{"id":"C2015A00040","name":"Australian Border Force Act 2015","slug":"australian-border-force-act-2015","collection":"act","jurisdiction":"commonwealth","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":"40 of 2015","makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":8541,"registerId":"commonwealth-C2015A00040-current","compilationNumber":null,"startDate":"2026-03-30","status":"InForce","reasons":null,"registeredAt":null},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"Part 1","sectionType":"part","heading":"Preliminary","content":"## Part 1—Preliminary","sortOrder":0},{"sectionNumber":"1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Short title","content":"#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Australian Border Force Act 2015.","sortOrder":1},{"sectionNumber":"2","sectionType":"section","heading":"Commencement","content":"#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on 1 July 2015.","sortOrder":2},{"sectionNumber":"3","sectionType":"section","heading":"Simplified outline of this Act","content":"#### 3 Simplified outline of this Act\n\n• There is an Australian Border Force within the Department.\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force, who is to have the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• There are resignation and termination provisions that apply to all APS employees in the Department in circumstances involving serious misconduct.\n\n• All Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n• There are secrecy and disclosure provisions covering information obtained by the Secretary, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and Immigration and Border Protection workers.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.","sortOrder":3},{"sectionNumber":"4","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions","content":"#### 4 Definitions\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> alcohol blood test means a test of a person’s blood to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol breath test means a test of a person’s breath to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol screening test means a test of a person’s breath to determine whether alcohol is present in the person’s breath.\n\n> Australian Border Force means that part of the Department known as the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Immigration and Border Protection workers may perform work for the Australian Border Force. The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Australian Border Force Commissioner means the Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> authorised person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is authorised in an instrument under subsection (2).\n\n> body sample means any of the following:\n\n    (a) any human biological fluid;\n    (b) any human biological tissue (whether alive or otherwise);\n    (c) any human breath.\n\n> corrupt conduct: see engages in corrupt conduct.\n\n> duty of confidence means any duty or obligation arising under the common law or at equity pursuant to which a person is obliged not to disclose information.\n\n> engages in corrupt conduct: an Immigration and Border Protection worker engages in corrupt conduct if the worker, while an Immigration and Border Protection worker, engages in:\n\n    (a) conduct that:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    the worker abusing his or her position as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) conduct that:\n    (i) perverts; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of perverting;\n    the course of justice; or\n    (c) conduct that, having regard to the duties and powers of the worker as an Immigration and Border Protection worker:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    corruption of any other kind.\n\n> entrusted person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs); or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection information means information of any of the following kinds that was obtained by a person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person:\n\n    (a) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia;\n    (b) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the prevention, detection or investigation of, or the conduct of proceedings relating to, an offence or a contravention of a civil penalty provision;\n    (c) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the protection of public health, or endanger the life or safety of an individual or group of individuals;\n    (d) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence;\n    (e) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to cause competitive detriment to a person;\n    (f) information of a kind prescribed in an instrument under subsection (7).\n\n> Note: See also subsections (4) to (7).\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection worker means:\n\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department; or\n    (b) a person covered by paragraph (d), (e) or (f) of the definition of officer of Customs in subsection 4(1) of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (c) a person covered by paragraph (f) or (g) of the definition of officer in subsection 5(1) of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (d) a person who is:\n    (i) an employee of an Agency (within the meaning of the Public Service Act 1999); or\n    (ii) an officer or employee of a State or Territory; or\n    (iii) an officer or employee of an agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (iv) an officer or employee of the government of a foreign country, an officer or employee of an agency or authority of a foreign country or an officer or employee of a public international organisation;\n    and whose services are made available to the Department; or\n    (e) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged as a consultant or contractor to perform services for the Department; and\n    (ii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(1); or\n    (f) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged or employed by a person to whom paragraph (e) or this paragraph applies; and\n    (ii) performing services for the Department in connection with that engagement or employment; and\n    (iii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(2).\n\n> intelligence agency means:\n\n    (a) the Australian Geospatial‑Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (b) the Australian Secret Intelligence Service; or\n    (c) the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (d) the Australian Signals Directorate; or\n    (e) the Defence Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (f) the Office of National Intelligence; or\n    (g) a government body or authority responsible for intelligence gathering for, or the security of, a foreign country.\n\n> paid work means work for financial gain or reward (whether as an employee, a self‑employed person or otherwise).\n\n> personal information has the same meaning as in the Privacy Act 1988.\n\n> prohibited drug means:\n\n    (a) a narcotic substance (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); or\n    (b) any drug prescribed in an instrument under subsection (3).\n\n> prohibited drug test means a test of a body sample of a person to determine the presence (if any) of a prohibited drug in the sample.\n\n> public international organisation has the meaning given by section 70.1 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> rules means the rules made under section 58.\n\n> Secretary means the Secretary of the Department.\n\n> serious misconduct, by an Immigration and Border Protection worker, means:\n\n    (a) corrupt conduct engaged in, a serious abuse of power, or a serious dereliction of duty, by the worker; or\n    (b) any other seriously reprehensible act or behaviour by the worker, whether or not acting, or purporting to act, in the course of his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> unauthorised maritime arrival has the same meaning as in the Migration Act 1958.\n\n  Authorised person instrument\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, authorise an Immigration and Border Protection worker for the purposes of paragraph (c) of the definition of authorised person in subsection (1).\n  Prohibited drug instrument\n  (3) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by legislative instrument, prescribe drugs for the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of prohibited drug in subsection (1).\n  Immigration and Border Protection information\n  (4) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information obtained by an entrusted person in the course of performing duties, or in performing functions or exercising powers, under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) as an officer of Customs, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (b) as an officer, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (c) as a maritime officer within the meaning of the Maritime Powers Act 2013; or\n    (d) as a delegate of someone else; or\n    (e) in any other capacity;\n  is taken to be information obtained by the person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person.\n  (5) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), the following kinds of information are taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia:\n    (a) information that has a security classification;\n    (b) information that has originated with, or been received from, an intelligence agency.\n  (6) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information that was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law is taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence.\n  (7) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, prescribe a kind of information for the purposes of paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1) if the Minister is satisfied that disclosure of the information would or could reasonably be expected to:\n    (a) prejudice the effective working of the Department; or\n    (b) otherwise harm the public interest.","sortOrder":4},{"sectionNumber":"5","sectionType":"section","heading":"Consultants and contractors etc.","content":"#### 5 Consultants and contractors etc.\n\n  Consultants and contractors\n  (1) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (e)(ii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Other persons\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (f)(iii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Determinations are not legislative instruments\n  (3) A determination under this section is not a legislative instrument.","sortOrder":5},{"sectionNumber":"6","sectionType":"section","heading":"Act binds the Crown","content":"#### 6 Act binds the Crown\n\n  This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.","sortOrder":6},{"sectionNumber":"7","sectionType":"section","heading":"Extraterritorial application","content":"#### 7 Extraterritorial application\n\n  This Act extends to acts, omissions, matters and things outside Australia.","sortOrder":7},{"sectionNumber":"Part 2","sectionType":"part","heading":"Australian Border Force Commissioner","content":"An Act relating to the Australian Border Force, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and persons performing work for the Department, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Australian Border Force Act 2015.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on 1 July 2015.\n\n#### 3 Simplified outline of this Act\n\n• There is an Australian Border Force within the Department.\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force, who is to have the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• There are resignation and termination provisions that apply to all APS employees in the Department in circumstances involving serious misconduct.\n\n• All Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n• There are secrecy and disclosure provisions covering information obtained by the Secretary, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and Immigration and Border Protection workers.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n#### 4 Definitions\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> alcohol blood test means a test of a person’s blood to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol breath test means a test of a person’s breath to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol screening test means a test of a person’s breath to determine whether alcohol is present in the person’s breath.\n\n> Australian Border Force means that part of the Department known as the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Immigration and Border Protection workers may perform work for the Australian Border Force. The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Australian Border Force Commissioner means the Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> authorised person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is authorised in an instrument under subsection (2).\n\n> body sample means any of the following:\n\n    (a) any human biological fluid;\n    (b) any human biological tissue (whether alive or otherwise);\n    (c) any human breath.\n\n> corrupt conduct: see engages in corrupt conduct.\n\n> duty of confidence means any duty or obligation arising under the common law or at equity pursuant to which a person is obliged not to disclose information.\n\n> engages in corrupt conduct: an Immigration and Border Protection worker engages in corrupt conduct if the worker, while an Immigration and Border Protection worker, engages in:\n\n    (a) conduct that:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    the worker abusing his or her position as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) conduct that:\n    (i) perverts; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of perverting;\n    the course of justice; or\n    (c) conduct that, having regard to the duties and powers of the worker as an Immigration and Border Protection worker:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    corruption of any other kind.\n\n> entrusted person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs); or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection information means information of any of the following kinds that was obtained by a person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person:\n\n    (a) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia;\n    (b) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the prevention, detection or investigation of, or the conduct of proceedings relating to, an offence or a contravention of a civil penalty provision;\n    (c) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the protection of public health, or endanger the life or safety of an individual or group of individuals;\n    (d) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence;\n    (e) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to cause competitive detriment to a person;\n    (f) information of a kind prescribed in an instrument under subsection (7).\n\n> Note: See also subsections (4) to (7).\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection worker means:\n\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department; or\n    (b) a person covered by paragraph (d), (e) or (f) of the definition of officer of Customs in subsection 4(1) of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (c) a person covered by paragraph (f) or (g) of the definition of officer in subsection 5(1) of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (d) a person who is:\n    (i) an employee of an Agency (within the meaning of the Public Service Act 1999); or\n    (ii) an officer or employee of a State or Territory; or\n    (iii) an officer or employee of an agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (iv) an officer or employee of the government of a foreign country, an officer or employee of an agency or authority of a foreign country or an officer or employee of a public international organisation;\n    and whose services are made available to the Department; or\n    (e) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged as a consultant or contractor to perform services for the Department; and\n    (ii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(1); or\n    (f) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged or employed by a person to whom paragraph (e) or this paragraph applies; and\n    (ii) performing services for the Department in connection with that engagement or employment; and\n    (iii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(2).\n\n> intelligence agency means:\n\n    (a) the Australian Geospatial‑Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (b) the Australian Secret Intelligence Service; or\n    (c) the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (d) the Australian Signals Directorate; or\n    (e) the Defence Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (f) the Office of National Intelligence; or\n    (g) a government body or authority responsible for intelligence gathering for, or the security of, a foreign country.\n\n> paid work means work for financial gain or reward (whether as an employee, a self‑employed person or otherwise).\n\n> personal information has the same meaning as in the Privacy Act 1988.\n\n> prohibited drug means:\n\n    (a) a narcotic substance (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); or\n    (b) any drug prescribed in an instrument under subsection (3).\n\n> prohibited drug test means a test of a body sample of a person to determine the presence (if any) of a prohibited drug in the sample.\n\n> public international organisation has the meaning given by section 70.1 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> rules means the rules made under section 58.\n\n> Secretary means the Secretary of the Department.\n\n> serious misconduct, by an Immigration and Border Protection worker, means:\n\n    (a) corrupt conduct engaged in, a serious abuse of power, or a serious dereliction of duty, by the worker; or\n    (b) any other seriously reprehensible act or behaviour by the worker, whether or not acting, or purporting to act, in the course of his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> unauthorised maritime arrival has the same meaning as in the Migration Act 1958.\n\n  Authorised person instrument\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, authorise an Immigration and Border Protection worker for the purposes of paragraph (c) of the definition of authorised person in subsection (1).\n  Prohibited drug instrument\n  (3) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by legislative instrument, prescribe drugs for the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of prohibited drug in subsection (1).\n  Immigration and Border Protection information\n  (4) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information obtained by an entrusted person in the course of performing duties, or in performing functions or exercising powers, under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) as an officer of Customs, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (b) as an officer, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (c) as a maritime officer within the meaning of the Maritime Powers Act 2013; or\n    (d) as a delegate of someone else; or\n    (e) in any other capacity;\n  is taken to be information obtained by the person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person.\n  (5) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), the following kinds of information are taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia:\n    (a) information that has a security classification;\n    (b) information that has originated with, or been received from, an intelligence agency.\n  (6) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information that was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law is taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence.\n  (7) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, prescribe a kind of information for the purposes of paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1) if the Minister is satisfied that disclosure of the information would or could reasonably be expected to:\n    (a) prejudice the effective working of the Department; or\n    (b) otherwise harm the public interest.\n\n#### 5 Consultants and contractors etc.\n\n  Consultants and contractors\n  (1) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (e)(ii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Other persons\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (f)(iii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Determinations are not legislative instruments\n  (3) A determination under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 6 Act binds the Crown\n\n  This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n\n#### 7 Extraterritorial application\n\n  This Act extends to acts, omissions, matters and things outside Australia.\n\n## Part 2—Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n### Division 1—Simplified outline of this Part\n\n#### 8 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner is also known as the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n### Division 2—Office and role of the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 9 Establishment\n\n  (1) There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has, under the Minister, the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n#### 10 Powers of Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner has power to do all things necessary or convenient to be done for or in connection with the performance of his or her duties.\n\n### Division 3—Appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 11 Appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed by the Governor‑General by written instrument.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed on a full‑time basis.\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (3) While a person holds office as the Australian Border Force Commissioner the person is also the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 12 Term of appointment\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office for the period specified in the instrument of appointment. The period must not exceed 5 years.\n\n> Note: The Australian Border Force Commissioner may be reappointed: see section 33AA of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 13 Oath or affirmation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must, before beginning to discharge the duties of his or her office, make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Minister.\n  Compliance\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she has made and subscribed under this section.\n\n#### 14 Acting Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by written instrument, appoint a person to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) during a vacancy in the office of the Australian Border Force Commissioner (whether or not an appointment has previously been made to the office); or\n    (b) during any period, or during all periods, when the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (i) is absent from duty or from Australia; or\n    (ii) is, for any reason, unable to perform the duties of the office.\n\n> Note: Sections 33AB and 33A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 have rules that apply to acting appointments.\n\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (2) A person appointed to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner is taken, while the person is so acting, to also be the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 15 Application of finance law\n\n  For the purposes of the finance law (within the meaning of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013), the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs) is an official of the Department.\n\n### Division 4—Terms and conditions for the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 16 Remuneration and allowances\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the remuneration that is determined by the Remuneration Tribunal. If no determination of that remuneration by the Tribunal is in operation, he or she is to be paid the remuneration that is prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the allowances that are prescribed by the rules.\n  (3) This section has effect subject to the Remuneration Tribunal Act 1973.\n\n#### 17 Leave of absence\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the recreation leave entitlements that are determined by the Remuneration Tribunal.\n  (2) The Minister may grant the Australian Border Force Commissioner leave of absence, other than recreation leave, on the terms and conditions as to remuneration or otherwise that the Minister determines.\n\n#### 18 Outside work\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in paid work outside the duties of his or her office without the Minister’s approval.\n\n#### 19 Disclosure of interests\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must give written notice to the Minister of any direct or indirect pecuniary interest that the Commissioner has or acquires and that conflicts or could conflict with the proper performance of the Commissioner’s functions.\n  (2) Subsection (1) applies in addition to section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests).\n\n#### 20 Resignation of appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may resign his or her appointment by giving the Governor‑General a written resignation.\n  (2) The resignation takes effect on the day it is received by the Governor‑General or, if a later day is specified in the resignation, on that later day.\n\n#### 21 Suspension or termination of appointment\n\n  (1) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) for misbehaviour; or\n    (b) if the Commissioner is unable to perform the duties of his or her office because of physical or mental incapacity.\n  (2) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner if:\n    (a) the Commissioner:\n    (i) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (ii) takes steps to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (iii) compounds with one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (iv) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (b) the Commissioner is absent, except on leave of absence, for 14 consecutive days or for 28 days in any 12 months; or\n    (c) the Commissioner engages in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she made and subscribed under section 13; or\n    (d) the Commissioner engages, except with the Minister’s approval, in paid work outside the duties of his or her office (see section 18); or\n    (e) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with:\n    (i) section 19; or\n    (ii) section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests) or rules made under that Act for the purposes of that section; or\n    (f) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with a direction under section 23.\n  (3) The suspension of the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner under this section does not affect any entitlement of the Commissioner to be paid remuneration, and allowances, in accordance with this Act.\n  Statement in Parliament\n  (4) If the Governor‑General suspends or terminates the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner, the Minister must cause a statement of the grounds of the suspension or termination to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 7 sitting days of that House after the suspension or termination.\n\n#### 22 Other terms and conditions\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office on the terms and conditions (if any) in relation to matters not covered by this Act that are determined by the Minister.\n\n### Division 5—Ministerial directions\n\n#### 23 Minister may give directions to Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, after obtaining and considering the advice of the Australian Border Force Commissioner and the Secretary, give written directions to the Australian Border Force Commissioner about policies that should be pursued, or priorities that should be followed, in relation to the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) If the Minister gives a direction under subsection (1), the Minister must cause a copy of the direction to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 15 sitting days of that House after giving the direction.\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must comply with all directions under subsection (1).\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n### Division 6—Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n#### 24 Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may request the following persons to make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c) or (d) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) A person must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Australian Border Force Commissioner or a person authorised by the Commissioner.\n  Compliance\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with the oath or affirmation.\n\n> Note: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  (4) Subsection (3) extends to an Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section but who is no longer a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b).\n\n### Division 7—Delegation and directions\n\n#### 25 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to the following:\n    (a) the Secretary;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (c) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct).\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (4) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to any Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (6) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n#### 26 Directions—administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in connection with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a person;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a person;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (5) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (6) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (7) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (8) If a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (4) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the person is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the person or expose the person to a penalty.\n  (9) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the person in any proceedings.\n  (10) Subsection (9) has effect subject to section 40.\n\n#### 27 Directions—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those persons under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Compliance with directions\n  (3) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (4) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (5) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n\n## Part 3—Resignation from the Department\n\n#### 28 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An APS employee in the Department must give at least 14 days’ notice of his or her resignation from the Department.\n\n• If an APS employee in the Department resigns in circumstances where the employee may have engaged in serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may delay the employee’s resignation by up to 90 days to allow further investigation of that conduct.\n\n#### 29 Resignation—general\n\n  (1) A person may resign as an APS employee in the Department if, and only if:\n    (a) he or she gives written notice to the Secretary of his or her resignation; and\n    (b) the notice specifies, in accordance with subsection (2), the day his or her resignation is to take effect.\n  (2) The day specified in a notice under paragraph (1)(a) must not:\n    (a) be earlier than 14 days, or such shorter period as the Secretary allows; or\n    (b) be later than 4 months;\n  after the day on which the notice is given to the Secretary.\n  (3) This section is subject to section 30.\n\n#### 30 Resignation in anticipation of termination of employment\n\n  (1) This section applies if:\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department gives the Secretary written notice of the employee’s resignation under paragraph 29(1)(a); and\n    (b) either:\n    (i) the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee has engaged in serious misconduct and the Secretary is considering terminating the employee’s employment; or\n    (ii) the employee is being investigated for serious misconduct and the Secretary is not in a position to decide whether to terminate the employee’s employment because the findings of the investigation are not yet known.\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written notice given to the APS employee, substitute a day, no later than 90 days after the day specified in the employee’s notice of resignation, as the day on which the employee’s resignation is to take effect.\n  (3) Subsection (2) has effect subject to subsection (7).\n  Multiple notices\n  (4) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may give more than one notice under subsection (2) to the APS employee in relation to the notice of resignation.\n  Timing of first notice\n  (5) To be effective, the first notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation must be given to the APS employee before the day specified in the notice of resignation.\n  Employee’s resignation takes effect or employee’s employment terminated\n  (6) The Secretary must, on or before the day substituted in the most recent notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation:\n    (a) notify the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect; or\n    (b) terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (7) If under paragraph (6)(a) the Secretary notifies the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect, the employee’s resignation takes effect on the day of that notification.\n\n## Part 4—Termination of employment in the Department for serious misconduct\n\n#### 31 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• If the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour amounts to serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Commissioner may make a declaration to that effect.\n\n• The effect of the declaration is that provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, will not apply to the APS employee.\n\n#### 32 Termination of employment for serious misconduct\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour or any part of it:\n    (a) amounts to serious misconduct by the APS employee; and\n    (b) is having, or is likely to have, a damaging effect on:\n    (i) the professional self‑respect or morale of some or all of the APS employees in the Department; or\n    (ii) the reputation of the Department with the public or any section of the public, with an Australian or overseas government or with a person or body to whom information may be disclosed under Part 6.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may make a written declaration that he or she has the belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee.\n  Timing of declaration\n  (3) A declaration under subsection (2) must be made within 24 hours of the Secretary’s decision to terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n  Copy of declaration to be given to APS employee\n  (4) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Secretary or the Commissioner must give the APS employee a copy of the declaration.\n  Effect of declaration on Fair Work Act\n  (5) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Fair Work Act 2009 (other than Part 3‑1 and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) the termination of the APS employee’s employment; or\n    (b) the making of the declaration.\n\n> Note 1: This means, for example, that the provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, do not apply in relation to the APS employee.\n\n> Note 2: Part 3‑1 of the Fair Work Act 2009 deals with general protections, and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act deals with payments relating to periods of industrial action.\n\n  (6) To avoid doubt, subsection (5) applies despite section 8 of the Public Service Act 1999.\n  Report to Minister\n  (7) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner must give the Minister a written report containing the following, as soon as practicable after making the declaration:\n    (a) the grounds for the Secretary’s or Commissioner’s belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee;\n    (b) the nature and findings of any investigation of, or inquiry into, the APS employee’s conduct or behaviour;\n    (c) details of any other matter the Secretary or Commissioner considers relevant.\n  Declaration not a legislative instrument\n  (8) A declaration under subsection (2) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n## Part 5—Alcohol and drug tests\n\n#### 33 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n#### 34 Alcohol screening test—suspicion that Immigration and Border Protection worker under the influence of alcohol\n\n  (1) An authorised person may require an Immigration and Border Protection worker to undergo an alcohol screening test if:\n    (a) the worker is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; and\n    (b) the authorised person reasonably suspects that the worker is under the influence of alcohol.\n  Compliance with requirement\n  (2) The worker must comply with a requirement given to him or her under subsection (1).\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n  Return to duties\n  (3) If the result of the alcohol screening test shows that alcohol is not present in the worker’s breath, he or she may return to his or her duties immediately.\n  Relationship with section 35\n  (4) This section does not limit section 35.\n\n#### 35 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—general\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Blood sample if alcohol breath test indicates presence of alcohol\n  (2) If:\n    (a) the worker undergoes an alcohol breath test in accordance with a direction under subsection (1); and\n    (b) the alcohol breath test indicates the presence of alcohol;\n  the worker may provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n#### 36 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—certain incidents\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following if subsection (2) or (3) applies:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Person killed or seriously injured in an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel or while detained\n  (2) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) one of the following applies:\n    (i) a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is held in custody in relation to an arrest under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958 or the Maritime Powers Act 2013 or otherwise detained under any of those Acts;\n    (iii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is an unauthorised maritime arrival and is being taken to a regional processing country under section 198AD of the Migration Act 1958; and\n    (b) the worker is directly involved in the incident in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Person killed or seriously injured by a firearm discharging or physical force\n  (3) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) all of the following apply:\n    (i) the worker is an officer authorised to carry arms within the meaning of section 189A of the Customs Act 1901;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the discharge of a firearm by the worker;\n    (iii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) both of the following apply:\n    (i) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the application of physical force by the worker;\n    (ii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Direction to be given as soon as practicable after the incident\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) must be given as soon as practicable after the incident concerned and may be given whether or not the worker is still performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Provision of blood or body sample while in hospital\n  (5) If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is involved in an incident referred to in subsection (2) or (3); and\n    (b) the worker attends or is admitted to a hospital for examination or treatment because of the incident;\n  an authorised person may give the worker a written direction requiring the worker to do either or both of the following:\n    (c) provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test;\n    (d) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (6) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n#### 37 Performing duties on board a vessel\n\n  If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is on board a vessel throughout a period (the onboard period); and\n    (b) the vessel is under the command of an officer of Customs (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); and\n    (c) at any time during the onboard period, the worker performs duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n  the worker is taken, for the purposes of this Part, to be in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker throughout the onboard period.\n\n#### 38 Conduct of tests and provision of samples to be in accordance with the rules\n\n  Conduct of tests\n  (1) An alcohol screening test, alcohol breath test, alcohol blood test or prohibited drug test under section 34, 35 or 36 is to be conducted in accordance with the rules.\n  Provision of samples\n  (2) A sample of blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test under section 35 or 36, or a body sample for the purpose of a prohibited drug test under that section, is to be provided in accordance with the rules.\n\n#### 39 Rules for purposes of this Part\n\n  For the purposes of sections 34, 35 and 36, the rules may make provision for and in relation to the following:\n    (a) the authorisation of persons:\n    (i) to conduct alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests for the purpose of those sections; and\n    (ii) to operate equipment for that purpose;\n    (b) the provision of samples of blood for the purpose of alcohol blood tests under those sections;\n    (c) the provision of body samples for the purpose of prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (d) the conduct of alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (e) the devices used in conducting alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections, including the calibration, inspection and testing of those devices;\n    (f) in the case of alcohol blood tests and prohibited drug tests—the accreditation of persons to conduct analyses in connection with such tests;\n    (g) the procedure for the handling, analysis, storage and destruction of:\n    (i) samples of blood taken in connection with alcohol blood tests under those sections; or\n    (ii) body samples taken in connection with prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (h) the giving of the test results in certificates or other documents and the evidentiary effect of such certificates or other documents;\n    (i) the confidentiality and disclosure of the test results;\n    (j) the keeping and destruction of records in relation to alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections.\n\n#### 40 Admissibility of test results etc. in legal proceedings\n\n  The following:\n    (a) a certificate or other document recording the results of a test conducted under section 34, 35 or 36 in relation to an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n    (b) any other information, answer to a question or document relevant to conducting such a test;\n  are not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings other than the following:\n    (c) proceedings in relation to a decision of the Secretary to terminate the employment or engagement of the worker;\n    (d) proceedings under the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988;\n    (e) proceedings in tort against the Commonwealth that are instituted by the worker.\n\n## Part 6—Secrecy and disclosure provisions\n\n#### 41 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An entrusted person must not make a record of or disclose Immigration and Border Protection information unless the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by a provision of this Part, is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person or is required or authorised by law or by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n#### 42 Secrecy\n\n  (1) A person commits an offence if:\n    (a) the person is, or has been, an entrusted person; and\n    (b) the person makes a record of, or discloses, information; and\n    (c) the information is Immigration and Border Protection information.\n\nPenalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.\n\n  (1A) If the information is Immigration and Border Protection information because of the operation of subsection 4(5) or (6), the fault element of recklessness for paragraph (1)(c) of this section is taken to be satisfied if the person is reckless as to whether or not whichever of the following applies:\n    (a) the information has a security classification;\n    (b) the information originated with, or was received from, an intelligence agency;\n    (c) the information was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law.\n\n> Note: Recklessness is the fault element for paragraph (1)(c)—see section 5.6 of the Criminal Code.\n\n  Exception\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49; or\n    (b) the making of the record or disclosure is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person; or\n    (c) the making of the record or disclosure is required or authorised by or under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (d) the making of the record or disclosure is required by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n> Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to a matter in subsection (2) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code).\n\n  Geographical jurisdiction\n  (3) Section 15.2 of the Criminal Code (extended geographical jurisdiction—category B) applies to an offence against subsection (1).\n\n#### 43 Records or disclosure for the purposes of this Act or the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022\n\n  An entrusted person may make a record of, or disclose, Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of this Act or a legislative instrument under this Act; or\n    (b) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022 or regulations under that Act.\n\n#### 44 Disclosure to certain bodies and persons\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of the information to that body or person is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Bodies and persons\n  (4) For the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), the bodies and persons are the following:\n    (a) a Department, agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (b) the Australian Federal Police;\n    (c) a police force or police service of a State or Territory;\n    (d) a coroner;\n    (e) any other person who holds an office or appointment under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (f) any other body or person prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n  (5) Paragraph (4)(f) does not apply in relation to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (6) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a body or person:\n    (a) before Immigration and Border Protection information is disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2); or\n    (b) in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (7) An instrument under subsection (3) or (6) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 45 Disclosure in accordance with agreements\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of that information to that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Agreements\n  (4) This subsection applies to an agreement that is in force between:\n    (a) the Commonwealth or an agency or authority of the Commonwealth; and\n    (b) one or more of the following:\n    (i) a foreign country;\n    (ii) an agency or authority of a foreign country;\n    (iii) a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (5) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to it under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (6) An instrument under subsection (3) or (5) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 46 Permitted purposes\n\n  For the purposes of sections 44 and 45, the purposes are the following:\n    (a) the administration or enforcement of a law of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country that relates to:\n    (i) criminal law; or\n    (ii) a law imposing a pecuniary penalty or providing for the forfeiture of property;\n    (b) in relation to a law referred to in paragraph (a), the prevention of crime, or the detection or analysis of criminal conduct, in respect of that law;\n    (c) assisting a coronial inquiry, coronial investigation or coronial inquest under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (d) a purpose relating to the protection of public health, or the prevention or elimination of risks to the life or safety of an individual or a group of individuals;\n    (e) the collection and verification of statistics for the purposes of the Census and Statistics Act 1905 or the performance of the functions of the Australian Bureau of Statistics as set out in section 6 of the Australian Bureau of Statistics Act 1975;\n    (f) the protection of the public revenue of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country;\n    (g) a purpose relating to matters covered by the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013, the Australian Citizenship Act 2007, the Immigration (Guardianship of Children) Act 1946, the Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 or the Biosecurity Act 2015;\n    (h) any of the following:\n    (i) assisting in establishing the identity of a particular person;\n    (ii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was an Australian citizen at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (iii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was the holder of a particular kind or class of visa under the Migration Act 1958 at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (i) a purpose relating to immigration, quarantine or border control between Australia and a foreign country;\n    (j) the provision of services to persons who are not Australian citizens;\n    (ja) a purpose relating to the performance of the Australian Crime Commission’s function covered by paragraph 7A(da) of the Australian Crime Commission Act 2002;\n    (k) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 17 of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Act 1979;\n    (l) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 6 of the Intelligence Services Act 2001;\n    (la) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 7 of the Office of National Intelligence Act 2018;\n    (m) the administration of the National Anti‑Doping Scheme (within the meaning of the Sport Integrity Australia Act 2020);\n    (n) the administration or enforcement of laws with respect to commerce:\n    (i) between a State and another State; or\n    (ii) between a State and a Territory; or\n    (iii) between a Territory and another Territory; or\n    (iv) between Australia and another country; or\n    (v) within a State or Territory;\n    (na) a purpose relating to the inter‑country adoption of a child;\n    (nb) a purpose relating to the protection of national security or the defence of Australia;\n    (nc) a purpose relating to locating a missing person;\n    (o) a purpose prescribed by the rules.\n\n#### 47 Disclosure with consent\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that relates to the affairs of a person or body if:\n    (a) the person or body has consented to the disclosure; and\n    (b) the disclosure is in accordance with that consent.\n\n#### 48 Disclosure to reduce threat to life or health\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the entrusted person reasonably believes that the disclosure is necessary to prevent or lessen a serious threat to the life or health of an individual; and\n    (b) the disclosure is for the purposes of preventing or lessening that threat.\n\n#### 49 Disclosure of publicly available information\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if it has already been lawfully made available to the public.\n\n#### 50 Exceptions operate independently\n\n  Sections 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 and 49 do not limit each other.\n\n#### 50A Information must be certified as appropriately classified before proceedings can be initiated\n\n  If, an offence against section 42 relates to information that has a security classification, proceedings for the offence must not be initiated unless the Secretary has certified that it is appropriate that the information had a security classification at the time of the conduct that is alleged to constitute the offence.\n\n#### 51 Interaction with Privacy Act\n\n  For the purposes of the Privacy Act 1988:\n    (a) the making of a record, in accordance with section 43, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a use that is authorised by this Act; and\n    (b) the disclosure, in accordance with section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a disclosure that is authorised by this Act.\n\n## Part 7—Other matters\n\n#### 52 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• The Secretary and the Comptroller‑General of Customs can delegate their functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the engagement of a person as a consultant or contractor if the person fails to comply with a direction under this Act.\n\n• The Minister may make rules for the purposes of this Act.\n\n#### 53 Delegation by Secretary\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to:\n    (a) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct); or\n    (c) the Migration Act 1958 or an instrument under that Act.\n\n> Note: Section 496 of the Migration Act 1958 deals with delegation by the Secretary of his or her powers under that Act.\n\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  Subdelegation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n  (4) If the Australian Border Force Commissioner is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to the following:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  (6) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Secretary.\n\n#### 54 Delegation by Comptroller‑General of Customs\n\n  (1) The Comptroller‑General of Customs may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth (other than section 179, 179K or 179L of the Customs Act 1901) to:\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Directions to delegates\n  (2) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (3) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (3), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (5) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (4) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (2) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (6) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (3) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 55 Directions by Secretary—administration and control of the Department\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in connection with the administration and control of the Department.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for Immigration and Border Protection workers for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements;\n    (d) security clearances.\n  Organisational suitability assessments\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to organisational suitability assessments.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (5) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by Immigration and Border Protection workers of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a worker;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a worker;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Relationship with directions under section 26\n  (6) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 26 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (7) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (8) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (9) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (10) If an Immigration and Border Protection worker is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (5) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the worker is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the worker or expose the worker to a penalty.\n  (11) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings.\n  (12) Subsection (11) has effect subject to section 40.\n\n#### 56 Directions by Secretary—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Relationship with directions under section 27\n  (3) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 27 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (5) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (6) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n\n#### 57 Termination of engagement of consultant or contractor\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a person is covered by paragraph (e) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) the person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or subsection (2) of this section or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a person (the affected person) is covered by paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) in connection with that person, paragraph (e) of that definition covers a person (the consultant/contractor); and\n    (c) the affected person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, direct the consultant/contractor to arrange for the affected person to cease to perform services for the Department.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not limit the circumstances in which a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor may be terminated.\n\n#### 57A Act not to apply so as to exceed Commonwealth power\n\n  (1) If a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act:\n    (a) would, apart from this section, have an application (an invalid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    because of which the provision exceeds the Commonwealth’s legislative power; but\n    (b) also has at least one application (a valid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    that, if it were the provision’s only application, would be within the Commonwealth’s legislative power;\n  it is the Parliament’s intention that the provision is not to have the invalid application, but is to have every valid application.\n  (2) This section applies to a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act, whether the provision is enacted or made before, on or after the commencement of this section.\n\n#### 58 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed by the rules; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) amend this Act.","sortOrder":8},{"sectionNumber":"Division 1","sectionType":"division","heading":"Simplified outline of this Part","content":"An Act relating to the Australian Border Force, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and persons performing work for the Department, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Australian Border Force Act 2015.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on 1 July 2015.\n\n#### 3 Simplified outline of this Act\n\n• There is an Australian Border Force within the Department.\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force, who is to have the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• There are resignation and termination provisions that apply to all APS employees in the Department in circumstances involving serious misconduct.\n\n• All Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n• There are secrecy and disclosure provisions covering information obtained by the Secretary, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and Immigration and Border Protection workers.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n#### 4 Definitions\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> alcohol blood test means a test of a person’s blood to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol breath test means a test of a person’s breath to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol screening test means a test of a person’s breath to determine whether alcohol is present in the person’s breath.\n\n> Australian Border Force means that part of the Department known as the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Immigration and Border Protection workers may perform work for the Australian Border Force. The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Australian Border Force Commissioner means the Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> authorised person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is authorised in an instrument under subsection (2).\n\n> body sample means any of the following:\n\n    (a) any human biological fluid;\n    (b) any human biological tissue (whether alive or otherwise);\n    (c) any human breath.\n\n> corrupt conduct: see engages in corrupt conduct.\n\n> duty of confidence means any duty or obligation arising under the common law or at equity pursuant to which a person is obliged not to disclose information.\n\n> engages in corrupt conduct: an Immigration and Border Protection worker engages in corrupt conduct if the worker, while an Immigration and Border Protection worker, engages in:\n\n    (a) conduct that:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    the worker abusing his or her position as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) conduct that:\n    (i) perverts; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of perverting;\n    the course of justice; or\n    (c) conduct that, having regard to the duties and powers of the worker as an Immigration and Border Protection worker:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    corruption of any other kind.\n\n> entrusted person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs); or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection information means information of any of the following kinds that was obtained by a person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person:\n\n    (a) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia;\n    (b) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the prevention, detection or investigation of, or the conduct of proceedings relating to, an offence or a contravention of a civil penalty provision;\n    (c) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the protection of public health, or endanger the life or safety of an individual or group of individuals;\n    (d) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence;\n    (e) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to cause competitive detriment to a person;\n    (f) information of a kind prescribed in an instrument under subsection (7).\n\n> Note: See also subsections (4) to (7).\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection worker means:\n\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department; or\n    (b) a person covered by paragraph (d), (e) or (f) of the definition of officer of Customs in subsection 4(1) of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (c) a person covered by paragraph (f) or (g) of the definition of officer in subsection 5(1) of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (d) a person who is:\n    (i) an employee of an Agency (within the meaning of the Public Service Act 1999); or\n    (ii) an officer or employee of a State or Territory; or\n    (iii) an officer or employee of an agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (iv) an officer or employee of the government of a foreign country, an officer or employee of an agency or authority of a foreign country or an officer or employee of a public international organisation;\n    and whose services are made available to the Department; or\n    (e) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged as a consultant or contractor to perform services for the Department; and\n    (ii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(1); or\n    (f) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged or employed by a person to whom paragraph (e) or this paragraph applies; and\n    (ii) performing services for the Department in connection with that engagement or employment; and\n    (iii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(2).\n\n> intelligence agency means:\n\n    (a) the Australian Geospatial‑Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (b) the Australian Secret Intelligence Service; or\n    (c) the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (d) the Australian Signals Directorate; or\n    (e) the Defence Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (f) the Office of National Intelligence; or\n    (g) a government body or authority responsible for intelligence gathering for, or the security of, a foreign country.\n\n> paid work means work for financial gain or reward (whether as an employee, a self‑employed person or otherwise).\n\n> personal information has the same meaning as in the Privacy Act 1988.\n\n> prohibited drug means:\n\n    (a) a narcotic substance (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); or\n    (b) any drug prescribed in an instrument under subsection (3).\n\n> prohibited drug test means a test of a body sample of a person to determine the presence (if any) of a prohibited drug in the sample.\n\n> public international organisation has the meaning given by section 70.1 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> rules means the rules made under section 58.\n\n> Secretary means the Secretary of the Department.\n\n> serious misconduct, by an Immigration and Border Protection worker, means:\n\n    (a) corrupt conduct engaged in, a serious abuse of power, or a serious dereliction of duty, by the worker; or\n    (b) any other seriously reprehensible act or behaviour by the worker, whether or not acting, or purporting to act, in the course of his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> unauthorised maritime arrival has the same meaning as in the Migration Act 1958.\n\n  Authorised person instrument\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, authorise an Immigration and Border Protection worker for the purposes of paragraph (c) of the definition of authorised person in subsection (1).\n  Prohibited drug instrument\n  (3) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by legislative instrument, prescribe drugs for the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of prohibited drug in subsection (1).\n  Immigration and Border Protection information\n  (4) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information obtained by an entrusted person in the course of performing duties, or in performing functions or exercising powers, under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) as an officer of Customs, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (b) as an officer, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (c) as a maritime officer within the meaning of the Maritime Powers Act 2013; or\n    (d) as a delegate of someone else; or\n    (e) in any other capacity;\n  is taken to be information obtained by the person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person.\n  (5) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), the following kinds of information are taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia:\n    (a) information that has a security classification;\n    (b) information that has originated with, or been received from, an intelligence agency.\n  (6) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information that was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law is taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence.\n  (7) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, prescribe a kind of information for the purposes of paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1) if the Minister is satisfied that disclosure of the information would or could reasonably be expected to:\n    (a) prejudice the effective working of the Department; or\n    (b) otherwise harm the public interest.\n\n#### 5 Consultants and contractors etc.\n\n  Consultants and contractors\n  (1) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (e)(ii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Other persons\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (f)(iii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Determinations are not legislative instruments\n  (3) A determination under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 6 Act binds the Crown\n\n  This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n\n#### 7 Extraterritorial application\n\n  This Act extends to acts, omissions, matters and things outside Australia.\n\n## Part 2—Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n### Division 1—Simplified outline of this Part\n\n#### 8 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner is also known as the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n### Division 2—Office and role of the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 9 Establishment\n\n  (1) There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has, under the Minister, the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n#### 10 Powers of Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner has power to do all things necessary or convenient to be done for or in connection with the performance of his or her duties.\n\n### Division 3—Appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 11 Appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed by the Governor‑General by written instrument.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed on a full‑time basis.\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (3) While a person holds office as the Australian Border Force Commissioner the person is also the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 12 Term of appointment\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office for the period specified in the instrument of appointment. The period must not exceed 5 years.\n\n> Note: The Australian Border Force Commissioner may be reappointed: see section 33AA of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 13 Oath or affirmation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must, before beginning to discharge the duties of his or her office, make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Minister.\n  Compliance\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she has made and subscribed under this section.\n\n#### 14 Acting Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by written instrument, appoint a person to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) during a vacancy in the office of the Australian Border Force Commissioner (whether or not an appointment has previously been made to the office); or\n    (b) during any period, or during all periods, when the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (i) is absent from duty or from Australia; or\n    (ii) is, for any reason, unable to perform the duties of the office.\n\n> Note: Sections 33AB and 33A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 have rules that apply to acting appointments.\n\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (2) A person appointed to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner is taken, while the person is so acting, to also be the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 15 Application of finance law\n\n  For the purposes of the finance law (within the meaning of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013), the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs) is an official of the Department.\n\n### Division 4—Terms and conditions for the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 16 Remuneration and allowances\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the remuneration that is determined by the Remuneration Tribunal. If no determination of that remuneration by the Tribunal is in operation, he or she is to be paid the remuneration that is prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the allowances that are prescribed by the rules.\n  (3) This section has effect subject to the Remuneration Tribunal Act 1973.\n\n#### 17 Leave of absence\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the recreation leave entitlements that are determined by the Remuneration Tribunal.\n  (2) The Minister may grant the Australian Border Force Commissioner leave of absence, other than recreation leave, on the terms and conditions as to remuneration or otherwise that the Minister determines.\n\n#### 18 Outside work\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in paid work outside the duties of his or her office without the Minister’s approval.\n\n#### 19 Disclosure of interests\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must give written notice to the Minister of any direct or indirect pecuniary interest that the Commissioner has or acquires and that conflicts or could conflict with the proper performance of the Commissioner’s functions.\n  (2) Subsection (1) applies in addition to section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests).\n\n#### 20 Resignation of appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may resign his or her appointment by giving the Governor‑General a written resignation.\n  (2) The resignation takes effect on the day it is received by the Governor‑General or, if a later day is specified in the resignation, on that later day.\n\n#### 21 Suspension or termination of appointment\n\n  (1) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) for misbehaviour; or\n    (b) if the Commissioner is unable to perform the duties of his or her office because of physical or mental incapacity.\n  (2) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner if:\n    (a) the Commissioner:\n    (i) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (ii) takes steps to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (iii) compounds with one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (iv) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (b) the Commissioner is absent, except on leave of absence, for 14 consecutive days or for 28 days in any 12 months; or\n    (c) the Commissioner engages in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she made and subscribed under section 13; or\n    (d) the Commissioner engages, except with the Minister’s approval, in paid work outside the duties of his or her office (see section 18); or\n    (e) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with:\n    (i) section 19; or\n    (ii) section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests) or rules made under that Act for the purposes of that section; or\n    (f) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with a direction under section 23.\n  (3) The suspension of the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner under this section does not affect any entitlement of the Commissioner to be paid remuneration, and allowances, in accordance with this Act.\n  Statement in Parliament\n  (4) If the Governor‑General suspends or terminates the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner, the Minister must cause a statement of the grounds of the suspension or termination to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 7 sitting days of that House after the suspension or termination.\n\n#### 22 Other terms and conditions\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office on the terms and conditions (if any) in relation to matters not covered by this Act that are determined by the Minister.\n\n### Division 5—Ministerial directions\n\n#### 23 Minister may give directions to Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, after obtaining and considering the advice of the Australian Border Force Commissioner and the Secretary, give written directions to the Australian Border Force Commissioner about policies that should be pursued, or priorities that should be followed, in relation to the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) If the Minister gives a direction under subsection (1), the Minister must cause a copy of the direction to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 15 sitting days of that House after giving the direction.\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must comply with all directions under subsection (1).\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n### Division 6—Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n#### 24 Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may request the following persons to make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c) or (d) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) A person must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Australian Border Force Commissioner or a person authorised by the Commissioner.\n  Compliance\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with the oath or affirmation.\n\n> Note: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  (4) Subsection (3) extends to an Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section but who is no longer a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b).\n\n### Division 7—Delegation and directions\n\n#### 25 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to the following:\n    (a) the Secretary;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (c) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct).\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (4) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to any Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (6) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n#### 26 Directions—administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in connection with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a person;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a person;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (5) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (6) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (7) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (8) If a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (4) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the person is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the person or expose the person to a penalty.\n  (9) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the person in any proceedings.\n  (10) Subsection (9) has effect subject to section 40.\n\n#### 27 Directions—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those persons under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Compliance with directions\n  (3) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (4) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (5) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n\n## Part 3—Resignation from the Department\n\n#### 28 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An APS employee in the Department must give at least 14 days’ notice of his or her resignation from the Department.\n\n• If an APS employee in the Department resigns in circumstances where the employee may have engaged in serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may delay the employee’s resignation by up to 90 days to allow further investigation of that conduct.\n\n#### 29 Resignation—general\n\n  (1) A person may resign as an APS employee in the Department if, and only if:\n    (a) he or she gives written notice to the Secretary of his or her resignation; and\n    (b) the notice specifies, in accordance with subsection (2), the day his or her resignation is to take effect.\n  (2) The day specified in a notice under paragraph (1)(a) must not:\n    (a) be earlier than 14 days, or such shorter period as the Secretary allows; or\n    (b) be later than 4 months;\n  after the day on which the notice is given to the Secretary.\n  (3) This section is subject to section 30.\n\n#### 30 Resignation in anticipation of termination of employment\n\n  (1) This section applies if:\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department gives the Secretary written notice of the employee’s resignation under paragraph 29(1)(a); and\n    (b) either:\n    (i) the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee has engaged in serious misconduct and the Secretary is considering terminating the employee’s employment; or\n    (ii) the employee is being investigated for serious misconduct and the Secretary is not in a position to decide whether to terminate the employee’s employment because the findings of the investigation are not yet known.\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written notice given to the APS employee, substitute a day, no later than 90 days after the day specified in the employee’s notice of resignation, as the day on which the employee’s resignation is to take effect.\n  (3) Subsection (2) has effect subject to subsection (7).\n  Multiple notices\n  (4) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may give more than one notice under subsection (2) to the APS employee in relation to the notice of resignation.\n  Timing of first notice\n  (5) To be effective, the first notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation must be given to the APS employee before the day specified in the notice of resignation.\n  Employee’s resignation takes effect or employee’s employment terminated\n  (6) The Secretary must, on or before the day substituted in the most recent notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation:\n    (a) notify the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect; or\n    (b) terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (7) If under paragraph (6)(a) the Secretary notifies the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect, the employee’s resignation takes effect on the day of that notification.\n\n## Part 4—Termination of employment in the Department for serious misconduct\n\n#### 31 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• If the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour amounts to serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Commissioner may make a declaration to that effect.\n\n• The effect of the declaration is that provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, will not apply to the APS employee.\n\n#### 32 Termination of employment for serious misconduct\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour or any part of it:\n    (a) amounts to serious misconduct by the APS employee; and\n    (b) is having, or is likely to have, a damaging effect on:\n    (i) the professional self‑respect or morale of some or all of the APS employees in the Department; or\n    (ii) the reputation of the Department with the public or any section of the public, with an Australian or overseas government or with a person or body to whom information may be disclosed under Part 6.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may make a written declaration that he or she has the belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee.\n  Timing of declaration\n  (3) A declaration under subsection (2) must be made within 24 hours of the Secretary’s decision to terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n  Copy of declaration to be given to APS employee\n  (4) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Secretary or the Commissioner must give the APS employee a copy of the declaration.\n  Effect of declaration on Fair Work Act\n  (5) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Fair Work Act 2009 (other than Part 3‑1 and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) the termination of the APS employee’s employment; or\n    (b) the making of the declaration.\n\n> Note 1: This means, for example, that the provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, do not apply in relation to the APS employee.\n\n> Note 2: Part 3‑1 of the Fair Work Act 2009 deals with general protections, and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act deals with payments relating to periods of industrial action.\n\n  (6) To avoid doubt, subsection (5) applies despite section 8 of the Public Service Act 1999.\n  Report to Minister\n  (7) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner must give the Minister a written report containing the following, as soon as practicable after making the declaration:\n    (a) the grounds for the Secretary’s or Commissioner’s belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee;\n    (b) the nature and findings of any investigation of, or inquiry into, the APS employee’s conduct or behaviour;\n    (c) details of any other matter the Secretary or Commissioner considers relevant.\n  Declaration not a legislative instrument\n  (8) A declaration under subsection (2) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n## Part 5—Alcohol and drug tests\n\n#### 33 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n#### 34 Alcohol screening test—suspicion that Immigration and Border Protection worker under the influence of alcohol\n\n  (1) An authorised person may require an Immigration and Border Protection worker to undergo an alcohol screening test if:\n    (a) the worker is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; and\n    (b) the authorised person reasonably suspects that the worker is under the influence of alcohol.\n  Compliance with requirement\n  (2) The worker must comply with a requirement given to him or her under subsection (1).\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n  Return to duties\n  (3) If the result of the alcohol screening test shows that alcohol is not present in the worker’s breath, he or she may return to his or her duties immediately.\n  Relationship with section 35\n  (4) This section does not limit section 35.\n\n#### 35 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—general\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Blood sample if alcohol breath test indicates presence of alcohol\n  (2) If:\n    (a) the worker undergoes an alcohol breath test in accordance with a direction under subsection (1); and\n    (b) the alcohol breath test indicates the presence of alcohol;\n  the worker may provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n#### 36 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—certain incidents\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following if subsection (2) or (3) applies:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Person killed or seriously injured in an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel or while detained\n  (2) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) one of the following applies:\n    (i) a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is held in custody in relation to an arrest under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958 or the Maritime Powers Act 2013 or otherwise detained under any of those Acts;\n    (iii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is an unauthorised maritime arrival and is being taken to a regional processing country under section 198AD of the Migration Act 1958; and\n    (b) the worker is directly involved in the incident in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Person killed or seriously injured by a firearm discharging or physical force\n  (3) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) all of the following apply:\n    (i) the worker is an officer authorised to carry arms within the meaning of section 189A of the Customs Act 1901;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the discharge of a firearm by the worker;\n    (iii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) both of the following apply:\n    (i) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the application of physical force by the worker;\n    (ii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Direction to be given as soon as practicable after the incident\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) must be given as soon as practicable after the incident concerned and may be given whether or not the worker is still performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Provision of blood or body sample while in hospital\n  (5) If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is involved in an incident referred to in subsection (2) or (3); and\n    (b) the worker attends or is admitted to a hospital for examination or treatment because of the incident;\n  an authorised person may give the worker a written direction requiring the worker to do either or both of the following:\n    (c) provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test;\n    (d) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (6) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n#### 37 Performing duties on board a vessel\n\n  If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is on board a vessel throughout a period (the onboard period); and\n    (b) the vessel is under the command of an officer of Customs (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); and\n    (c) at any time during the onboard period, the worker performs duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n  the worker is taken, for the purposes of this Part, to be in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker throughout the onboard period.\n\n#### 38 Conduct of tests and provision of samples to be in accordance with the rules\n\n  Conduct of tests\n  (1) An alcohol screening test, alcohol breath test, alcohol blood test or prohibited drug test under section 34, 35 or 36 is to be conducted in accordance with the rules.\n  Provision of samples\n  (2) A sample of blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test under section 35 or 36, or a body sample for the purpose of a prohibited drug test under that section, is to be provided in accordance with the rules.\n\n#### 39 Rules for purposes of this Part\n\n  For the purposes of sections 34, 35 and 36, the rules may make provision for and in relation to the following:\n    (a) the authorisation of persons:\n    (i) to conduct alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests for the purpose of those sections; and\n    (ii) to operate equipment for that purpose;\n    (b) the provision of samples of blood for the purpose of alcohol blood tests under those sections;\n    (c) the provision of body samples for the purpose of prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (d) the conduct of alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (e) the devices used in conducting alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections, including the calibration, inspection and testing of those devices;\n    (f) in the case of alcohol blood tests and prohibited drug tests—the accreditation of persons to conduct analyses in connection with such tests;\n    (g) the procedure for the handling, analysis, storage and destruction of:\n    (i) samples of blood taken in connection with alcohol blood tests under those sections; or\n    (ii) body samples taken in connection with prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (h) the giving of the test results in certificates or other documents and the evidentiary effect of such certificates or other documents;\n    (i) the confidentiality and disclosure of the test results;\n    (j) the keeping and destruction of records in relation to alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections.\n\n#### 40 Admissibility of test results etc. in legal proceedings\n\n  The following:\n    (a) a certificate or other document recording the results of a test conducted under section 34, 35 or 36 in relation to an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n    (b) any other information, answer to a question or document relevant to conducting such a test;\n  are not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings other than the following:\n    (c) proceedings in relation to a decision of the Secretary to terminate the employment or engagement of the worker;\n    (d) proceedings under the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988;\n    (e) proceedings in tort against the Commonwealth that are instituted by the worker.\n\n## Part 6—Secrecy and disclosure provisions\n\n#### 41 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An entrusted person must not make a record of or disclose Immigration and Border Protection information unless the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by a provision of this Part, is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person or is required or authorised by law or by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n#### 42 Secrecy\n\n  (1) A person commits an offence if:\n    (a) the person is, or has been, an entrusted person; and\n    (b) the person makes a record of, or discloses, information; and\n    (c) the information is Immigration and Border Protection information.\n\nPenalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.\n\n  (1A) If the information is Immigration and Border Protection information because of the operation of subsection 4(5) or (6), the fault element of recklessness for paragraph (1)(c) of this section is taken to be satisfied if the person is reckless as to whether or not whichever of the following applies:\n    (a) the information has a security classification;\n    (b) the information originated with, or was received from, an intelligence agency;\n    (c) the information was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law.\n\n> Note: Recklessness is the fault element for paragraph (1)(c)—see section 5.6 of the Criminal Code.\n\n  Exception\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49; or\n    (b) the making of the record or disclosure is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person; or\n    (c) the making of the record or disclosure is required or authorised by or under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (d) the making of the record or disclosure is required by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n> Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to a matter in subsection (2) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code).\n\n  Geographical jurisdiction\n  (3) Section 15.2 of the Criminal Code (extended geographical jurisdiction—category B) applies to an offence against subsection (1).\n\n#### 43 Records or disclosure for the purposes of this Act or the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022\n\n  An entrusted person may make a record of, or disclose, Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of this Act or a legislative instrument under this Act; or\n    (b) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022 or regulations under that Act.\n\n#### 44 Disclosure to certain bodies and persons\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of the information to that body or person is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Bodies and persons\n  (4) For the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), the bodies and persons are the following:\n    (a) a Department, agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (b) the Australian Federal Police;\n    (c) a police force or police service of a State or Territory;\n    (d) a coroner;\n    (e) any other person who holds an office or appointment under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (f) any other body or person prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n  (5) Paragraph (4)(f) does not apply in relation to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (6) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a body or person:\n    (a) before Immigration and Border Protection information is disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2); or\n    (b) in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (7) An instrument under subsection (3) or (6) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 45 Disclosure in accordance with agreements\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of that information to that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Agreements\n  (4) This subsection applies to an agreement that is in force between:\n    (a) the Commonwealth or an agency or authority of the Commonwealth; and\n    (b) one or more of the following:\n    (i) a foreign country;\n    (ii) an agency or authority of a foreign country;\n    (iii) a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (5) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to it under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (6) An instrument under subsection (3) or (5) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 46 Permitted purposes\n\n  For the purposes of sections 44 and 45, the purposes are the following:\n    (a) the administration or enforcement of a law of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country that relates to:\n    (i) criminal law; or\n    (ii) a law imposing a pecuniary penalty or providing for the forfeiture of property;\n    (b) in relation to a law referred to in paragraph (a), the prevention of crime, or the detection or analysis of criminal conduct, in respect of that law;\n    (c) assisting a coronial inquiry, coronial investigation or coronial inquest under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (d) a purpose relating to the protection of public health, or the prevention or elimination of risks to the life or safety of an individual or a group of individuals;\n    (e) the collection and verification of statistics for the purposes of the Census and Statistics Act 1905 or the performance of the functions of the Australian Bureau of Statistics as set out in section 6 of the Australian Bureau of Statistics Act 1975;\n    (f) the protection of the public revenue of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country;\n    (g) a purpose relating to matters covered by the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013, the Australian Citizenship Act 2007, the Immigration (Guardianship of Children) Act 1946, the Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 or the Biosecurity Act 2015;\n    (h) any of the following:\n    (i) assisting in establishing the identity of a particular person;\n    (ii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was an Australian citizen at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (iii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was the holder of a particular kind or class of visa under the Migration Act 1958 at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (i) a purpose relating to immigration, quarantine or border control between Australia and a foreign country;\n    (j) the provision of services to persons who are not Australian citizens;\n    (ja) a purpose relating to the performance of the Australian Crime Commission’s function covered by paragraph 7A(da) of the Australian Crime Commission Act 2002;\n    (k) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 17 of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Act 1979;\n    (l) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 6 of the Intelligence Services Act 2001;\n    (la) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 7 of the Office of National Intelligence Act 2018;\n    (m) the administration of the National Anti‑Doping Scheme (within the meaning of the Sport Integrity Australia Act 2020);\n    (n) the administration or enforcement of laws with respect to commerce:\n    (i) between a State and another State; or\n    (ii) between a State and a Territory; or\n    (iii) between a Territory and another Territory; or\n    (iv) between Australia and another country; or\n    (v) within a State or Territory;\n    (na) a purpose relating to the inter‑country adoption of a child;\n    (nb) a purpose relating to the protection of national security or the defence of Australia;\n    (nc) a purpose relating to locating a missing person;\n    (o) a purpose prescribed by the rules.\n\n#### 47 Disclosure with consent\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that relates to the affairs of a person or body if:\n    (a) the person or body has consented to the disclosure; and\n    (b) the disclosure is in accordance with that consent.\n\n#### 48 Disclosure to reduce threat to life or health\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the entrusted person reasonably believes that the disclosure is necessary to prevent or lessen a serious threat to the life or health of an individual; and\n    (b) the disclosure is for the purposes of preventing or lessening that threat.\n\n#### 49 Disclosure of publicly available information\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if it has already been lawfully made available to the public.\n\n#### 50 Exceptions operate independently\n\n  Sections 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 and 49 do not limit each other.\n\n#### 50A Information must be certified as appropriately classified before proceedings can be initiated\n\n  If, an offence against section 42 relates to information that has a security classification, proceedings for the offence must not be initiated unless the Secretary has certified that it is appropriate that the information had a security classification at the time of the conduct that is alleged to constitute the offence.\n\n#### 51 Interaction with Privacy Act\n\n  For the purposes of the Privacy Act 1988:\n    (a) the making of a record, in accordance with section 43, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a use that is authorised by this Act; and\n    (b) the disclosure, in accordance with section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a disclosure that is authorised by this Act.\n\n## Part 7—Other matters\n\n#### 52 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• The Secretary and the Comptroller‑General of Customs can delegate their functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the engagement of a person as a consultant or contractor if the person fails to comply with a direction under this Act.\n\n• The Minister may make rules for the purposes of this Act.\n\n#### 53 Delegation by Secretary\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to:\n    (a) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct); or\n    (c) the Migration Act 1958 or an instrument under that Act.\n\n> Note: Section 496 of the Migration Act 1958 deals with delegation by the Secretary of his or her powers under that Act.\n\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  Subdelegation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n  (4) If the Australian Border Force Commissioner is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to the following:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  (6) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Secretary.\n\n#### 54 Delegation by Comptroller‑General of Customs\n\n  (1) The Comptroller‑General of Customs may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth (other than section 179, 179K or 179L of the Customs Act 1901) to:\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Directions to delegates\n  (2) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (3) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (3), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (5) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (4) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (2) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (6) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (3) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 55 Directions by Secretary—administration and control of the Department\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in connection with the administration and control of the Department.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for Immigration and Border Protection workers for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements;\n    (d) security clearances.\n  Organisational suitability assessments\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to organisational suitability assessments.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (5) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by Immigration and Border Protection workers of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a worker;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a worker;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Relationship with directions under section 26\n  (6) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 26 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (7) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (8) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (9) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (10) If an Immigration and Border Protection worker is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (5) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the worker is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the worker or expose the worker to a penalty.\n  (11) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings.\n  (12) Subsection (11) has effect subject to section 40.\n\n#### 56 Directions by Secretary—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Relationship with directions under section 27\n  (3) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 27 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (5) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (6) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n\n#### 57 Termination of engagement of consultant or contractor\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a person is covered by paragraph (e) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) the person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or subsection (2) of this section or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a person (the affected person) is covered by paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) in connection with that person, paragraph (e) of that definition covers a person (the consultant/contractor); and\n    (c) the affected person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, direct the consultant/contractor to arrange for the affected person to cease to perform services for the Department.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not limit the circumstances in which a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor may be terminated.\n\n#### 57A Act not to apply so as to exceed Commonwealth power\n\n  (1) If a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act:\n    (a) would, apart from this section, have an application (an invalid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    because of which the provision exceeds the Commonwealth’s legislative power; but\n    (b) also has at least one application (a valid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    that, if it were the provision’s only application, would be within the Commonwealth’s legislative power;\n  it is the Parliament’s intention that the provision is not to have the invalid application, but is to have every valid application.\n  (2) This section applies to a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act, whether the provision is enacted or made before, on or after the commencement of this section.\n\n#### 58 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed by the rules; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) amend this Act.","sortOrder":9},{"sectionNumber":"8","sectionType":"section","heading":"Simplified outline of this Part","content":"#### 8 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner is also known as the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.","sortOrder":10},{"sectionNumber":"Division 2","sectionType":"division","heading":"Office and role of the Australian Border Force Commissioner","content":"An Act relating to the Australian Border Force, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and persons performing work for the Department, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Australian Border Force Act 2015.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on 1 July 2015.\n\n#### 3 Simplified outline of this Act\n\n• There is an Australian Border Force within the Department.\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force, who is to have the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• There are resignation and termination provisions that apply to all APS employees in the Department in circumstances involving serious misconduct.\n\n• All Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n• There are secrecy and disclosure provisions covering information obtained by the Secretary, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and Immigration and Border Protection workers.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n#### 4 Definitions\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> alcohol blood test means a test of a person’s blood to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol breath test means a test of a person’s breath to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol screening test means a test of a person’s breath to determine whether alcohol is present in the person’s breath.\n\n> Australian Border Force means that part of the Department known as the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Immigration and Border Protection workers may perform work for the Australian Border Force. The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Australian Border Force Commissioner means the Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> authorised person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is authorised in an instrument under subsection (2).\n\n> body sample means any of the following:\n\n    (a) any human biological fluid;\n    (b) any human biological tissue (whether alive or otherwise);\n    (c) any human breath.\n\n> corrupt conduct: see engages in corrupt conduct.\n\n> duty of confidence means any duty or obligation arising under the common law or at equity pursuant to which a person is obliged not to disclose information.\n\n> engages in corrupt conduct: an Immigration and Border Protection worker engages in corrupt conduct if the worker, while an Immigration and Border Protection worker, engages in:\n\n    (a) conduct that:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    the worker abusing his or her position as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) conduct that:\n    (i) perverts; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of perverting;\n    the course of justice; or\n    (c) conduct that, having regard to the duties and powers of the worker as an Immigration and Border Protection worker:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    corruption of any other kind.\n\n> entrusted person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs); or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection information means information of any of the following kinds that was obtained by a person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person:\n\n    (a) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia;\n    (b) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the prevention, detection or investigation of, or the conduct of proceedings relating to, an offence or a contravention of a civil penalty provision;\n    (c) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the protection of public health, or endanger the life or safety of an individual or group of individuals;\n    (d) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence;\n    (e) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to cause competitive detriment to a person;\n    (f) information of a kind prescribed in an instrument under subsection (7).\n\n> Note: See also subsections (4) to (7).\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection worker means:\n\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department; or\n    (b) a person covered by paragraph (d), (e) or (f) of the definition of officer of Customs in subsection 4(1) of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (c) a person covered by paragraph (f) or (g) of the definition of officer in subsection 5(1) of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (d) a person who is:\n    (i) an employee of an Agency (within the meaning of the Public Service Act 1999); or\n    (ii) an officer or employee of a State or Territory; or\n    (iii) an officer or employee of an agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (iv) an officer or employee of the government of a foreign country, an officer or employee of an agency or authority of a foreign country or an officer or employee of a public international organisation;\n    and whose services are made available to the Department; or\n    (e) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged as a consultant or contractor to perform services for the Department; and\n    (ii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(1); or\n    (f) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged or employed by a person to whom paragraph (e) or this paragraph applies; and\n    (ii) performing services for the Department in connection with that engagement or employment; and\n    (iii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(2).\n\n> intelligence agency means:\n\n    (a) the Australian Geospatial‑Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (b) the Australian Secret Intelligence Service; or\n    (c) the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (d) the Australian Signals Directorate; or\n    (e) the Defence Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (f) the Office of National Intelligence; or\n    (g) a government body or authority responsible for intelligence gathering for, or the security of, a foreign country.\n\n> paid work means work for financial gain or reward (whether as an employee, a self‑employed person or otherwise).\n\n> personal information has the same meaning as in the Privacy Act 1988.\n\n> prohibited drug means:\n\n    (a) a narcotic substance (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); or\n    (b) any drug prescribed in an instrument under subsection (3).\n\n> prohibited drug test means a test of a body sample of a person to determine the presence (if any) of a prohibited drug in the sample.\n\n> public international organisation has the meaning given by section 70.1 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> rules means the rules made under section 58.\n\n> Secretary means the Secretary of the Department.\n\n> serious misconduct, by an Immigration and Border Protection worker, means:\n\n    (a) corrupt conduct engaged in, a serious abuse of power, or a serious dereliction of duty, by the worker; or\n    (b) any other seriously reprehensible act or behaviour by the worker, whether or not acting, or purporting to act, in the course of his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> unauthorised maritime arrival has the same meaning as in the Migration Act 1958.\n\n  Authorised person instrument\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, authorise an Immigration and Border Protection worker for the purposes of paragraph (c) of the definition of authorised person in subsection (1).\n  Prohibited drug instrument\n  (3) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by legislative instrument, prescribe drugs for the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of prohibited drug in subsection (1).\n  Immigration and Border Protection information\n  (4) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information obtained by an entrusted person in the course of performing duties, or in performing functions or exercising powers, under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) as an officer of Customs, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (b) as an officer, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (c) as a maritime officer within the meaning of the Maritime Powers Act 2013; or\n    (d) as a delegate of someone else; or\n    (e) in any other capacity;\n  is taken to be information obtained by the person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person.\n  (5) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), the following kinds of information are taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia:\n    (a) information that has a security classification;\n    (b) information that has originated with, or been received from, an intelligence agency.\n  (6) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information that was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law is taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence.\n  (7) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, prescribe a kind of information for the purposes of paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1) if the Minister is satisfied that disclosure of the information would or could reasonably be expected to:\n    (a) prejudice the effective working of the Department; or\n    (b) otherwise harm the public interest.\n\n#### 5 Consultants and contractors etc.\n\n  Consultants and contractors\n  (1) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (e)(ii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Other persons\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (f)(iii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Determinations are not legislative instruments\n  (3) A determination under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 6 Act binds the Crown\n\n  This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n\n#### 7 Extraterritorial application\n\n  This Act extends to acts, omissions, matters and things outside Australia.\n\n## Part 2—Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n### Division 1—Simplified outline of this Part\n\n#### 8 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner is also known as the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n### Division 2—Office and role of the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 9 Establishment\n\n  (1) There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has, under the Minister, the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n#### 10 Powers of Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner has power to do all things necessary or convenient to be done for or in connection with the performance of his or her duties.\n\n### Division 3—Appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 11 Appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed by the Governor‑General by written instrument.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed on a full‑time basis.\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (3) While a person holds office as the Australian Border Force Commissioner the person is also the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 12 Term of appointment\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office for the period specified in the instrument of appointment. The period must not exceed 5 years.\n\n> Note: The Australian Border Force Commissioner may be reappointed: see section 33AA of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 13 Oath or affirmation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must, before beginning to discharge the duties of his or her office, make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Minister.\n  Compliance\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she has made and subscribed under this section.\n\n#### 14 Acting Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by written instrument, appoint a person to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) during a vacancy in the office of the Australian Border Force Commissioner (whether or not an appointment has previously been made to the office); or\n    (b) during any period, or during all periods, when the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (i) is absent from duty or from Australia; or\n    (ii) is, for any reason, unable to perform the duties of the office.\n\n> Note: Sections 33AB and 33A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 have rules that apply to acting appointments.\n\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (2) A person appointed to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner is taken, while the person is so acting, to also be the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 15 Application of finance law\n\n  For the purposes of the finance law (within the meaning of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013), the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs) is an official of the Department.\n\n### Division 4—Terms and conditions for the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 16 Remuneration and allowances\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the remuneration that is determined by the Remuneration Tribunal. If no determination of that remuneration by the Tribunal is in operation, he or she is to be paid the remuneration that is prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the allowances that are prescribed by the rules.\n  (3) This section has effect subject to the Remuneration Tribunal Act 1973.\n\n#### 17 Leave of absence\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the recreation leave entitlements that are determined by the Remuneration Tribunal.\n  (2) The Minister may grant the Australian Border Force Commissioner leave of absence, other than recreation leave, on the terms and conditions as to remuneration or otherwise that the Minister determines.\n\n#### 18 Outside work\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in paid work outside the duties of his or her office without the Minister’s approval.\n\n#### 19 Disclosure of interests\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must give written notice to the Minister of any direct or indirect pecuniary interest that the Commissioner has or acquires and that conflicts or could conflict with the proper performance of the Commissioner’s functions.\n  (2) Subsection (1) applies in addition to section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests).\n\n#### 20 Resignation of appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may resign his or her appointment by giving the Governor‑General a written resignation.\n  (2) The resignation takes effect on the day it is received by the Governor‑General or, if a later day is specified in the resignation, on that later day.\n\n#### 21 Suspension or termination of appointment\n\n  (1) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) for misbehaviour; or\n    (b) if the Commissioner is unable to perform the duties of his or her office because of physical or mental incapacity.\n  (2) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner if:\n    (a) the Commissioner:\n    (i) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (ii) takes steps to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (iii) compounds with one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (iv) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (b) the Commissioner is absent, except on leave of absence, for 14 consecutive days or for 28 days in any 12 months; or\n    (c) the Commissioner engages in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she made and subscribed under section 13; or\n    (d) the Commissioner engages, except with the Minister’s approval, in paid work outside the duties of his or her office (see section 18); or\n    (e) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with:\n    (i) section 19; or\n    (ii) section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests) or rules made under that Act for the purposes of that section; or\n    (f) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with a direction under section 23.\n  (3) The suspension of the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner under this section does not affect any entitlement of the Commissioner to be paid remuneration, and allowances, in accordance with this Act.\n  Statement in Parliament\n  (4) If the Governor‑General suspends or terminates the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner, the Minister must cause a statement of the grounds of the suspension or termination to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 7 sitting days of that House after the suspension or termination.\n\n#### 22 Other terms and conditions\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office on the terms and conditions (if any) in relation to matters not covered by this Act that are determined by the Minister.\n\n### Division 5—Ministerial directions\n\n#### 23 Minister may give directions to Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, after obtaining and considering the advice of the Australian Border Force Commissioner and the Secretary, give written directions to the Australian Border Force Commissioner about policies that should be pursued, or priorities that should be followed, in relation to the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) If the Minister gives a direction under subsection (1), the Minister must cause a copy of the direction to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 15 sitting days of that House after giving the direction.\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must comply with all directions under subsection (1).\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n### Division 6—Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n#### 24 Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may request the following persons to make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c) or (d) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) A person must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Australian Border Force Commissioner or a person authorised by the Commissioner.\n  Compliance\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with the oath or affirmation.\n\n> Note: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  (4) Subsection (3) extends to an Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section but who is no longer a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b).\n\n### Division 7—Delegation and directions\n\n#### 25 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to the following:\n    (a) the Secretary;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (c) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct).\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (4) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to any Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (6) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n#### 26 Directions—administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in connection with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a person;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a person;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (5) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (6) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (7) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (8) If a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (4) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the person is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the person or expose the person to a penalty.\n  (9) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the person in any proceedings.\n  (10) Subsection (9) has effect subject to section 40.\n\n#### 27 Directions—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those persons under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Compliance with directions\n  (3) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (4) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (5) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n\n## Part 3—Resignation from the Department\n\n#### 28 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An APS employee in the Department must give at least 14 days’ notice of his or her resignation from the Department.\n\n• If an APS employee in the Department resigns in circumstances where the employee may have engaged in serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may delay the employee’s resignation by up to 90 days to allow further investigation of that conduct.\n\n#### 29 Resignation—general\n\n  (1) A person may resign as an APS employee in the Department if, and only if:\n    (a) he or she gives written notice to the Secretary of his or her resignation; and\n    (b) the notice specifies, in accordance with subsection (2), the day his or her resignation is to take effect.\n  (2) The day specified in a notice under paragraph (1)(a) must not:\n    (a) be earlier than 14 days, or such shorter period as the Secretary allows; or\n    (b) be later than 4 months;\n  after the day on which the notice is given to the Secretary.\n  (3) This section is subject to section 30.\n\n#### 30 Resignation in anticipation of termination of employment\n\n  (1) This section applies if:\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department gives the Secretary written notice of the employee’s resignation under paragraph 29(1)(a); and\n    (b) either:\n    (i) the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee has engaged in serious misconduct and the Secretary is considering terminating the employee’s employment; or\n    (ii) the employee is being investigated for serious misconduct and the Secretary is not in a position to decide whether to terminate the employee’s employment because the findings of the investigation are not yet known.\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written notice given to the APS employee, substitute a day, no later than 90 days after the day specified in the employee’s notice of resignation, as the day on which the employee’s resignation is to take effect.\n  (3) Subsection (2) has effect subject to subsection (7).\n  Multiple notices\n  (4) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may give more than one notice under subsection (2) to the APS employee in relation to the notice of resignation.\n  Timing of first notice\n  (5) To be effective, the first notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation must be given to the APS employee before the day specified in the notice of resignation.\n  Employee’s resignation takes effect or employee’s employment terminated\n  (6) The Secretary must, on or before the day substituted in the most recent notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation:\n    (a) notify the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect; or\n    (b) terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (7) If under paragraph (6)(a) the Secretary notifies the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect, the employee’s resignation takes effect on the day of that notification.\n\n## Part 4—Termination of employment in the Department for serious misconduct\n\n#### 31 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• If the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour amounts to serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Commissioner may make a declaration to that effect.\n\n• The effect of the declaration is that provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, will not apply to the APS employee.\n\n#### 32 Termination of employment for serious misconduct\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour or any part of it:\n    (a) amounts to serious misconduct by the APS employee; and\n    (b) is having, or is likely to have, a damaging effect on:\n    (i) the professional self‑respect or morale of some or all of the APS employees in the Department; or\n    (ii) the reputation of the Department with the public or any section of the public, with an Australian or overseas government or with a person or body to whom information may be disclosed under Part 6.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may make a written declaration that he or she has the belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee.\n  Timing of declaration\n  (3) A declaration under subsection (2) must be made within 24 hours of the Secretary’s decision to terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n  Copy of declaration to be given to APS employee\n  (4) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Secretary or the Commissioner must give the APS employee a copy of the declaration.\n  Effect of declaration on Fair Work Act\n  (5) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Fair Work Act 2009 (other than Part 3‑1 and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) the termination of the APS employee’s employment; or\n    (b) the making of the declaration.\n\n> Note 1: This means, for example, that the provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, do not apply in relation to the APS employee.\n\n> Note 2: Part 3‑1 of the Fair Work Act 2009 deals with general protections, and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act deals with payments relating to periods of industrial action.\n\n  (6) To avoid doubt, subsection (5) applies despite section 8 of the Public Service Act 1999.\n  Report to Minister\n  (7) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner must give the Minister a written report containing the following, as soon as practicable after making the declaration:\n    (a) the grounds for the Secretary’s or Commissioner’s belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee;\n    (b) the nature and findings of any investigation of, or inquiry into, the APS employee’s conduct or behaviour;\n    (c) details of any other matter the Secretary or Commissioner considers relevant.\n  Declaration not a legislative instrument\n  (8) A declaration under subsection (2) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n## Part 5—Alcohol and drug tests\n\n#### 33 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n#### 34 Alcohol screening test—suspicion that Immigration and Border Protection worker under the influence of alcohol\n\n  (1) An authorised person may require an Immigration and Border Protection worker to undergo an alcohol screening test if:\n    (a) the worker is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; and\n    (b) the authorised person reasonably suspects that the worker is under the influence of alcohol.\n  Compliance with requirement\n  (2) The worker must comply with a requirement given to him or her under subsection (1).\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n  Return to duties\n  (3) If the result of the alcohol screening test shows that alcohol is not present in the worker’s breath, he or she may return to his or her duties immediately.\n  Relationship with section 35\n  (4) This section does not limit section 35.\n\n#### 35 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—general\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Blood sample if alcohol breath test indicates presence of alcohol\n  (2) If:\n    (a) the worker undergoes an alcohol breath test in accordance with a direction under subsection (1); and\n    (b) the alcohol breath test indicates the presence of alcohol;\n  the worker may provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n#### 36 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—certain incidents\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following if subsection (2) or (3) applies:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Person killed or seriously injured in an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel or while detained\n  (2) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) one of the following applies:\n    (i) a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is held in custody in relation to an arrest under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958 or the Maritime Powers Act 2013 or otherwise detained under any of those Acts;\n    (iii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is an unauthorised maritime arrival and is being taken to a regional processing country under section 198AD of the Migration Act 1958; and\n    (b) the worker is directly involved in the incident in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Person killed or seriously injured by a firearm discharging or physical force\n  (3) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) all of the following apply:\n    (i) the worker is an officer authorised to carry arms within the meaning of section 189A of the Customs Act 1901;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the discharge of a firearm by the worker;\n    (iii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) both of the following apply:\n    (i) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the application of physical force by the worker;\n    (ii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Direction to be given as soon as practicable after the incident\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) must be given as soon as practicable after the incident concerned and may be given whether or not the worker is still performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Provision of blood or body sample while in hospital\n  (5) If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is involved in an incident referred to in subsection (2) or (3); and\n    (b) the worker attends or is admitted to a hospital for examination or treatment because of the incident;\n  an authorised person may give the worker a written direction requiring the worker to do either or both of the following:\n    (c) provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test;\n    (d) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (6) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n#### 37 Performing duties on board a vessel\n\n  If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is on board a vessel throughout a period (the onboard period); and\n    (b) the vessel is under the command of an officer of Customs (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); and\n    (c) at any time during the onboard period, the worker performs duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n  the worker is taken, for the purposes of this Part, to be in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker throughout the onboard period.\n\n#### 38 Conduct of tests and provision of samples to be in accordance with the rules\n\n  Conduct of tests\n  (1) An alcohol screening test, alcohol breath test, alcohol blood test or prohibited drug test under section 34, 35 or 36 is to be conducted in accordance with the rules.\n  Provision of samples\n  (2) A sample of blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test under section 35 or 36, or a body sample for the purpose of a prohibited drug test under that section, is to be provided in accordance with the rules.\n\n#### 39 Rules for purposes of this Part\n\n  For the purposes of sections 34, 35 and 36, the rules may make provision for and in relation to the following:\n    (a) the authorisation of persons:\n    (i) to conduct alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests for the purpose of those sections; and\n    (ii) to operate equipment for that purpose;\n    (b) the provision of samples of blood for the purpose of alcohol blood tests under those sections;\n    (c) the provision of body samples for the purpose of prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (d) the conduct of alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (e) the devices used in conducting alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections, including the calibration, inspection and testing of those devices;\n    (f) in the case of alcohol blood tests and prohibited drug tests—the accreditation of persons to conduct analyses in connection with such tests;\n    (g) the procedure for the handling, analysis, storage and destruction of:\n    (i) samples of blood taken in connection with alcohol blood tests under those sections; or\n    (ii) body samples taken in connection with prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (h) the giving of the test results in certificates or other documents and the evidentiary effect of such certificates or other documents;\n    (i) the confidentiality and disclosure of the test results;\n    (j) the keeping and destruction of records in relation to alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections.\n\n#### 40 Admissibility of test results etc. in legal proceedings\n\n  The following:\n    (a) a certificate or other document recording the results of a test conducted under section 34, 35 or 36 in relation to an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n    (b) any other information, answer to a question or document relevant to conducting such a test;\n  are not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings other than the following:\n    (c) proceedings in relation to a decision of the Secretary to terminate the employment or engagement of the worker;\n    (d) proceedings under the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988;\n    (e) proceedings in tort against the Commonwealth that are instituted by the worker.\n\n## Part 6—Secrecy and disclosure provisions\n\n#### 41 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An entrusted person must not make a record of or disclose Immigration and Border Protection information unless the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by a provision of this Part, is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person or is required or authorised by law or by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n#### 42 Secrecy\n\n  (1) A person commits an offence if:\n    (a) the person is, or has been, an entrusted person; and\n    (b) the person makes a record of, or discloses, information; and\n    (c) the information is Immigration and Border Protection information.\n\nPenalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.\n\n  (1A) If the information is Immigration and Border Protection information because of the operation of subsection 4(5) or (6), the fault element of recklessness for paragraph (1)(c) of this section is taken to be satisfied if the person is reckless as to whether or not whichever of the following applies:\n    (a) the information has a security classification;\n    (b) the information originated with, or was received from, an intelligence agency;\n    (c) the information was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law.\n\n> Note: Recklessness is the fault element for paragraph (1)(c)—see section 5.6 of the Criminal Code.\n\n  Exception\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49; or\n    (b) the making of the record or disclosure is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person; or\n    (c) the making of the record or disclosure is required or authorised by or under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (d) the making of the record or disclosure is required by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n> Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to a matter in subsection (2) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code).\n\n  Geographical jurisdiction\n  (3) Section 15.2 of the Criminal Code (extended geographical jurisdiction—category B) applies to an offence against subsection (1).\n\n#### 43 Records or disclosure for the purposes of this Act or the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022\n\n  An entrusted person may make a record of, or disclose, Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of this Act or a legislative instrument under this Act; or\n    (b) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022 or regulations under that Act.\n\n#### 44 Disclosure to certain bodies and persons\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of the information to that body or person is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Bodies and persons\n  (4) For the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), the bodies and persons are the following:\n    (a) a Department, agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (b) the Australian Federal Police;\n    (c) a police force or police service of a State or Territory;\n    (d) a coroner;\n    (e) any other person who holds an office or appointment under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (f) any other body or person prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n  (5) Paragraph (4)(f) does not apply in relation to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (6) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a body or person:\n    (a) before Immigration and Border Protection information is disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2); or\n    (b) in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (7) An instrument under subsection (3) or (6) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 45 Disclosure in accordance with agreements\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of that information to that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Agreements\n  (4) This subsection applies to an agreement that is in force between:\n    (a) the Commonwealth or an agency or authority of the Commonwealth; and\n    (b) one or more of the following:\n    (i) a foreign country;\n    (ii) an agency or authority of a foreign country;\n    (iii) a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (5) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to it under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (6) An instrument under subsection (3) or (5) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 46 Permitted purposes\n\n  For the purposes of sections 44 and 45, the purposes are the following:\n    (a) the administration or enforcement of a law of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country that relates to:\n    (i) criminal law; or\n    (ii) a law imposing a pecuniary penalty or providing for the forfeiture of property;\n    (b) in relation to a law referred to in paragraph (a), the prevention of crime, or the detection or analysis of criminal conduct, in respect of that law;\n    (c) assisting a coronial inquiry, coronial investigation or coronial inquest under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (d) a purpose relating to the protection of public health, or the prevention or elimination of risks to the life or safety of an individual or a group of individuals;\n    (e) the collection and verification of statistics for the purposes of the Census and Statistics Act 1905 or the performance of the functions of the Australian Bureau of Statistics as set out in section 6 of the Australian Bureau of Statistics Act 1975;\n    (f) the protection of the public revenue of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country;\n    (g) a purpose relating to matters covered by the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013, the Australian Citizenship Act 2007, the Immigration (Guardianship of Children) Act 1946, the Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 or the Biosecurity Act 2015;\n    (h) any of the following:\n    (i) assisting in establishing the identity of a particular person;\n    (ii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was an Australian citizen at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (iii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was the holder of a particular kind or class of visa under the Migration Act 1958 at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (i) a purpose relating to immigration, quarantine or border control between Australia and a foreign country;\n    (j) the provision of services to persons who are not Australian citizens;\n    (ja) a purpose relating to the performance of the Australian Crime Commission’s function covered by paragraph 7A(da) of the Australian Crime Commission Act 2002;\n    (k) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 17 of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Act 1979;\n    (l) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 6 of the Intelligence Services Act 2001;\n    (la) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 7 of the Office of National Intelligence Act 2018;\n    (m) the administration of the National Anti‑Doping Scheme (within the meaning of the Sport Integrity Australia Act 2020);\n    (n) the administration or enforcement of laws with respect to commerce:\n    (i) between a State and another State; or\n    (ii) between a State and a Territory; or\n    (iii) between a Territory and another Territory; or\n    (iv) between Australia and another country; or\n    (v) within a State or Territory;\n    (na) a purpose relating to the inter‑country adoption of a child;\n    (nb) a purpose relating to the protection of national security or the defence of Australia;\n    (nc) a purpose relating to locating a missing person;\n    (o) a purpose prescribed by the rules.\n\n#### 47 Disclosure with consent\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that relates to the affairs of a person or body if:\n    (a) the person or body has consented to the disclosure; and\n    (b) the disclosure is in accordance with that consent.\n\n#### 48 Disclosure to reduce threat to life or health\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the entrusted person reasonably believes that the disclosure is necessary to prevent or lessen a serious threat to the life or health of an individual; and\n    (b) the disclosure is for the purposes of preventing or lessening that threat.\n\n#### 49 Disclosure of publicly available information\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if it has already been lawfully made available to the public.\n\n#### 50 Exceptions operate independently\n\n  Sections 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 and 49 do not limit each other.\n\n#### 50A Information must be certified as appropriately classified before proceedings can be initiated\n\n  If, an offence against section 42 relates to information that has a security classification, proceedings for the offence must not be initiated unless the Secretary has certified that it is appropriate that the information had a security classification at the time of the conduct that is alleged to constitute the offence.\n\n#### 51 Interaction with Privacy Act\n\n  For the purposes of the Privacy Act 1988:\n    (a) the making of a record, in accordance with section 43, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a use that is authorised by this Act; and\n    (b) the disclosure, in accordance with section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a disclosure that is authorised by this Act.\n\n## Part 7—Other matters\n\n#### 52 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• The Secretary and the Comptroller‑General of Customs can delegate their functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the engagement of a person as a consultant or contractor if the person fails to comply with a direction under this Act.\n\n• The Minister may make rules for the purposes of this Act.\n\n#### 53 Delegation by Secretary\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to:\n    (a) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct); or\n    (c) the Migration Act 1958 or an instrument under that Act.\n\n> Note: Section 496 of the Migration Act 1958 deals with delegation by the Secretary of his or her powers under that Act.\n\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  Subdelegation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n  (4) If the Australian Border Force Commissioner is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to the following:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  (6) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Secretary.\n\n#### 54 Delegation by Comptroller‑General of Customs\n\n  (1) The Comptroller‑General of Customs may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth (other than section 179, 179K or 179L of the Customs Act 1901) to:\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Directions to delegates\n  (2) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (3) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (3), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (5) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (4) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (2) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (6) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (3) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 55 Directions by Secretary—administration and control of the Department\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in connection with the administration and control of the Department.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for Immigration and Border Protection workers for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements;\n    (d) security clearances.\n  Organisational suitability assessments\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to organisational suitability assessments.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (5) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by Immigration and Border Protection workers of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a worker;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a worker;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Relationship with directions under section 26\n  (6) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 26 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (7) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (8) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (9) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (10) If an Immigration and Border Protection worker is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (5) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the worker is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the worker or expose the worker to a penalty.\n  (11) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings.\n  (12) Subsection (11) has effect subject to section 40.\n\n#### 56 Directions by Secretary—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Relationship with directions under section 27\n  (3) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 27 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (5) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (6) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n\n#### 57 Termination of engagement of consultant or contractor\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a person is covered by paragraph (e) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) the person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or subsection (2) of this section or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a person (the affected person) is covered by paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) in connection with that person, paragraph (e) of that definition covers a person (the consultant/contractor); and\n    (c) the affected person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, direct the consultant/contractor to arrange for the affected person to cease to perform services for the Department.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not limit the circumstances in which a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor may be terminated.\n\n#### 57A Act not to apply so as to exceed Commonwealth power\n\n  (1) If a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act:\n    (a) would, apart from this section, have an application (an invalid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    because of which the provision exceeds the Commonwealth’s legislative power; but\n    (b) also has at least one application (a valid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    that, if it were the provision’s only application, would be within the Commonwealth’s legislative power;\n  it is the Parliament’s intention that the provision is not to have the invalid application, but is to have every valid application.\n  (2) This section applies to a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act, whether the provision is enacted or made before, on or after the commencement of this section.\n\n#### 58 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed by the rules; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) amend this Act.","sortOrder":11},{"sectionNumber":"9","sectionType":"section","heading":"Establishment","content":"#### 9 Establishment\n\n  (1) There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has, under the Minister, the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.","sortOrder":12},{"sectionNumber":"10","sectionType":"section","heading":"Powers of Australian Border Force Commissioner","content":"#### 10 Powers of Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner has power to do all things necessary or convenient to be done for or in connection with the performance of his or her duties.","sortOrder":13},{"sectionNumber":"Division 3","sectionType":"division","heading":"Appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner","content":"An Act relating to the Australian Border Force, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and persons performing work for the Department, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Australian Border Force Act 2015.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on 1 July 2015.\n\n#### 3 Simplified outline of this Act\n\n• There is an Australian Border Force within the Department.\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force, who is to have the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• There are resignation and termination provisions that apply to all APS employees in the Department in circumstances involving serious misconduct.\n\n• All Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n• There are secrecy and disclosure provisions covering information obtained by the Secretary, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and Immigration and Border Protection workers.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n#### 4 Definitions\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> alcohol blood test means a test of a person’s blood to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol breath test means a test of a person’s breath to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol screening test means a test of a person’s breath to determine whether alcohol is present in the person’s breath.\n\n> Australian Border Force means that part of the Department known as the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Immigration and Border Protection workers may perform work for the Australian Border Force. The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Australian Border Force Commissioner means the Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> authorised person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is authorised in an instrument under subsection (2).\n\n> body sample means any of the following:\n\n    (a) any human biological fluid;\n    (b) any human biological tissue (whether alive or otherwise);\n    (c) any human breath.\n\n> corrupt conduct: see engages in corrupt conduct.\n\n> duty of confidence means any duty or obligation arising under the common law or at equity pursuant to which a person is obliged not to disclose information.\n\n> engages in corrupt conduct: an Immigration and Border Protection worker engages in corrupt conduct if the worker, while an Immigration and Border Protection worker, engages in:\n\n    (a) conduct that:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    the worker abusing his or her position as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) conduct that:\n    (i) perverts; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of perverting;\n    the course of justice; or\n    (c) conduct that, having regard to the duties and powers of the worker as an Immigration and Border Protection worker:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    corruption of any other kind.\n\n> entrusted person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs); or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection information means information of any of the following kinds that was obtained by a person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person:\n\n    (a) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia;\n    (b) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the prevention, detection or investigation of, or the conduct of proceedings relating to, an offence or a contravention of a civil penalty provision;\n    (c) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the protection of public health, or endanger the life or safety of an individual or group of individuals;\n    (d) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence;\n    (e) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to cause competitive detriment to a person;\n    (f) information of a kind prescribed in an instrument under subsection (7).\n\n> Note: See also subsections (4) to (7).\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection worker means:\n\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department; or\n    (b) a person covered by paragraph (d), (e) or (f) of the definition of officer of Customs in subsection 4(1) of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (c) a person covered by paragraph (f) or (g) of the definition of officer in subsection 5(1) of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (d) a person who is:\n    (i) an employee of an Agency (within the meaning of the Public Service Act 1999); or\n    (ii) an officer or employee of a State or Territory; or\n    (iii) an officer or employee of an agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (iv) an officer or employee of the government of a foreign country, an officer or employee of an agency or authority of a foreign country or an officer or employee of a public international organisation;\n    and whose services are made available to the Department; or\n    (e) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged as a consultant or contractor to perform services for the Department; and\n    (ii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(1); or\n    (f) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged or employed by a person to whom paragraph (e) or this paragraph applies; and\n    (ii) performing services for the Department in connection with that engagement or employment; and\n    (iii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(2).\n\n> intelligence agency means:\n\n    (a) the Australian Geospatial‑Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (b) the Australian Secret Intelligence Service; or\n    (c) the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (d) the Australian Signals Directorate; or\n    (e) the Defence Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (f) the Office of National Intelligence; or\n    (g) a government body or authority responsible for intelligence gathering for, or the security of, a foreign country.\n\n> paid work means work for financial gain or reward (whether as an employee, a self‑employed person or otherwise).\n\n> personal information has the same meaning as in the Privacy Act 1988.\n\n> prohibited drug means:\n\n    (a) a narcotic substance (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); or\n    (b) any drug prescribed in an instrument under subsection (3).\n\n> prohibited drug test means a test of a body sample of a person to determine the presence (if any) of a prohibited drug in the sample.\n\n> public international organisation has the meaning given by section 70.1 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> rules means the rules made under section 58.\n\n> Secretary means the Secretary of the Department.\n\n> serious misconduct, by an Immigration and Border Protection worker, means:\n\n    (a) corrupt conduct engaged in, a serious abuse of power, or a serious dereliction of duty, by the worker; or\n    (b) any other seriously reprehensible act or behaviour by the worker, whether or not acting, or purporting to act, in the course of his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> unauthorised maritime arrival has the same meaning as in the Migration Act 1958.\n\n  Authorised person instrument\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, authorise an Immigration and Border Protection worker for the purposes of paragraph (c) of the definition of authorised person in subsection (1).\n  Prohibited drug instrument\n  (3) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by legislative instrument, prescribe drugs for the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of prohibited drug in subsection (1).\n  Immigration and Border Protection information\n  (4) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information obtained by an entrusted person in the course of performing duties, or in performing functions or exercising powers, under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) as an officer of Customs, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (b) as an officer, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (c) as a maritime officer within the meaning of the Maritime Powers Act 2013; or\n    (d) as a delegate of someone else; or\n    (e) in any other capacity;\n  is taken to be information obtained by the person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person.\n  (5) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), the following kinds of information are taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia:\n    (a) information that has a security classification;\n    (b) information that has originated with, or been received from, an intelligence agency.\n  (6) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information that was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law is taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence.\n  (7) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, prescribe a kind of information for the purposes of paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1) if the Minister is satisfied that disclosure of the information would or could reasonably be expected to:\n    (a) prejudice the effective working of the Department; or\n    (b) otherwise harm the public interest.\n\n#### 5 Consultants and contractors etc.\n\n  Consultants and contractors\n  (1) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (e)(ii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Other persons\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (f)(iii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Determinations are not legislative instruments\n  (3) A determination under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 6 Act binds the Crown\n\n  This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n\n#### 7 Extraterritorial application\n\n  This Act extends to acts, omissions, matters and things outside Australia.\n\n## Part 2—Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n### Division 1—Simplified outline of this Part\n\n#### 8 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner is also known as the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n### Division 2—Office and role of the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 9 Establishment\n\n  (1) There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has, under the Minister, the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n#### 10 Powers of Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner has power to do all things necessary or convenient to be done for or in connection with the performance of his or her duties.\n\n### Division 3—Appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 11 Appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed by the Governor‑General by written instrument.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed on a full‑time basis.\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (3) While a person holds office as the Australian Border Force Commissioner the person is also the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 12 Term of appointment\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office for the period specified in the instrument of appointment. The period must not exceed 5 years.\n\n> Note: The Australian Border Force Commissioner may be reappointed: see section 33AA of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 13 Oath or affirmation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must, before beginning to discharge the duties of his or her office, make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Minister.\n  Compliance\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she has made and subscribed under this section.\n\n#### 14 Acting Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by written instrument, appoint a person to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) during a vacancy in the office of the Australian Border Force Commissioner (whether or not an appointment has previously been made to the office); or\n    (b) during any period, or during all periods, when the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (i) is absent from duty or from Australia; or\n    (ii) is, for any reason, unable to perform the duties of the office.\n\n> Note: Sections 33AB and 33A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 have rules that apply to acting appointments.\n\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (2) A person appointed to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner is taken, while the person is so acting, to also be the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 15 Application of finance law\n\n  For the purposes of the finance law (within the meaning of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013), the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs) is an official of the Department.\n\n### Division 4—Terms and conditions for the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 16 Remuneration and allowances\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the remuneration that is determined by the Remuneration Tribunal. If no determination of that remuneration by the Tribunal is in operation, he or she is to be paid the remuneration that is prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the allowances that are prescribed by the rules.\n  (3) This section has effect subject to the Remuneration Tribunal Act 1973.\n\n#### 17 Leave of absence\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the recreation leave entitlements that are determined by the Remuneration Tribunal.\n  (2) The Minister may grant the Australian Border Force Commissioner leave of absence, other than recreation leave, on the terms and conditions as to remuneration or otherwise that the Minister determines.\n\n#### 18 Outside work\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in paid work outside the duties of his or her office without the Minister’s approval.\n\n#### 19 Disclosure of interests\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must give written notice to the Minister of any direct or indirect pecuniary interest that the Commissioner has or acquires and that conflicts or could conflict with the proper performance of the Commissioner’s functions.\n  (2) Subsection (1) applies in addition to section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests).\n\n#### 20 Resignation of appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may resign his or her appointment by giving the Governor‑General a written resignation.\n  (2) The resignation takes effect on the day it is received by the Governor‑General or, if a later day is specified in the resignation, on that later day.\n\n#### 21 Suspension or termination of appointment\n\n  (1) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) for misbehaviour; or\n    (b) if the Commissioner is unable to perform the duties of his or her office because of physical or mental incapacity.\n  (2) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner if:\n    (a) the Commissioner:\n    (i) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (ii) takes steps to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (iii) compounds with one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (iv) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (b) the Commissioner is absent, except on leave of absence, for 14 consecutive days or for 28 days in any 12 months; or\n    (c) the Commissioner engages in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she made and subscribed under section 13; or\n    (d) the Commissioner engages, except with the Minister’s approval, in paid work outside the duties of his or her office (see section 18); or\n    (e) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with:\n    (i) section 19; or\n    (ii) section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests) or rules made under that Act for the purposes of that section; or\n    (f) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with a direction under section 23.\n  (3) The suspension of the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner under this section does not affect any entitlement of the Commissioner to be paid remuneration, and allowances, in accordance with this Act.\n  Statement in Parliament\n  (4) If the Governor‑General suspends or terminates the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner, the Minister must cause a statement of the grounds of the suspension or termination to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 7 sitting days of that House after the suspension or termination.\n\n#### 22 Other terms and conditions\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office on the terms and conditions (if any) in relation to matters not covered by this Act that are determined by the Minister.\n\n### Division 5—Ministerial directions\n\n#### 23 Minister may give directions to Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, after obtaining and considering the advice of the Australian Border Force Commissioner and the Secretary, give written directions to the Australian Border Force Commissioner about policies that should be pursued, or priorities that should be followed, in relation to the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) If the Minister gives a direction under subsection (1), the Minister must cause a copy of the direction to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 15 sitting days of that House after giving the direction.\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must comply with all directions under subsection (1).\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n### Division 6—Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n#### 24 Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may request the following persons to make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c) or (d) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) A person must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Australian Border Force Commissioner or a person authorised by the Commissioner.\n  Compliance\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with the oath or affirmation.\n\n> Note: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  (4) Subsection (3) extends to an Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section but who is no longer a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b).\n\n### Division 7—Delegation and directions\n\n#### 25 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to the following:\n    (a) the Secretary;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (c) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct).\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (4) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to any Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (6) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n#### 26 Directions—administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in connection with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a person;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a person;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (5) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (6) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (7) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (8) If a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (4) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the person is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the person or expose the person to a penalty.\n  (9) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the person in any proceedings.\n  (10) Subsection (9) has effect subject to section 40.\n\n#### 27 Directions—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those persons under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Compliance with directions\n  (3) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (4) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (5) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n\n## Part 3—Resignation from the Department\n\n#### 28 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An APS employee in the Department must give at least 14 days’ notice of his or her resignation from the Department.\n\n• If an APS employee in the Department resigns in circumstances where the employee may have engaged in serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may delay the employee’s resignation by up to 90 days to allow further investigation of that conduct.\n\n#### 29 Resignation—general\n\n  (1) A person may resign as an APS employee in the Department if, and only if:\n    (a) he or she gives written notice to the Secretary of his or her resignation; and\n    (b) the notice specifies, in accordance with subsection (2), the day his or her resignation is to take effect.\n  (2) The day specified in a notice under paragraph (1)(a) must not:\n    (a) be earlier than 14 days, or such shorter period as the Secretary allows; or\n    (b) be later than 4 months;\n  after the day on which the notice is given to the Secretary.\n  (3) This section is subject to section 30.\n\n#### 30 Resignation in anticipation of termination of employment\n\n  (1) This section applies if:\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department gives the Secretary written notice of the employee’s resignation under paragraph 29(1)(a); and\n    (b) either:\n    (i) the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee has engaged in serious misconduct and the Secretary is considering terminating the employee’s employment; or\n    (ii) the employee is being investigated for serious misconduct and the Secretary is not in a position to decide whether to terminate the employee’s employment because the findings of the investigation are not yet known.\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written notice given to the APS employee, substitute a day, no later than 90 days after the day specified in the employee’s notice of resignation, as the day on which the employee’s resignation is to take effect.\n  (3) Subsection (2) has effect subject to subsection (7).\n  Multiple notices\n  (4) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may give more than one notice under subsection (2) to the APS employee in relation to the notice of resignation.\n  Timing of first notice\n  (5) To be effective, the first notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation must be given to the APS employee before the day specified in the notice of resignation.\n  Employee’s resignation takes effect or employee’s employment terminated\n  (6) The Secretary must, on or before the day substituted in the most recent notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation:\n    (a) notify the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect; or\n    (b) terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (7) If under paragraph (6)(a) the Secretary notifies the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect, the employee’s resignation takes effect on the day of that notification.\n\n## Part 4—Termination of employment in the Department for serious misconduct\n\n#### 31 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• If the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour amounts to serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Commissioner may make a declaration to that effect.\n\n• The effect of the declaration is that provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, will not apply to the APS employee.\n\n#### 32 Termination of employment for serious misconduct\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour or any part of it:\n    (a) amounts to serious misconduct by the APS employee; and\n    (b) is having, or is likely to have, a damaging effect on:\n    (i) the professional self‑respect or morale of some or all of the APS employees in the Department; or\n    (ii) the reputation of the Department with the public or any section of the public, with an Australian or overseas government or with a person or body to whom information may be disclosed under Part 6.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may make a written declaration that he or she has the belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee.\n  Timing of declaration\n  (3) A declaration under subsection (2) must be made within 24 hours of the Secretary’s decision to terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n  Copy of declaration to be given to APS employee\n  (4) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Secretary or the Commissioner must give the APS employee a copy of the declaration.\n  Effect of declaration on Fair Work Act\n  (5) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Fair Work Act 2009 (other than Part 3‑1 and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) the termination of the APS employee’s employment; or\n    (b) the making of the declaration.\n\n> Note 1: This means, for example, that the provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, do not apply in relation to the APS employee.\n\n> Note 2: Part 3‑1 of the Fair Work Act 2009 deals with general protections, and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act deals with payments relating to periods of industrial action.\n\n  (6) To avoid doubt, subsection (5) applies despite section 8 of the Public Service Act 1999.\n  Report to Minister\n  (7) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner must give the Minister a written report containing the following, as soon as practicable after making the declaration:\n    (a) the grounds for the Secretary’s or Commissioner’s belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee;\n    (b) the nature and findings of any investigation of, or inquiry into, the APS employee’s conduct or behaviour;\n    (c) details of any other matter the Secretary or Commissioner considers relevant.\n  Declaration not a legislative instrument\n  (8) A declaration under subsection (2) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n## Part 5—Alcohol and drug tests\n\n#### 33 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n#### 34 Alcohol screening test—suspicion that Immigration and Border Protection worker under the influence of alcohol\n\n  (1) An authorised person may require an Immigration and Border Protection worker to undergo an alcohol screening test if:\n    (a) the worker is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; and\n    (b) the authorised person reasonably suspects that the worker is under the influence of alcohol.\n  Compliance with requirement\n  (2) The worker must comply with a requirement given to him or her under subsection (1).\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n  Return to duties\n  (3) If the result of the alcohol screening test shows that alcohol is not present in the worker’s breath, he or she may return to his or her duties immediately.\n  Relationship with section 35\n  (4) This section does not limit section 35.\n\n#### 35 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—general\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Blood sample if alcohol breath test indicates presence of alcohol\n  (2) If:\n    (a) the worker undergoes an alcohol breath test in accordance with a direction under subsection (1); and\n    (b) the alcohol breath test indicates the presence of alcohol;\n  the worker may provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n#### 36 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—certain incidents\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following if subsection (2) or (3) applies:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Person killed or seriously injured in an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel or while detained\n  (2) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) one of the following applies:\n    (i) a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is held in custody in relation to an arrest under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958 or the Maritime Powers Act 2013 or otherwise detained under any of those Acts;\n    (iii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is an unauthorised maritime arrival and is being taken to a regional processing country under section 198AD of the Migration Act 1958; and\n    (b) the worker is directly involved in the incident in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Person killed or seriously injured by a firearm discharging or physical force\n  (3) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) all of the following apply:\n    (i) the worker is an officer authorised to carry arms within the meaning of section 189A of the Customs Act 1901;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the discharge of a firearm by the worker;\n    (iii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) both of the following apply:\n    (i) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the application of physical force by the worker;\n    (ii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Direction to be given as soon as practicable after the incident\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) must be given as soon as practicable after the incident concerned and may be given whether or not the worker is still performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Provision of blood or body sample while in hospital\n  (5) If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is involved in an incident referred to in subsection (2) or (3); and\n    (b) the worker attends or is admitted to a hospital for examination or treatment because of the incident;\n  an authorised person may give the worker a written direction requiring the worker to do either or both of the following:\n    (c) provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test;\n    (d) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (6) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n#### 37 Performing duties on board a vessel\n\n  If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is on board a vessel throughout a period (the onboard period); and\n    (b) the vessel is under the command of an officer of Customs (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); and\n    (c) at any time during the onboard period, the worker performs duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n  the worker is taken, for the purposes of this Part, to be in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker throughout the onboard period.\n\n#### 38 Conduct of tests and provision of samples to be in accordance with the rules\n\n  Conduct of tests\n  (1) An alcohol screening test, alcohol breath test, alcohol blood test or prohibited drug test under section 34, 35 or 36 is to be conducted in accordance with the rules.\n  Provision of samples\n  (2) A sample of blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test under section 35 or 36, or a body sample for the purpose of a prohibited drug test under that section, is to be provided in accordance with the rules.\n\n#### 39 Rules for purposes of this Part\n\n  For the purposes of sections 34, 35 and 36, the rules may make provision for and in relation to the following:\n    (a) the authorisation of persons:\n    (i) to conduct alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests for the purpose of those sections; and\n    (ii) to operate equipment for that purpose;\n    (b) the provision of samples of blood for the purpose of alcohol blood tests under those sections;\n    (c) the provision of body samples for the purpose of prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (d) the conduct of alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (e) the devices used in conducting alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections, including the calibration, inspection and testing of those devices;\n    (f) in the case of alcohol blood tests and prohibited drug tests—the accreditation of persons to conduct analyses in connection with such tests;\n    (g) the procedure for the handling, analysis, storage and destruction of:\n    (i) samples of blood taken in connection with alcohol blood tests under those sections; or\n    (ii) body samples taken in connection with prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (h) the giving of the test results in certificates or other documents and the evidentiary effect of such certificates or other documents;\n    (i) the confidentiality and disclosure of the test results;\n    (j) the keeping and destruction of records in relation to alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections.\n\n#### 40 Admissibility of test results etc. in legal proceedings\n\n  The following:\n    (a) a certificate or other document recording the results of a test conducted under section 34, 35 or 36 in relation to an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n    (b) any other information, answer to a question or document relevant to conducting such a test;\n  are not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings other than the following:\n    (c) proceedings in relation to a decision of the Secretary to terminate the employment or engagement of the worker;\n    (d) proceedings under the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988;\n    (e) proceedings in tort against the Commonwealth that are instituted by the worker.\n\n## Part 6—Secrecy and disclosure provisions\n\n#### 41 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An entrusted person must not make a record of or disclose Immigration and Border Protection information unless the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by a provision of this Part, is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person or is required or authorised by law or by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n#### 42 Secrecy\n\n  (1) A person commits an offence if:\n    (a) the person is, or has been, an entrusted person; and\n    (b) the person makes a record of, or discloses, information; and\n    (c) the information is Immigration and Border Protection information.\n\nPenalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.\n\n  (1A) If the information is Immigration and Border Protection information because of the operation of subsection 4(5) or (6), the fault element of recklessness for paragraph (1)(c) of this section is taken to be satisfied if the person is reckless as to whether or not whichever of the following applies:\n    (a) the information has a security classification;\n    (b) the information originated with, or was received from, an intelligence agency;\n    (c) the information was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law.\n\n> Note: Recklessness is the fault element for paragraph (1)(c)—see section 5.6 of the Criminal Code.\n\n  Exception\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49; or\n    (b) the making of the record or disclosure is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person; or\n    (c) the making of the record or disclosure is required or authorised by or under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (d) the making of the record or disclosure is required by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n> Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to a matter in subsection (2) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code).\n\n  Geographical jurisdiction\n  (3) Section 15.2 of the Criminal Code (extended geographical jurisdiction—category B) applies to an offence against subsection (1).\n\n#### 43 Records or disclosure for the purposes of this Act or the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022\n\n  An entrusted person may make a record of, or disclose, Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of this Act or a legislative instrument under this Act; or\n    (b) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022 or regulations under that Act.\n\n#### 44 Disclosure to certain bodies and persons\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of the information to that body or person is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Bodies and persons\n  (4) For the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), the bodies and persons are the following:\n    (a) a Department, agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (b) the Australian Federal Police;\n    (c) a police force or police service of a State or Territory;\n    (d) a coroner;\n    (e) any other person who holds an office or appointment under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (f) any other body or person prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n  (5) Paragraph (4)(f) does not apply in relation to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (6) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a body or person:\n    (a) before Immigration and Border Protection information is disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2); or\n    (b) in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (7) An instrument under subsection (3) or (6) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 45 Disclosure in accordance with agreements\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of that information to that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Agreements\n  (4) This subsection applies to an agreement that is in force between:\n    (a) the Commonwealth or an agency or authority of the Commonwealth; and\n    (b) one or more of the following:\n    (i) a foreign country;\n    (ii) an agency or authority of a foreign country;\n    (iii) a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (5) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to it under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (6) An instrument under subsection (3) or (5) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 46 Permitted purposes\n\n  For the purposes of sections 44 and 45, the purposes are the following:\n    (a) the administration or enforcement of a law of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country that relates to:\n    (i) criminal law; or\n    (ii) a law imposing a pecuniary penalty or providing for the forfeiture of property;\n    (b) in relation to a law referred to in paragraph (a), the prevention of crime, or the detection or analysis of criminal conduct, in respect of that law;\n    (c) assisting a coronial inquiry, coronial investigation or coronial inquest under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (d) a purpose relating to the protection of public health, or the prevention or elimination of risks to the life or safety of an individual or a group of individuals;\n    (e) the collection and verification of statistics for the purposes of the Census and Statistics Act 1905 or the performance of the functions of the Australian Bureau of Statistics as set out in section 6 of the Australian Bureau of Statistics Act 1975;\n    (f) the protection of the public revenue of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country;\n    (g) a purpose relating to matters covered by the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013, the Australian Citizenship Act 2007, the Immigration (Guardianship of Children) Act 1946, the Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 or the Biosecurity Act 2015;\n    (h) any of the following:\n    (i) assisting in establishing the identity of a particular person;\n    (ii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was an Australian citizen at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (iii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was the holder of a particular kind or class of visa under the Migration Act 1958 at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (i) a purpose relating to immigration, quarantine or border control between Australia and a foreign country;\n    (j) the provision of services to persons who are not Australian citizens;\n    (ja) a purpose relating to the performance of the Australian Crime Commission’s function covered by paragraph 7A(da) of the Australian Crime Commission Act 2002;\n    (k) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 17 of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Act 1979;\n    (l) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 6 of the Intelligence Services Act 2001;\n    (la) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 7 of the Office of National Intelligence Act 2018;\n    (m) the administration of the National Anti‑Doping Scheme (within the meaning of the Sport Integrity Australia Act 2020);\n    (n) the administration or enforcement of laws with respect to commerce:\n    (i) between a State and another State; or\n    (ii) between a State and a Territory; or\n    (iii) between a Territory and another Territory; or\n    (iv) between Australia and another country; or\n    (v) within a State or Territory;\n    (na) a purpose relating to the inter‑country adoption of a child;\n    (nb) a purpose relating to the protection of national security or the defence of Australia;\n    (nc) a purpose relating to locating a missing person;\n    (o) a purpose prescribed by the rules.\n\n#### 47 Disclosure with consent\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that relates to the affairs of a person or body if:\n    (a) the person or body has consented to the disclosure; and\n    (b) the disclosure is in accordance with that consent.\n\n#### 48 Disclosure to reduce threat to life or health\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the entrusted person reasonably believes that the disclosure is necessary to prevent or lessen a serious threat to the life or health of an individual; and\n    (b) the disclosure is for the purposes of preventing or lessening that threat.\n\n#### 49 Disclosure of publicly available information\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if it has already been lawfully made available to the public.\n\n#### 50 Exceptions operate independently\n\n  Sections 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 and 49 do not limit each other.\n\n#### 50A Information must be certified as appropriately classified before proceedings can be initiated\n\n  If, an offence against section 42 relates to information that has a security classification, proceedings for the offence must not be initiated unless the Secretary has certified that it is appropriate that the information had a security classification at the time of the conduct that is alleged to constitute the offence.\n\n#### 51 Interaction with Privacy Act\n\n  For the purposes of the Privacy Act 1988:\n    (a) the making of a record, in accordance with section 43, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a use that is authorised by this Act; and\n    (b) the disclosure, in accordance with section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a disclosure that is authorised by this Act.\n\n## Part 7—Other matters\n\n#### 52 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• The Secretary and the Comptroller‑General of Customs can delegate their functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the engagement of a person as a consultant or contractor if the person fails to comply with a direction under this Act.\n\n• The Minister may make rules for the purposes of this Act.\n\n#### 53 Delegation by Secretary\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to:\n    (a) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct); or\n    (c) the Migration Act 1958 or an instrument under that Act.\n\n> Note: Section 496 of the Migration Act 1958 deals with delegation by the Secretary of his or her powers under that Act.\n\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  Subdelegation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n  (4) If the Australian Border Force Commissioner is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to the following:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  (6) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Secretary.\n\n#### 54 Delegation by Comptroller‑General of Customs\n\n  (1) The Comptroller‑General of Customs may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth (other than section 179, 179K or 179L of the Customs Act 1901) to:\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Directions to delegates\n  (2) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (3) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (3), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (5) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (4) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (2) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (6) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (3) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 55 Directions by Secretary—administration and control of the Department\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in connection with the administration and control of the Department.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for Immigration and Border Protection workers for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements;\n    (d) security clearances.\n  Organisational suitability assessments\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to organisational suitability assessments.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (5) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by Immigration and Border Protection workers of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a worker;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a worker;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Relationship with directions under section 26\n  (6) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 26 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (7) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (8) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (9) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (10) If an Immigration and Border Protection worker is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (5) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the worker is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the worker or expose the worker to a penalty.\n  (11) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings.\n  (12) Subsection (11) has effect subject to section 40.\n\n#### 56 Directions by Secretary—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Relationship with directions under section 27\n  (3) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 27 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (5) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (6) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n\n#### 57 Termination of engagement of consultant or contractor\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a person is covered by paragraph (e) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) the person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or subsection (2) of this section or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a person (the affected person) is covered by paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) in connection with that person, paragraph (e) of that definition covers a person (the consultant/contractor); and\n    (c) the affected person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, direct the consultant/contractor to arrange for the affected person to cease to perform services for the Department.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not limit the circumstances in which a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor may be terminated.\n\n#### 57A Act not to apply so as to exceed Commonwealth power\n\n  (1) If a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act:\n    (a) would, apart from this section, have an application (an invalid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    because of which the provision exceeds the Commonwealth’s legislative power; but\n    (b) also has at least one application (a valid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    that, if it were the provision’s only application, would be within the Commonwealth’s legislative power;\n  it is the Parliament’s intention that the provision is not to have the invalid application, but is to have every valid application.\n  (2) This section applies to a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act, whether the provision is enacted or made before, on or after the commencement of this section.\n\n#### 58 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed by the rules; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) amend this Act.","sortOrder":14},{"sectionNumber":"11","sectionType":"section","heading":"Appointment","content":"#### 11 Appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed by the Governor‑General by written instrument.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed on a full‑time basis.\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (3) While a person holds office as the Australian Border Force Commissioner the person is also the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Comptroller‑General of Customs.","sortOrder":15},{"sectionNumber":"12","sectionType":"section","heading":"Term of appointment","content":"#### 12 Term of appointment\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office for the period specified in the instrument of appointment. The period must not exceed 5 years.\n\n> Note: The Australian Border Force Commissioner may be reappointed: see section 33AA of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.","sortOrder":16},{"sectionNumber":"13","sectionType":"section","heading":"Oath or affirmation by Australian Border Force Commissioner","content":"#### 13 Oath or affirmation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must, before beginning to discharge the duties of his or her office, make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Minister.\n  Compliance\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she has made and subscribed under this section.","sortOrder":17},{"sectionNumber":"14","sectionType":"section","heading":"Acting Australian Border Force Commissioner","content":"#### 14 Acting Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by written instrument, appoint a person to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) during a vacancy in the office of the Australian Border Force Commissioner (whether or not an appointment has previously been made to the office); or\n    (b) during any period, or during all periods, when the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (i) is absent from duty or from Australia; or\n    (ii) is, for any reason, unable to perform the duties of the office.\n\n> Note: Sections 33AB and 33A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 have rules that apply to acting appointments.\n\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (2) A person appointed to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner is taken, while the person is so acting, to also be the Comptroller‑General of Customs.","sortOrder":18},{"sectionNumber":"15","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of finance law","content":"#### 15 Application of finance law\n\n  For the purposes of the finance law (within the meaning of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013), the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs) is an official of the Department.","sortOrder":19},{"sectionNumber":"Division 4","sectionType":"division","heading":"Terms and conditions for the Australian Border Force Commissioner","content":"An Act relating to the Australian Border Force, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and persons performing work for the Department, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Australian Border Force Act 2015.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on 1 July 2015.\n\n#### 3 Simplified outline of this Act\n\n• There is an Australian Border Force within the Department.\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force, who is to have the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• There are resignation and termination provisions that apply to all APS employees in the Department in circumstances involving serious misconduct.\n\n• All Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n• There are secrecy and disclosure provisions covering information obtained by the Secretary, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and Immigration and Border Protection workers.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n#### 4 Definitions\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> alcohol blood test means a test of a person’s blood to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol breath test means a test of a person’s breath to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol screening test means a test of a person’s breath to determine whether alcohol is present in the person’s breath.\n\n> Australian Border Force means that part of the Department known as the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Immigration and Border Protection workers may perform work for the Australian Border Force. The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Australian Border Force Commissioner means the Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> authorised person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is authorised in an instrument under subsection (2).\n\n> body sample means any of the following:\n\n    (a) any human biological fluid;\n    (b) any human biological tissue (whether alive or otherwise);\n    (c) any human breath.\n\n> corrupt conduct: see engages in corrupt conduct.\n\n> duty of confidence means any duty or obligation arising under the common law or at equity pursuant to which a person is obliged not to disclose information.\n\n> engages in corrupt conduct: an Immigration and Border Protection worker engages in corrupt conduct if the worker, while an Immigration and Border Protection worker, engages in:\n\n    (a) conduct that:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    the worker abusing his or her position as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) conduct that:\n    (i) perverts; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of perverting;\n    the course of justice; or\n    (c) conduct that, having regard to the duties and powers of the worker as an Immigration and Border Protection worker:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    corruption of any other kind.\n\n> entrusted person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs); or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection information means information of any of the following kinds that was obtained by a person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person:\n\n    (a) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia;\n    (b) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the prevention, detection or investigation of, or the conduct of proceedings relating to, an offence or a contravention of a civil penalty provision;\n    (c) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the protection of public health, or endanger the life or safety of an individual or group of individuals;\n    (d) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence;\n    (e) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to cause competitive detriment to a person;\n    (f) information of a kind prescribed in an instrument under subsection (7).\n\n> Note: See also subsections (4) to (7).\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection worker means:\n\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department; or\n    (b) a person covered by paragraph (d), (e) or (f) of the definition of officer of Customs in subsection 4(1) of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (c) a person covered by paragraph (f) or (g) of the definition of officer in subsection 5(1) of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (d) a person who is:\n    (i) an employee of an Agency (within the meaning of the Public Service Act 1999); or\n    (ii) an officer or employee of a State or Territory; or\n    (iii) an officer or employee of an agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (iv) an officer or employee of the government of a foreign country, an officer or employee of an agency or authority of a foreign country or an officer or employee of a public international organisation;\n    and whose services are made available to the Department; or\n    (e) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged as a consultant or contractor to perform services for the Department; and\n    (ii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(1); or\n    (f) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged or employed by a person to whom paragraph (e) or this paragraph applies; and\n    (ii) performing services for the Department in connection with that engagement or employment; and\n    (iii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(2).\n\n> intelligence agency means:\n\n    (a) the Australian Geospatial‑Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (b) the Australian Secret Intelligence Service; or\n    (c) the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (d) the Australian Signals Directorate; or\n    (e) the Defence Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (f) the Office of National Intelligence; or\n    (g) a government body or authority responsible for intelligence gathering for, or the security of, a foreign country.\n\n> paid work means work for financial gain or reward (whether as an employee, a self‑employed person or otherwise).\n\n> personal information has the same meaning as in the Privacy Act 1988.\n\n> prohibited drug means:\n\n    (a) a narcotic substance (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); or\n    (b) any drug prescribed in an instrument under subsection (3).\n\n> prohibited drug test means a test of a body sample of a person to determine the presence (if any) of a prohibited drug in the sample.\n\n> public international organisation has the meaning given by section 70.1 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> rules means the rules made under section 58.\n\n> Secretary means the Secretary of the Department.\n\n> serious misconduct, by an Immigration and Border Protection worker, means:\n\n    (a) corrupt conduct engaged in, a serious abuse of power, or a serious dereliction of duty, by the worker; or\n    (b) any other seriously reprehensible act or behaviour by the worker, whether or not acting, or purporting to act, in the course of his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> unauthorised maritime arrival has the same meaning as in the Migration Act 1958.\n\n  Authorised person instrument\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, authorise an Immigration and Border Protection worker for the purposes of paragraph (c) of the definition of authorised person in subsection (1).\n  Prohibited drug instrument\n  (3) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by legislative instrument, prescribe drugs for the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of prohibited drug in subsection (1).\n  Immigration and Border Protection information\n  (4) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information obtained by an entrusted person in the course of performing duties, or in performing functions or exercising powers, under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) as an officer of Customs, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (b) as an officer, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (c) as a maritime officer within the meaning of the Maritime Powers Act 2013; or\n    (d) as a delegate of someone else; or\n    (e) in any other capacity;\n  is taken to be information obtained by the person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person.\n  (5) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), the following kinds of information are taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia:\n    (a) information that has a security classification;\n    (b) information that has originated with, or been received from, an intelligence agency.\n  (6) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information that was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law is taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence.\n  (7) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, prescribe a kind of information for the purposes of paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1) if the Minister is satisfied that disclosure of the information would or could reasonably be expected to:\n    (a) prejudice the effective working of the Department; or\n    (b) otherwise harm the public interest.\n\n#### 5 Consultants and contractors etc.\n\n  Consultants and contractors\n  (1) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (e)(ii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Other persons\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (f)(iii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Determinations are not legislative instruments\n  (3) A determination under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 6 Act binds the Crown\n\n  This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n\n#### 7 Extraterritorial application\n\n  This Act extends to acts, omissions, matters and things outside Australia.\n\n## Part 2—Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n### Division 1—Simplified outline of this Part\n\n#### 8 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner is also known as the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n### Division 2—Office and role of the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 9 Establishment\n\n  (1) There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has, under the Minister, the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n#### 10 Powers of Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner has power to do all things necessary or convenient to be done for or in connection with the performance of his or her duties.\n\n### Division 3—Appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 11 Appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed by the Governor‑General by written instrument.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed on a full‑time basis.\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (3) While a person holds office as the Australian Border Force Commissioner the person is also the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 12 Term of appointment\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office for the period specified in the instrument of appointment. The period must not exceed 5 years.\n\n> Note: The Australian Border Force Commissioner may be reappointed: see section 33AA of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 13 Oath or affirmation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must, before beginning to discharge the duties of his or her office, make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Minister.\n  Compliance\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she has made and subscribed under this section.\n\n#### 14 Acting Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by written instrument, appoint a person to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) during a vacancy in the office of the Australian Border Force Commissioner (whether or not an appointment has previously been made to the office); or\n    (b) during any period, or during all periods, when the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (i) is absent from duty or from Australia; or\n    (ii) is, for any reason, unable to perform the duties of the office.\n\n> Note: Sections 33AB and 33A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 have rules that apply to acting appointments.\n\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (2) A person appointed to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner is taken, while the person is so acting, to also be the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 15 Application of finance law\n\n  For the purposes of the finance law (within the meaning of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013), the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs) is an official of the Department.\n\n### Division 4—Terms and conditions for the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 16 Remuneration and allowances\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the remuneration that is determined by the Remuneration Tribunal. If no determination of that remuneration by the Tribunal is in operation, he or she is to be paid the remuneration that is prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the allowances that are prescribed by the rules.\n  (3) This section has effect subject to the Remuneration Tribunal Act 1973.\n\n#### 17 Leave of absence\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the recreation leave entitlements that are determined by the Remuneration Tribunal.\n  (2) The Minister may grant the Australian Border Force Commissioner leave of absence, other than recreation leave, on the terms and conditions as to remuneration or otherwise that the Minister determines.\n\n#### 18 Outside work\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in paid work outside the duties of his or her office without the Minister’s approval.\n\n#### 19 Disclosure of interests\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must give written notice to the Minister of any direct or indirect pecuniary interest that the Commissioner has or acquires and that conflicts or could conflict with the proper performance of the Commissioner’s functions.\n  (2) Subsection (1) applies in addition to section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests).\n\n#### 20 Resignation of appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may resign his or her appointment by giving the Governor‑General a written resignation.\n  (2) The resignation takes effect on the day it is received by the Governor‑General or, if a later day is specified in the resignation, on that later day.\n\n#### 21 Suspension or termination of appointment\n\n  (1) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) for misbehaviour; or\n    (b) if the Commissioner is unable to perform the duties of his or her office because of physical or mental incapacity.\n  (2) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner if:\n    (a) the Commissioner:\n    (i) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (ii) takes steps to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (iii) compounds with one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (iv) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (b) the Commissioner is absent, except on leave of absence, for 14 consecutive days or for 28 days in any 12 months; or\n    (c) the Commissioner engages in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she made and subscribed under section 13; or\n    (d) the Commissioner engages, except with the Minister’s approval, in paid work outside the duties of his or her office (see section 18); or\n    (e) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with:\n    (i) section 19; or\n    (ii) section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests) or rules made under that Act for the purposes of that section; or\n    (f) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with a direction under section 23.\n  (3) The suspension of the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner under this section does not affect any entitlement of the Commissioner to be paid remuneration, and allowances, in accordance with this Act.\n  Statement in Parliament\n  (4) If the Governor‑General suspends or terminates the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner, the Minister must cause a statement of the grounds of the suspension or termination to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 7 sitting days of that House after the suspension or termination.\n\n#### 22 Other terms and conditions\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office on the terms and conditions (if any) in relation to matters not covered by this Act that are determined by the Minister.\n\n### Division 5—Ministerial directions\n\n#### 23 Minister may give directions to Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, after obtaining and considering the advice of the Australian Border Force Commissioner and the Secretary, give written directions to the Australian Border Force Commissioner about policies that should be pursued, or priorities that should be followed, in relation to the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) If the Minister gives a direction under subsection (1), the Minister must cause a copy of the direction to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 15 sitting days of that House after giving the direction.\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must comply with all directions under subsection (1).\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n### Division 6—Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n#### 24 Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may request the following persons to make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c) or (d) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) A person must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Australian Border Force Commissioner or a person authorised by the Commissioner.\n  Compliance\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with the oath or affirmation.\n\n> Note: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  (4) Subsection (3) extends to an Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section but who is no longer a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b).\n\n### Division 7—Delegation and directions\n\n#### 25 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to the following:\n    (a) the Secretary;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (c) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct).\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (4) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to any Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (6) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n#### 26 Directions—administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in connection with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a person;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a person;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (5) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (6) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (7) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (8) If a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (4) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the person is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the person or expose the person to a penalty.\n  (9) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the person in any proceedings.\n  (10) Subsection (9) has effect subject to section 40.\n\n#### 27 Directions—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those persons under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Compliance with directions\n  (3) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (4) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (5) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n\n## Part 3—Resignation from the Department\n\n#### 28 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An APS employee in the Department must give at least 14 days’ notice of his or her resignation from the Department.\n\n• If an APS employee in the Department resigns in circumstances where the employee may have engaged in serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may delay the employee’s resignation by up to 90 days to allow further investigation of that conduct.\n\n#### 29 Resignation—general\n\n  (1) A person may resign as an APS employee in the Department if, and only if:\n    (a) he or she gives written notice to the Secretary of his or her resignation; and\n    (b) the notice specifies, in accordance with subsection (2), the day his or her resignation is to take effect.\n  (2) The day specified in a notice under paragraph (1)(a) must not:\n    (a) be earlier than 14 days, or such shorter period as the Secretary allows; or\n    (b) be later than 4 months;\n  after the day on which the notice is given to the Secretary.\n  (3) This section is subject to section 30.\n\n#### 30 Resignation in anticipation of termination of employment\n\n  (1) This section applies if:\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department gives the Secretary written notice of the employee’s resignation under paragraph 29(1)(a); and\n    (b) either:\n    (i) the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee has engaged in serious misconduct and the Secretary is considering terminating the employee’s employment; or\n    (ii) the employee is being investigated for serious misconduct and the Secretary is not in a position to decide whether to terminate the employee’s employment because the findings of the investigation are not yet known.\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written notice given to the APS employee, substitute a day, no later than 90 days after the day specified in the employee’s notice of resignation, as the day on which the employee’s resignation is to take effect.\n  (3) Subsection (2) has effect subject to subsection (7).\n  Multiple notices\n  (4) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may give more than one notice under subsection (2) to the APS employee in relation to the notice of resignation.\n  Timing of first notice\n  (5) To be effective, the first notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation must be given to the APS employee before the day specified in the notice of resignation.\n  Employee’s resignation takes effect or employee’s employment terminated\n  (6) The Secretary must, on or before the day substituted in the most recent notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation:\n    (a) notify the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect; or\n    (b) terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (7) If under paragraph (6)(a) the Secretary notifies the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect, the employee’s resignation takes effect on the day of that notification.\n\n## Part 4—Termination of employment in the Department for serious misconduct\n\n#### 31 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• If the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour amounts to serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Commissioner may make a declaration to that effect.\n\n• The effect of the declaration is that provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, will not apply to the APS employee.\n\n#### 32 Termination of employment for serious misconduct\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour or any part of it:\n    (a) amounts to serious misconduct by the APS employee; and\n    (b) is having, or is likely to have, a damaging effect on:\n    (i) the professional self‑respect or morale of some or all of the APS employees in the Department; or\n    (ii) the reputation of the Department with the public or any section of the public, with an Australian or overseas government or with a person or body to whom information may be disclosed under Part 6.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may make a written declaration that he or she has the belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee.\n  Timing of declaration\n  (3) A declaration under subsection (2) must be made within 24 hours of the Secretary’s decision to terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n  Copy of declaration to be given to APS employee\n  (4) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Secretary or the Commissioner must give the APS employee a copy of the declaration.\n  Effect of declaration on Fair Work Act\n  (5) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Fair Work Act 2009 (other than Part 3‑1 and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) the termination of the APS employee’s employment; or\n    (b) the making of the declaration.\n\n> Note 1: This means, for example, that the provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, do not apply in relation to the APS employee.\n\n> Note 2: Part 3‑1 of the Fair Work Act 2009 deals with general protections, and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act deals with payments relating to periods of industrial action.\n\n  (6) To avoid doubt, subsection (5) applies despite section 8 of the Public Service Act 1999.\n  Report to Minister\n  (7) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner must give the Minister a written report containing the following, as soon as practicable after making the declaration:\n    (a) the grounds for the Secretary’s or Commissioner’s belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee;\n    (b) the nature and findings of any investigation of, or inquiry into, the APS employee’s conduct or behaviour;\n    (c) details of any other matter the Secretary or Commissioner considers relevant.\n  Declaration not a legislative instrument\n  (8) A declaration under subsection (2) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n## Part 5—Alcohol and drug tests\n\n#### 33 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n#### 34 Alcohol screening test—suspicion that Immigration and Border Protection worker under the influence of alcohol\n\n  (1) An authorised person may require an Immigration and Border Protection worker to undergo an alcohol screening test if:\n    (a) the worker is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; and\n    (b) the authorised person reasonably suspects that the worker is under the influence of alcohol.\n  Compliance with requirement\n  (2) The worker must comply with a requirement given to him or her under subsection (1).\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n  Return to duties\n  (3) If the result of the alcohol screening test shows that alcohol is not present in the worker’s breath, he or she may return to his or her duties immediately.\n  Relationship with section 35\n  (4) This section does not limit section 35.\n\n#### 35 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—general\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Blood sample if alcohol breath test indicates presence of alcohol\n  (2) If:\n    (a) the worker undergoes an alcohol breath test in accordance with a direction under subsection (1); and\n    (b) the alcohol breath test indicates the presence of alcohol;\n  the worker may provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n#### 36 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—certain incidents\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following if subsection (2) or (3) applies:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Person killed or seriously injured in an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel or while detained\n  (2) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) one of the following applies:\n    (i) a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is held in custody in relation to an arrest under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958 or the Maritime Powers Act 2013 or otherwise detained under any of those Acts;\n    (iii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is an unauthorised maritime arrival and is being taken to a regional processing country under section 198AD of the Migration Act 1958; and\n    (b) the worker is directly involved in the incident in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Person killed or seriously injured by a firearm discharging or physical force\n  (3) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) all of the following apply:\n    (i) the worker is an officer authorised to carry arms within the meaning of section 189A of the Customs Act 1901;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the discharge of a firearm by the worker;\n    (iii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) both of the following apply:\n    (i) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the application of physical force by the worker;\n    (ii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Direction to be given as soon as practicable after the incident\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) must be given as soon as practicable after the incident concerned and may be given whether or not the worker is still performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Provision of blood or body sample while in hospital\n  (5) If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is involved in an incident referred to in subsection (2) or (3); and\n    (b) the worker attends or is admitted to a hospital for examination or treatment because of the incident;\n  an authorised person may give the worker a written direction requiring the worker to do either or both of the following:\n    (c) provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test;\n    (d) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (6) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n#### 37 Performing duties on board a vessel\n\n  If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is on board a vessel throughout a period (the onboard period); and\n    (b) the vessel is under the command of an officer of Customs (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); and\n    (c) at any time during the onboard period, the worker performs duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n  the worker is taken, for the purposes of this Part, to be in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker throughout the onboard period.\n\n#### 38 Conduct of tests and provision of samples to be in accordance with the rules\n\n  Conduct of tests\n  (1) An alcohol screening test, alcohol breath test, alcohol blood test or prohibited drug test under section 34, 35 or 36 is to be conducted in accordance with the rules.\n  Provision of samples\n  (2) A sample of blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test under section 35 or 36, or a body sample for the purpose of a prohibited drug test under that section, is to be provided in accordance with the rules.\n\n#### 39 Rules for purposes of this Part\n\n  For the purposes of sections 34, 35 and 36, the rules may make provision for and in relation to the following:\n    (a) the authorisation of persons:\n    (i) to conduct alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests for the purpose of those sections; and\n    (ii) to operate equipment for that purpose;\n    (b) the provision of samples of blood for the purpose of alcohol blood tests under those sections;\n    (c) the provision of body samples for the purpose of prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (d) the conduct of alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (e) the devices used in conducting alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections, including the calibration, inspection and testing of those devices;\n    (f) in the case of alcohol blood tests and prohibited drug tests—the accreditation of persons to conduct analyses in connection with such tests;\n    (g) the procedure for the handling, analysis, storage and destruction of:\n    (i) samples of blood taken in connection with alcohol blood tests under those sections; or\n    (ii) body samples taken in connection with prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (h) the giving of the test results in certificates or other documents and the evidentiary effect of such certificates or other documents;\n    (i) the confidentiality and disclosure of the test results;\n    (j) the keeping and destruction of records in relation to alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections.\n\n#### 40 Admissibility of test results etc. in legal proceedings\n\n  The following:\n    (a) a certificate or other document recording the results of a test conducted under section 34, 35 or 36 in relation to an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n    (b) any other information, answer to a question or document relevant to conducting such a test;\n  are not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings other than the following:\n    (c) proceedings in relation to a decision of the Secretary to terminate the employment or engagement of the worker;\n    (d) proceedings under the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988;\n    (e) proceedings in tort against the Commonwealth that are instituted by the worker.\n\n## Part 6—Secrecy and disclosure provisions\n\n#### 41 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An entrusted person must not make a record of or disclose Immigration and Border Protection information unless the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by a provision of this Part, is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person or is required or authorised by law or by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n#### 42 Secrecy\n\n  (1) A person commits an offence if:\n    (a) the person is, or has been, an entrusted person; and\n    (b) the person makes a record of, or discloses, information; and\n    (c) the information is Immigration and Border Protection information.\n\nPenalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.\n\n  (1A) If the information is Immigration and Border Protection information because of the operation of subsection 4(5) or (6), the fault element of recklessness for paragraph (1)(c) of this section is taken to be satisfied if the person is reckless as to whether or not whichever of the following applies:\n    (a) the information has a security classification;\n    (b) the information originated with, or was received from, an intelligence agency;\n    (c) the information was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law.\n\n> Note: Recklessness is the fault element for paragraph (1)(c)—see section 5.6 of the Criminal Code.\n\n  Exception\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49; or\n    (b) the making of the record or disclosure is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person; or\n    (c) the making of the record or disclosure is required or authorised by or under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (d) the making of the record or disclosure is required by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n> Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to a matter in subsection (2) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code).\n\n  Geographical jurisdiction\n  (3) Section 15.2 of the Criminal Code (extended geographical jurisdiction—category B) applies to an offence against subsection (1).\n\n#### 43 Records or disclosure for the purposes of this Act or the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022\n\n  An entrusted person may make a record of, or disclose, Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of this Act or a legislative instrument under this Act; or\n    (b) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022 or regulations under that Act.\n\n#### 44 Disclosure to certain bodies and persons\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of the information to that body or person is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Bodies and persons\n  (4) For the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), the bodies and persons are the following:\n    (a) a Department, agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (b) the Australian Federal Police;\n    (c) a police force or police service of a State or Territory;\n    (d) a coroner;\n    (e) any other person who holds an office or appointment under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (f) any other body or person prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n  (5) Paragraph (4)(f) does not apply in relation to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (6) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a body or person:\n    (a) before Immigration and Border Protection information is disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2); or\n    (b) in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (7) An instrument under subsection (3) or (6) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 45 Disclosure in accordance with agreements\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of that information to that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Agreements\n  (4) This subsection applies to an agreement that is in force between:\n    (a) the Commonwealth or an agency or authority of the Commonwealth; and\n    (b) one or more of the following:\n    (i) a foreign country;\n    (ii) an agency or authority of a foreign country;\n    (iii) a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (5) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to it under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (6) An instrument under subsection (3) or (5) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 46 Permitted purposes\n\n  For the purposes of sections 44 and 45, the purposes are the following:\n    (a) the administration or enforcement of a law of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country that relates to:\n    (i) criminal law; or\n    (ii) a law imposing a pecuniary penalty or providing for the forfeiture of property;\n    (b) in relation to a law referred to in paragraph (a), the prevention of crime, or the detection or analysis of criminal conduct, in respect of that law;\n    (c) assisting a coronial inquiry, coronial investigation or coronial inquest under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (d) a purpose relating to the protection of public health, or the prevention or elimination of risks to the life or safety of an individual or a group of individuals;\n    (e) the collection and verification of statistics for the purposes of the Census and Statistics Act 1905 or the performance of the functions of the Australian Bureau of Statistics as set out in section 6 of the Australian Bureau of Statistics Act 1975;\n    (f) the protection of the public revenue of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country;\n    (g) a purpose relating to matters covered by the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013, the Australian Citizenship Act 2007, the Immigration (Guardianship of Children) Act 1946, the Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 or the Biosecurity Act 2015;\n    (h) any of the following:\n    (i) assisting in establishing the identity of a particular person;\n    (ii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was an Australian citizen at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (iii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was the holder of a particular kind or class of visa under the Migration Act 1958 at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (i) a purpose relating to immigration, quarantine or border control between Australia and a foreign country;\n    (j) the provision of services to persons who are not Australian citizens;\n    (ja) a purpose relating to the performance of the Australian Crime Commission’s function covered by paragraph 7A(da) of the Australian Crime Commission Act 2002;\n    (k) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 17 of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Act 1979;\n    (l) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 6 of the Intelligence Services Act 2001;\n    (la) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 7 of the Office of National Intelligence Act 2018;\n    (m) the administration of the National Anti‑Doping Scheme (within the meaning of the Sport Integrity Australia Act 2020);\n    (n) the administration or enforcement of laws with respect to commerce:\n    (i) between a State and another State; or\n    (ii) between a State and a Territory; or\n    (iii) between a Territory and another Territory; or\n    (iv) between Australia and another country; or\n    (v) within a State or Territory;\n    (na) a purpose relating to the inter‑country adoption of a child;\n    (nb) a purpose relating to the protection of national security or the defence of Australia;\n    (nc) a purpose relating to locating a missing person;\n    (o) a purpose prescribed by the rules.\n\n#### 47 Disclosure with consent\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that relates to the affairs of a person or body if:\n    (a) the person or body has consented to the disclosure; and\n    (b) the disclosure is in accordance with that consent.\n\n#### 48 Disclosure to reduce threat to life or health\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the entrusted person reasonably believes that the disclosure is necessary to prevent or lessen a serious threat to the life or health of an individual; and\n    (b) the disclosure is for the purposes of preventing or lessening that threat.\n\n#### 49 Disclosure of publicly available information\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if it has already been lawfully made available to the public.\n\n#### 50 Exceptions operate independently\n\n  Sections 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 and 49 do not limit each other.\n\n#### 50A Information must be certified as appropriately classified before proceedings can be initiated\n\n  If, an offence against section 42 relates to information that has a security classification, proceedings for the offence must not be initiated unless the Secretary has certified that it is appropriate that the information had a security classification at the time of the conduct that is alleged to constitute the offence.\n\n#### 51 Interaction with Privacy Act\n\n  For the purposes of the Privacy Act 1988:\n    (a) the making of a record, in accordance with section 43, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a use that is authorised by this Act; and\n    (b) the disclosure, in accordance with section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a disclosure that is authorised by this Act.\n\n## Part 7—Other matters\n\n#### 52 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• The Secretary and the Comptroller‑General of Customs can delegate their functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the engagement of a person as a consultant or contractor if the person fails to comply with a direction under this Act.\n\n• The Minister may make rules for the purposes of this Act.\n\n#### 53 Delegation by Secretary\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to:\n    (a) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct); or\n    (c) the Migration Act 1958 or an instrument under that Act.\n\n> Note: Section 496 of the Migration Act 1958 deals with delegation by the Secretary of his or her powers under that Act.\n\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  Subdelegation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n  (4) If the Australian Border Force Commissioner is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to the following:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  (6) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Secretary.\n\n#### 54 Delegation by Comptroller‑General of Customs\n\n  (1) The Comptroller‑General of Customs may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth (other than section 179, 179K or 179L of the Customs Act 1901) to:\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Directions to delegates\n  (2) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (3) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (3), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (5) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (4) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (2) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (6) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (3) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 55 Directions by Secretary—administration and control of the Department\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in connection with the administration and control of the Department.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for Immigration and Border Protection workers for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements;\n    (d) security clearances.\n  Organisational suitability assessments\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to organisational suitability assessments.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (5) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by Immigration and Border Protection workers of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a worker;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a worker;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Relationship with directions under section 26\n  (6) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 26 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (7) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (8) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (9) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (10) If an Immigration and Border Protection worker is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (5) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the worker is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the worker or expose the worker to a penalty.\n  (11) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings.\n  (12) Subsection (11) has effect subject to section 40.\n\n#### 56 Directions by Secretary—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Relationship with directions under section 27\n  (3) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 27 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (5) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (6) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n\n#### 57 Termination of engagement of consultant or contractor\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a person is covered by paragraph (e) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) the person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or subsection (2) of this section or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a person (the affected person) is covered by paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) in connection with that person, paragraph (e) of that definition covers a person (the consultant/contractor); and\n    (c) the affected person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, direct the consultant/contractor to arrange for the affected person to cease to perform services for the Department.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not limit the circumstances in which a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor may be terminated.\n\n#### 57A Act not to apply so as to exceed Commonwealth power\n\n  (1) If a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act:\n    (a) would, apart from this section, have an application (an invalid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    because of which the provision exceeds the Commonwealth’s legislative power; but\n    (b) also has at least one application (a valid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    that, if it were the provision’s only application, would be within the Commonwealth’s legislative power;\n  it is the Parliament’s intention that the provision is not to have the invalid application, but is to have every valid application.\n  (2) This section applies to a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act, whether the provision is enacted or made before, on or after the commencement of this section.\n\n#### 58 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed by the rules; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) amend this Act.","sortOrder":20},{"sectionNumber":"16","sectionType":"section","heading":"Remuneration and allowances","content":"#### 16 Remuneration and allowances\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the remuneration that is determined by the Remuneration Tribunal. If no determination of that remuneration by the Tribunal is in operation, he or she is to be paid the remuneration that is prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the allowances that are prescribed by the rules.\n  (3) This section has effect subject to the Remuneration Tribunal Act 1973.","sortOrder":21},{"sectionNumber":"17","sectionType":"section","heading":"Leave of absence","content":"#### 17 Leave of absence\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the recreation leave entitlements that are determined by the Remuneration Tribunal.\n  (2) The Minister may grant the Australian Border Force Commissioner leave of absence, other than recreation leave, on the terms and conditions as to remuneration or otherwise that the Minister determines.","sortOrder":22},{"sectionNumber":"18","sectionType":"section","heading":"Outside work","content":"#### 18 Outside work\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in paid work outside the duties of his or her office without the Minister’s approval.","sortOrder":23},{"sectionNumber":"19","sectionType":"section","heading":"Disclosure of interests","content":"#### 19 Disclosure of interests\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must give written notice to the Minister of any direct or indirect pecuniary interest that the Commissioner has or acquires and that conflicts or could conflict with the proper performance of the Commissioner’s functions.\n  (2) Subsection (1) applies in addition to section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests).","sortOrder":24},{"sectionNumber":"20","sectionType":"section","heading":"Resignation of appointment","content":"#### 20 Resignation of appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may resign his or her appointment by giving the Governor‑General a written resignation.\n  (2) The resignation takes effect on the day it is received by the Governor‑General or, if a later day is specified in the resignation, on that later day.","sortOrder":25},{"sectionNumber":"21","sectionType":"section","heading":"Suspension or termination of appointment","content":"#### 21 Suspension or termination of appointment\n\n  (1) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) for misbehaviour; or\n    (b) if the Commissioner is unable to perform the duties of his or her office because of physical or mental incapacity.\n  (2) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner if:\n    (a) the Commissioner:\n    (i) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (ii) takes steps to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (iii) compounds with one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (iv) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (b) the Commissioner is absent, except on leave of absence, for 14 consecutive days or for 28 days in any 12 months; or\n    (c) the Commissioner engages in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she made and subscribed under section 13; or\n    (d) the Commissioner engages, except with the Minister’s approval, in paid work outside the duties of his or her office (see section 18); or\n    (e) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with:\n    (i) section 19; or\n    (ii) section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests) or rules made under that Act for the purposes of that section; or\n    (f) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with a direction under section 23.\n  (3) The suspension of the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner under this section does not affect any entitlement of the Commissioner to be paid remuneration, and allowances, in accordance with this Act.\n  Statement in Parliament\n  (4) If the Governor‑General suspends or terminates the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner, the Minister must cause a statement of the grounds of the suspension or termination to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 7 sitting days of that House after the suspension or termination.","sortOrder":26},{"sectionNumber":"22","sectionType":"section","heading":"Other terms and conditions","content":"#### 22 Other terms and conditions\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office on the terms and conditions (if any) in relation to matters not covered by this Act that are determined by the Minister.","sortOrder":27},{"sectionNumber":"Division 5","sectionType":"division","heading":"Ministerial directions","content":"An Act relating to the Australian Border Force, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and persons performing work for the Department, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Australian Border Force Act 2015.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on 1 July 2015.\n\n#### 3 Simplified outline of this Act\n\n• There is an Australian Border Force within the Department.\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force, who is to have the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• There are resignation and termination provisions that apply to all APS employees in the Department in circumstances involving serious misconduct.\n\n• All Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n• There are secrecy and disclosure provisions covering information obtained by the Secretary, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and Immigration and Border Protection workers.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n#### 4 Definitions\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> alcohol blood test means a test of a person’s blood to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol breath test means a test of a person’s breath to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol screening test means a test of a person’s breath to determine whether alcohol is present in the person’s breath.\n\n> Australian Border Force means that part of the Department known as the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Immigration and Border Protection workers may perform work for the Australian Border Force. The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Australian Border Force Commissioner means the Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> authorised person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is authorised in an instrument under subsection (2).\n\n> body sample means any of the following:\n\n    (a) any human biological fluid;\n    (b) any human biological tissue (whether alive or otherwise);\n    (c) any human breath.\n\n> corrupt conduct: see engages in corrupt conduct.\n\n> duty of confidence means any duty or obligation arising under the common law or at equity pursuant to which a person is obliged not to disclose information.\n\n> engages in corrupt conduct: an Immigration and Border Protection worker engages in corrupt conduct if the worker, while an Immigration and Border Protection worker, engages in:\n\n    (a) conduct that:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    the worker abusing his or her position as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) conduct that:\n    (i) perverts; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of perverting;\n    the course of justice; or\n    (c) conduct that, having regard to the duties and powers of the worker as an Immigration and Border Protection worker:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    corruption of any other kind.\n\n> entrusted person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs); or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection information means information of any of the following kinds that was obtained by a person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person:\n\n    (a) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia;\n    (b) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the prevention, detection or investigation of, or the conduct of proceedings relating to, an offence or a contravention of a civil penalty provision;\n    (c) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the protection of public health, or endanger the life or safety of an individual or group of individuals;\n    (d) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence;\n    (e) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to cause competitive detriment to a person;\n    (f) information of a kind prescribed in an instrument under subsection (7).\n\n> Note: See also subsections (4) to (7).\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection worker means:\n\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department; or\n    (b) a person covered by paragraph (d), (e) or (f) of the definition of officer of Customs in subsection 4(1) of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (c) a person covered by paragraph (f) or (g) of the definition of officer in subsection 5(1) of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (d) a person who is:\n    (i) an employee of an Agency (within the meaning of the Public Service Act 1999); or\n    (ii) an officer or employee of a State or Territory; or\n    (iii) an officer or employee of an agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (iv) an officer or employee of the government of a foreign country, an officer or employee of an agency or authority of a foreign country or an officer or employee of a public international organisation;\n    and whose services are made available to the Department; or\n    (e) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged as a consultant or contractor to perform services for the Department; and\n    (ii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(1); or\n    (f) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged or employed by a person to whom paragraph (e) or this paragraph applies; and\n    (ii) performing services for the Department in connection with that engagement or employment; and\n    (iii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(2).\n\n> intelligence agency means:\n\n    (a) the Australian Geospatial‑Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (b) the Australian Secret Intelligence Service; or\n    (c) the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (d) the Australian Signals Directorate; or\n    (e) the Defence Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (f) the Office of National Intelligence; or\n    (g) a government body or authority responsible for intelligence gathering for, or the security of, a foreign country.\n\n> paid work means work for financial gain or reward (whether as an employee, a self‑employed person or otherwise).\n\n> personal information has the same meaning as in the Privacy Act 1988.\n\n> prohibited drug means:\n\n    (a) a narcotic substance (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); or\n    (b) any drug prescribed in an instrument under subsection (3).\n\n> prohibited drug test means a test of a body sample of a person to determine the presence (if any) of a prohibited drug in the sample.\n\n> public international organisation has the meaning given by section 70.1 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> rules means the rules made under section 58.\n\n> Secretary means the Secretary of the Department.\n\n> serious misconduct, by an Immigration and Border Protection worker, means:\n\n    (a) corrupt conduct engaged in, a serious abuse of power, or a serious dereliction of duty, by the worker; or\n    (b) any other seriously reprehensible act or behaviour by the worker, whether or not acting, or purporting to act, in the course of his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> unauthorised maritime arrival has the same meaning as in the Migration Act 1958.\n\n  Authorised person instrument\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, authorise an Immigration and Border Protection worker for the purposes of paragraph (c) of the definition of authorised person in subsection (1).\n  Prohibited drug instrument\n  (3) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by legislative instrument, prescribe drugs for the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of prohibited drug in subsection (1).\n  Immigration and Border Protection information\n  (4) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information obtained by an entrusted person in the course of performing duties, or in performing functions or exercising powers, under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) as an officer of Customs, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (b) as an officer, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (c) as a maritime officer within the meaning of the Maritime Powers Act 2013; or\n    (d) as a delegate of someone else; or\n    (e) in any other capacity;\n  is taken to be information obtained by the person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person.\n  (5) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), the following kinds of information are taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia:\n    (a) information that has a security classification;\n    (b) information that has originated with, or been received from, an intelligence agency.\n  (6) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information that was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law is taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence.\n  (7) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, prescribe a kind of information for the purposes of paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1) if the Minister is satisfied that disclosure of the information would or could reasonably be expected to:\n    (a) prejudice the effective working of the Department; or\n    (b) otherwise harm the public interest.\n\n#### 5 Consultants and contractors etc.\n\n  Consultants and contractors\n  (1) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (e)(ii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Other persons\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (f)(iii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Determinations are not legislative instruments\n  (3) A determination under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 6 Act binds the Crown\n\n  This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n\n#### 7 Extraterritorial application\n\n  This Act extends to acts, omissions, matters and things outside Australia.\n\n## Part 2—Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n### Division 1—Simplified outline of this Part\n\n#### 8 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner is also known as the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n### Division 2—Office and role of the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 9 Establishment\n\n  (1) There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has, under the Minister, the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n#### 10 Powers of Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner has power to do all things necessary or convenient to be done for or in connection with the performance of his or her duties.\n\n### Division 3—Appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 11 Appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed by the Governor‑General by written instrument.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed on a full‑time basis.\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (3) While a person holds office as the Australian Border Force Commissioner the person is also the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 12 Term of appointment\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office for the period specified in the instrument of appointment. The period must not exceed 5 years.\n\n> Note: The Australian Border Force Commissioner may be reappointed: see section 33AA of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 13 Oath or affirmation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must, before beginning to discharge the duties of his or her office, make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Minister.\n  Compliance\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she has made and subscribed under this section.\n\n#### 14 Acting Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by written instrument, appoint a person to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) during a vacancy in the office of the Australian Border Force Commissioner (whether or not an appointment has previously been made to the office); or\n    (b) during any period, or during all periods, when the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (i) is absent from duty or from Australia; or\n    (ii) is, for any reason, unable to perform the duties of the office.\n\n> Note: Sections 33AB and 33A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 have rules that apply to acting appointments.\n\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (2) A person appointed to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner is taken, while the person is so acting, to also be the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 15 Application of finance law\n\n  For the purposes of the finance law (within the meaning of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013), the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs) is an official of the Department.\n\n### Division 4—Terms and conditions for the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 16 Remuneration and allowances\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the remuneration that is determined by the Remuneration Tribunal. If no determination of that remuneration by the Tribunal is in operation, he or she is to be paid the remuneration that is prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the allowances that are prescribed by the rules.\n  (3) This section has effect subject to the Remuneration Tribunal Act 1973.\n\n#### 17 Leave of absence\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the recreation leave entitlements that are determined by the Remuneration Tribunal.\n  (2) The Minister may grant the Australian Border Force Commissioner leave of absence, other than recreation leave, on the terms and conditions as to remuneration or otherwise that the Minister determines.\n\n#### 18 Outside work\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in paid work outside the duties of his or her office without the Minister’s approval.\n\n#### 19 Disclosure of interests\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must give written notice to the Minister of any direct or indirect pecuniary interest that the Commissioner has or acquires and that conflicts or could conflict with the proper performance of the Commissioner’s functions.\n  (2) Subsection (1) applies in addition to section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests).\n\n#### 20 Resignation of appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may resign his or her appointment by giving the Governor‑General a written resignation.\n  (2) The resignation takes effect on the day it is received by the Governor‑General or, if a later day is specified in the resignation, on that later day.\n\n#### 21 Suspension or termination of appointment\n\n  (1) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) for misbehaviour; or\n    (b) if the Commissioner is unable to perform the duties of his or her office because of physical or mental incapacity.\n  (2) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner if:\n    (a) the Commissioner:\n    (i) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (ii) takes steps to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (iii) compounds with one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (iv) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (b) the Commissioner is absent, except on leave of absence, for 14 consecutive days or for 28 days in any 12 months; or\n    (c) the Commissioner engages in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she made and subscribed under section 13; or\n    (d) the Commissioner engages, except with the Minister’s approval, in paid work outside the duties of his or her office (see section 18); or\n    (e) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with:\n    (i) section 19; or\n    (ii) section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests) or rules made under that Act for the purposes of that section; or\n    (f) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with a direction under section 23.\n  (3) The suspension of the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner under this section does not affect any entitlement of the Commissioner to be paid remuneration, and allowances, in accordance with this Act.\n  Statement in Parliament\n  (4) If the Governor‑General suspends or terminates the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner, the Minister must cause a statement of the grounds of the suspension or termination to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 7 sitting days of that House after the suspension or termination.\n\n#### 22 Other terms and conditions\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office on the terms and conditions (if any) in relation to matters not covered by this Act that are determined by the Minister.\n\n### Division 5—Ministerial directions\n\n#### 23 Minister may give directions to Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, after obtaining and considering the advice of the Australian Border Force Commissioner and the Secretary, give written directions to the Australian Border Force Commissioner about policies that should be pursued, or priorities that should be followed, in relation to the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) If the Minister gives a direction under subsection (1), the Minister must cause a copy of the direction to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 15 sitting days of that House after giving the direction.\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must comply with all directions under subsection (1).\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n### Division 6—Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n#### 24 Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may request the following persons to make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c) or (d) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) A person must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Australian Border Force Commissioner or a person authorised by the Commissioner.\n  Compliance\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with the oath or affirmation.\n\n> Note: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  (4) Subsection (3) extends to an Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section but who is no longer a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b).\n\n### Division 7—Delegation and directions\n\n#### 25 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to the following:\n    (a) the Secretary;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (c) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct).\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (4) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to any Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (6) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n#### 26 Directions—administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in connection with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a person;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a person;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (5) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (6) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (7) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (8) If a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (4) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the person is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the person or expose the person to a penalty.\n  (9) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the person in any proceedings.\n  (10) Subsection (9) has effect subject to section 40.\n\n#### 27 Directions—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those persons under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Compliance with directions\n  (3) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (4) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (5) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n\n## Part 3—Resignation from the Department\n\n#### 28 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An APS employee in the Department must give at least 14 days’ notice of his or her resignation from the Department.\n\n• If an APS employee in the Department resigns in circumstances where the employee may have engaged in serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may delay the employee’s resignation by up to 90 days to allow further investigation of that conduct.\n\n#### 29 Resignation—general\n\n  (1) A person may resign as an APS employee in the Department if, and only if:\n    (a) he or she gives written notice to the Secretary of his or her resignation; and\n    (b) the notice specifies, in accordance with subsection (2), the day his or her resignation is to take effect.\n  (2) The day specified in a notice under paragraph (1)(a) must not:\n    (a) be earlier than 14 days, or such shorter period as the Secretary allows; or\n    (b) be later than 4 months;\n  after the day on which the notice is given to the Secretary.\n  (3) This section is subject to section 30.\n\n#### 30 Resignation in anticipation of termination of employment\n\n  (1) This section applies if:\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department gives the Secretary written notice of the employee’s resignation under paragraph 29(1)(a); and\n    (b) either:\n    (i) the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee has engaged in serious misconduct and the Secretary is considering terminating the employee’s employment; or\n    (ii) the employee is being investigated for serious misconduct and the Secretary is not in a position to decide whether to terminate the employee’s employment because the findings of the investigation are not yet known.\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written notice given to the APS employee, substitute a day, no later than 90 days after the day specified in the employee’s notice of resignation, as the day on which the employee’s resignation is to take effect.\n  (3) Subsection (2) has effect subject to subsection (7).\n  Multiple notices\n  (4) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may give more than one notice under subsection (2) to the APS employee in relation to the notice of resignation.\n  Timing of first notice\n  (5) To be effective, the first notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation must be given to the APS employee before the day specified in the notice of resignation.\n  Employee’s resignation takes effect or employee’s employment terminated\n  (6) The Secretary must, on or before the day substituted in the most recent notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation:\n    (a) notify the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect; or\n    (b) terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (7) If under paragraph (6)(a) the Secretary notifies the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect, the employee’s resignation takes effect on the day of that notification.\n\n## Part 4—Termination of employment in the Department for serious misconduct\n\n#### 31 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• If the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour amounts to serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Commissioner may make a declaration to that effect.\n\n• The effect of the declaration is that provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, will not apply to the APS employee.\n\n#### 32 Termination of employment for serious misconduct\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour or any part of it:\n    (a) amounts to serious misconduct by the APS employee; and\n    (b) is having, or is likely to have, a damaging effect on:\n    (i) the professional self‑respect or morale of some or all of the APS employees in the Department; or\n    (ii) the reputation of the Department with the public or any section of the public, with an Australian or overseas government or with a person or body to whom information may be disclosed under Part 6.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may make a written declaration that he or she has the belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee.\n  Timing of declaration\n  (3) A declaration under subsection (2) must be made within 24 hours of the Secretary’s decision to terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n  Copy of declaration to be given to APS employee\n  (4) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Secretary or the Commissioner must give the APS employee a copy of the declaration.\n  Effect of declaration on Fair Work Act\n  (5) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Fair Work Act 2009 (other than Part 3‑1 and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) the termination of the APS employee’s employment; or\n    (b) the making of the declaration.\n\n> Note 1: This means, for example, that the provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, do not apply in relation to the APS employee.\n\n> Note 2: Part 3‑1 of the Fair Work Act 2009 deals with general protections, and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act deals with payments relating to periods of industrial action.\n\n  (6) To avoid doubt, subsection (5) applies despite section 8 of the Public Service Act 1999.\n  Report to Minister\n  (7) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner must give the Minister a written report containing the following, as soon as practicable after making the declaration:\n    (a) the grounds for the Secretary’s or Commissioner’s belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee;\n    (b) the nature and findings of any investigation of, or inquiry into, the APS employee’s conduct or behaviour;\n    (c) details of any other matter the Secretary or Commissioner considers relevant.\n  Declaration not a legislative instrument\n  (8) A declaration under subsection (2) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n## Part 5—Alcohol and drug tests\n\n#### 33 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n#### 34 Alcohol screening test—suspicion that Immigration and Border Protection worker under the influence of alcohol\n\n  (1) An authorised person may require an Immigration and Border Protection worker to undergo an alcohol screening test if:\n    (a) the worker is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; and\n    (b) the authorised person reasonably suspects that the worker is under the influence of alcohol.\n  Compliance with requirement\n  (2) The worker must comply with a requirement given to him or her under subsection (1).\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n  Return to duties\n  (3) If the result of the alcohol screening test shows that alcohol is not present in the worker’s breath, he or she may return to his or her duties immediately.\n  Relationship with section 35\n  (4) This section does not limit section 35.\n\n#### 35 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—general\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Blood sample if alcohol breath test indicates presence of alcohol\n  (2) If:\n    (a) the worker undergoes an alcohol breath test in accordance with a direction under subsection (1); and\n    (b) the alcohol breath test indicates the presence of alcohol;\n  the worker may provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n#### 36 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—certain incidents\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following if subsection (2) or (3) applies:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Person killed or seriously injured in an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel or while detained\n  (2) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) one of the following applies:\n    (i) a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is held in custody in relation to an arrest under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958 or the Maritime Powers Act 2013 or otherwise detained under any of those Acts;\n    (iii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is an unauthorised maritime arrival and is being taken to a regional processing country under section 198AD of the Migration Act 1958; and\n    (b) the worker is directly involved in the incident in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Person killed or seriously injured by a firearm discharging or physical force\n  (3) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) all of the following apply:\n    (i) the worker is an officer authorised to carry arms within the meaning of section 189A of the Customs Act 1901;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the discharge of a firearm by the worker;\n    (iii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) both of the following apply:\n    (i) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the application of physical force by the worker;\n    (ii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Direction to be given as soon as practicable after the incident\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) must be given as soon as practicable after the incident concerned and may be given whether or not the worker is still performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Provision of blood or body sample while in hospital\n  (5) If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is involved in an incident referred to in subsection (2) or (3); and\n    (b) the worker attends or is admitted to a hospital for examination or treatment because of the incident;\n  an authorised person may give the worker a written direction requiring the worker to do either or both of the following:\n    (c) provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test;\n    (d) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (6) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n#### 37 Performing duties on board a vessel\n\n  If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is on board a vessel throughout a period (the onboard period); and\n    (b) the vessel is under the command of an officer of Customs (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); and\n    (c) at any time during the onboard period, the worker performs duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n  the worker is taken, for the purposes of this Part, to be in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker throughout the onboard period.\n\n#### 38 Conduct of tests and provision of samples to be in accordance with the rules\n\n  Conduct of tests\n  (1) An alcohol screening test, alcohol breath test, alcohol blood test or prohibited drug test under section 34, 35 or 36 is to be conducted in accordance with the rules.\n  Provision of samples\n  (2) A sample of blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test under section 35 or 36, or a body sample for the purpose of a prohibited drug test under that section, is to be provided in accordance with the rules.\n\n#### 39 Rules for purposes of this Part\n\n  For the purposes of sections 34, 35 and 36, the rules may make provision for and in relation to the following:\n    (a) the authorisation of persons:\n    (i) to conduct alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests for the purpose of those sections; and\n    (ii) to operate equipment for that purpose;\n    (b) the provision of samples of blood for the purpose of alcohol blood tests under those sections;\n    (c) the provision of body samples for the purpose of prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (d) the conduct of alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (e) the devices used in conducting alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections, including the calibration, inspection and testing of those devices;\n    (f) in the case of alcohol blood tests and prohibited drug tests—the accreditation of persons to conduct analyses in connection with such tests;\n    (g) the procedure for the handling, analysis, storage and destruction of:\n    (i) samples of blood taken in connection with alcohol blood tests under those sections; or\n    (ii) body samples taken in connection with prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (h) the giving of the test results in certificates or other documents and the evidentiary effect of such certificates or other documents;\n    (i) the confidentiality and disclosure of the test results;\n    (j) the keeping and destruction of records in relation to alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections.\n\n#### 40 Admissibility of test results etc. in legal proceedings\n\n  The following:\n    (a) a certificate or other document recording the results of a test conducted under section 34, 35 or 36 in relation to an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n    (b) any other information, answer to a question or document relevant to conducting such a test;\n  are not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings other than the following:\n    (c) proceedings in relation to a decision of the Secretary to terminate the employment or engagement of the worker;\n    (d) proceedings under the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988;\n    (e) proceedings in tort against the Commonwealth that are instituted by the worker.\n\n## Part 6—Secrecy and disclosure provisions\n\n#### 41 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An entrusted person must not make a record of or disclose Immigration and Border Protection information unless the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by a provision of this Part, is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person or is required or authorised by law or by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n#### 42 Secrecy\n\n  (1) A person commits an offence if:\n    (a) the person is, or has been, an entrusted person; and\n    (b) the person makes a record of, or discloses, information; and\n    (c) the information is Immigration and Border Protection information.\n\nPenalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.\n\n  (1A) If the information is Immigration and Border Protection information because of the operation of subsection 4(5) or (6), the fault element of recklessness for paragraph (1)(c) of this section is taken to be satisfied if the person is reckless as to whether or not whichever of the following applies:\n    (a) the information has a security classification;\n    (b) the information originated with, or was received from, an intelligence agency;\n    (c) the information was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law.\n\n> Note: Recklessness is the fault element for paragraph (1)(c)—see section 5.6 of the Criminal Code.\n\n  Exception\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49; or\n    (b) the making of the record or disclosure is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person; or\n    (c) the making of the record or disclosure is required or authorised by or under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (d) the making of the record or disclosure is required by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n> Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to a matter in subsection (2) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code).\n\n  Geographical jurisdiction\n  (3) Section 15.2 of the Criminal Code (extended geographical jurisdiction—category B) applies to an offence against subsection (1).\n\n#### 43 Records or disclosure for the purposes of this Act or the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022\n\n  An entrusted person may make a record of, or disclose, Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of this Act or a legislative instrument under this Act; or\n    (b) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022 or regulations under that Act.\n\n#### 44 Disclosure to certain bodies and persons\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of the information to that body or person is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Bodies and persons\n  (4) For the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), the bodies and persons are the following:\n    (a) a Department, agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (b) the Australian Federal Police;\n    (c) a police force or police service of a State or Territory;\n    (d) a coroner;\n    (e) any other person who holds an office or appointment under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (f) any other body or person prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n  (5) Paragraph (4)(f) does not apply in relation to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (6) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a body or person:\n    (a) before Immigration and Border Protection information is disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2); or\n    (b) in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (7) An instrument under subsection (3) or (6) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 45 Disclosure in accordance with agreements\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of that information to that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Agreements\n  (4) This subsection applies to an agreement that is in force between:\n    (a) the Commonwealth or an agency or authority of the Commonwealth; and\n    (b) one or more of the following:\n    (i) a foreign country;\n    (ii) an agency or authority of a foreign country;\n    (iii) a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (5) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to it under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (6) An instrument under subsection (3) or (5) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 46 Permitted purposes\n\n  For the purposes of sections 44 and 45, the purposes are the following:\n    (a) the administration or enforcement of a law of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country that relates to:\n    (i) criminal law; or\n    (ii) a law imposing a pecuniary penalty or providing for the forfeiture of property;\n    (b) in relation to a law referred to in paragraph (a), the prevention of crime, or the detection or analysis of criminal conduct, in respect of that law;\n    (c) assisting a coronial inquiry, coronial investigation or coronial inquest under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (d) a purpose relating to the protection of public health, or the prevention or elimination of risks to the life or safety of an individual or a group of individuals;\n    (e) the collection and verification of statistics for the purposes of the Census and Statistics Act 1905 or the performance of the functions of the Australian Bureau of Statistics as set out in section 6 of the Australian Bureau of Statistics Act 1975;\n    (f) the protection of the public revenue of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country;\n    (g) a purpose relating to matters covered by the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013, the Australian Citizenship Act 2007, the Immigration (Guardianship of Children) Act 1946, the Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 or the Biosecurity Act 2015;\n    (h) any of the following:\n    (i) assisting in establishing the identity of a particular person;\n    (ii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was an Australian citizen at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (iii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was the holder of a particular kind or class of visa under the Migration Act 1958 at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (i) a purpose relating to immigration, quarantine or border control between Australia and a foreign country;\n    (j) the provision of services to persons who are not Australian citizens;\n    (ja) a purpose relating to the performance of the Australian Crime Commission’s function covered by paragraph 7A(da) of the Australian Crime Commission Act 2002;\n    (k) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 17 of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Act 1979;\n    (l) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 6 of the Intelligence Services Act 2001;\n    (la) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 7 of the Office of National Intelligence Act 2018;\n    (m) the administration of the National Anti‑Doping Scheme (within the meaning of the Sport Integrity Australia Act 2020);\n    (n) the administration or enforcement of laws with respect to commerce:\n    (i) between a State and another State; or\n    (ii) between a State and a Territory; or\n    (iii) between a Territory and another Territory; or\n    (iv) between Australia and another country; or\n    (v) within a State or Territory;\n    (na) a purpose relating to the inter‑country adoption of a child;\n    (nb) a purpose relating to the protection of national security or the defence of Australia;\n    (nc) a purpose relating to locating a missing person;\n    (o) a purpose prescribed by the rules.\n\n#### 47 Disclosure with consent\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that relates to the affairs of a person or body if:\n    (a) the person or body has consented to the disclosure; and\n    (b) the disclosure is in accordance with that consent.\n\n#### 48 Disclosure to reduce threat to life or health\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the entrusted person reasonably believes that the disclosure is necessary to prevent or lessen a serious threat to the life or health of an individual; and\n    (b) the disclosure is for the purposes of preventing or lessening that threat.\n\n#### 49 Disclosure of publicly available information\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if it has already been lawfully made available to the public.\n\n#### 50 Exceptions operate independently\n\n  Sections 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 and 49 do not limit each other.\n\n#### 50A Information must be certified as appropriately classified before proceedings can be initiated\n\n  If, an offence against section 42 relates to information that has a security classification, proceedings for the offence must not be initiated unless the Secretary has certified that it is appropriate that the information had a security classification at the time of the conduct that is alleged to constitute the offence.\n\n#### 51 Interaction with Privacy Act\n\n  For the purposes of the Privacy Act 1988:\n    (a) the making of a record, in accordance with section 43, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a use that is authorised by this Act; and\n    (b) the disclosure, in accordance with section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a disclosure that is authorised by this Act.\n\n## Part 7—Other matters\n\n#### 52 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• The Secretary and the Comptroller‑General of Customs can delegate their functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the engagement of a person as a consultant or contractor if the person fails to comply with a direction under this Act.\n\n• The Minister may make rules for the purposes of this Act.\n\n#### 53 Delegation by Secretary\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to:\n    (a) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct); or\n    (c) the Migration Act 1958 or an instrument under that Act.\n\n> Note: Section 496 of the Migration Act 1958 deals with delegation by the Secretary of his or her powers under that Act.\n\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  Subdelegation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n  (4) If the Australian Border Force Commissioner is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to the following:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  (6) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Secretary.\n\n#### 54 Delegation by Comptroller‑General of Customs\n\n  (1) The Comptroller‑General of Customs may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth (other than section 179, 179K or 179L of the Customs Act 1901) to:\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Directions to delegates\n  (2) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (3) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (3), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (5) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (4) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (2) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (6) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (3) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 55 Directions by Secretary—administration and control of the Department\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in connection with the administration and control of the Department.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for Immigration and Border Protection workers for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements;\n    (d) security clearances.\n  Organisational suitability assessments\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to organisational suitability assessments.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (5) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by Immigration and Border Protection workers of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a worker;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a worker;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Relationship with directions under section 26\n  (6) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 26 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (7) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (8) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (9) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (10) If an Immigration and Border Protection worker is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (5) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the worker is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the worker or expose the worker to a penalty.\n  (11) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings.\n  (12) Subsection (11) has effect subject to section 40.\n\n#### 56 Directions by Secretary—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Relationship with directions under section 27\n  (3) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 27 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (5) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (6) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n\n#### 57 Termination of engagement of consultant or contractor\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a person is covered by paragraph (e) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) the person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or subsection (2) of this section or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a person (the affected person) is covered by paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) in connection with that person, paragraph (e) of that definition covers a person (the consultant/contractor); and\n    (c) the affected person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, direct the consultant/contractor to arrange for the affected person to cease to perform services for the Department.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not limit the circumstances in which a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor may be terminated.\n\n#### 57A Act not to apply so as to exceed Commonwealth power\n\n  (1) If a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act:\n    (a) would, apart from this section, have an application (an invalid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    because of which the provision exceeds the Commonwealth’s legislative power; but\n    (b) also has at least one application (a valid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    that, if it were the provision’s only application, would be within the Commonwealth’s legislative power;\n  it is the Parliament’s intention that the provision is not to have the invalid application, but is to have every valid application.\n  (2) This section applies to a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act, whether the provision is enacted or made before, on or after the commencement of this section.\n\n#### 58 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed by the rules; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) amend this Act.","sortOrder":28},{"sectionNumber":"23","sectionType":"section","heading":"Minister may give directions to Australian Border Force Commissioner","content":"#### 23 Minister may give directions to Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, after obtaining and considering the advice of the Australian Border Force Commissioner and the Secretary, give written directions to the Australian Border Force Commissioner about policies that should be pursued, or priorities that should be followed, in relation to the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) If the Minister gives a direction under subsection (1), the Minister must cause a copy of the direction to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 15 sitting days of that House after giving the direction.\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must comply with all directions under subsection (1).\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) is not a legislative instrument.","sortOrder":29},{"sectionNumber":"Division 6","sectionType":"division","heading":"Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers","content":"An Act relating to the Australian Border Force, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and persons performing work for the Department, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Australian Border Force Act 2015.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on 1 July 2015.\n\n#### 3 Simplified outline of this Act\n\n• There is an Australian Border Force within the Department.\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force, who is to have the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• There are resignation and termination provisions that apply to all APS employees in the Department in circumstances involving serious misconduct.\n\n• All Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n• There are secrecy and disclosure provisions covering information obtained by the Secretary, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and Immigration and Border Protection workers.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n#### 4 Definitions\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> alcohol blood test means a test of a person’s blood to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol breath test means a test of a person’s breath to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol screening test means a test of a person’s breath to determine whether alcohol is present in the person’s breath.\n\n> Australian Border Force means that part of the Department known as the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Immigration and Border Protection workers may perform work for the Australian Border Force. The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Australian Border Force Commissioner means the Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> authorised person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is authorised in an instrument under subsection (2).\n\n> body sample means any of the following:\n\n    (a) any human biological fluid;\n    (b) any human biological tissue (whether alive or otherwise);\n    (c) any human breath.\n\n> corrupt conduct: see engages in corrupt conduct.\n\n> duty of confidence means any duty or obligation arising under the common law or at equity pursuant to which a person is obliged not to disclose information.\n\n> engages in corrupt conduct: an Immigration and Border Protection worker engages in corrupt conduct if the worker, while an Immigration and Border Protection worker, engages in:\n\n    (a) conduct that:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    the worker abusing his or her position as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) conduct that:\n    (i) perverts; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of perverting;\n    the course of justice; or\n    (c) conduct that, having regard to the duties and powers of the worker as an Immigration and Border Protection worker:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    corruption of any other kind.\n\n> entrusted person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs); or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection information means information of any of the following kinds that was obtained by a person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person:\n\n    (a) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia;\n    (b) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the prevention, detection or investigation of, or the conduct of proceedings relating to, an offence or a contravention of a civil penalty provision;\n    (c) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the protection of public health, or endanger the life or safety of an individual or group of individuals;\n    (d) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence;\n    (e) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to cause competitive detriment to a person;\n    (f) information of a kind prescribed in an instrument under subsection (7).\n\n> Note: See also subsections (4) to (7).\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection worker means:\n\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department; or\n    (b) a person covered by paragraph (d), (e) or (f) of the definition of officer of Customs in subsection 4(1) of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (c) a person covered by paragraph (f) or (g) of the definition of officer in subsection 5(1) of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (d) a person who is:\n    (i) an employee of an Agency (within the meaning of the Public Service Act 1999); or\n    (ii) an officer or employee of a State or Territory; or\n    (iii) an officer or employee of an agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (iv) an officer or employee of the government of a foreign country, an officer or employee of an agency or authority of a foreign country or an officer or employee of a public international organisation;\n    and whose services are made available to the Department; or\n    (e) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged as a consultant or contractor to perform services for the Department; and\n    (ii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(1); or\n    (f) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged or employed by a person to whom paragraph (e) or this paragraph applies; and\n    (ii) performing services for the Department in connection with that engagement or employment; and\n    (iii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(2).\n\n> intelligence agency means:\n\n    (a) the Australian Geospatial‑Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (b) the Australian Secret Intelligence Service; or\n    (c) the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (d) the Australian Signals Directorate; or\n    (e) the Defence Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (f) the Office of National Intelligence; or\n    (g) a government body or authority responsible for intelligence gathering for, or the security of, a foreign country.\n\n> paid work means work for financial gain or reward (whether as an employee, a self‑employed person or otherwise).\n\n> personal information has the same meaning as in the Privacy Act 1988.\n\n> prohibited drug means:\n\n    (a) a narcotic substance (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); or\n    (b) any drug prescribed in an instrument under subsection (3).\n\n> prohibited drug test means a test of a body sample of a person to determine the presence (if any) of a prohibited drug in the sample.\n\n> public international organisation has the meaning given by section 70.1 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> rules means the rules made under section 58.\n\n> Secretary means the Secretary of the Department.\n\n> serious misconduct, by an Immigration and Border Protection worker, means:\n\n    (a) corrupt conduct engaged in, a serious abuse of power, or a serious dereliction of duty, by the worker; or\n    (b) any other seriously reprehensible act or behaviour by the worker, whether or not acting, or purporting to act, in the course of his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> unauthorised maritime arrival has the same meaning as in the Migration Act 1958.\n\n  Authorised person instrument\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, authorise an Immigration and Border Protection worker for the purposes of paragraph (c) of the definition of authorised person in subsection (1).\n  Prohibited drug instrument\n  (3) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by legislative instrument, prescribe drugs for the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of prohibited drug in subsection (1).\n  Immigration and Border Protection information\n  (4) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information obtained by an entrusted person in the course of performing duties, or in performing functions or exercising powers, under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) as an officer of Customs, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (b) as an officer, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (c) as a maritime officer within the meaning of the Maritime Powers Act 2013; or\n    (d) as a delegate of someone else; or\n    (e) in any other capacity;\n  is taken to be information obtained by the person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person.\n  (5) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), the following kinds of information are taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia:\n    (a) information that has a security classification;\n    (b) information that has originated with, or been received from, an intelligence agency.\n  (6) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information that was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law is taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence.\n  (7) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, prescribe a kind of information for the purposes of paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1) if the Minister is satisfied that disclosure of the information would or could reasonably be expected to:\n    (a) prejudice the effective working of the Department; or\n    (b) otherwise harm the public interest.\n\n#### 5 Consultants and contractors etc.\n\n  Consultants and contractors\n  (1) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (e)(ii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Other persons\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (f)(iii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Determinations are not legislative instruments\n  (3) A determination under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 6 Act binds the Crown\n\n  This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n\n#### 7 Extraterritorial application\n\n  This Act extends to acts, omissions, matters and things outside Australia.\n\n## Part 2—Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n### Division 1—Simplified outline of this Part\n\n#### 8 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner is also known as the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n### Division 2—Office and role of the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 9 Establishment\n\n  (1) There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has, under the Minister, the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n#### 10 Powers of Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner has power to do all things necessary or convenient to be done for or in connection with the performance of his or her duties.\n\n### Division 3—Appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 11 Appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed by the Governor‑General by written instrument.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed on a full‑time basis.\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (3) While a person holds office as the Australian Border Force Commissioner the person is also the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 12 Term of appointment\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office for the period specified in the instrument of appointment. The period must not exceed 5 years.\n\n> Note: The Australian Border Force Commissioner may be reappointed: see section 33AA of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 13 Oath or affirmation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must, before beginning to discharge the duties of his or her office, make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Minister.\n  Compliance\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she has made and subscribed under this section.\n\n#### 14 Acting Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by written instrument, appoint a person to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) during a vacancy in the office of the Australian Border Force Commissioner (whether or not an appointment has previously been made to the office); or\n    (b) during any period, or during all periods, when the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (i) is absent from duty or from Australia; or\n    (ii) is, for any reason, unable to perform the duties of the office.\n\n> Note: Sections 33AB and 33A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 have rules that apply to acting appointments.\n\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (2) A person appointed to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner is taken, while the person is so acting, to also be the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 15 Application of finance law\n\n  For the purposes of the finance law (within the meaning of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013), the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs) is an official of the Department.\n\n### Division 4—Terms and conditions for the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 16 Remuneration and allowances\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the remuneration that is determined by the Remuneration Tribunal. If no determination of that remuneration by the Tribunal is in operation, he or she is to be paid the remuneration that is prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the allowances that are prescribed by the rules.\n  (3) This section has effect subject to the Remuneration Tribunal Act 1973.\n\n#### 17 Leave of absence\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the recreation leave entitlements that are determined by the Remuneration Tribunal.\n  (2) The Minister may grant the Australian Border Force Commissioner leave of absence, other than recreation leave, on the terms and conditions as to remuneration or otherwise that the Minister determines.\n\n#### 18 Outside work\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in paid work outside the duties of his or her office without the Minister’s approval.\n\n#### 19 Disclosure of interests\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must give written notice to the Minister of any direct or indirect pecuniary interest that the Commissioner has or acquires and that conflicts or could conflict with the proper performance of the Commissioner’s functions.\n  (2) Subsection (1) applies in addition to section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests).\n\n#### 20 Resignation of appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may resign his or her appointment by giving the Governor‑General a written resignation.\n  (2) The resignation takes effect on the day it is received by the Governor‑General or, if a later day is specified in the resignation, on that later day.\n\n#### 21 Suspension or termination of appointment\n\n  (1) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) for misbehaviour; or\n    (b) if the Commissioner is unable to perform the duties of his or her office because of physical or mental incapacity.\n  (2) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner if:\n    (a) the Commissioner:\n    (i) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (ii) takes steps to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (iii) compounds with one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (iv) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (b) the Commissioner is absent, except on leave of absence, for 14 consecutive days or for 28 days in any 12 months; or\n    (c) the Commissioner engages in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she made and subscribed under section 13; or\n    (d) the Commissioner engages, except with the Minister’s approval, in paid work outside the duties of his or her office (see section 18); or\n    (e) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with:\n    (i) section 19; or\n    (ii) section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests) or rules made under that Act for the purposes of that section; or\n    (f) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with a direction under section 23.\n  (3) The suspension of the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner under this section does not affect any entitlement of the Commissioner to be paid remuneration, and allowances, in accordance with this Act.\n  Statement in Parliament\n  (4) If the Governor‑General suspends or terminates the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner, the Minister must cause a statement of the grounds of the suspension or termination to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 7 sitting days of that House after the suspension or termination.\n\n#### 22 Other terms and conditions\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office on the terms and conditions (if any) in relation to matters not covered by this Act that are determined by the Minister.\n\n### Division 5—Ministerial directions\n\n#### 23 Minister may give directions to Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, after obtaining and considering the advice of the Australian Border Force Commissioner and the Secretary, give written directions to the Australian Border Force Commissioner about policies that should be pursued, or priorities that should be followed, in relation to the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) If the Minister gives a direction under subsection (1), the Minister must cause a copy of the direction to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 15 sitting days of that House after giving the direction.\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must comply with all directions under subsection (1).\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n### Division 6—Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n#### 24 Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may request the following persons to make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c) or (d) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) A person must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Australian Border Force Commissioner or a person authorised by the Commissioner.\n  Compliance\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with the oath or affirmation.\n\n> Note: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  (4) Subsection (3) extends to an Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section but who is no longer a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b).\n\n### Division 7—Delegation and directions\n\n#### 25 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to the following:\n    (a) the Secretary;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (c) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct).\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (4) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to any Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (6) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n#### 26 Directions—administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in connection with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a person;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a person;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (5) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (6) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (7) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (8) If a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (4) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the person is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the person or expose the person to a penalty.\n  (9) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the person in any proceedings.\n  (10) Subsection (9) has effect subject to section 40.\n\n#### 27 Directions—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those persons under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Compliance with directions\n  (3) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (4) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (5) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n\n## Part 3—Resignation from the Department\n\n#### 28 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An APS employee in the Department must give at least 14 days’ notice of his or her resignation from the Department.\n\n• If an APS employee in the Department resigns in circumstances where the employee may have engaged in serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may delay the employee’s resignation by up to 90 days to allow further investigation of that conduct.\n\n#### 29 Resignation—general\n\n  (1) A person may resign as an APS employee in the Department if, and only if:\n    (a) he or she gives written notice to the Secretary of his or her resignation; and\n    (b) the notice specifies, in accordance with subsection (2), the day his or her resignation is to take effect.\n  (2) The day specified in a notice under paragraph (1)(a) must not:\n    (a) be earlier than 14 days, or such shorter period as the Secretary allows; or\n    (b) be later than 4 months;\n  after the day on which the notice is given to the Secretary.\n  (3) This section is subject to section 30.\n\n#### 30 Resignation in anticipation of termination of employment\n\n  (1) This section applies if:\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department gives the Secretary written notice of the employee’s resignation under paragraph 29(1)(a); and\n    (b) either:\n    (i) the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee has engaged in serious misconduct and the Secretary is considering terminating the employee’s employment; or\n    (ii) the employee is being investigated for serious misconduct and the Secretary is not in a position to decide whether to terminate the employee’s employment because the findings of the investigation are not yet known.\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written notice given to the APS employee, substitute a day, no later than 90 days after the day specified in the employee’s notice of resignation, as the day on which the employee’s resignation is to take effect.\n  (3) Subsection (2) has effect subject to subsection (7).\n  Multiple notices\n  (4) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may give more than one notice under subsection (2) to the APS employee in relation to the notice of resignation.\n  Timing of first notice\n  (5) To be effective, the first notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation must be given to the APS employee before the day specified in the notice of resignation.\n  Employee’s resignation takes effect or employee’s employment terminated\n  (6) The Secretary must, on or before the day substituted in the most recent notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation:\n    (a) notify the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect; or\n    (b) terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (7) If under paragraph (6)(a) the Secretary notifies the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect, the employee’s resignation takes effect on the day of that notification.\n\n## Part 4—Termination of employment in the Department for serious misconduct\n\n#### 31 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• If the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour amounts to serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Commissioner may make a declaration to that effect.\n\n• The effect of the declaration is that provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, will not apply to the APS employee.\n\n#### 32 Termination of employment for serious misconduct\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour or any part of it:\n    (a) amounts to serious misconduct by the APS employee; and\n    (b) is having, or is likely to have, a damaging effect on:\n    (i) the professional self‑respect or morale of some or all of the APS employees in the Department; or\n    (ii) the reputation of the Department with the public or any section of the public, with an Australian or overseas government or with a person or body to whom information may be disclosed under Part 6.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may make a written declaration that he or she has the belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee.\n  Timing of declaration\n  (3) A declaration under subsection (2) must be made within 24 hours of the Secretary’s decision to terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n  Copy of declaration to be given to APS employee\n  (4) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Secretary or the Commissioner must give the APS employee a copy of the declaration.\n  Effect of declaration on Fair Work Act\n  (5) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Fair Work Act 2009 (other than Part 3‑1 and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) the termination of the APS employee’s employment; or\n    (b) the making of the declaration.\n\n> Note 1: This means, for example, that the provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, do not apply in relation to the APS employee.\n\n> Note 2: Part 3‑1 of the Fair Work Act 2009 deals with general protections, and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act deals with payments relating to periods of industrial action.\n\n  (6) To avoid doubt, subsection (5) applies despite section 8 of the Public Service Act 1999.\n  Report to Minister\n  (7) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner must give the Minister a written report containing the following, as soon as practicable after making the declaration:\n    (a) the grounds for the Secretary’s or Commissioner’s belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee;\n    (b) the nature and findings of any investigation of, or inquiry into, the APS employee’s conduct or behaviour;\n    (c) details of any other matter the Secretary or Commissioner considers relevant.\n  Declaration not a legislative instrument\n  (8) A declaration under subsection (2) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n## Part 5—Alcohol and drug tests\n\n#### 33 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n#### 34 Alcohol screening test—suspicion that Immigration and Border Protection worker under the influence of alcohol\n\n  (1) An authorised person may require an Immigration and Border Protection worker to undergo an alcohol screening test if:\n    (a) the worker is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; and\n    (b) the authorised person reasonably suspects that the worker is under the influence of alcohol.\n  Compliance with requirement\n  (2) The worker must comply with a requirement given to him or her under subsection (1).\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n  Return to duties\n  (3) If the result of the alcohol screening test shows that alcohol is not present in the worker’s breath, he or she may return to his or her duties immediately.\n  Relationship with section 35\n  (4) This section does not limit section 35.\n\n#### 35 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—general\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Blood sample if alcohol breath test indicates presence of alcohol\n  (2) If:\n    (a) the worker undergoes an alcohol breath test in accordance with a direction under subsection (1); and\n    (b) the alcohol breath test indicates the presence of alcohol;\n  the worker may provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n#### 36 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—certain incidents\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following if subsection (2) or (3) applies:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Person killed or seriously injured in an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel or while detained\n  (2) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) one of the following applies:\n    (i) a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is held in custody in relation to an arrest under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958 or the Maritime Powers Act 2013 or otherwise detained under any of those Acts;\n    (iii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is an unauthorised maritime arrival and is being taken to a regional processing country under section 198AD of the Migration Act 1958; and\n    (b) the worker is directly involved in the incident in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Person killed or seriously injured by a firearm discharging or physical force\n  (3) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) all of the following apply:\n    (i) the worker is an officer authorised to carry arms within the meaning of section 189A of the Customs Act 1901;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the discharge of a firearm by the worker;\n    (iii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) both of the following apply:\n    (i) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the application of physical force by the worker;\n    (ii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Direction to be given as soon as practicable after the incident\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) must be given as soon as practicable after the incident concerned and may be given whether or not the worker is still performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Provision of blood or body sample while in hospital\n  (5) If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is involved in an incident referred to in subsection (2) or (3); and\n    (b) the worker attends or is admitted to a hospital for examination or treatment because of the incident;\n  an authorised person may give the worker a written direction requiring the worker to do either or both of the following:\n    (c) provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test;\n    (d) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (6) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n#### 37 Performing duties on board a vessel\n\n  If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is on board a vessel throughout a period (the onboard period); and\n    (b) the vessel is under the command of an officer of Customs (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); and\n    (c) at any time during the onboard period, the worker performs duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n  the worker is taken, for the purposes of this Part, to be in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker throughout the onboard period.\n\n#### 38 Conduct of tests and provision of samples to be in accordance with the rules\n\n  Conduct of tests\n  (1) An alcohol screening test, alcohol breath test, alcohol blood test or prohibited drug test under section 34, 35 or 36 is to be conducted in accordance with the rules.\n  Provision of samples\n  (2) A sample of blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test under section 35 or 36, or a body sample for the purpose of a prohibited drug test under that section, is to be provided in accordance with the rules.\n\n#### 39 Rules for purposes of this Part\n\n  For the purposes of sections 34, 35 and 36, the rules may make provision for and in relation to the following:\n    (a) the authorisation of persons:\n    (i) to conduct alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests for the purpose of those sections; and\n    (ii) to operate equipment for that purpose;\n    (b) the provision of samples of blood for the purpose of alcohol blood tests under those sections;\n    (c) the provision of body samples for the purpose of prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (d) the conduct of alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (e) the devices used in conducting alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections, including the calibration, inspection and testing of those devices;\n    (f) in the case of alcohol blood tests and prohibited drug tests—the accreditation of persons to conduct analyses in connection with such tests;\n    (g) the procedure for the handling, analysis, storage and destruction of:\n    (i) samples of blood taken in connection with alcohol blood tests under those sections; or\n    (ii) body samples taken in connection with prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (h) the giving of the test results in certificates or other documents and the evidentiary effect of such certificates or other documents;\n    (i) the confidentiality and disclosure of the test results;\n    (j) the keeping and destruction of records in relation to alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections.\n\n#### 40 Admissibility of test results etc. in legal proceedings\n\n  The following:\n    (a) a certificate or other document recording the results of a test conducted under section 34, 35 or 36 in relation to an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n    (b) any other information, answer to a question or document relevant to conducting such a test;\n  are not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings other than the following:\n    (c) proceedings in relation to a decision of the Secretary to terminate the employment or engagement of the worker;\n    (d) proceedings under the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988;\n    (e) proceedings in tort against the Commonwealth that are instituted by the worker.\n\n## Part 6—Secrecy and disclosure provisions\n\n#### 41 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An entrusted person must not make a record of or disclose Immigration and Border Protection information unless the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by a provision of this Part, is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person or is required or authorised by law or by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n#### 42 Secrecy\n\n  (1) A person commits an offence if:\n    (a) the person is, or has been, an entrusted person; and\n    (b) the person makes a record of, or discloses, information; and\n    (c) the information is Immigration and Border Protection information.\n\nPenalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.\n\n  (1A) If the information is Immigration and Border Protection information because of the operation of subsection 4(5) or (6), the fault element of recklessness for paragraph (1)(c) of this section is taken to be satisfied if the person is reckless as to whether or not whichever of the following applies:\n    (a) the information has a security classification;\n    (b) the information originated with, or was received from, an intelligence agency;\n    (c) the information was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law.\n\n> Note: Recklessness is the fault element for paragraph (1)(c)—see section 5.6 of the Criminal Code.\n\n  Exception\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49; or\n    (b) the making of the record or disclosure is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person; or\n    (c) the making of the record or disclosure is required or authorised by or under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (d) the making of the record or disclosure is required by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n> Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to a matter in subsection (2) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code).\n\n  Geographical jurisdiction\n  (3) Section 15.2 of the Criminal Code (extended geographical jurisdiction—category B) applies to an offence against subsection (1).\n\n#### 43 Records or disclosure for the purposes of this Act or the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022\n\n  An entrusted person may make a record of, or disclose, Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of this Act or a legislative instrument under this Act; or\n    (b) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022 or regulations under that Act.\n\n#### 44 Disclosure to certain bodies and persons\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of the information to that body or person is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Bodies and persons\n  (4) For the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), the bodies and persons are the following:\n    (a) a Department, agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (b) the Australian Federal Police;\n    (c) a police force or police service of a State or Territory;\n    (d) a coroner;\n    (e) any other person who holds an office or appointment under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (f) any other body or person prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n  (5) Paragraph (4)(f) does not apply in relation to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (6) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a body or person:\n    (a) before Immigration and Border Protection information is disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2); or\n    (b) in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (7) An instrument under subsection (3) or (6) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 45 Disclosure in accordance with agreements\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of that information to that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Agreements\n  (4) This subsection applies to an agreement that is in force between:\n    (a) the Commonwealth or an agency or authority of the Commonwealth; and\n    (b) one or more of the following:\n    (i) a foreign country;\n    (ii) an agency or authority of a foreign country;\n    (iii) a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (5) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to it under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (6) An instrument under subsection (3) or (5) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 46 Permitted purposes\n\n  For the purposes of sections 44 and 45, the purposes are the following:\n    (a) the administration or enforcement of a law of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country that relates to:\n    (i) criminal law; or\n    (ii) a law imposing a pecuniary penalty or providing for the forfeiture of property;\n    (b) in relation to a law referred to in paragraph (a), the prevention of crime, or the detection or analysis of criminal conduct, in respect of that law;\n    (c) assisting a coronial inquiry, coronial investigation or coronial inquest under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (d) a purpose relating to the protection of public health, or the prevention or elimination of risks to the life or safety of an individual or a group of individuals;\n    (e) the collection and verification of statistics for the purposes of the Census and Statistics Act 1905 or the performance of the functions of the Australian Bureau of Statistics as set out in section 6 of the Australian Bureau of Statistics Act 1975;\n    (f) the protection of the public revenue of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country;\n    (g) a purpose relating to matters covered by the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013, the Australian Citizenship Act 2007, the Immigration (Guardianship of Children) Act 1946, the Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 or the Biosecurity Act 2015;\n    (h) any of the following:\n    (i) assisting in establishing the identity of a particular person;\n    (ii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was an Australian citizen at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (iii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was the holder of a particular kind or class of visa under the Migration Act 1958 at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (i) a purpose relating to immigration, quarantine or border control between Australia and a foreign country;\n    (j) the provision of services to persons who are not Australian citizens;\n    (ja) a purpose relating to the performance of the Australian Crime Commission’s function covered by paragraph 7A(da) of the Australian Crime Commission Act 2002;\n    (k) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 17 of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Act 1979;\n    (l) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 6 of the Intelligence Services Act 2001;\n    (la) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 7 of the Office of National Intelligence Act 2018;\n    (m) the administration of the National Anti‑Doping Scheme (within the meaning of the Sport Integrity Australia Act 2020);\n    (n) the administration or enforcement of laws with respect to commerce:\n    (i) between a State and another State; or\n    (ii) between a State and a Territory; or\n    (iii) between a Territory and another Territory; or\n    (iv) between Australia and another country; or\n    (v) within a State or Territory;\n    (na) a purpose relating to the inter‑country adoption of a child;\n    (nb) a purpose relating to the protection of national security or the defence of Australia;\n    (nc) a purpose relating to locating a missing person;\n    (o) a purpose prescribed by the rules.\n\n#### 47 Disclosure with consent\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that relates to the affairs of a person or body if:\n    (a) the person or body has consented to the disclosure; and\n    (b) the disclosure is in accordance with that consent.\n\n#### 48 Disclosure to reduce threat to life or health\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the entrusted person reasonably believes that the disclosure is necessary to prevent or lessen a serious threat to the life or health of an individual; and\n    (b) the disclosure is for the purposes of preventing or lessening that threat.\n\n#### 49 Disclosure of publicly available information\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if it has already been lawfully made available to the public.\n\n#### 50 Exceptions operate independently\n\n  Sections 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 and 49 do not limit each other.\n\n#### 50A Information must be certified as appropriately classified before proceedings can be initiated\n\n  If, an offence against section 42 relates to information that has a security classification, proceedings for the offence must not be initiated unless the Secretary has certified that it is appropriate that the information had a security classification at the time of the conduct that is alleged to constitute the offence.\n\n#### 51 Interaction with Privacy Act\n\n  For the purposes of the Privacy Act 1988:\n    (a) the making of a record, in accordance with section 43, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a use that is authorised by this Act; and\n    (b) the disclosure, in accordance with section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a disclosure that is authorised by this Act.\n\n## Part 7—Other matters\n\n#### 52 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• The Secretary and the Comptroller‑General of Customs can delegate their functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the engagement of a person as a consultant or contractor if the person fails to comply with a direction under this Act.\n\n• The Minister may make rules for the purposes of this Act.\n\n#### 53 Delegation by Secretary\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to:\n    (a) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct); or\n    (c) the Migration Act 1958 or an instrument under that Act.\n\n> Note: Section 496 of the Migration Act 1958 deals with delegation by the Secretary of his or her powers under that Act.\n\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  Subdelegation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n  (4) If the Australian Border Force Commissioner is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to the following:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  (6) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Secretary.\n\n#### 54 Delegation by Comptroller‑General of Customs\n\n  (1) The Comptroller‑General of Customs may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth (other than section 179, 179K or 179L of the Customs Act 1901) to:\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Directions to delegates\n  (2) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (3) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (3), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (5) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (4) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (2) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (6) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (3) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 55 Directions by Secretary—administration and control of the Department\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in connection with the administration and control of the Department.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for Immigration and Border Protection workers for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements;\n    (d) security clearances.\n  Organisational suitability assessments\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to organisational suitability assessments.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (5) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by Immigration and Border Protection workers of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a worker;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a worker;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Relationship with directions under section 26\n  (6) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 26 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (7) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (8) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (9) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (10) If an Immigration and Border Protection worker is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (5) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the worker is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the worker or expose the worker to a penalty.\n  (11) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings.\n  (12) Subsection (11) has effect subject to section 40.\n\n#### 56 Directions by Secretary—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Relationship with directions under section 27\n  (3) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 27 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (5) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (6) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n\n#### 57 Termination of engagement of consultant or contractor\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a person is covered by paragraph (e) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) the person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or subsection (2) of this section or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a person (the affected person) is covered by paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) in connection with that person, paragraph (e) of that definition covers a person (the consultant/contractor); and\n    (c) the affected person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, direct the consultant/contractor to arrange for the affected person to cease to perform services for the Department.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not limit the circumstances in which a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor may be terminated.\n\n#### 57A Act not to apply so as to exceed Commonwealth power\n\n  (1) If a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act:\n    (a) would, apart from this section, have an application (an invalid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    because of which the provision exceeds the Commonwealth’s legislative power; but\n    (b) also has at least one application (a valid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    that, if it were the provision’s only application, would be within the Commonwealth’s legislative power;\n  it is the Parliament’s intention that the provision is not to have the invalid application, but is to have every valid application.\n  (2) This section applies to a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act, whether the provision is enacted or made before, on or after the commencement of this section.\n\n#### 58 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed by the rules; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) amend this Act.","sortOrder":30},{"sectionNumber":"24","sectionType":"section","heading":"Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers","content":"#### 24 Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may request the following persons to make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c) or (d) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) A person must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Australian Border Force Commissioner or a person authorised by the Commissioner.\n  Compliance\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with the oath or affirmation.\n\n> Note: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  (4) Subsection (3) extends to an Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section but who is no longer a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b).","sortOrder":31},{"sectionNumber":"Division 7","sectionType":"division","heading":"Delegation and directions","content":"An Act relating to the Australian Border Force, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and persons performing work for the Department, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Australian Border Force Act 2015.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on 1 July 2015.\n\n#### 3 Simplified outline of this Act\n\n• There is an Australian Border Force within the Department.\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force, who is to have the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• There are resignation and termination provisions that apply to all APS employees in the Department in circumstances involving serious misconduct.\n\n• All Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n• There are secrecy and disclosure provisions covering information obtained by the Secretary, the Australian Border Force Commissioner and Immigration and Border Protection workers.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n#### 4 Definitions\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> alcohol blood test means a test of a person’s blood to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol breath test means a test of a person’s breath to determine the amount of alcohol (if any) in the person’s blood.\n\n> alcohol screening test means a test of a person’s breath to determine whether alcohol is present in the person’s breath.\n\n> Australian Border Force means that part of the Department known as the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Immigration and Border Protection workers may perform work for the Australian Border Force. The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Australian Border Force Commissioner means the Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> authorised person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is authorised in an instrument under subsection (2).\n\n> body sample means any of the following:\n\n    (a) any human biological fluid;\n    (b) any human biological tissue (whether alive or otherwise);\n    (c) any human breath.\n\n> corrupt conduct: see engages in corrupt conduct.\n\n> duty of confidence means any duty or obligation arising under the common law or at equity pursuant to which a person is obliged not to disclose information.\n\n> engages in corrupt conduct: an Immigration and Border Protection worker engages in corrupt conduct if the worker, while an Immigration and Border Protection worker, engages in:\n\n    (a) conduct that:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    the worker abusing his or her position as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) conduct that:\n    (i) perverts; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of perverting;\n    the course of justice; or\n    (c) conduct that, having regard to the duties and powers of the worker as an Immigration and Border Protection worker:\n    (i) involves; or\n    (ii) is engaged in for the purpose (or for purposes including the purpose) of;\n    corruption of any other kind.\n\n> entrusted person means:\n\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs); or\n    (c) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection information means information of any of the following kinds that was obtained by a person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person:\n\n    (a) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia;\n    (b) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the prevention, detection or investigation of, or the conduct of proceedings relating to, an offence or a contravention of a civil penalty provision;\n    (c) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the protection of public health, or endanger the life or safety of an individual or group of individuals;\n    (d) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence;\n    (e) information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to cause competitive detriment to a person;\n    (f) information of a kind prescribed in an instrument under subsection (7).\n\n> Note: See also subsections (4) to (7).\n\n> Immigration and Border Protection worker means:\n\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department; or\n    (b) a person covered by paragraph (d), (e) or (f) of the definition of officer of Customs in subsection 4(1) of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (c) a person covered by paragraph (f) or (g) of the definition of officer in subsection 5(1) of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (d) a person who is:\n    (i) an employee of an Agency (within the meaning of the Public Service Act 1999); or\n    (ii) an officer or employee of a State or Territory; or\n    (iii) an officer or employee of an agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (iv) an officer or employee of the government of a foreign country, an officer or employee of an agency or authority of a foreign country or an officer or employee of a public international organisation;\n    and whose services are made available to the Department; or\n    (e) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged as a consultant or contractor to perform services for the Department; and\n    (ii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(1); or\n    (f) a person who is:\n    (i) engaged or employed by a person to whom paragraph (e) or this paragraph applies; and\n    (ii) performing services for the Department in connection with that engagement or employment; and\n    (iii) specified in a determination under subsection 5(2).\n\n> intelligence agency means:\n\n    (a) the Australian Geospatial‑Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (b) the Australian Secret Intelligence Service; or\n    (c) the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (d) the Australian Signals Directorate; or\n    (e) the Defence Intelligence Organisation; or\n    (f) the Office of National Intelligence; or\n    (g) a government body or authority responsible for intelligence gathering for, or the security of, a foreign country.\n\n> paid work means work for financial gain or reward (whether as an employee, a self‑employed person or otherwise).\n\n> personal information has the same meaning as in the Privacy Act 1988.\n\n> prohibited drug means:\n\n    (a) a narcotic substance (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); or\n    (b) any drug prescribed in an instrument under subsection (3).\n\n> prohibited drug test means a test of a body sample of a person to determine the presence (if any) of a prohibited drug in the sample.\n\n> public international organisation has the meaning given by section 70.1 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> rules means the rules made under section 58.\n\n> Secretary means the Secretary of the Department.\n\n> serious misconduct, by an Immigration and Border Protection worker, means:\n\n    (a) corrupt conduct engaged in, a serious abuse of power, or a serious dereliction of duty, by the worker; or\n    (b) any other seriously reprehensible act or behaviour by the worker, whether or not acting, or purporting to act, in the course of his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n\n> unauthorised maritime arrival has the same meaning as in the Migration Act 1958.\n\n  Authorised person instrument\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, authorise an Immigration and Border Protection worker for the purposes of paragraph (c) of the definition of authorised person in subsection (1).\n  Prohibited drug instrument\n  (3) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by legislative instrument, prescribe drugs for the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of prohibited drug in subsection (1).\n  Immigration and Border Protection information\n  (4) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information obtained by an entrusted person in the course of performing duties, or in performing functions or exercising powers, under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) as an officer of Customs, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901; or\n    (b) as an officer, or an authorised officer, within the meaning of the Migration Act 1958; or\n    (c) as a maritime officer within the meaning of the Maritime Powers Act 2013; or\n    (d) as a delegate of someone else; or\n    (e) in any other capacity;\n  is taken to be information obtained by the person in the person’s capacity as an entrusted person.\n  (5) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), the following kinds of information are taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to prejudice the security, defence or international relations of Australia:\n    (a) information that has a security classification;\n    (b) information that has originated with, or been received from, an intelligence agency.\n  (6) Without limiting the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1), information that was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law is taken to be information the disclosure of which would or could reasonably be expected to found an action by a person (other than the Commonwealth) for breach of a duty of confidence.\n  (7) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, prescribe a kind of information for the purposes of paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection information in subsection (1) if the Minister is satisfied that disclosure of the information would or could reasonably be expected to:\n    (a) prejudice the effective working of the Department; or\n    (b) otherwise harm the public interest.\n\n#### 5 Consultants and contractors etc.\n\n  Consultants and contractors\n  (1) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (e)(ii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Other persons\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written determination, specify a person for the purposes of subparagraph (f)(iii) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1).\n  Determinations are not legislative instruments\n  (3) A determination under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 6 Act binds the Crown\n\n  This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n\n#### 7 Extraterritorial application\n\n  This Act extends to acts, omissions, matters and things outside Australia.\n\n## Part 2—Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n### Division 1—Simplified outline of this Part\n\n#### 8 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner and APS employees in the Australian Border Force are able to exercise powers under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013 and other Commonwealth laws.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner is also known as the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n• The Australian Border Force Commissioner may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n### Division 2—Office and role of the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 9 Establishment\n\n  (1) There is to be an Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has, under the Minister, the control of the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n\n#### 10 Powers of Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner has power to do all things necessary or convenient to be done for or in connection with the performance of his or her duties.\n\n### Division 3—Appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 11 Appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed by the Governor‑General by written instrument.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be appointed on a full‑time basis.\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (3) While a person holds office as the Australian Border Force Commissioner the person is also the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n> Note: Many Commonwealth laws confer functions and powers on the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 12 Term of appointment\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office for the period specified in the instrument of appointment. The period must not exceed 5 years.\n\n> Note: The Australian Border Force Commissioner may be reappointed: see section 33AA of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 13 Oath or affirmation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must, before beginning to discharge the duties of his or her office, make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Minister.\n  Compliance\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she has made and subscribed under this section.\n\n#### 14 Acting Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by written instrument, appoint a person to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) during a vacancy in the office of the Australian Border Force Commissioner (whether or not an appointment has previously been made to the office); or\n    (b) during any period, or during all periods, when the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (i) is absent from duty or from Australia; or\n    (ii) is, for any reason, unable to perform the duties of the office.\n\n> Note: Sections 33AB and 33A of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 have rules that apply to acting appointments.\n\n  Comptroller‑General of Customs\n  (2) A person appointed to act as the Australian Border Force Commissioner is taken, while the person is so acting, to also be the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 15 Application of finance law\n\n  For the purposes of the finance law (within the meaning of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013), the Australian Border Force Commissioner (including in his or her capacity as the Comptroller‑General of Customs) is an official of the Department.\n\n### Division 4—Terms and conditions for the Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n#### 16 Remuneration and allowances\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the remuneration that is determined by the Remuneration Tribunal. If no determination of that remuneration by the Tribunal is in operation, he or she is to be paid the remuneration that is prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) The Australian Border Force Commissioner is to be paid the allowances that are prescribed by the rules.\n  (3) This section has effect subject to the Remuneration Tribunal Act 1973.\n\n#### 17 Leave of absence\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner has the recreation leave entitlements that are determined by the Remuneration Tribunal.\n  (2) The Minister may grant the Australian Border Force Commissioner leave of absence, other than recreation leave, on the terms and conditions as to remuneration or otherwise that the Minister determines.\n\n#### 18 Outside work\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not engage in paid work outside the duties of his or her office without the Minister’s approval.\n\n#### 19 Disclosure of interests\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must give written notice to the Minister of any direct or indirect pecuniary interest that the Commissioner has or acquires and that conflicts or could conflict with the proper performance of the Commissioner’s functions.\n  (2) Subsection (1) applies in addition to section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests).\n\n#### 20 Resignation of appointment\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may resign his or her appointment by giving the Governor‑General a written resignation.\n  (2) The resignation takes effect on the day it is received by the Governor‑General or, if a later day is specified in the resignation, on that later day.\n\n#### 21 Suspension or termination of appointment\n\n  (1) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner:\n    (a) for misbehaviour; or\n    (b) if the Commissioner is unable to perform the duties of his or her office because of physical or mental incapacity.\n  (2) The Governor‑General may suspend or terminate the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner if:\n    (a) the Commissioner:\n    (i) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (ii) takes steps to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (iii) compounds with one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (iv) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of one or more of his or her creditors; or\n    (b) the Commissioner is absent, except on leave of absence, for 14 consecutive days or for 28 days in any 12 months; or\n    (c) the Commissioner engages in conduct that is inconsistent with an oath or affirmation he or she made and subscribed under section 13; or\n    (d) the Commissioner engages, except with the Minister’s approval, in paid work outside the duties of his or her office (see section 18); or\n    (e) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with:\n    (i) section 19; or\n    (ii) section 29 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 (which deals with the duty to disclose interests) or rules made under that Act for the purposes of that section; or\n    (f) the Commissioner fails, without reasonable excuse, to comply with a direction under section 23.\n  (3) The suspension of the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner under this section does not affect any entitlement of the Commissioner to be paid remuneration, and allowances, in accordance with this Act.\n  Statement in Parliament\n  (4) If the Governor‑General suspends or terminates the appointment of the Australian Border Force Commissioner, the Minister must cause a statement of the grounds of the suspension or termination to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 7 sitting days of that House after the suspension or termination.\n\n#### 22 Other terms and conditions\n\n  The Australian Border Force Commissioner holds office on the terms and conditions (if any) in relation to matters not covered by this Act that are determined by the Minister.\n\n### Division 5—Ministerial directions\n\n#### 23 Minister may give directions to Australian Border Force Commissioner\n\n  (1) The Minister may, after obtaining and considering the advice of the Australian Border Force Commissioner and the Secretary, give written directions to the Australian Border Force Commissioner about policies that should be pursued, or priorities that should be followed, in relation to the operations of the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) If the Minister gives a direction under subsection (1), the Minister must cause a copy of the direction to be laid before each House of the Parliament within 15 sitting days of that House after giving the direction.\n  (3) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must comply with all directions under subsection (1).\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n### Division 6—Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n#### 24 Oaths or affirmations by Immigration and Border Protection workers\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may request the following persons to make and subscribe an oath or affirmation in accordance with the form prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this subsection:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c) or (d) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) A person must make and subscribe the oath or affirmation before the Australian Border Force Commissioner or a person authorised by the Commissioner.\n  Compliance\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section must not engage in conduct that is inconsistent with the oath or affirmation.\n\n> Note: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  (4) Subsection (3) extends to an Immigration and Border Protection worker who has made and subscribed an oath or affirmation under this section but who is no longer a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b).\n\n### Division 7—Delegation and directions\n\n#### 25 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to the following:\n    (a) the Secretary;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (c) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct).\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (4) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to any Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (6) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n\n#### 26 Directions—administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in connection with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a person;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a person;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (5) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (6) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (7) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (8) If a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (4) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the person is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the person or expose the person to a penalty.\n  (9) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the person in any proceedings.\n  (10) Subsection (9) has effect subject to section 40.\n\n#### 27 Directions—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those persons under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Compliance with directions\n  (3) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (4) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (5) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n\n## Part 3—Resignation from the Department\n\n#### 28 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An APS employee in the Department must give at least 14 days’ notice of his or her resignation from the Department.\n\n• If an APS employee in the Department resigns in circumstances where the employee may have engaged in serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may delay the employee’s resignation by up to 90 days to allow further investigation of that conduct.\n\n#### 29 Resignation—general\n\n  (1) A person may resign as an APS employee in the Department if, and only if:\n    (a) he or she gives written notice to the Secretary of his or her resignation; and\n    (b) the notice specifies, in accordance with subsection (2), the day his or her resignation is to take effect.\n  (2) The day specified in a notice under paragraph (1)(a) must not:\n    (a) be earlier than 14 days, or such shorter period as the Secretary allows; or\n    (b) be later than 4 months;\n  after the day on which the notice is given to the Secretary.\n  (3) This section is subject to section 30.\n\n#### 30 Resignation in anticipation of termination of employment\n\n  (1) This section applies if:\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department gives the Secretary written notice of the employee’s resignation under paragraph 29(1)(a); and\n    (b) either:\n    (i) the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee has engaged in serious misconduct and the Secretary is considering terminating the employee’s employment; or\n    (ii) the employee is being investigated for serious misconduct and the Secretary is not in a position to decide whether to terminate the employee’s employment because the findings of the investigation are not yet known.\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written notice given to the APS employee, substitute a day, no later than 90 days after the day specified in the employee’s notice of resignation, as the day on which the employee’s resignation is to take effect.\n  (3) Subsection (2) has effect subject to subsection (7).\n  Multiple notices\n  (4) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may give more than one notice under subsection (2) to the APS employee in relation to the notice of resignation.\n  Timing of first notice\n  (5) To be effective, the first notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation must be given to the APS employee before the day specified in the notice of resignation.\n  Employee’s resignation takes effect or employee’s employment terminated\n  (6) The Secretary must, on or before the day substituted in the most recent notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation:\n    (a) notify the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect; or\n    (b) terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (7) If under paragraph (6)(a) the Secretary notifies the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect, the employee’s resignation takes effect on the day of that notification.\n\n## Part 4—Termination of employment in the Department for serious misconduct\n\n#### 31 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• If the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour amounts to serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Commissioner may make a declaration to that effect.\n\n• The effect of the declaration is that provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, will not apply to the APS employee.\n\n#### 32 Termination of employment for serious misconduct\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour or any part of it:\n    (a) amounts to serious misconduct by the APS employee; and\n    (b) is having, or is likely to have, a damaging effect on:\n    (i) the professional self‑respect or morale of some or all of the APS employees in the Department; or\n    (ii) the reputation of the Department with the public or any section of the public, with an Australian or overseas government or with a person or body to whom information may be disclosed under Part 6.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may make a written declaration that he or she has the belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee.\n  Timing of declaration\n  (3) A declaration under subsection (2) must be made within 24 hours of the Secretary’s decision to terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n  Copy of declaration to be given to APS employee\n  (4) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Secretary or the Commissioner must give the APS employee a copy of the declaration.\n  Effect of declaration on Fair Work Act\n  (5) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Fair Work Act 2009 (other than Part 3‑1 and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) the termination of the APS employee’s employment; or\n    (b) the making of the declaration.\n\n> Note 1: This means, for example, that the provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, do not apply in relation to the APS employee.\n\n> Note 2: Part 3‑1 of the Fair Work Act 2009 deals with general protections, and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act deals with payments relating to periods of industrial action.\n\n  (6) To avoid doubt, subsection (5) applies despite section 8 of the Public Service Act 1999.\n  Report to Minister\n  (7) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner must give the Minister a written report containing the following, as soon as practicable after making the declaration:\n    (a) the grounds for the Secretary’s or Commissioner’s belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee;\n    (b) the nature and findings of any investigation of, or inquiry into, the APS employee’s conduct or behaviour;\n    (c) details of any other matter the Secretary or Commissioner considers relevant.\n  Declaration not a legislative instrument\n  (8) A declaration under subsection (2) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n## Part 5—Alcohol and drug tests\n\n#### 33 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.\n\n#### 34 Alcohol screening test—suspicion that Immigration and Border Protection worker under the influence of alcohol\n\n  (1) An authorised person may require an Immigration and Border Protection worker to undergo an alcohol screening test if:\n    (a) the worker is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; and\n    (b) the authorised person reasonably suspects that the worker is under the influence of alcohol.\n  Compliance with requirement\n  (2) The worker must comply with a requirement given to him or her under subsection (1).\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n  Return to duties\n  (3) If the result of the alcohol screening test shows that alcohol is not present in the worker’s breath, he or she may return to his or her duties immediately.\n  Relationship with section 35\n  (4) This section does not limit section 35.\n\n#### 35 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—general\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Blood sample if alcohol breath test indicates presence of alcohol\n  (2) If:\n    (a) the worker undergoes an alcohol breath test in accordance with a direction under subsection (1); and\n    (b) the alcohol breath test indicates the presence of alcohol;\n  the worker may provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n#### 36 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—certain incidents\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following if subsection (2) or (3) applies:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Person killed or seriously injured in an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel or while detained\n  (2) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) one of the following applies:\n    (i) a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is held in custody in relation to an arrest under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958 or the Maritime Powers Act 2013 or otherwise detained under any of those Acts;\n    (iii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is an unauthorised maritime arrival and is being taken to a regional processing country under section 198AD of the Migration Act 1958; and\n    (b) the worker is directly involved in the incident in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Person killed or seriously injured by a firearm discharging or physical force\n  (3) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) all of the following apply:\n    (i) the worker is an officer authorised to carry arms within the meaning of section 189A of the Customs Act 1901;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the discharge of a firearm by the worker;\n    (iii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) both of the following apply:\n    (i) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the application of physical force by the worker;\n    (ii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Direction to be given as soon as practicable after the incident\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) must be given as soon as practicable after the incident concerned and may be given whether or not the worker is still performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Provision of blood or body sample while in hospital\n  (5) If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is involved in an incident referred to in subsection (2) or (3); and\n    (b) the worker attends or is admitted to a hospital for examination or treatment because of the incident;\n  an authorised person may give the worker a written direction requiring the worker to do either or both of the following:\n    (c) provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test;\n    (d) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (6) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n#### 37 Performing duties on board a vessel\n\n  If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is on board a vessel throughout a period (the onboard period); and\n    (b) the vessel is under the command of an officer of Customs (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); and\n    (c) at any time during the onboard period, the worker performs duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n  the worker is taken, for the purposes of this Part, to be in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker throughout the onboard period.\n\n#### 38 Conduct of tests and provision of samples to be in accordance with the rules\n\n  Conduct of tests\n  (1) An alcohol screening test, alcohol breath test, alcohol blood test or prohibited drug test under section 34, 35 or 36 is to be conducted in accordance with the rules.\n  Provision of samples\n  (2) A sample of blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test under section 35 or 36, or a body sample for the purpose of a prohibited drug test under that section, is to be provided in accordance with the rules.\n\n#### 39 Rules for purposes of this Part\n\n  For the purposes of sections 34, 35 and 36, the rules may make provision for and in relation to the following:\n    (a) the authorisation of persons:\n    (i) to conduct alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests for the purpose of those sections; and\n    (ii) to operate equipment for that purpose;\n    (b) the provision of samples of blood for the purpose of alcohol blood tests under those sections;\n    (c) the provision of body samples for the purpose of prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (d) the conduct of alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (e) the devices used in conducting alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections, including the calibration, inspection and testing of those devices;\n    (f) in the case of alcohol blood tests and prohibited drug tests—the accreditation of persons to conduct analyses in connection with such tests;\n    (g) the procedure for the handling, analysis, storage and destruction of:\n    (i) samples of blood taken in connection with alcohol blood tests under those sections; or\n    (ii) body samples taken in connection with prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (h) the giving of the test results in certificates or other documents and the evidentiary effect of such certificates or other documents;\n    (i) the confidentiality and disclosure of the test results;\n    (j) the keeping and destruction of records in relation to alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections.\n\n#### 40 Admissibility of test results etc. in legal proceedings\n\n  The following:\n    (a) a certificate or other document recording the results of a test conducted under section 34, 35 or 36 in relation to an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n    (b) any other information, answer to a question or document relevant to conducting such a test;\n  are not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings other than the following:\n    (c) proceedings in relation to a decision of the Secretary to terminate the employment or engagement of the worker;\n    (d) proceedings under the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988;\n    (e) proceedings in tort against the Commonwealth that are instituted by the worker.\n\n## Part 6—Secrecy and disclosure provisions\n\n#### 41 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An entrusted person must not make a record of or disclose Immigration and Border Protection information unless the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by a provision of this Part, is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person or is required or authorised by law or by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n#### 42 Secrecy\n\n  (1) A person commits an offence if:\n    (a) the person is, or has been, an entrusted person; and\n    (b) the person makes a record of, or discloses, information; and\n    (c) the information is Immigration and Border Protection information.\n\nPenalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.\n\n  (1A) If the information is Immigration and Border Protection information because of the operation of subsection 4(5) or (6), the fault element of recklessness for paragraph (1)(c) of this section is taken to be satisfied if the person is reckless as to whether or not whichever of the following applies:\n    (a) the information has a security classification;\n    (b) the information originated with, or was received from, an intelligence agency;\n    (c) the information was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law.\n\n> Note: Recklessness is the fault element for paragraph (1)(c)—see section 5.6 of the Criminal Code.\n\n  Exception\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49; or\n    (b) the making of the record or disclosure is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person; or\n    (c) the making of the record or disclosure is required or authorised by or under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (d) the making of the record or disclosure is required by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n> Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to a matter in subsection (2) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code).\n\n  Geographical jurisdiction\n  (3) Section 15.2 of the Criminal Code (extended geographical jurisdiction—category B) applies to an offence against subsection (1).\n\n#### 43 Records or disclosure for the purposes of this Act or the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022\n\n  An entrusted person may make a record of, or disclose, Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of this Act or a legislative instrument under this Act; or\n    (b) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022 or regulations under that Act.\n\n#### 44 Disclosure to certain bodies and persons\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of the information to that body or person is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Bodies and persons\n  (4) For the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), the bodies and persons are the following:\n    (a) a Department, agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (b) the Australian Federal Police;\n    (c) a police force or police service of a State or Territory;\n    (d) a coroner;\n    (e) any other person who holds an office or appointment under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (f) any other body or person prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n  (5) Paragraph (4)(f) does not apply in relation to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (6) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a body or person:\n    (a) before Immigration and Border Protection information is disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2); or\n    (b) in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (7) An instrument under subsection (3) or (6) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 45 Disclosure in accordance with agreements\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of that information to that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Agreements\n  (4) This subsection applies to an agreement that is in force between:\n    (a) the Commonwealth or an agency or authority of the Commonwealth; and\n    (b) one or more of the following:\n    (i) a foreign country;\n    (ii) an agency or authority of a foreign country;\n    (iii) a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (5) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to it under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (6) An instrument under subsection (3) or (5) is not a legislative instrument.\n\n#### 46 Permitted purposes\n\n  For the purposes of sections 44 and 45, the purposes are the following:\n    (a) the administration or enforcement of a law of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country that relates to:\n    (i) criminal law; or\n    (ii) a law imposing a pecuniary penalty or providing for the forfeiture of property;\n    (b) in relation to a law referred to in paragraph (a), the prevention of crime, or the detection or analysis of criminal conduct, in respect of that law;\n    (c) assisting a coronial inquiry, coronial investigation or coronial inquest under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (d) a purpose relating to the protection of public health, or the prevention or elimination of risks to the life or safety of an individual or a group of individuals;\n    (e) the collection and verification of statistics for the purposes of the Census and Statistics Act 1905 or the performance of the functions of the Australian Bureau of Statistics as set out in section 6 of the Australian Bureau of Statistics Act 1975;\n    (f) the protection of the public revenue of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country;\n    (g) a purpose relating to matters covered by the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013, the Australian Citizenship Act 2007, the Immigration (Guardianship of Children) Act 1946, the Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 or the Biosecurity Act 2015;\n    (h) any of the following:\n    (i) assisting in establishing the identity of a particular person;\n    (ii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was an Australian citizen at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (iii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was the holder of a particular kind or class of visa under the Migration Act 1958 at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (i) a purpose relating to immigration, quarantine or border control between Australia and a foreign country;\n    (j) the provision of services to persons who are not Australian citizens;\n    (ja) a purpose relating to the performance of the Australian Crime Commission’s function covered by paragraph 7A(da) of the Australian Crime Commission Act 2002;\n    (k) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 17 of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Act 1979;\n    (l) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 6 of the Intelligence Services Act 2001;\n    (la) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 7 of the Office of National Intelligence Act 2018;\n    (m) the administration of the National Anti‑Doping Scheme (within the meaning of the Sport Integrity Australia Act 2020);\n    (n) the administration or enforcement of laws with respect to commerce:\n    (i) between a State and another State; or\n    (ii) between a State and a Territory; or\n    (iii) between a Territory and another Territory; or\n    (iv) between Australia and another country; or\n    (v) within a State or Territory;\n    (na) a purpose relating to the inter‑country adoption of a child;\n    (nb) a purpose relating to the protection of national security or the defence of Australia;\n    (nc) a purpose relating to locating a missing person;\n    (o) a purpose prescribed by the rules.\n\n#### 47 Disclosure with consent\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that relates to the affairs of a person or body if:\n    (a) the person or body has consented to the disclosure; and\n    (b) the disclosure is in accordance with that consent.\n\n#### 48 Disclosure to reduce threat to life or health\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the entrusted person reasonably believes that the disclosure is necessary to prevent or lessen a serious threat to the life or health of an individual; and\n    (b) the disclosure is for the purposes of preventing or lessening that threat.\n\n#### 49 Disclosure of publicly available information\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if it has already been lawfully made available to the public.\n\n#### 50 Exceptions operate independently\n\n  Sections 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 and 49 do not limit each other.\n\n#### 50A Information must be certified as appropriately classified before proceedings can be initiated\n\n  If, an offence against section 42 relates to information that has a security classification, proceedings for the offence must not be initiated unless the Secretary has certified that it is appropriate that the information had a security classification at the time of the conduct that is alleged to constitute the offence.\n\n#### 51 Interaction with Privacy Act\n\n  For the purposes of the Privacy Act 1988:\n    (a) the making of a record, in accordance with section 43, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a use that is authorised by this Act; and\n    (b) the disclosure, in accordance with section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a disclosure that is authorised by this Act.\n\n## Part 7—Other matters\n\n#### 52 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• The Secretary and the Comptroller‑General of Customs can delegate their functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the engagement of a person as a consultant or contractor if the person fails to comply with a direction under this Act.\n\n• The Minister may make rules for the purposes of this Act.\n\n#### 53 Delegation by Secretary\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to:\n    (a) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct); or\n    (c) the Migration Act 1958 or an instrument under that Act.\n\n> Note: Section 496 of the Migration Act 1958 deals with delegation by the Secretary of his or her powers under that Act.\n\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  Subdelegation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n  (4) If the Australian Border Force Commissioner is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to the following:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  (6) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Secretary.\n\n#### 54 Delegation by Comptroller‑General of Customs\n\n  (1) The Comptroller‑General of Customs may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth (other than section 179, 179K or 179L of the Customs Act 1901) to:\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Directions to delegates\n  (2) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (3) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (3), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (5) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (4) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (2) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (6) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (3) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n\n#### 55 Directions by Secretary—administration and control of the Department\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in connection with the administration and control of the Department.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for Immigration and Border Protection workers for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements;\n    (d) security clearances.\n  Organisational suitability assessments\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to organisational suitability assessments.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (5) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by Immigration and Border Protection workers of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a worker;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a worker;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Relationship with directions under section 26\n  (6) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 26 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (7) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (8) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (9) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (10) If an Immigration and Border Protection worker is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (5) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the worker is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the worker or expose the worker to a penalty.\n  (11) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings.\n  (12) Subsection (11) has effect subject to section 40.\n\n#### 56 Directions by Secretary—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Relationship with directions under section 27\n  (3) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 27 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (5) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (6) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n\n#### 57 Termination of engagement of consultant or contractor\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a person is covered by paragraph (e) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) the person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or subsection (2) of this section or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a person (the affected person) is covered by paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) in connection with that person, paragraph (e) of that definition covers a person (the consultant/contractor); and\n    (c) the affected person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, direct the consultant/contractor to arrange for the affected person to cease to perform services for the Department.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not limit the circumstances in which a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor may be terminated.\n\n#### 57A Act not to apply so as to exceed Commonwealth power\n\n  (1) If a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act:\n    (a) would, apart from this section, have an application (an invalid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    because of which the provision exceeds the Commonwealth’s legislative power; but\n    (b) also has at least one application (a valid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    that, if it were the provision’s only application, would be within the Commonwealth’s legislative power;\n  it is the Parliament’s intention that the provision is not to have the invalid application, but is to have every valid application.\n  (2) This section applies to a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act, whether the provision is enacted or made before, on or after the commencement of this section.\n\n#### 58 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed by the rules; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) amend this Act.","sortOrder":32},{"sectionNumber":"25","sectionType":"section","heading":"Delegation","content":"#### 25 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to the following:\n    (a) the Secretary;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (c) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct).\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (4) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to any Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (6) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Australian Border Force Commissioner.","sortOrder":33},{"sectionNumber":"26","sectionType":"section","heading":"Directions—administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force","content":"#### 26 Directions—administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in connection with the administration and control of the operations of the Australian Border Force:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by persons mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a person;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a person;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (5) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (5) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (6) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (7) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (8) If a person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (4) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the person is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the person or expose the person to a penalty.\n  (9) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the person in any proceedings.\n  (10) Subsection (9) has effect subject to section 40.","sortOrder":34},{"sectionNumber":"27","sectionType":"section","heading":"Directions—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth","content":"#### 27 Directions—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, give directions to the following persons in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those persons under a law of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Compliance with directions\n  (3) A person mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) or (b) must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (4) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (5) This section does not limit any other power of the Australian Border Force Commissioner to give directions to any person.","sortOrder":35},{"sectionNumber":"Part 3","sectionType":"part","heading":"Resignation from the Department","content":"## Part 3—Resignation from the Department","sortOrder":36},{"sectionNumber":"28","sectionType":"section","heading":"Simplified outline of this Part","content":"#### 28 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An APS employee in the Department must give at least 14 days’ notice of his or her resignation from the Department.\n\n• If an APS employee in the Department resigns in circumstances where the employee may have engaged in serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may delay the employee’s resignation by up to 90 days to allow further investigation of that conduct.","sortOrder":37},{"sectionNumber":"29","sectionType":"section","heading":"Resignation—general","content":"#### 29 Resignation—general\n\n  (1) A person may resign as an APS employee in the Department if, and only if:\n    (a) he or she gives written notice to the Secretary of his or her resignation; and\n    (b) the notice specifies, in accordance with subsection (2), the day his or her resignation is to take effect.\n  (2) The day specified in a notice under paragraph (1)(a) must not:\n    (a) be earlier than 14 days, or such shorter period as the Secretary allows; or\n    (b) be later than 4 months;\n  after the day on which the notice is given to the Secretary.\n  (3) This section is subject to section 30.","sortOrder":38},{"sectionNumber":"30","sectionType":"section","heading":"Resignation in anticipation of termination of employment","content":"#### 30 Resignation in anticipation of termination of employment\n\n  (1) This section applies if:\n    (a) an APS employee in the Department gives the Secretary written notice of the employee’s resignation under paragraph 29(1)(a); and\n    (b) either:\n    (i) the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee has engaged in serious misconduct and the Secretary is considering terminating the employee’s employment; or\n    (ii) the employee is being investigated for serious misconduct and the Secretary is not in a position to decide whether to terminate the employee’s employment because the findings of the investigation are not yet known.\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by written notice given to the APS employee, substitute a day, no later than 90 days after the day specified in the employee’s notice of resignation, as the day on which the employee’s resignation is to take effect.\n  (3) Subsection (2) has effect subject to subsection (7).\n  Multiple notices\n  (4) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may give more than one notice under subsection (2) to the APS employee in relation to the notice of resignation.\n  Timing of first notice\n  (5) To be effective, the first notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation must be given to the APS employee before the day specified in the notice of resignation.\n  Employee’s resignation takes effect or employee’s employment terminated\n  (6) The Secretary must, on or before the day substituted in the most recent notice given under subsection (2) in relation to the notice of resignation:\n    (a) notify the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect; or\n    (b) terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (7) If under paragraph (6)(a) the Secretary notifies the APS employee that the employee’s resignation takes effect, the employee’s resignation takes effect on the day of that notification.","sortOrder":39},{"sectionNumber":"Part 4","sectionType":"part","heading":"Termination of employment in the Department for serious misconduct","content":"## Part 4—Termination of employment in the Department for serious misconduct","sortOrder":40},{"sectionNumber":"31","sectionType":"section","heading":"Simplified outline of this Part","content":"#### 31 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• If the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour amounts to serious misconduct, the Secretary or the Commissioner may make a declaration to that effect.\n\n• The effect of the declaration is that provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, will not apply to the APS employee.","sortOrder":41},{"sectionNumber":"32","sectionType":"section","heading":"Termination of employment for serious misconduct","content":"#### 32 Termination of employment for serious misconduct\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Secretary terminates the employment of an APS employee in the Department and the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner reasonably believes that the employee’s conduct or behaviour or any part of it:\n    (a) amounts to serious misconduct by the APS employee; and\n    (b) is having, or is likely to have, a damaging effect on:\n    (i) the professional self‑respect or morale of some or all of the APS employees in the Department; or\n    (ii) the reputation of the Department with the public or any section of the public, with an Australian or overseas government or with a person or body to whom information may be disclosed under Part 6.\n\n> Note: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department.\n\n  (2) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may make a written declaration that he or she has the belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee.\n  Timing of declaration\n  (3) A declaration under subsection (2) must be made within 24 hours of the Secretary’s decision to terminate the APS employee’s employment.\n  Copy of declaration to be given to APS employee\n  (4) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Secretary or the Commissioner must give the APS employee a copy of the declaration.\n  Effect of declaration on Fair Work Act\n  (5) If the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner makes the declaration for the APS employee, the Fair Work Act 2009 (other than Part 3‑1 and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) the termination of the APS employee’s employment; or\n    (b) the making of the declaration.\n\n> Note 1: This means, for example, that the provisions of the Fair Work Act 2009 dealing with unfair dismissal, and notice of termination or payment in lieu, do not apply in relation to the APS employee.\n\n> Note 2: Part 3‑1 of the Fair Work Act 2009 deals with general protections, and Division 9 of Part 3‑3 of that Act deals with payments relating to periods of industrial action.\n\n  (6) To avoid doubt, subsection (5) applies despite section 8 of the Public Service Act 1999.\n  Report to Minister\n  (7) The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner must give the Minister a written report containing the following, as soon as practicable after making the declaration:\n    (a) the grounds for the Secretary’s or Commissioner’s belief referred to in subsection (1) in relation to the APS employee;\n    (b) the nature and findings of any investigation of, or inquiry into, the APS employee’s conduct or behaviour;\n    (c) details of any other matter the Secretary or Commissioner considers relevant.\n  Declaration not a legislative instrument\n  (8) A declaration under subsection (2) is not a legislative instrument.","sortOrder":42},{"sectionNumber":"Part 5","sectionType":"part","heading":"Alcohol and drug tests","content":"## Part 5—Alcohol and drug tests","sortOrder":43},{"sectionNumber":"33","sectionType":"section","heading":"Simplified outline of this Part","content":"#### 33 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• Immigration and Border Protection workers may be required to undergo an alcohol screening test, an alcohol breath test, an alcohol blood test or a prohibited drug test.","sortOrder":44},{"sectionNumber":"34","sectionType":"section","heading":"Alcohol screening test—suspicion that Immigration and Border Protection worker under the influence of alcohol","content":"#### 34 Alcohol screening test—suspicion that Immigration and Border Protection worker under the influence of alcohol\n\n  (1) An authorised person may require an Immigration and Border Protection worker to undergo an alcohol screening test if:\n    (a) the worker is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; and\n    (b) the authorised person reasonably suspects that the worker is under the influence of alcohol.\n  Compliance with requirement\n  (2) The worker must comply with a requirement given to him or her under subsection (1).\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (2) of this section.\n\n  Return to duties\n  (3) If the result of the alcohol screening test shows that alcohol is not present in the worker’s breath, he or she may return to his or her duties immediately.\n  Relationship with section 35\n  (4) This section does not limit section 35.","sortOrder":45},{"sectionNumber":"35","sectionType":"section","heading":"Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—general","content":"#### 35 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—general\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker who is in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Blood sample if alcohol breath test indicates presence of alcohol\n  (2) If:\n    (a) the worker undergoes an alcohol breath test in accordance with a direction under subsection (1); and\n    (b) the alcohol breath test indicates the presence of alcohol;\n  the worker may provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (3) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (3) of this section.","sortOrder":46},{"sectionNumber":"36","sectionType":"section","heading":"Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—certain incidents","content":"#### 36 Alcohol screening, breath or blood test or prohibited drug test—certain incidents\n\n  (1) An authorised person may give an Immigration and Border Protection worker a written direction requiring the worker to do one or more of the following if subsection (2) or (3) applies:\n    (a) undergo an alcohol screening test;\n    (b) undergo an alcohol breath test;\n    (c) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Person killed or seriously injured in an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel or while detained\n  (2) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) one of the following applies:\n    (i) a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of an incident involving a motor vehicle or vessel;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is held in custody in relation to an arrest under the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958 or the Maritime Powers Act 2013 or otherwise detained under any of those Acts;\n    (iii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured while the person is an unauthorised maritime arrival and is being taken to a regional processing country under section 198AD of the Migration Act 1958; and\n    (b) the worker is directly involved in the incident in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Person killed or seriously injured by a firearm discharging or physical force\n  (3) This subsection applies if:\n    (a) all of the following apply:\n    (i) the worker is an officer authorised to carry arms within the meaning of section 189A of the Customs Act 1901;\n    (ii) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the discharge of a firearm by the worker;\n    (iii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker; or\n    (b) both of the following apply:\n    (i) an incident occurs in which a person is killed or seriously injured as a result of the application of physical force by the worker;\n    (ii) the incident occurs in the course of the worker performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Direction to be given as soon as practicable after the incident\n  (4) A direction under subsection (1) must be given as soon as practicable after the incident concerned and may be given whether or not the worker is still performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Provision of blood or body sample while in hospital\n  (5) If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is involved in an incident referred to in subsection (2) or (3); and\n    (b) the worker attends or is admitted to a hospital for examination or treatment because of the incident;\n  an authorised person may give the worker a written direction requiring the worker to do either or both of the following:\n    (c) provide a sample of his or her blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test;\n    (d) provide a body sample of a kind specified in the direction for a prohibited drug test.\n  Compliance with direction\n  (6) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction given to him or her under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (6) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (6) of this section.","sortOrder":47},{"sectionNumber":"37","sectionType":"section","heading":"Performing duties on board a vessel","content":"#### 37 Performing duties on board a vessel\n\n  If:\n    (a) an Immigration and Border Protection worker is on board a vessel throughout a period (the onboard period); and\n    (b) the vessel is under the command of an officer of Customs (within the meaning of the Customs Act 1901); and\n    (c) at any time during the onboard period, the worker performs duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n  the worker is taken, for the purposes of this Part, to be in the course of performing his or her duties as an Immigration and Border Protection worker throughout the onboard period.","sortOrder":48},{"sectionNumber":"38","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conduct of tests and provision of samples to be in accordance with the rules","content":"#### 38 Conduct of tests and provision of samples to be in accordance with the rules\n\n  Conduct of tests\n  (1) An alcohol screening test, alcohol breath test, alcohol blood test or prohibited drug test under section 34, 35 or 36 is to be conducted in accordance with the rules.\n  Provision of samples\n  (2) A sample of blood for the purpose of an alcohol blood test under section 35 or 36, or a body sample for the purpose of a prohibited drug test under that section, is to be provided in accordance with the rules.","sortOrder":49},{"sectionNumber":"39","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rules for purposes of this Part","content":"#### 39 Rules for purposes of this Part\n\n  For the purposes of sections 34, 35 and 36, the rules may make provision for and in relation to the following:\n    (a) the authorisation of persons:\n    (i) to conduct alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests for the purpose of those sections; and\n    (ii) to operate equipment for that purpose;\n    (b) the provision of samples of blood for the purpose of alcohol blood tests under those sections;\n    (c) the provision of body samples for the purpose of prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (d) the conduct of alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (e) the devices used in conducting alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections, including the calibration, inspection and testing of those devices;\n    (f) in the case of alcohol blood tests and prohibited drug tests—the accreditation of persons to conduct analyses in connection with such tests;\n    (g) the procedure for the handling, analysis, storage and destruction of:\n    (i) samples of blood taken in connection with alcohol blood tests under those sections; or\n    (ii) body samples taken in connection with prohibited drug tests under those sections;\n    (h) the giving of the test results in certificates or other documents and the evidentiary effect of such certificates or other documents;\n    (i) the confidentiality and disclosure of the test results;\n    (j) the keeping and destruction of records in relation to alcohol screening tests, alcohol breath tests, alcohol blood tests or prohibited drug tests under those sections.","sortOrder":50},{"sectionNumber":"40","sectionType":"section","heading":"Admissibility of test results etc. in legal proceedings","content":"#### 40 Admissibility of test results etc. in legal proceedings\n\n  The following:\n    (a) a certificate or other document recording the results of a test conducted under section 34, 35 or 36 in relation to an Immigration and Border Protection worker;\n    (b) any other information, answer to a question or document relevant to conducting such a test;\n  are not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings other than the following:\n    (c) proceedings in relation to a decision of the Secretary to terminate the employment or engagement of the worker;\n    (d) proceedings under the Safety, Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 1988;\n    (e) proceedings in tort against the Commonwealth that are instituted by the worker.","sortOrder":51},{"sectionNumber":"Part 6","sectionType":"part","heading":"Secrecy and disclosure provisions","content":"## Part 6—Secrecy and disclosure provisions","sortOrder":52},{"sectionNumber":"41","sectionType":"section","heading":"Simplified outline of this Part","content":"#### 41 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• An entrusted person must not make a record of or disclose Immigration and Border Protection information unless the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by a provision of this Part, is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person or is required or authorised by law or by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.","sortOrder":53},{"sectionNumber":"42","sectionType":"section","heading":"Secrecy","content":"#### 42 Secrecy\n\n  (1) A person commits an offence if:\n    (a) the person is, or has been, an entrusted person; and\n    (b) the person makes a record of, or discloses, information; and\n    (c) the information is Immigration and Border Protection information.\n\nPenalty: Imprisonment for 2 years.\n\n  (1A) If the information is Immigration and Border Protection information because of the operation of subsection 4(5) or (6), the fault element of recklessness for paragraph (1)(c) of this section is taken to be satisfied if the person is reckless as to whether or not whichever of the following applies:\n    (a) the information has a security classification;\n    (b) the information originated with, or was received from, an intelligence agency;\n    (c) the information was provided to the Commonwealth pursuant to a statutory obligation or otherwise by compulsion of law.\n\n> Note: Recklessness is the fault element for paragraph (1)(c)—see section 5.6 of the Criminal Code.\n\n  Exception\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the making of the record or disclosure is authorised by section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49; or\n    (b) the making of the record or disclosure is in the course of the person’s employment or service as an entrusted person; or\n    (c) the making of the record or disclosure is required or authorised by or under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory; or\n    (d) the making of the record or disclosure is required by an order or direction of a court or tribunal.\n\n> Note: A defendant bears an evidential burden in relation to a matter in subsection (2) (see subsection 13.3(3) of the Criminal Code).\n\n  Geographical jurisdiction\n  (3) Section 15.2 of the Criminal Code (extended geographical jurisdiction—category B) applies to an offence against subsection (1).","sortOrder":54},{"sectionNumber":"43","sectionType":"section","heading":"Records or disclosure for the purposes of this Act or the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022","content":"#### 43 Records or disclosure for the purposes of this Act or the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022\n\n  An entrusted person may make a record of, or disclose, Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of this Act or a legislative instrument under this Act; or\n    (b) the making of the record, or disclosure, is for the purposes of the National Anti‑Corruption Commission Act 2022 or regulations under that Act.","sortOrder":55},{"sectionNumber":"44","sectionType":"section","heading":"Disclosure to certain bodies and persons","content":"#### 44 Disclosure to certain bodies and persons\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a body or person mentioned in subsection (4) for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will enable or assist that body or person to perform or exercise any of the functions, duties or powers of that body or person; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of the information to that body or person is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) if, under subsection (6), that body or person is required to comply with a condition before the disclosure of the information—that body or person has complied with that condition.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Bodies and persons\n  (4) For the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), the bodies and persons are the following:\n    (a) a Department, agency or authority of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (b) the Australian Federal Police;\n    (c) a police force or police service of a State or Territory;\n    (d) a coroner;\n    (e) any other person who holds an office or appointment under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (f) any other body or person prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n  (5) Paragraph (4)(f) does not apply in relation to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (6) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a body or person:\n    (a) before Immigration and Border Protection information is disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2); or\n    (b) in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to that body or person under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (7) An instrument under subsection (3) or (6) is not a legislative instrument.","sortOrder":56},{"sectionNumber":"45","sectionType":"section","heading":"Disclosure in accordance with agreements","content":"#### 45 Disclosure in accordance with agreements\n\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is not personal information\n  (1) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that does not contain personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Immigration and Border Protection information that is personal information\n  (2) An entrusted person authorised under subsection (3) may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that contains personal information, to a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation for a purpose mentioned in section 46 if:\n    (a) the Secretary is satisfied that the information will be used in accordance with an agreement to which subsection (4) applies; and\n    (b) the Secretary is satisfied that the disclosure of that information to that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation is necessary for the purpose mentioned in section 46; and\n    (c) that foreign country, agency, authority or organisation has undertaken not to use or further disclose the information except in accordance with the agreement or otherwise as required or authorised by law.\n  Authorisation\n  (3) The Secretary may, by writing, authorise an entrusted person for the purposes of subsections (1) and (2).\n  Agreements\n  (4) This subsection applies to an agreement that is in force between:\n    (a) the Commonwealth or an agency or authority of the Commonwealth; and\n    (b) one or more of the following:\n    (i) a foreign country;\n    (ii) an agency or authority of a foreign country;\n    (iii) a public international organisation.\n  Conditions\n  (5) The Secretary may, by writing, impose conditions to be complied with by a foreign country, an agency or authority of a foreign country or a public international organisation in relation to Immigration and Border Protection information disclosed to it under subsection (1) or (2).\n  Instruments are not legislative instruments\n  (6) An instrument under subsection (3) or (5) is not a legislative instrument.","sortOrder":57},{"sectionNumber":"46","sectionType":"section","heading":"Permitted purposes","content":"#### 46 Permitted purposes\n\n  For the purposes of sections 44 and 45, the purposes are the following:\n    (a) the administration or enforcement of a law of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country that relates to:\n    (i) criminal law; or\n    (ii) a law imposing a pecuniary penalty or providing for the forfeiture of property;\n    (b) in relation to a law referred to in paragraph (a), the prevention of crime, or the detection or analysis of criminal conduct, in respect of that law;\n    (c) assisting a coronial inquiry, coronial investigation or coronial inquest under a law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory;\n    (d) a purpose relating to the protection of public health, or the prevention or elimination of risks to the life or safety of an individual or a group of individuals;\n    (e) the collection and verification of statistics for the purposes of the Census and Statistics Act 1905 or the performance of the functions of the Australian Bureau of Statistics as set out in section 6 of the Australian Bureau of Statistics Act 1975;\n    (f) the protection of the public revenue of the Commonwealth, a State, a Territory or a foreign country;\n    (g) a purpose relating to matters covered by the Customs Act 1901, the Migration Act 1958, the Maritime Powers Act 2013, the Australian Citizenship Act 2007, the Immigration (Guardianship of Children) Act 1946, the Education Services for Overseas Students Act 2000 or the Biosecurity Act 2015;\n    (h) any of the following:\n    (i) assisting in establishing the identity of a particular person;\n    (ii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was an Australian citizen at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (iii) establishing whether or not a particular person is or was the holder of a particular kind or class of visa under the Migration Act 1958 at a particular time or in a particular period;\n    (i) a purpose relating to immigration, quarantine or border control between Australia and a foreign country;\n    (j) the provision of services to persons who are not Australian citizens;\n    (ja) a purpose relating to the performance of the Australian Crime Commission’s function covered by paragraph 7A(da) of the Australian Crime Commission Act 2002;\n    (k) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 17 of the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation Act 1979;\n    (l) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 6 of the Intelligence Services Act 2001;\n    (la) a purpose relating to the performance of functions under section 7 of the Office of National Intelligence Act 2018;\n    (m) the administration of the National Anti‑Doping Scheme (within the meaning of the Sport Integrity Australia Act 2020);\n    (n) the administration or enforcement of laws with respect to commerce:\n    (i) between a State and another State; or\n    (ii) between a State and a Territory; or\n    (iii) between a Territory and another Territory; or\n    (iv) between Australia and another country; or\n    (v) within a State or Territory;\n    (na) a purpose relating to the inter‑country adoption of a child;\n    (nb) a purpose relating to the protection of national security or the defence of Australia;\n    (nc) a purpose relating to locating a missing person;\n    (o) a purpose prescribed by the rules.","sortOrder":58},{"sectionNumber":"47","sectionType":"section","heading":"Disclosure with consent","content":"#### 47 Disclosure with consent\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information that relates to the affairs of a person or body if:\n    (a) the person or body has consented to the disclosure; and\n    (b) the disclosure is in accordance with that consent.","sortOrder":59},{"sectionNumber":"48","sectionType":"section","heading":"Disclosure to reduce threat to life or health","content":"#### 48 Disclosure to reduce threat to life or health\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if:\n    (a) the entrusted person reasonably believes that the disclosure is necessary to prevent or lessen a serious threat to the life or health of an individual; and\n    (b) the disclosure is for the purposes of preventing or lessening that threat.","sortOrder":60},{"sectionNumber":"49","sectionType":"section","heading":"Disclosure of publicly available information","content":"#### 49 Disclosure of publicly available information\n\n  An entrusted person may disclose Immigration and Border Protection information if it has already been lawfully made available to the public.","sortOrder":61},{"sectionNumber":"50","sectionType":"section","heading":"Exceptions operate independently","content":"#### 50 Exceptions operate independently\n\n  Sections 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 and 49 do not limit each other.","sortOrder":62},{"sectionNumber":"50A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Information must be certified as appropriately classified before proceedings can be initiated","content":"#### 50A Information must be certified as appropriately classified before proceedings can be initiated\n\n  If, an offence against section 42 relates to information that has a security classification, proceedings for the offence must not be initiated unless the Secretary has certified that it is appropriate that the information had a security classification at the time of the conduct that is alleged to constitute the offence.","sortOrder":63},{"sectionNumber":"51","sectionType":"section","heading":"Interaction with Privacy Act","content":"#### 51 Interaction with Privacy Act\n\n  For the purposes of the Privacy Act 1988:\n    (a) the making of a record, in accordance with section 43, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a use that is authorised by this Act; and\n    (b) the disclosure, in accordance with section 43, 44, 45, 47, 48 or 49, of Immigration and Border Protection information, to the extent that the Immigration and Border Protection information contains personal information, is taken to be a disclosure that is authorised by this Act.","sortOrder":64},{"sectionNumber":"Part 7","sectionType":"part","heading":"Other matters","content":"## Part 7—Other matters","sortOrder":65},{"sectionNumber":"52","sectionType":"section","heading":"Simplified outline of this Part","content":"#### 52 Simplified outline of this Part\n\n• The Secretary and the Comptroller‑General of Customs can delegate their functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary may give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers to do with the administration and control of the Department or the performance of functions or exercise of powers by such workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n\n• The Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the engagement of a person as a consultant or contractor if the person fails to comply with a direction under this Act.\n\n• The Minister may make rules for the purposes of this Act.","sortOrder":66},{"sectionNumber":"53","sectionType":"section","heading":"Delegation by Secretary","content":"#### 53 Delegation by Secretary\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth to:\n    (a) the Australian Border Force Commissioner; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to:\n    (a) section 30 (resignation in anticipation of termination of employment); or\n    (b) section 32 (termination of employment for serious misconduct); or\n    (c) the Migration Act 1958 or an instrument under that Act.\n\n> Note: Section 496 of the Migration Act 1958 deals with delegation by the Secretary of his or her powers under that Act.\n\n  Directions to delegates\n  (3) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  Subdelegation by Australian Border Force Commissioner\n  (4) If the Australian Border Force Commissioner is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Commissioner may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to the following:\n    (a) a person who is covered by paragraph (a) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1) and who is in the Australian Border Force;\n    (b) a person who is covered by paragraph (b), (c), (d), (e) or (f) of that definition and whose services are made available to, or who is performing services for, the Australian Border Force.\n  (5) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (4), comply with any written directions of the Australian Border Force Commissioner.\n  (6) The Australian Border Force Commissioner must not give directions under subsection (5) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (3) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (7) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (4) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Secretary.","sortOrder":67},{"sectionNumber":"54","sectionType":"section","heading":"Delegation by Comptroller‑General of Customs","content":"#### 54 Delegation by Comptroller‑General of Customs\n\n  (1) The Comptroller‑General of Customs may, by writing, delegate any of his or her functions or powers under a law of the Commonwealth (other than section 179, 179K or 179L of the Customs Act 1901) to:\n    (a) the Secretary; or\n    (b) an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  Directions to delegates\n  (2) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (1), comply with any written directions of the Comptroller‑General of Customs.\n  Subdelegation by Secretary\n  (3) If the Secretary is delegated functions or powers under subsection (1), the Secretary may, by writing, delegate any of those functions or powers to an Immigration and Border Protection worker.\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must, in performing functions or exercising powers under a delegation under subsection (3), comply with any written directions of the Secretary.\n  (5) The Secretary must not give directions under subsection (4) in relation to particular functions or powers that are inconsistent with any directions given under subsection (2) in relation to those functions or powers.\n  (6) A function that is performed or a power that is exercised by an Immigration and Border Protection worker under a delegation under subsection (3) is taken, for the purposes of the law referred to in subsection (1), to have been performed or exercised by the Comptroller‑General of Customs.","sortOrder":68},{"sectionNumber":"55","sectionType":"section","heading":"Directions by Secretary—administration and control of the Department","content":"#### 55 Directions by Secretary—administration and control of the Department\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in connection with the administration and control of the Department.\n  Essential qualifications\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the essential qualifications for Immigration and Border Protection workers for performing their duties.\n\n> Note 1: See section 23 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the reduction in the classification of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n> Note 2: See section 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the termination of the employment of an APS employee in the Department if the employee lacks, or has lost, an essential qualification for performing his or her duties.\n\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), essential qualifications may have one or more of the following components:\n    (a) physical or psychological health or fitness;\n    (b) professional or technical qualifications;\n    (c) learning and development requirements;\n    (d) security clearances.\n  Organisational suitability assessments\n  (4) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to organisational suitability assessments.\n  Reporting of serious misconduct or criminal activity\n  (5) Without limiting subsection (1), directions under that subsection may relate to the reporting by Immigration and Border Protection workers of the following:\n    (a) serious misconduct by such a worker;\n    (b) criminal activity involving such a worker;\n  where the serious misconduct or criminal activity affects, or is likely to affect, the operations, responsibilities or reputation of the Department.\n  Relationship with directions under section 26\n  (6) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 26 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (7) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (7) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (8) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (9) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.\n  Self‑incrimination\n  (10) If an Immigration and Border Protection worker is required by a direction of the kind mentioned in subsection (5) to give information, answer a question or produce a document, the worker is not excused from:\n    (a) giving the information; or\n    (b) answering the question; or\n    (c) producing the document;\n  on the ground that the information, the answer to the question or the production of the document might tend to incriminate the worker or expose the worker to a penalty.\n  (11) However:\n    (a) the information given, the answer given or the document produced; or\n    (b) giving the information, answering the question or producing the document;\n  is not admissible in evidence against the worker in any proceedings.\n  (12) Subsection (11) has effect subject to section 40.","sortOrder":69},{"sectionNumber":"56","sectionType":"section","heading":"Directions by Secretary—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth","content":"#### 56 Directions by Secretary—performance of functions or exercise of powers under laws of the Commonwealth\n\n  (1) The Secretary may, by writing, give directions to Immigration and Border Protection workers in relation to the performance of functions, or the exercise of powers, by those workers under a law of the Commonwealth.\n  (2) However, subsection (1) does not apply in relation to the Migration Act 1958.\n\n> Note: Section 499 of the Migration Act 1958 allows the Minister to give directions to a person or body about the performance of functions or the exercise of powers under that Act.\n\n  Relationship with directions under section 27\n  (3) A direction under this section prevails over a direction under section 27 to the extent of any inconsistency.\n  Compliance with directions\n  (4) An Immigration and Border Protection worker must comply with a direction under this section.\n\n> Note 1: See subsection 13(4) and sections 15, 28 and 29 of the Public Service Act 1999 for the consequences of an APS employee in the Department not complying with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n> Note 2: See section 57 of this Act for the termination of a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor, or for the arranging of a person to cease to perform services for the Department, if the person does not comply with subsection (4) of this section.\n\n  Directions are not legislative instruments\n  (5) A direction under this section is not a legislative instrument.\n  No limit on other powers to give directions\n  (6) This section does not limit any other power of the Secretary to give directions to any person.","sortOrder":70},{"sectionNumber":"57","sectionType":"section","heading":"Termination of engagement of consultant or contractor","content":"#### 57 Termination of engagement of consultant or contractor\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a person is covered by paragraph (e) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) the person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or subsection (2) of this section or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may terminate the person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a person (the affected person) is covered by paragraph (f) of the definition of Immigration and Border Protection worker in subsection 4(1); and\n    (b) in connection with that person, paragraph (e) of that definition covers a person (the consultant/contractor); and\n    (c) the affected person fails to comply with a direction under section 26, 27, 35, 36, 55 or 56 or with a requirement under subsection 34(1);\n  the Secretary or the Australian Border Force Commissioner may, by writing, direct the consultant/contractor to arrange for the affected person to cease to perform services for the Department.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not limit the circumstances in which a person’s engagement as a consultant or contractor may be terminated.","sortOrder":71},{"sectionNumber":"57A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Act not to apply so as to exceed Commonwealth power","content":"#### 57A Act not to apply so as to exceed Commonwealth power\n\n  (1) If a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act:\n    (a) would, apart from this section, have an application (an invalid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    because of which the provision exceeds the Commonwealth’s legislative power; but\n    (b) also has at least one application (a valid application) in relation to:\n    (i) one or more particular persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases; or\n    (ii) one or more classes (however defined or determined) of persons, things, matters, places, circumstances or cases;\n    that, if it were the provision’s only application, would be within the Commonwealth’s legislative power;\n  it is the Parliament’s intention that the provision is not to have the invalid application, but is to have every valid application.\n  (2) This section applies to a provision of this Act, or of an instrument made under this Act, whether the provision is enacted or made before, on or after the commencement of this section.","sortOrder":72},{"sectionNumber":"58","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rules","content":"#### 58 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed by the rules; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) amend this Act.","sortOrder":73}],"analysis":{"summary":{"complexity_score":8,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The Act was originally presented as administrative legislation to establish the structural and governance framework for the ABF. However, its scope materially expanded through broad secrecy provisions. Notably, the secrecy regime was wide enough to potentially criminalise ABF workers — including healthcare contractors working in immigration detention — who disclosed information about the treatment of asylum seekers. This created significant controversy, as it appeared to extend well beyond administrative governance into suppressing legitimate public interest disclosures. Subsequent amendments (including referencing the National Anti-Corruption Commission Act 2022) reflect ongoing scope evolution beyond the original border management framework intent."},"complexity_factors":["Heavily cross-references multiple other Commonwealth statutes (Customs Act 1901, Migration Act 1958, Maritime Powers Act 2013, Fair Work Act 2009, Public Service Act 1999, Privacy Act 1988, Public Governance Performance and Accountability Act 2013), requiring knowledge of all those laws to fully understand this one","Extremely broad and multi-layered definition of 'Immigration and Border Protection information' with six categories plus ministerial power to add more by instrument","Multiple overlapping definitions of who qualifies as an 'Immigration and Border Protection worker', including contractors, subcontractors, seconded foreign government officials, and employees of public international organisations","Complex dual-role structure where the ABF Commissioner simultaneously holds the office of Comptroller-General of Customs, with different powers attaching to each role","Layered delegation and subdelegation chains (Commissioner delegates to Secretary who subdelegates to workers, and vice versa) with different compliance obligations at each level","Secrecy offence provisions with extended geographical jurisdiction (applying outside Australia) and complex fault element (recklessness) rules for specific categories of information","Interaction between this Act's misconduct termination regime and the Fair Work Act 2009 protections creates a complex carve-out that requires understanding employment law to assess","Significant ministerial and executive discretion throughout (Minister can classify additional information types by instrument, Secretary can impose conditions on disclosure recipients) with limited parliamentary oversight for some instruments","Self-incrimination provisions with conditional admissibility rules that vary depending on the type of proceeding, creating interpretive complexity","Extraterritorial application adds jurisdictional complexity, particularly for workers operating on vessels or in foreign countries"],"plain_english_summary":"## Australian Border Force Act 2015 — What It Does and Why It Matters\n\n### What is this law?\nThis Act creates the **Australian Border Force (ABF)** — the government agency responsible for managing Australia's borders, including customs, immigration enforcement, and maritime patrols. Think of it as the founding rulebook for the ABF and the people who work in it.\n\n### Who does it affect?\n- **ABF officers and staff** (including contractors and seconded workers from other agencies)\n- **People entering or leaving Australia** (indirectly, through the powers it gives ABF officers)\n- **Whistleblowers and journalists** (through strict secrecy rules)\n- **Detainees** (through rules about incidents involving people in custody)\n\n### Key things this law does:\n\n**1. Creates the ABF Commissioner**\nA senior official (appointed by the Governor-General, Australia's head of state representative) who runs the day-to-day operations of the ABF. This person is also automatically the \"Comptroller-General of Customs\" — a role that carries significant powers under Australia's customs laws.\n\n**2. Drug and alcohol testing**\nABF workers can be required to take breath tests, blood tests, or drug tests at work. If you're on a vessel performing border duties, you're considered \"on duty\" the entire time you're on board. Test results generally **cannot be used against you in criminal proceedings** — but they can be used in workplace disciplinary processes.\n\n**3. Strict secrecy rules**\nThis is one of the most controversial parts of the law. ABF workers — including contractors — face **up to 2 years in prison** for disclosing certain \"Immigration and Border Protection information\" without authorisation. The definition of protected information is very broad, covering:\n- Anything that could affect national security\n- Information that could hinder law enforcement\n- Information shared in confidence\n- Even information the Minister decides should be kept secret\n\nThis law was criticised because it could prevent ABF workers from speaking publicly about the treatment of asylum seekers in detention — even to doctors or lawyers.\n\n**4. Misconduct and seniority powers**\nIf a worker is suspected of serious misconduct (corruption, abuse of power, criminal behaviour), their resignation can be **delayed by up to 90 days** to allow investigation. Workers dismissed for serious misconduct lose access to standard **Fair Work Act** protections (the law that normally protects employees from unfair dismissal).\n\n**5. Directions and delegation**\nThe ABF Commissioner and the Secretary of the Department can issue binding instructions to all ABF workers. Workers must follow these directions or face consequences including termination.\n\n**6. Information sharing**\nDespite the secrecy rules, the law allows controlled sharing of information with other government agencies, foreign countries (under formal agreements), coroners, and bodies like the AFP — for purposes like law enforcement, public health, and border control."},"issue_detection":{"absurdities":[{"type":"circular_definition","section":"4(1) - definition of 'Australian Border Force Commissioner'","severity":"medium","reasoning":"A definition that uses the term being defined as part of the definition is logically void. It tells the reader nothing about what the Australian Border Force Commissioner is — only that it is 'the Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force'. The actual substance (an appointed statutory officeholder) must be inferred from section 9 and 11, not from the definition itself.","confidence":0.95,"description":"Circular definition: 'Australian Border Force Commissioner means the Australian Border Force Commissioner of the Australian Border Force.' The term is defined by reference to itself, providing no actual meaning."},{"type":"self_contradicting","section":"4(6)","severity":"high","reasoning":"The definition of 'duty of confidence' in s4(1) refers to obligations under common law or equity. A foundational principle of confidentiality is that information disclosed under compulsion of law does not attract equitable or common law duties of confidence (see Woolgar v Chief Constable of Sussex Police [1999]). By deeming such information to found a confidence action, s4(6) directly contradicts the legal framework it purports to invoke, creating a statutory fiction that is logically impossible under the very legal doctrine referenced.","confidence":0.85,"description":"Information compulsorily provided to the Commonwealth by law is deemed to found a breach of confidence action — even though a duty of confidence cannot generally arise over information disclosed under legal compulsion, as compelled disclosure negates the necessary element of voluntary confidential communication."},{"type":"other","section":"4(5)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"The classification of a document is an administrative act that need not reflect genuine sensitivity. By deeming all classified information to prejudice security/defence/international relations, the Act creates an irrebuttable presumption based on bureaucratic labelling rather than substantive harm. This allows the secrecy regime to be expanded arbitrarily through the classification system without parliamentary oversight.","confidence":0.8,"description":"Any information that has 'a security classification' is deemed to prejudice security, defence or international relations if disclosed — regardless of the actual content or sensitivity of the classified information. This means a trivially classified document (e.g. an administrative memo marked 'PROTECTED') automatically meets the threshold without any genuine nexus to national security."},{"type":"self_contradicting","section":"42(1) and 42(2)(b)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"The exemption for disclosures in the course of employment is so broad it substantially hollows out the prohibition for current workers, while the prohibition remains fully operative for former entrusted persons. This creates an asymmetry: a current worker can disclose information while on duty with impunity under s42(2)(b), but the same disclosure by a former worker could constitute a criminal offence. The utility of the offence against current workers is therefore near-zero.","confidence":0.75,"description":"The secrecy offence in s42(1) prohibits disclosure of Immigration and Border Protection information, but s42(2)(b) exempts any disclosure 'in the course of the person's employment or service as an entrusted person.' Given the extraordinarily broad definition of 'Immigration and Border Protection information' (covering virtually all departmental information), almost any disclosure by a current worker is excepted, while former workers face potential criminal liability for the same disclosure."},{"type":"impossible_compliance","section":"30(2) and 30(6)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"The power to give a notice under s30(2) is shared between Secretary and Commissioner, but s30(6) imposes the obligation to act before the substituted date exclusively on the Secretary. If the Commissioner issues a delay notice but the Secretary fails to act under s30(6), it is unclear whether the resignation automatically takes effect or remains in limbo. The Act does not resolve this gap, potentially leaving employment status uncertain.","confidence":0.72,"description":"Section 30 allows the Secretary or Commissioner to delay an employee's resignation by substituting a later date up to 90 days, but s30(6) then requires the Secretary (not the Commissioner) to either notify the resignation takes effect or terminate employment by that date. The Commissioner can delay resignation but cannot notify it as taking effect — only the Secretary can. This creates an impossible scenario where the Commissioner delays but the Secretary must act."},{"type":"impossible_compliance","section":"32(3)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"The 24-hour window is extremely narrow given that the declaration requires the Secretary or Commissioner to form and document a reasonable belief about serious misconduct — a legally significant finding. In practice this may require legal advice, review of investigation materials, and consultation. Failure to meet the 24-hour deadline means Fair Work Act protections are not displaced, undermining the entire purpose of the provision.","confidence":0.78,"description":"A declaration of serious misconduct under s32(2) must be made 'within 24 hours of the Secretary's decision to terminate.' However, the termination decision and the investigation findings it depends upon may emerge outside business hours, on weekends, or in operationally complex circumstances, making 24-hour compliance practically impossible in many real-world scenarios."},{"type":"self_contradicting","section":"26(8) and 26(9) read with s40","severity":"high","reasoning":"The self-incrimination 'protection' under s26(9) is illusory given s40's carve-out for termination proceedings. The Act compels workers to answer questions about conduct that may be criminal (under pain of disciplinary consequences for non-compliance), then uses those answers in the very proceedings most directly adverse to the worker. The combined effect is to compel self-incrimination for employment-adverse purposes while maintaining only partial legal protection.","confidence":0.88,"description":"Section 26(8)-(9) compels workers to self-incriminate about serious misconduct or criminal activity, then purports to render those answers inadmissible 'in any proceedings.' However s26(10) subjects this to s40, which makes the answers admissible in proceedings relating to termination of employment. Workers are thus compelled to incriminate themselves in materials that can be used to dismiss them, while believing the protection applies broadly."},{"type":"other","section":"4(1) - definition of 'body sample' and s35","severity":"low","reasoning":"The inclusion of 'breath' in the definition of 'body sample' alongside biological fluids and tissue, combined with the prohibited drug test framework, creates theoretical ambiguity about whether breath can be required for drug testing. While the rules under s38-39 may clarify methodology, the statutory definitions do not exclude this possibility and create internal definitional incoherence.","confidence":0.65,"description":"'Body sample' includes 'any human breath,' and a prohibited drug test is defined as a test of a 'body sample' for prohibited drugs. Section 35 allows an authorised person to direct a worker to provide a body sample for a prohibited drug test. This technically means a worker could be directed to provide their breath for a prohibited drug test — but breath tests for drugs are not scientifically standard, and the Act conflates breath (used for alcohol testing) with biological samples used for drug detection."},{"type":"other","section":"50A","severity":"medium","reasoning":"Gatekeeping criminal prosecutions through an executive certification by an interested party is structurally anomalous. The Secretary whose information was allegedly unlawfully disclosed decides whether prosecution can proceed. This could be used to block prosecutions against favoured persons or conversely, in theory, to enable prosecutions of whistleblowers by certifying classification as appropriate even where it was marginal.","confidence":0.73,"description":"Proceedings for an offence under s42 relating to classified information cannot be initiated unless the Secretary certifies the classification was appropriate 'at the time of the conduct.' This creates a situation where the Secretary — a potential victim or interested party in the secrecy breach — controls whether criminal proceedings can commence, raising a structural conflict of interest and potentially enabling the Secretary to shield disclosures by friendly parties."},{"type":"circular_definition","section":"4(1) - definition of 'Immigration and Border Protection worker', paragraph (f)(i)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"Paragraph (f)(i) includes persons employed by a paragraph (f) person. This means a subcontractor of a subcontractor of a subcontractor (and so on, ad infinitum) can qualify as an Immigration and Border Protection worker, provided they are specified in a determination. While the determination requirement provides a practical limit, the logical structure of the definition is self-referential and potentially unlimited in depth.","confidence":0.82,"description":"Paragraph (f) of the definition of 'Immigration and Border Protection worker' applies to a person 'engaged or employed by a person to whom paragraph (e) or this paragraph applies.' The self-reference ('or this paragraph applies') creates a potentially infinite recursive chain of subcontractors all qualifying as Immigration and Border Protection workers, subject only to a determination requirement."}],"contradictions":[{"severity":"high","section_a":"s26(5) - Commissioner's directions prevail over compliance obligations","section_b":"s55(6) - Secretary's directions prevail over Commissioner's directions","confidence":0.85,"description":"Section 26 requires persons to comply with the Commissioner's directions in relation to administration and control of the ABF. Section 55(6) provides that Secretary directions under s55 prevail over Commissioner directions under s26 to the extent of any inconsistency. This means the Commissioner's mandatory compliance obligation (s26(5)) is effectively subordinated to the Secretary, creating a hierarchy where the Commissioner cannot enforce compliance if the Secretary has given a conflicting direction."},{"severity":"high","section_a":"s27(1) - Commissioner may direct on performance of powers under Commonwealth laws","section_b":"s56(3) - Secretary's directions under s56 prevail over Commissioner's directions under s27","confidence":0.88,"description":"The Commissioner has power to direct workers on the performance of functions under Commonwealth law (s27), but the Secretary's equivalent directions (s56) expressly prevail over the Commissioner's to the extent of inconsistency (s56(3)). Combined with s9(2) which gives the Commissioner 'control of the operations of the Australian Border Force,' the Secretary can effectively override the Commissioner's operational directions, contradicting the Commissioner's statutory control function."},{"severity":"medium","section_a":"s9(2) - Commissioner has control of operations of the ABF","section_b":"s23(1) - Minister may give directions to Commissioner about policies and priorities","confidence":0.72,"description":"Section 9(2) vests 'control of the operations of the Australian Border Force' in the Commissioner (under the Minister). Section 23 allows the Minister to give binding written directions about 'policies that should be pursued, or priorities that should be followed' in operations. While s9 says control is 'under the Minister', s23(3) makes those directions mandatory, potentially reducing the Commissioner's 'control' to a purely administrative function with substantive direction coming from the Minister — contradicting the notion of operational independence implied by the statutory structure."},{"severity":"medium","section_a":"s42(1) - offence of disclosure applies to persons who 'have been' entrusted persons","section_b":"s42(2)(b) - exception for disclosure in course of employment or service as an entrusted person","confidence":0.8,"description":"The offence in s42(1) expressly covers former entrusted persons ('is, or has been'). The exception in s42(2)(b) applies only to disclosures 'in the course of the person's employment or service as an entrusted person.' A former worker cannot be 'in the course of employment' and therefore cannot rely on s42(2)(b), even if they are disclosing information for legitimate public interest reasons. This asymmetry means former workers have fewer disclosure options than current workers, yet the same criminal liability."},{"severity":"low","section_a":"s25(2) - Commissioner cannot delegate s30 and s32 functions","section_b":"s30(2) and s32(2) - both the Secretary AND the Commissioner may act under these sections","confidence":0.7,"description":"Section 25(2) prohibits the Commissioner from delegating functions under s30 (resignation delay) and s32 (termination declaration). Yet s30(2) and s32(2) themselves directly confer the relevant powers on both the Secretary and the Commissioner. The non-delegation rule in s25(2) is therefore redundant and potentially misleading — it implies these are Commissioner-only functions that could otherwise be delegated, when in fact the Act directly grants concurrent powers to both officers."},{"severity":"medium","section_a":"s53(2)(c) - Secretary cannot delegate functions under the Migration Act 1958","section_b":"s56(1) and (2) - Secretary can give directions about performance of functions under Commonwealth laws but not Migration Act","confidence":0.67,"description":"Both s53 and s56 carve out the Migration Act from the Secretary's delegation and direction powers respectively. However, s53(4)-(7) allows the ABF Commissioner (as subdelegatee from the Secretary) to further delegate Secretary functions to workers. If the Secretary cannot delegate Migration Act functions under s53(2)(c), but the Commissioner can otherwise subdelegate Secretary-delegated functions, the combined effect creates ambiguity about whether Migration Act functions can reach ABF workers through any pathway under this Act."},{"severity":"low","section_a":"s35(2) - worker 'may' provide blood sample after positive breath test","section_b":"s36(5)(c) - worker must comply with direction to provide blood sample after incident","confidence":0.75,"description":"Under s35(2), providing a blood sample following a positive alcohol breath test is voluntary ('may provide'). Under s36(5)(c), in post-incident circumstances a direction to provide blood can be given and must be complied with under s36(6). This creates an inconsistency where the same type of blood sample is optional in a general testing scenario but compulsory after a serious incident, without clear policy rationale for why voluntariness should differ based on incident involvement rather than test type."},{"severity":"low","section_a":"s4(1) definition of 'Immigration and Border Protection information' para (c) - information endangering life or safety","section_b":"s48 - disclosure permitted to prevent serious threat to life or health","confidence":0.6,"description":"Information that could endanger the life or safety of an individual is classified as protected 'Immigration and Border Protection information' under s4(1)(c). However, s48 permits disclosure of any Immigration and Border Protection information to prevent a serious threat to life or health. This means an entrusted person may disclose information that itself endangers life (and is protected on that basis) in order to prevent a threat to life — using the endangering information as the vehicle for protection, which is logically paradoxical in some scenarios."}]},"kimi_summary":{"_metrics":{"completionTokens":686},"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":7,"scope_assessment":{"changed":false,"description":"The legislation appears consistent with its original purpose of establishing the Australian Border Force, creating the Commissioner position, and implementing associated employment and secrecy frameworks. No significant scope expansion is evident."},"complexity_factors":["Extensive cross-referencing with multiple other Acts (Customs Act 1901, Migration Act 1958, Maritime Powers Act 2013, Fair Work Act 2009, Public Service Act 1999)","Nested definitions: 'Immigration and Border Protection worker' has 6 paragraphs with multiple sub-paragraphs, and 'Immigration and Border Protection information' has 7 categories plus deeming provisions in subsections 4(4)-(7)","Complex delegation chains: Commissioner → Secretary → worker, with direction hierarchies and inconsistency rules (sections 25, 53, 54)","Multiple overlapping direction powers: Commissioner can give directions under sections 26 and 27; Secretary under sections 55 and 56, with precedence rules","Conditional logic in secrecy offences: section 42 has exceptions in subsection (2) that create evidential burdens, plus special recklessness rules in subsection (1A)","Serious misconduct provisions create exceptions to Fair Work Act protections with strict timing requirements (24 hours for declarations)","Self-incrimination protections with carve-outs (sections 26(8)-(10), 55(10)-(12))","Rules-making power in section 58 with explicit prohibitions on creating offences, arrest powers, taxes, or appropriations"],"plain_english_summary":"This Act establishes the **Australian Border Force (ABF)** as a distinct operational arm within the Department of Home Affairs (formerly Immigration and Border Protection), headed by the **Australian Border Force Commissioner**.\n\n**What it does:**\n- Creates the position of Australian Border Force Commissioner, who also serves as **Comptroller-General of Customs** (a historical title with extensive powers under customs law)\n- Gives the Commissioner control over ABF operations, including powers under the Customs Act 1901, Migration Act 1958, and Maritime Powers Act 2013\n- Establishes a comprehensive **secrecy regime** making it a criminal offence (up to 2 years imprisonment) for \"entrusted persons\" to disclose \"Immigration and Border Protection information\" without authorisation\n- Allows **mandatory alcohol and drug testing** of all Immigration and Border Protection workers, including breath, blood, and urine tests\n- Creates special **resignation and termination provisions** for serious misconduct that bypass normal Fair Work Act protections\n- Enables the Commissioner and Secretary to give **binding directions** to staff about how they perform their duties\n\n**Who it affects:**\n- APS employees in the Department\n- Customs and migration officers\n- Consultants, contractors, and even employees of foreign governments whose services are made available to the Department\n- Anyone defined as an \"Immigration and Border Protection worker\"\n\n**Why it matters:**\nThis Act consolidated border enforcement functions and created powerful secrecy provisions that have been controversial. The broad definition of \"Immigration and Border Protection information\" and the criminal penalties for disclosure have significant implications for whistleblowers and public accountability. The Act also removes standard employment protections for workers accused of serious misconduct, allowing rapid termination without usual procedural safeguards."},"flash_summary":{"complexity_score":8,"scope_assessment":{"changed":false,"description":"This Act was enacted as a new standalone framework for the Australian Border Force, consolidating and enhancing existing powers from earlier border-related legislation. There is no evidence that the scope has changed from its original intent, as the text provided appears to be the original enactment."},"complexity_factors":["Long with many sections (over 50 sections) and multiple parts","Extensive definitions (over 30 defined terms) with cross-references to other Acts (Customs, Migration, Maritime Powers, etc.)","Nested exceptions and conditions, e.g., in secrecy provisions (multiple authorized disclosure pathways)","Conditional logic for alcohol/drug testing (different triggers and requirements)","Cross-references to other laws for consequences (e.g., Public Service Act, Fair Work Act)","Multiple power-granting and direction-giving provisions with hierarchy (Commissioner vs Secretary directions)","Scope covers a wide range of persons (APS employees, consultants, contractors, foreign officers)","Includes self-incrimination and use immunity provisions with exceptions"],"plain_english_summary":"This Act creates the Australian Border Force (ABF) as a part of the Immigration Department, and establishes the position of ABF Commissioner (who also serves as the Comptroller-General of Customs). The Commissioner controls ABF operations and can give directions to immigration and border protection workers about how they do their jobs. The Act covers:\n\n- **Powers**: ABF officers can exercise powers under existing laws like the Customs Act, Migration Act, and Maritime Powers Act.\n- **Alcohol and drug testing**: Workers can be required to undergo breath, blood, or drug tests in certain situations (e.g., after a serious incident).\n- **Secrecy**: Strict rules about disclosing information obtained in the course of work, with penalties of up to 2 years in prison. There are exceptions for things like law enforcement, health threats, or with consent.\n- **Resignation and termination**: Special rules for APS employees accused of serious misconduct – their resignation can be delayed for up to 90 days, and they can lose unfair dismissal protections if a declaration is made.\n- **Directions**: The Minister can give policy directions to the Commissioner. The Secretary can give directions to staff about administration.\n\nThe Act applies to a broad range of workers, including public servants, contractors, and even foreign officials seconded to the Department. It applies outside Australia as well."}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/australian-border-force-act-2015","history":"/api/acts/australian-border-force-act-2015/history","analysis":"/api/acts/australian-border-force-act-2015/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/australian-border-force-act-2015/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/australian-border-force-act-2015/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/australian-border-force-act-2015/documents"}}