members interjecting:
Mr PICTON: I think it is important that your side listen to this, Attorney-General, because you are the ones inserting section 33A(4) into this legislation, which is creating an offence that will be punishable to volunteers. A person who fails to comply with subsection (1)—that is, if you undertake work, you need to pay for your check—will be guilty of an offence. The maximum penalty of that offence will be $5,000. I did not see that in the propaganda put out by the Liberal Party before the election. I did not see that in any of their policy documents in relation to this policy, but that is the sting in the tail that they have introduced into this legislation.
I think that is going to be particularly devastating for many volunteers who expected that they were going to get a free check under this government, but they absolutely are not going to because of this clause. Not only are they not going to get the check but we are particularly concerned that there will be people who will, unfortunately for them, slip up in this process when they thought they were doing the right thing. They thought they were entitled to access a free volunteer screening check. They undertook some work—not very much work but some work—in the community. They did not then think, 'Oh, well, I now have to pay this additional money because I am doing a small level of paid work,' and they are now subject to a maximum penalty of $5,000.
I do not think that is a very good way of rewarding our volunteers for their hard work in the community. In our questioning of this, the government was unable to explain how that discretion is going to be applied in terms of who they will prosecute. The actual work test itself seems to be very fuzzy. We asked a number of questions that could not be answered in terms of how that was going to be applied and how many hours would be required for that, so I think it is going to leave volunteers in a state of doubt, a state of confusion.
Firstly, I do not think that they are actually going to know that this clause is there. I do not think that the government is going to promote this clause to those volunteers, so they are not going to be aware of it in the first place. Because they are not aware of it, they will not be of the understanding that, when they undertake a small amount of work, they have to then go back to the government and repay the fee, otherwise they could be subject to this penalty. I think that it was perfectly reasonable and appropriate for Her Majesty's Opposition to examine that in this house and in this committee stage of this debate.
Unfortunately, it was not the approach of the government that that was appropriate. We had the minister responsible for this in the other place criticise members of the opposition for daring to question her bill, daring to question what I believe is a breaking of their election promise to offer free screenings for volunteers and daring to question this new penalty in section 33A(4) that is going to be put into the legislation. The minister not only tweeted her objections about questions in relation to these clauses but also said that this house had to pass this legislation by 5.30pm today.
What we found out in the questioning through the committee stage is that the Attorney-General did not have any reason why that 5.30pm time was put in place. There did not seem to be any rationale. Any failure to meet the 5.30pm deadline was not going to create any problems for the government whatsoever. Hence, I think that basically the minister was lying. The minister was lying when she said that there was a 5.30pm deadline for this house to pass this legislation. I actually think that it infringes upon the privileges of this house to have a minister from the other place instruct us on how we need to deliberate our business.
I note the other place went home pretty early today, as it usually does because it has no work to do under this government, but they could have stayed around if they wanted to pass this legislation. If the minister was so insistent that this had to go through their house tonight, then they could very easily have stayed and debated any number of their pieces of legislation that they have had sitting on their books for many months. But they did not do that. They went home. They are at home having a glass of port or whatever members of the Legislative Council do.
Basically, we have found out that this email directive that we received from Michelle Lensink was completely false. I think that is another area which we needed to examine in terms of the debate tonight and I think that it was clearly completely false. I think it would be very difficult, certainly on our side of the parliament, for us to believe anything we hear come out of the lips of Michelle Lensink after that completely ill thought through and made up email that we received in relation to this bill.
Apart from the fact that section 33A is a massive breaking of their election promise, when you look at the detail of this legislation there are so many unanswered questions. There are a number of areas in which we had some issues in terms of the way the government has drafted this. The amendment I moved was in relation to the ministerial powers to add additional things into this legislation, which I believe was under clause 7, where clause 7 says in terms of functions that they were going to add:
to conduct screenings for the purposes of the Disability Inclusion Act 2018 and to perform such other functions as may be assigned to the central assessment unit under that Act.
When you look at the original act, there is already an ability for additional functions to be assigned to the unit under the act. However, for that to happen, there needs to be the agreement of the minister to do that whereas the clause, which has been drafted by the government in clause 7, section 21(1)(da), would not have the minister involved in that process at all. It has it completely open to the department to decide what additional functions would be assigned to the unit under the Disability Inclusion Act 2018. So that is something we disagreed with. We moved an amendment in relation to that matter because we believe that is an important principle.
Unfortunately, the government did not believe that and, of course, they had the numbers and carried the day. I think when you look at the detail of this, how this has been drafted so sloppily is an area where this house deserves to have a proper examination of this legislation. I think for people to criticise us for doing that perhaps shows up their house, which they supposedly view as the house of review, but it is lucky to sit for two hours a day. This house has been doing the review function of this legislation that has been sloppily drafted in the other place. I believe that is an area deserving of significant scrutiny.
Clause 8, which inserts the new section 26A, in relation to people who are presumed to pose an unacceptable risk to children, is a significant new section in the act. It is unrelated to the screening payments for volunteers but it is an area that deserved significant scrutiny. I think there was a lot of information that we drew out through questioning the Attorney-General in relation to that clause last sitting week about how that is going to be applied and also about how the government still has a lot of work to do on how that is going to be applied.
I asked the Attorney-General a number of questions in relation to clause 12. Clause 12 relates to how the Commissioner of Police will provide information to the central assessment unit on the charging of certain persons. Perhaps because I was the minister for police for a brief time, I have a feeling that there is a bit of work here that needs to happen from the police's end. We had some very disparate answers from the Attorney in relation to whether the police's system is up to speed for doing this. Firstly, she said that a whole lot of work had been done with the police on this, but then later in the questioning it came out that nothing needed to happen in relation to this.
This is something that we will have to watch continuously, to see whether or not it will involve additional work that needs to take place in regard to the new section 39. As we know, IT systems always carry a significant pressure in terms of updating them in the legislation that we pass in this house. Certainly, with the police it is no different. Sometimes, the police feel frustrated that legislation is passed in this place without significant regard for how much work needs to occur to update their systems and implement measures so that it can be actioned at their end, particularly when we place an onus on police to inform.
That might seem like a very appropriate thing to do, but it is appropriate for the parliament to know that the government executive has done the proper work with the police to make sure that is all going to be in place and to make sure that process is going to work. If the process does not work, it will potentially create a concern in relation to the screening process. If we are not getting those notifications—in this case, in terms of the prescribed offences or presumptive disqualification offences in relation to new section 26A—it will make the whole system not work very well. So I did not feel particularly confident in relation to the answers that we had from the Attorney-General that it had been sorted in this regard. I hope that it is the case. I hope that perhaps the Hon. Michelle Lensink, Minister for Human Services, has more information in that regard than the Attorney was able to provide.
I know from my experience that it is sometimes frustrating that bills are passed here, and it takes a lot of work at the other end for the police to implement their systems to ensure that it happens. In one example, both sides of the house strongly supported increasing a range of drug-driving penalties. Thinking back now, that would have therefore led to a significant amount of work by the police to implement their systems to ensure that it happened. It cannot be done at a click of the fingers. So we welcome this bill and we support this bill.
However, we are concerned, particularly in relation to what is a broken promise. The government are not doing what they said they would do at the election. Ultimately, the government will be judged in a number of regards when it comes to the next election and how they performed against the promises they made. This is one area where what they promised and what they have actually delivered are two very different things. By not delivering that for people, potentially the sting in the tail of creating offences for people who fall foul of that—not through their own deliberate actions, but because they did not understand this very confusing piece of legislation that the government have drafted—will be a problem for them.
If people are prosecuted needlessly under this legislation, we will be highlighting that and holding those members of the government to account for promoting and bringing before the house this offence against volunteers who perhaps did not know that they were doing the wrong thing.
Mr SZAKACS (Cheltenham) (20:13): I rise to make a brief contribution further to those of my colleagues, and I do so as a relatively new member of the house. It has been an interesting exercise and I appreciate sincerely the Attorney's contribution and her answers to questions at the committee stage as the carrier of this bill through this house. However, it leaves me in no better place on a couple of key clauses than when we started the process of going into committee. I want to talk about a number of those key clauses which have yet to provide further clarity to the satisfaction of us on this side of the house and, importantly, further clarity for the volunteers who would potentially fall foul of the implementation of this bill.
There have been a number of questions posed by members of the opposition in respect to the circumstances under which a volunteer would be required to repay their screening fee that had been remitted. Much has been said about the qualification of hours or days worked and I would not seek to provide anything further on that. What leaves me with some confusion still, despite the best endeavours of the Attorney, is under what circumstances a volunteer undertaking work would be required to pay back their remitted fees.
In various answers before the house, we have heard different words used. We have heard the word 'remuneration'; the definition of remuneration of course means something. We have heard 'work'; work means something altogether different. We have heard 'paid work'; paid work is a bit different from work. We have also heard 'paid employment'. All those definitions have particular meaning under various pieces of legislation in this state. Of course, the South Australian Fair Work Act provides certain definitions. The commonwealth Fair Work Act also provides certain definition and guidance in respect to those words. The point I make is that they are all very different.
We could also look to the guidance provided in operational standards and guides issued by ReturnToWorkSA in respect to remuneration and those circumstances that were taken in guides, particularly in respect to the types of remuneration that employers need and should declare for the purposes of remuneration—non-monetary items. So here we have the confusion between the Volunteers Protection Act, which provides some guidance in respect to when voluntary work still is voluntary work because of a genuine honorarium, but then we are taken to the ReturnToWorkSA guidelines which provide similar circumstances where similar cash or non-cash benefits would, for the purposes of an employer declaration, be remuneration.
What I put in this third reading contribution is that if it is confusing for us here, what does it mean for SAPOL, which is going to be forced and asked to implement these laws? What is it going mean for volunteers who, frankly, are not sitting at home tonight listening to the committee contribution, as exciting as it is? I am sure that the viewership has probably spiked a little since I got to my feet, but I think maybe just my mum at home is listening.
The point I make is that for a scheme to operate well it needs to be digestible, it needs to be consumable and, most importantly, if this were to be a piece of law to fulfil the commitments made by the government in respect to their election commitments, then it should be easy to operate. This piece of law will not be easy to operate, certainly not for those volunteers who will be forced to pay back their free volunteer screening.
Another interesting point that was raised through the committee stage, which as far I could see certainly was not dragged out—again, I have not been around for that long, but I would expect there to be in my—
The Hon. J.A.W. Gardner: You had to learn to read Katrine's handwriting!
Mr SZAKACS: I did. So I settled in. I have passed the first test of the member for Reynell's handwriting. I dare say that there are going to be longer and more fulsome committee stages than the one we just embarked on, but we did, through the prudent questioning of those on this side of the house, establish that there are now, both in the eyes of the government and the eyes of the bill, various classes of emergency service workers. An emergency service worker within the same emergency service organisation, whether it be the MFS, CFS or SES, will be treated differently for the purposes of the transitional provisions and that is the requirement for periodic screening to take place.
This is not about us on this side saying the screening should not take place. It is us on this side saying that, if you are a 000 call centre operator doing the same job, the same work and employed under the Fire and Emergency Services Act, sitting in the chair tonight next to someone employed under the Public Sector Act, which is precisely what is happening, then it is simply ludicrous for the piece of law that this government is seeking to pass through this house to treat those two workers, those two front-line emergency service workers, in different ways.
In further questioning, we also heard that an SES volunteer may or may not, depending upon which of the answers we got, be covered by the transitional provisions. A Volunteer Marine Rescue volunteer, who comes under the SES and reports to the Chief Officer of the State Emergency Service, may not be covered.
Despite the protestations of the minister in the other place about the time frames on the bill to be passed, it is my true belief that the committee stage has been important. Unfortunately, we have more questions now unanswered than we have answered. I commend the bill. I look forward to its implementation, notwithstanding the intervention of the minister from the other place. I hope that the operation for volunteers, who were promised one thing and will be delivered something else, is far less disappointing.