{"id":"deakin-university-act-2009","name":"Deakin University Act 2009","slug":"deakin-university-act-2009","collection":"act","jurisdiction":"vic","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":null,"makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":173847,"registerId":"vic-deakin-university-act-2009-current","compilationNumber":null,"startDate":"2026-04-05","status":"InForce","reasons":null,"registeredAt":null},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Deakin University Act 2009","content":"Version No. 007\n\n**Deakin University Act 2009**\n\n**No. 71 of 2009**\n\nVersion incorporating amendments as at  \n15 October 2018\n\n**table of provisions**\n\n*Section Page*\n\nPart 1—Preliminary 2\n\n1 Purposes 2\n\n2 Commencement 2\n\n3 Definitions 2\n\nPart 2—Constitution and governance of the University 5\n\nDivision 1—The University 5\n\n4 Deakin University 5\n\n5 Objects of the University 5\n\n6 General powers and functions of University 7\n\n7 Common seal 8\n\nDivision 2—The Council 9\n\n8 The Council 9\n\n9 Powers and functions of the Council 10\n\n10 Power of Council to confer degrees or grant other awards 11\n\n11 Council membership 12\n\n11A Council membership pending Order under section 63 14\n\n12 Government appointed members 15\n\n13 Council appointed members 16\n\n14 Limitations on membership 17\n\n15 Responsibilities of Council members 17\n\n16 Remuneration 18\n\n17 Membership and procedure of Council 18\n\n18 Power to delegate 18\n\n19 Indemnities 19\n\nPart 3—Persons and bodies connected with the University 21\n\n20 Academic board 21\n\n21 Faculties, departments, divisions, centres, units, schools and institutes of the University 21\n\n22 Visitor 21\n\n23 Acting Visitor 22\n\nPart 4—Officers of the University 23\n\n24 Chancellor 23\n\n25 Deputy chancellor 23\n\n26 Vice-Chancellor 24\n\n27 Other officers 25\n\nPart 5—University statutes and university regulations 26\n\n28 Council may make university statutes and university regulations 26\n\n29 Specific subject matter for university statutes and university regulations 26\n\n30 University statutes may provide for making of university regulations 29\n\n31 Manner of making university statutes and university regulations 29\n\n32 Commencement 30\n\n33 Application of laws to university statutes and university regulations 30\n\n34 Judicial notice of university statute or university regulation 31\n\nPart 6—Property, finance and commercial activities 32\n\nDivision 1—Property generally 32\n\n35 Powers relating to property 32\n\nDivision 2—Land 32\n\n36 Acquisition of land 32\n\n37 Disposal of land 34\n\n38 Disposal of investment lands 34\n\nDivision 3—Trust funds and related matters 35\n\n39 Creation and administration of trust funds and other funds 35\n\n40 Establishment of investment common funds 35\n\n41 Distribution of income of investment common funds 35\n\n42 Commissions etc. 36\n\n43 Delegation 36\n\nDivision 4—Finance 36\n\n44 Revenue 36\n\n45 Borrowing powers 37\n\n46 Investments 37\n\n47 Audit of income and expenditure of University 38\n\nDivision 5—Joint ventures and companies 38\n\n48 Corporations and joint ventures 38\n\n49 Audit of limited company 39\n\n50 Audit of other companies 39\n\n51 Audits under section 49 and 50 generally 40\n\nDivision 6—Guidelines 41\n\n52 Declarations—*university commercial activity* 41\n\n53 University may submit guidelines to the Minister 42\n\n54 Consultation 43\n\n55 Ministerial approval of guidelines and power to make guidelines 43\n\n56 Publication and availability 44\n\n57 Guidelines and university statutes 44\n\n58 Council to ensure compliance 44\n\n59 Reports to Minister 45\n\n60 Referral to Auditor-General 45\n\nPart 7—General 46\n\n61 Fine is civil debt recoverable summarily 46\n\n62 Certificate is evidence of amount of fine 46\n\n63 Orders in Council 46\n\nPart 8—Repeals and transitional matters 49\n\nDivision 2—Transitional provisions 49\n\n64 Definitions for this Division 49\n\n65 Operation of Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984 49\n\n66 University 49\n\n67 Council 50\n\n68 Members of Council 50\n\n69 Staff 51\n\n70 Construction of references 51\n\n71 Gifts, trusts and other dispositions 52\n\n72 University statutes and university regulations 53\n\n73 Regulations dealing with transitional matters 53\n\nDivision 3—Further transitional provisions 54\n\n74 Definition for this Division 54\n\n75 Operation of Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984 55\n\n77 Saving of reconstituted Council 55\n\n78 Members of Council 56\n\nDivision 4—Further transitional provisions 56\n\n79 Transitional provisions—Education Legislation Amendment (TAFE and University Governance Reform) Act 2015 56\n\nDivision 5—Further transitional provisions 58\n\n80 Transitional provision—Education Legislation Amendment (Victorian Institute of Teaching, TAFE and Other Matters) Act 2018 58\n\nSchedule 1—Membership and procedure of the Council 59\n\nEndnotes 71\n\n1 General information 71\n\n2 Table of Amendments 73\n\n3 Amendments Not in Operation 74\n\n4 Explanatory details 75\n\n**Version No.** **007**\n\n**Deakin University Act 2009**\n\n**No. 71 of 2009**\n\nVersion incorporating amendments as at  \n15 October 2018\n\n**Preamble**\n\nDeakin University was established by the **Deakin University Act 1974**. It was the first university in regional Victoria.\n\nThe primary objectives for Deakin University's establishment were to create a university in the Geelong area and to provide an opportunity for tertiary education at university level to all qualified persons whether within or outside Victoria by means of distance education programs.\n\nDeakin University's first campus was established at Waurn Ponds in 1979. Since then it has grown to include campuses in Warrnambool, by amalgamation with the Warrnambool Institute of Advanced Education in 1990 under the **Deakin University (Warrnambool) Act 1990**, and in Burwood, arising from an amalgamation with Victoria College in 1991 under the **Deakin University (Victoria College) Act 1991**. A second Geelong campus was established at the Geelong Waterfront in 1996.\n\nThe teaching and research activities of Deakin University now reach nationally and internationally, but the University retains a particular commitment to rural and regional communities and to providing equitable opportunities for people to enjoy the benefits that flow from participation in higher education.\n\nDeakin University aims to be a catalyst for positive change for the individuals and the communities it serves. It aspires to be recognised as Australia's most progressive university.\n\nTo enable Deakin University to expand its mission and to achieve its aspirations it is desirable to re‑enact the law relating to Deakin University in a more modern form.\n\n**The Parliament of Victoria therefore enacts:**\n\nPart 1—Preliminary\n\n\t1 Purposes\n\nThe main purposes of this Act are—\n\n(a) to re-enact with amendments the law relating to Deakin University by rationalising obsolete and disparate legislation; and\n\n(b) to provide for a new Act reflecting best practice and a consistent approach to governance and reporting for universities in Victoria.\n\n\t2 Commencement\n\n(1) Subject to subsection (2), this Act comes into operation on a day or days to be proclaimed.\n\n(2) If a provision of this Act does not come into operation before 1 January 2011, it comes into operation on that day.\n\n\t3 Definitions\n\nIn this Act—\n\nS. 3 def. of *appointed member* repealed by No. 73/2012 s. 34(1).\n\n* * * * *\n\n***Chancellor*** means the person appointed to the office of Chancellor of the University under section 24;\n\n***Council*** means the Council established under section 8;\n\n***Council appointed member*** means a member of the Council appointed under section 13;\n\nS. 3 def. of *elected member* repealed by No. 73/2012 s. 34(1), new def. of *elected member* inserted by No. 69/2015 s. 15.\n\n***elected member*** means a member of the Council referred to in section 11(4A);\n\nS. 3 def. of *government appointed member* inserted by No. 73/2012 s. 34(2).\n\n***government appointed member*** means a member of the Council appointed under section 12(1) or (2);\n\n***graduate*** means a person upon whom has been conferred or granted, or who has been admitted without examination to, any degree or award under any Act relating to the University for the time being in force and whether before or after the passing of this Act;\n\n***guidelines*** means the guidelines approved by the Minister under section 55 and includes any interim guidelines made under section 55(2);\n\n***limited company***, in Division 5 of Part 6, means a limited company within the meaning of the Corporations Act;\n\n***official member*** means a member of the Council referred to in section 11(2);\n\n***staff*** means any person employed by the University;\n\nS. 3 def. of *student* amended by No. 69/2015 s. 30(1).\n\n***student*** means—\n\n(a) a person enrolled at the University in a course leading to a degree or other award; or\n\n(b) a person designated as a student or who is of a class of persons designated as students by the Council;\n\n***University*** means Deakin University referred to in section 4;\n\n***university commercial activity*** means any commercial activity engaged in by, or on behalf of, the University and—\n\n(a) includes any activity declared under section 52 to be a university commercial activity;\n\n(b) does not include any commercial activity declared under section 52 not to be a university commercial activity;\n\n***university regulations*** means the regulations of the University made under Part 5;\n\n***university statutes*** means the statutes of the University made under Part 5;\n\n***Vice-Chancellor*** means the person appointed to the office of Vice-Chancellor and President under section 26 and includes—\n\n(a) an interim Vice-Chancellor appointed under section 26(3); or\n\n(b) an acting Vice-Chancellor;\n\n***Visitor*** means the Visitor under section 22 and includes an acting Visitor.\n\nPart 2—Constitution and governance of the University\n\nDivision 1—The University\n\n\t4 Deakin University\n\n(1) Deakin University is declared to have been established on 10 December 1974.\n\n(2) The University established in accordance with subsection (1) and as constituted under the **Deakin University Act 1974** as in force immediately before its repeal—\n\n(a) continues in existence under this Act; and\n\n(b) is a body politic and corporate by the name \"Deakin University\".\n\n(3) The University consists of—\n\n(a) the Council; and\n\n(b) the staff, other than staff of any class that is designated from time to time by the Council not to be staff for the purposes of this section; and\n\n(c) the graduates; and\n\n(d) the students; and\n\n(e) the emeritus professors of the University.\n\n\t5 Objects of the University\n\nThe objects of the University include—\n\n(a) to provide and maintain a teaching and learning environment of excellent quality offering higher education at an international standard;\n\n(b) to provide vocational education and training, further education and other forms of education determined by the University to support and complement the provision of higher education by the University;\n\n(c) to undertake scholarship, pure and applied research, invention, innovation, education and consultancy of international standing and to apply those matters to the advancement of knowledge and to the benefit of the well-being of the Victorian, Australian and international communities;\n\n(d) to equip graduates of the University to excel in their chosen careers and to contribute to the life of the community;\n\n(e) to serve the Victorian, Australian and international communities and the public interest by—\n\n(i) enriching cultural and community life;\n\n(ii) elevating public awareness of educational, scientific and artistic developments;\n\n(iii) promoting critical and free enquiry, informed intellectual discourse and public debate within the University and in the wider society;\n\nS. 5(f) amended by No. 71/2010 s. 71(Sch. item 1.1(a)).\n\n(f) to use its expertise and resources to involve Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people of Australia in its teaching, learning, research and advancement of knowledge activities and thereby contribute to—\n\n(i) realising Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander aspirations; and\n\n(ii) the safeguarding of the ancient and rich Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander cultural heritage;\n\nS. 5(g) amended by No. 71/2010 s. 71(Sch. item 1.1(b)).\n\n(g) to provide programs and services in a way that reflects principles of equity and social justice;\n\nS. 5(h) substituted byNo. 71/2010 s. 71(Sch. item 1.1(c)).\n\n(h) to confer degrees and grant diplomas, certificates and other awards;\n\n(i) to utilise or exploit its expertise and resources, whether commercially or otherwise.\n\n\t6 General powers and functions of University\n\n(1) The University—\n\n(a) is a body politic and corporate with perpetual succession; and\n\n(b) may sue and be sued in its corporate name; and\n\n(c) subject to this Act, may acquire, hold and dispose of real and personal property.\n\n(2) The University may do and suffer all acts and things that a body corporate may by law do and suffer.\n\n(3) Without limiting subsection (1) or (2), the University—\n\n(a) may enter into contracts;\n\n(b) may fix fees and charges;\n\n(c) may employ persons in academic, teaching or other positions in the University on any terms and conditions that it determines and may terminate the employment of any member of staff employed by it;\n\n(d) subject to any guidelines, may be a member of a company, association, trust or partnership;\n\n(e) subject to any guidelines, may form or participate in the formation of a company, association, trust or partnership;\n\n(f) subject to any guidelines, may enter into a joint venture or joint undertaking with any other person or persons;\n\n(g) has any other powers and functions conferred on it by or under—\n\n(i) this Act or any other Act; or\n\n(ii) any university statute or university regulation;\n\n(h) may do anything else necessary or convenient to be done for or in connection with its objects, powers and functions.\n\n(4) The University may exercise its powers and functions—\n\n(a) within and outside Victoria; and\n\n(b) outside Australia.\n\n\t7 Common seal\n\n(1) The University has a common seal.\n\n(2) The common seal of the University must be kept and used as directed by the Council or in any manner authorised by the university statutes or university regulations.\n\n(3) All courts, tribunals and other persons acting judicially—\n\n(a) must take judicial notice of the common seal of the University on a document; and\n\n(b) until the contrary is proved, must presume that it was duly affixed.\n\nDivision 2—The Council\n\n\t8 The Council\n\n(1) There is established a Council.\n\n(2) The Council—\n\n(a) is the governing body of the University; and\n\n(b) has the general direction and superintendence of the University; and\n\n(c) subject to this Act, the university statutes and university regulations, may exercise all the powers, functions and duties of the University.\n\n(3) The primary responsibilities of the Council include—\n\n(a) appointing and monitoring the performance of the Vice-Chancellor as chief executive officer of the University;\n\n(b) approving the mission and strategic direction of the University and its annual budget and business plan;\n\n(c) overseeing and reviewing the management of the University and its performance;\n\n(d) establishing policy and procedural principles for the operation of the University consistent with legal requirements and community expectations;\n\n(e) approving and monitoring systems of control and accountability of the University, including those required to maintain a general overview of any entity over which the University has control within the meaning of section 3 of the **Audit Act 1994**;\n\n(f) overseeing and monitoring the assessment and management of risk across the University, including university commercial activities;\n\n(g) overseeing and monitoring the academic activities of the University;\n\n(h) approving any significant university commercial activities.\n\n\t9 Powers and functions of the Council\n\n(1) The Council has the following functions and powers—\n\n(a) to appoint the Chancellor, any Deputy Chancellor and the Vice-Chancellor;\n\n(b) to establish policies relating to the governance of the University;\n\n(c) to oversee and review the management of the University and its performance;\n\n(d) to oversee the management and control of the property and business affairs of the University;\n\n(e) to oversee the management and control of the University's finances;\n\n(f) any other powers and functions conferred on it by or under—\n\n(i) this Act or any other Act; or\n\n(ii) any university statute or university regulation;\n\n(g) the power to do anything else necessary or convenient to be done for or in connection with its powers and functions.\n\n(2) Without limiting subsection (1), the Council—\n\n(a) may determine what persons or classes of persons constitute the academic staff of the University for the purposes of this Act;\n\n(b) may designate a diploma or certificate to be awarded to students as—\n\n(i) a postgraduate diploma or postgraduate certificate; or\n\n(ii) a graduate diploma or graduate certificate; or\n\n(iii) an undergraduate diploma or undergraduate certificate;\n\n(c) may designate persons or classes of persons as students.\n\nS. 10 (Heading) amended by No. 71/2010 s. 71(Sch. item 1.2).\n\n\t10 Power of Council to confer degrees or grant other awards\n\nS. 10(1) amended by No. 71/2010 s. 71(Sch. item 1.3).\n\n(1) Subject to the university statutes and university regulations, the Council has power, and is deemed always to have had power, to confer any degree or grant any other award in any discipline, except divinity.\n\n(2) The university statutes or university regulations may provide—\n\nS. 10(2)(a) amended by No. 71/2010 s. 71(Sch. item 1.3).\n\n(a) for the conferral, without examination, of any degree or the granting, without examination, of any other award referred to in subsection (1) on or to any person who has graduated from a university; and\n\nS. 10(2)(b) amended by No. 71/2010 s. 71(Sch. item 1.3).\n\n(b) for the conferral honoris causa of any degree or granting honoris causa of any other award referred to in subsection (1) on or to any person, whether or not he or she has graduated from a university.\n\nS. 10(3) amended by No. 71/2010 s. 71(Sch. item 1.3).\n\n(3) If the university statutes so provide, the Council may revoke any degree conferred or any other award granted by the University, whenever conferred or granted.\n\n(4) The power of the Council under subsection (3) is to be exercised in the circumstances and manner prescribed in the university statutes.\n\nS. 11 substituted by No. 73/2012 s. 35.\n\n\t11 Council membership\n\nS. 11(1) substituted by No. 69/2015 s. 16(1).\n\n(1) The Council consists of the fixed number of members being—\n\n(a) the official members; and\n\n(b) a fixed number of at least 4 government appointed members; and\n\n(c) a minimum of one or any other greater fixed number of Council appointed members; and\n\n(d) the elected members.\n\n(2) The official members of the Council are—\n\n(a) the Chancellor;\n\n(b) the Vice-Chancellor;\n\n(c) the president (however designated) of the academic board or its equivalent.\n\n(3) The government appointed members are—\n\n(a) a minimum of one or any other greater fixed number of persons appointed by the Governor in Council under section 12(1); and\n\n(b) a minimum of one or any other greater fixed number of persons appointed by the Minister under section 12(2).\n\n(4) The Council appointed members are the persons appointed by the Council under section 13.\n\nS. 11(4A) inserted by No. 69/2015 s. 16(2).\n\n(4A) The elected members are—\n\n(a) one or more persons elected by and from the staff of the University in accordance with the university statutes and any university regulations; and\n\n(b) one or more persons elected by and from the students of the University in accordance with the university statutes and any university regulations.\n\n(5) The number of government appointed members must be equal to or greater than the number of Council appointed members.\n\nS. 11(5A) inserted by No. 69/2015 s. 16(3).\n\n(5A) Of the members referred to in subsection (1)(b) and (c)—\n\n(a) at least 2 must be persons with financial expertise with relevant qualifications or experience in financial management; and\n\n(b) one must be a person with commercial expertise at a senior level.\n\n(6) In this section a reference to a fixed number of members is a reference to the number of members fixed by Order in Council under section 63.\n\nNote to s. 11 amended by No. 69/2015 s. 16(4).\n\n**Note**\n\nSection 11A provides for the composition of the Council until an Order in Council is made under section 63.\n\nS. 11A inserted by No. 69/2015 s. 17.\n\n\t11A Council membership pending Order under section 63\n\n(1) Until an Order in Council is made under section 63 for the purposes of section 11, the Council consists of at least 13 but no more than 21 persons being—\n\n(a) the official members; and\n\n(b) at least 4 government appointed members; and\n\n(c) at least 4 Council appointed members; and\n\n(d) the elected members.\n\n(2) The official members of the Council are—\n\n(a) the Chancellor; and\n\n(b) the Vice-Chancellor; and\n\n(c) the president (however designated) of the academic board or its equivalent.\n\n(3) The government appointed members are—\n\n(a) at least 3 persons appointed by the Governor in Council under section 12(1); and\n\n(b) one person appointed by the Minister under section 12(2).\n\n(4) The Council appointed members are the persons appointed by the Council under section 13.\n\n(5) The number of government appointed members must be equal to or greater than the number of Council appointed members.\n\n(6) Of the members referred to in subsection (1)(b) and (c)—\n\n(a) at least 2 must be persons with financial expertise with relevant qualifications or experience in financial management; and\n\n(b) one must be a person with commercial expertise at a senior level.\n\nS. 12 (Heading) amended by No. 73/2012 s. 38(1).\n\n\t12 Government appointed members\n\nS. 12(1) amended by No. 73/2012 s. 38(2).\n\n(1) On the recommendation of the Minister, the Governor in Council, by instrument, may appoint persons to the Council as government appointed members.\n\nS. 12(2) amended by No. 73/2012 s. 38(3).\n\n(2) The Minister, by instrument, may appoint persons to the Council as government appointed members.\n\n(3) In making a recommendation under subsection (1) or an appointment under subsection (2), the Minister must have regard to appointing members to the Council who have—\n\n(a) the knowledge, skills and experience required for the effective working of the Council;\n\n(b) an appreciation of the values of a university relating to teaching, research, independence and academic freedom;\n\n(c) the capacity to recognise the needs of the external community served by the University.\n\nS. 12(4) amended by No. 73/2012 s. 38(2).\n\n(4) Not more than 2 members of the Council who are government appointed members may be persons whose normal place of residence is outside Australia.\n\nS. 12(5) amended by No. 73/2012 s. 38(4).\n\n(5) A government appointed member may be removed at any time—\n\n(a) in the case of a member appointed under subsection (1), by the Governor in Council; and\n\n(b) in the case of a member appointed under subsection (2), by the Minister.\n\n\t13 Council appointed members\n\n(1) The Council may appoint persons to the Council as Council appointed members.\n\n(2) In making an appointment under subsection (1), the Council must have regard to appointing members to the Council who have—\n\n(a) the knowledge, skills and experience required for the effective working of the Council;\n\n(b) an appreciation of the values of a university relating to teaching, research, independence and academic freedom;\n\n(c) the capacity to recognise the needs of the external community served by the University.\n\n(3) Not more than 2 members of the Council who are Council appointed members may be persons whose normal place of residence is outside Australia.\n\n\t14 Limitations on membership\n\n(1) A person who is a member of the Parliament of Victoria or of the Commonwealth or of any other State or Territory must not be a member of the Council.\n\n(2) A person is ineligible to be a member of the Council if the person—\n\n(a) is or becomes disqualified from managing corporations under Part 2D.6 of the Corporations Act; or\n\n(b) is, or has been, convicted or found guilty of an indictable offence or an offence that, if committed in Victoria, would be an indictable offence.\n\n\t15 Responsibilities of Council members\n\n(1) A member of the Council must act reasonably to ensure that the Council carries out its functions and exercises its powers appropriately, effectively and efficiently.\n\n(2) In exercising his or her responsibilities and carrying out his or her functions and duties, a member of the Council must—\n\n(a) act in good faith, honestly and for proper purposes consistent with the objects and interests of the University;\n\n(b) exercise reasonable skill, appropriate care and diligence; and\n\n(c) take reasonable steps to avoid all conflicts of interest unless they are declared in accordance with clause 11 of Schedule 1.\n\n(3) A member of the Council must not make improper use of his or her position as a member, or of information acquired because of his or her position as a member, to gain, directly or indirectly, an advantage for the member or for another person.\n\n\t16 Remuneration\n\n(1) Subject to subsection (2), at the discretion of the Council, a member of the Council other than a member who holds—\n\n(a) a full-time office on the staff of the University; or\n\n(b) a full-time office under the Crown in any of its capacities; or\n\n(c) a full-time office in a statutory authority—\n\nmay be paid the remuneration and fees that are fixed from time to time by the Minister for that member.\n\n(2) The following persons are not entitled to be paid or to receive any remuneration, fees, allowances or expenses in respect of their membership of the Council—\n\n(a) the Chief Justice and other Justices of the High Court of Australia;\n\n(b) the Chief Justice and other Judges of the Supreme Court;\n\n(c) a judge of any other court in Victoria or another State or Territory.\n\n\t17 Membership and procedure of Council\n\nSchedule 1 has effect with respect to the membership and procedure of the Council.\n\n\t18 Power to delegate\n\n(1) Subject to subsection (2), the Council, by instrument, may delegate its powers or functions under this Act to—\n\n(a) a member of the Council; or\n\n(b) a committee of the Council; or\n\n(c) any member of staff of the University; or\n\n(d) the academic board or its equivalent; or\n\n(e) any other entity prescribed by the university statutes.\n\n(2) The Council must not delegate—\n\n(a) this power of delegation; or\n\n(b) the power to appoint officers under section 9(1)(a); or\n\n(c) the power to make university statutes.\n\n**Note**\n\nSee also sections 41A, 42 and 42A of the **Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984**.\n\n\t19 Indemnities\n\nThe University must indemnify and keep indemnified—\n\n(a) each member of the Council; and\n\n(b) any member of a committee constituted or appointed by resolution of the Council or by or under a university statute or university regulation; and\n\n(c) any member of the academic board or its equivalent—\n\nagainst all actions or claims (whether arising during or after the term of office of that member) in respect of any act or thing done or omitted to be done in good faith in the exercise or purported exercise of any power or duty conferred or imposed—\n\n(d) on the Council, committee or the academic board or its equivalent; or\n\n(e) on any member or members of the Council, committee or academic board or its equivalent by or under this Act.\n\nPart 3—Persons and bodies connected with the University\n\n\t20 Academic board\n\nSubject to the university statutes and university regulations, the Council—\n\n(a) must establish an academic board or its equivalent; and\n\n(b) must determine—\n\n(i) the powers, functions and membership of the academic board or its equivalent; and\n\n(ii) the method of appointment of a president (however designated) of the academic board or its equivalent.\n\n\t21 Faculties, departments, divisions, centres, units, schools and institutes of the University\n\n(1) There are the faculties, departments, divisions, centres, units, schools and institutes of the University (however designated) that the Council from time to time specifies.\n\n(2) Nothing in this section limits the name by which any faculty, department, division, centre, unit, school or institute or any head of any faculty, department, division, centre, unit, school or institute may be known.\n\n\t22 Visitor\n\n(1) The person who holds the office of Governor of the State is the Visitor of the University.\n\n(2) Subject to subsection (3), the Visitor has power to do anything necessary to carry out the duties and functions of the Visitor.\n\n(3) The Visitor—\n\n(a) has ceremonial functions only; and\n\n(b) has no powers, duties or functions with respect to the resolution of disputes or any other matter concerning the affairs of the University, other than a matter involving the exercise of ceremonial functions only.\n\n\t23 Acting Visitor\n\n(1) The Visitor may authorise a person to act as Visitor in his or her place—\n\n(a) in relation to any particular matter concerning the affairs of the University; or\n\n(b) during any period when the Visitor is absent or unable to act.\n\n(2) The person who is authorised to act as Visitor under subsection (1) has all the powers, duties and functions of the Visitor to the extent, or for the period of, the authorisation under that subsection.\n\nPart 4—Officers of the University\n\n\t24 Chancellor\n\n(1) There is a Chancellor of the University.\n\n(2) The Council must appoint a person to the office of Chancellor of the University when there is a vacancy in that office.\n\n(3) A person may be appointed Chancellor whether or not the person is a member of the Council.\n\n(4) The Chancellor holds office—\n\n(a) for a term not exceeding 5 years fixed by the Council in accordance with the university statutes and is eligible for re‑appointment; and\n\n(b) on the conditions determined by the Council in accordance with the university statutes and university regulations.\n\n\t25 Deputy chancellor\n\n(1) There is at least one deputy chancellor of the University.\n\n(2) The Council must appoint a person to be a deputy chancellor of the University when there is a vacancy in that office.\n\n(3) A deputy chancellor holds office—\n\n(a) for a term not exceeding 5 years fixed by the Council in accordance with the university statutes and is eligible for re‑appointment; and\n\n(b) on the conditions determined by the Council in accordance with the university statutes and university regulations.\n\n(4) A deputy chancellor is to act as Chancellor—\n\n(a) in the absence of the Chancellor; or\n\n(b) during any vacancy in the office of Chancellor; or\n\n(c) during the inability of the Chancellor to act; or\n\n(d) at any other time with the consent of the Chancellor.\n\n(5) When acting as Chancellor, a deputy chancellor, has all the powers and duties of the Chancellor.\n\n\t26 Vice-Chancellor\n\n(1) There is a Vice-Chancellor and President of the University.\n\n(2) The Council must appoint a person to the office of Vice-Chancellor when there is a vacancy in that office.\n\n(3) Despite subsection (2) and section 27(1), pending the appointment of a Vice-Chancellor under subsection (2), the Council may make an interim appointment of a person to a vacancy in the office of Vice-Chancellor.\n\n(4) An interim appointment under subsection (3) is for the period specified in the appointment, being a period not exceeding 12 months.\n\n(5) The Vice-Chancellor's terms of appointment are determined by the Council in accordance with the university statutes and university regulations.\n\n(6) Subject to this Act, the Vice-Chancellor—\n\n(a) is the chief executive officer of the University generally responsible for the conduct of the University's affairs in all matters; and\n\n(b) has the functions, powers and duties conferred or imposed upon him or her—\n\n(i) by or under this Act or any other Act; or\n\n(ii) by or under any university statute or university regulation; or\n\n(iii) by the Council.\n\n(7) Subject to this Act, the university statutes and the university regulations, the Vice-Chancellor may delegate any of his or her functions, powers and duties to—\n\nS. 26(7)(a) amended by No. 71/2010 s. 71(Sch. item 1.4).\n\n(a) any appropriately qualified member of staff; or\n\n(b) any committee established from appropriately qualified members of staff.\n\n\t27 Other officers\n\n(1) In accordance with the university statutes and university regulations, during the absence of the Vice-Chancellor, the Council may appoint an acting Vice-Chancellor.\n\n(2) In accordance with the university statutes and university regulations, the Council may appoint one or more deputy vice-chancellors who have the functions, duties and powers conferred by the university statutes and university regulations.\n\nPart 5—University statutes and university regulations\n\n\t28 Council may make university statutes and university regulations\n\nSubject to this Act, the Council may make any university statutes and university regulations with respect to any matter relating to—\n\n(a) the University; and\n\n(b) any person—\n\n(i) entering or on land or other property of the University; or\n\n(ii) using University facilities.\n\n\t29 Specific subject matter for university statutes and university regulations\n\n(1) Without limiting section 28, university statutes and university regulations may be made for or with respect to—\n\n(a) the organisation, management and good governance of the University;\n\n(b) the academic board or its equivalent;\n\n(c) employment of staff;\n\n(d) retired staff members;\n\n(e) discipline;\n\n(f) academic dress and academic titles, ranks or positions;\n\n(g) the common seal;\n\n(h) intellectual property;\n\n(i) examinations;\n\n(j) graduates;\n\n(k) students;\n\n(l) student loans;\n\n(m) courses of study;\n\n(n) credit in courses of the University for work done elsewhere;\n\n(o) degrees and other awards;\n\n(p) fees charged by the University;\n\n(q) trusts and endowments;\n\n(r) organisations, amenities and services which are not of an academic nature;\n\n(s) property, including buildings and staff housing;\n\n(t) traffic, including parking on University property;\n\nS. 29(1)(u) substituted by No. 69/2015 s. 18(a).\n\n(u) elections conducted by the University including electoral systems and procedures, voting methods, voter and candidate eligibility and dispute resolution;\n\nS. 29(1)(ua) inserted by No. 69/2015 s. 18(b).\n\n(ua) the elected members of the Council including—\n\n(i) fixing the number of each category of elected member; and\n\n(ii) making provision for any matter of a transitional nature consequent to altering the fixed number of each category of elected member under subparagraph (i);\n\nS. 29(1)(ub) inserted by No. 69/2015 s. 18(b).\n\n(ub) training and support of the members of the Council;\n\n(v) research, development, consultancy, university commercial activities and other services undertaken by the University for commercial organisations, public bodies or individuals;\n\n(w) recognition of institutions or bodies at which—\n\n(i) work is undertaken by students of the University for the purpose of satisfaction of degree requirements of the University; or\n\n(ii) research is or may be undertaken by teaching or research staff of the University; or\n\n(iii) any other work is undertaken that assists the University to attain any of its objects;\n\n(x) teaching, research and continuing education projects and university commercial activities within and outside Victoria undertaken by the University jointly with commercial organisations, public bodies or individuals;\n\n(y) the affiliation with the University of any colleges, halls of residence for students, educational, commercial, cultural, sporting or other institution, organisation or body if—\n\n(i) the affiliation would assist in attaining any of the objects of the University; and\n\n(ii) the governing body of the college, hall of residence, institution, organisation or body has consented to the affiliation.\n\n(2) Without limiting section 28, university statutes and university regulations may be made for or with respect to any other matter in relation to which—\n\n(a) the Council may make university statutes or university regulations; or\n\n(b) it is necessary or expedient to make university statutes or university regulations for the good governance of the University or for the management of its affairs.\n\n\t30 University statutes may provide for making of university regulations\n\n(1) A university statute made by the Council may provide for the making of university regulations for or with respect to prescribing or providing for any matter or thing for the purposes of the university statute, either by—\n\n(a) the Council; or\n\n(b) if the university statutes authorise it, by the Vice-Chancellor or the academic board or its equivalent.\n\n(2) A university statute made by the Council may provide for—\n\n(a) the manner of making and promulgation of a university regulation;\n\n(b) the revocation or amendment of a university regulation.\n\n\t31 Manner of making university statutes and university regulations\n\n(1) A university statute made by the Council must—\n\n(a) be in writing; and\n\n(b) have the common seal of the University affixed; and\n\n(c) be submitted to the Minister for approval.\n\n(2) The Council must ensure that university statutes and university regulations are readily available to the public by whatever means the Council considers appropriate.\n\nS. 31(3) amended by No. 71/2010 s. 71(Sch. item 1.5).\n\n(3) The Council may revoke or amend any university statute made under this Part in the same manner and subject to the same terms and conditions as the university statute was made.\n\n(4) The Vice-Chancellor may revoke or amend any university regulation made under section 30(1)(b).\n\n(5) The academic board or its equivalent may revoke or amend any university regulation made by the academic board or its equivalent under section 30(1)(b).\n\n**Note**\n\nSection 30 of this Act empowers a university statute to provide for the revocation and amendment of university regulations.\n\n\t32 Commencement\n\nS. 32(1) amended by No. 69/2015 s. 30(2).\n\n(1) A university statute comes into operation on the day on which the Minister approves it unless a later commencement day is specified in the university statute.\n\n(2) A university regulation comes into operation on—\n\n(a) the day on which it is promulgated in accordance with the university statute under which it is made; or\n\n(b) if a later day is specified in the university regulation, that later day.\n\n\t33 Application of laws to university statutes and university regulations\n\n(1) A university statute or university regulation is not a statutory rule for the purposes of the **Subordinate Legislation Act 1994**.\n\n(2) A university statute or university regulation is not a subordinate instrument for the purposes of section 32 of the **Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984**.\n\n\t34 Judicial notice of university statute or university regulation\n\n(1) The production of a verified copy of a university statute under the common seal of the University is sufficient evidence of its making and authenticity—\n\n(a) in all courts and tribunals; and\n\n(b) before all persons acting judicially.\n\n(2) The production of a verified copy of a university regulation under the common seal of the University is sufficient evidence of its making and authenticity—\n\n(a) in all courts and tribunals; and\n\n(b) before all persons acting judicially.\n\nPart 6—Property, finance and commercial activities\n\nDivision 1—Property generally\n\n\t35 Powers relating to property\n\nThe University—\n\n(a) may acquire by purchase, gift, grant, bequest or devise any property for the purposes of this Act; and\n\n(b) may agree to and carry out any conditions of any such gift, grant, bequest or devise; and\n\n(c) has control and management of all property vested in or acquired by the University; and\n\n(d) may dispose of property of the University.\n\nDivision 2—Land\n\n\t36 Acquisition of land\n\n(1) After consultation with the University, the Minister may acquire any land for the purposes of, or in connection with, the University.\n\n(2) Land acquired under subsection (1) may be acquired by agreement or compulsorily.\n\n(3) The **Land Acquisition and Compensation Act 1986** applies to this Act and for that purpose—\n\n(a) the **Deakin University Act 2009** is the special Act; and\n\n(b) the Minister is the Authority.\n\n(4) Any land acquired by agreement under this Act by the Minister—\n\n(a) is to be conveyed or transferred to the Crown; and\n\n(b) may be dealt with as unalienated Crown land, despite anything to the contrary in any Act.\n\n(5) Any land acquired compulsorily under this Act by the Minister—\n\n(a) vests in the Crown under section 24 of the **Land Acquisition and Compensation Act 1986**, despite anything to the contrary in that section; and\n\n(b) may be dealt with as unalienated Crown land, despite anything to the contrary in any Act.\n\n(6) Despite anything to the contrary in the **Land Act 1958**, any unalienated Crown land may—\n\n(a) be granted in fee simple to the University or to any educational institution affiliated or connected with the University—\n\n(i) for the consideration (if any) that the Governor in Council determines; and\n\n(ii) subject to the conditions, limitations and restrictions that the Governor in Council determines; or\n\n(b) be reserved under the **Crown Land (Reserves) Act 1978** either permanently or temporarily as a site for the purposes of the University or any such institution.\n\n\t37 Disposal of land\n\n(1) Without the prior approval of the Minister, the University must not alienate any land granted in fee simple under section 36(6)(a) whether—\n\n(a) the alienation of the land is in fee simple or for a lesser estate or interest; or\n\n(b) the alienation of the land is—\n\n(i) total or partial; or\n\n(ii) subject to conditions.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a leasehold interest not exceeding 21 years.\n\n(3) Without the prior approval of the Minister, the University must not alienate any interest in fee simple in any land owned by the University, other than land referred to in section 36(6)(a), if the sum of the consideration for the transfer or conveyance of that interest exceeds—\n\n(a) $5 000 000; or\n\n(b) any other greater amount that the Minister fixes by notice published in the Government Gazette.\n\n(4) Without the prior approval of the Minister, the University must not grant a lease for a term exceeding 21 years of any land owned by the University other than land referred to in section 36(6)(a).\n\n(5) Subject to section 38, this section has effect despite any Act or law to the contrary, including any rule of common law.\n\n\t38 Disposal of investment lands\n\nSections 37(3) and 37(4) do not apply to any land or any interest in land which, in the opinion of the Council, was acquired for investment purposes.\n\nDivision 3—Trust funds and related matters\n\n\t39 Creation and administration of trust funds and other funds\n\nSubject to this Act, the University may create and administer—\n\n(a) any trust fund; or\n\n(b) any funds for any other purpose.\n\n\t40 Establishment of investment common funds\n\n(1) The University may establish one or more investment common funds for the collective investment of any trust funds and other funds held by or in the custody of the University.\n\n(2) Without liability for breach of trust, the University may bring into or withdraw from any investment common fund the whole or any part of any trust fund or other fund held by or in the custody of the University.\n\n(3) Subsection (2) applies despite any direction to the contrary, whether express or implied, contained in the trust instrument.\n\n\t41 Distribution of income of investment common funds\n\n(1) Subject to subsection (2), the University must periodically distribute the income of each investment common fund among the funds participating in the pool having regard to the extent of the participation by each fund during the relevant accounting period.\n\n(2) From time to time, the University, if it considers it expedient to do so, may—\n\n(a) add some portion of the income of each investment common fund to the capital of the common fund; or\n\n(b) establish a fund or funds as a provision against capital depreciation or reduction in income.\n\n\t42 Commissions etc.\n\n(1) Out of the annual income of a trust fund in an investment common fund, the University may periodically deduct an amount not exceeding 5% of the annual income of that trust fund as commission for the administration of that trust fund.\n\n(2) The commission deducted in accordance with subsection (1) is to be received and accepted by the University as full payment to it for the costs of administration of the trust fund.\n\n(3) The University must not make any other charges on the trust fund in addition to the commission received under subsection (2) except in accordance with the trust instrument.\n\n\t43 Delegation\n\nDespite the terms of any trust, the Council may delegate all or any of its powers, functions and duties as trustee under this Division, other than this power of delegation, to—\n\n(a) a committee of the Council; or\n\n(b) a designated staff member of the University.\n\nDivision 4—Finance\n\n\t44 Revenue\n\nSubject to this Act, all fees and all other money received by or on behalf of the University under this Act or otherwise must be applied by the University solely for the objects or purposes of the University.\n\n\t45 Borrowing powers\n\n(1) Subject to this Act, for the purpose of carrying out or performing any of its powers, authorities, duties or functions, the University may—\n\n(a) borrow money at interest by way of mortgage, overdraft with an ADI or otherwise; or\n\n(b) without limiting paragraph (a)—\n\n(i) obtain financial accommodation within the meaning of section 3 of the **Borrowing and Investment Powers Act 1987**; or\n\n(ii) enter into and perform financial arrangements within the meaning of that section of that Act.\n\n**Note**\n\nSection 38 of the **Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984** defines ***ADI*** as an authorised deposit-taking institution within the meaning of the Banking Act 1959 of the Commonwealth.\n\n(2) Subsection (1) applies within the limits and upon the conditions as to security and otherwise as the Treasurer, from time to time, approves after consultation with the Minister.\n\n\t46 Investments\n\n(1) Subject to this Act, the University may invest any money of the University in any manner of investment authorised by the Council.\n\n(2) Any endowment funds held by the University in accordance with specific trusts as to the payment of the income from those funds in perpetuity may be invested for the time being in any manner in which moneys may be invested under the **Trustee Act 1958**.\n\n\t47 Audit of income and expenditure of University\n\nThe Council must arrange for an audit of the income and expenditure of the University, in accordance with the guidelines.\n\nDivision 5—Joint ventures and companies\n\n\t48 Corporations and joint ventures\n\n(1) For the purposes of one or more of the objects set out in subsection (2), the University may, in accordance with the guidelines—\n\n(a) be a member of a company, association trust or partnership;\n\n(b) form, manage or participate in the formation of a company, association, trust or partnership;\n\n(c) enter into a joint venture or joint undertaking with another person or persons.\n\n(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), the objects are—\n\n(a) making available facilities for study, research or education;\n\n(b) providing teaching, research, development, consultancy or other services for public or private entities;\n\n(c) assisting or engaging in the development or promotion of the University's research or the application or use of the results of that research;\n\n(d) preparing, publishing, distributing or licensing the use of literary or artistic work, audio or audiovisual material or computer software;\n\n(e) exploiting commercially a facility or resource of the University, including but not limited to, study, research or knowledge developed by or belonging to the University, whether alone or with another entity;\n\n(f) seeking or encouraging gifts to the University or for the University's purposes;\n\n(g) any other object, consistent with this Act, that the Council considers appropriate in the circumstances.\n\n\t49 Audit of limited company\n\n(1) If the University—\n\n(a) forms, participates in the formation of, or is a member of, a limited company to which section 48 applies; and\n\n(b) has control, within the meaning of section 3 of the **Audit Act 1994**, of that company—\n\nthe accounts of the limited company must be audited annually by the Auditor-General.\n\n(2) The requirements of subsection (1) are in addition to the requirements of the Corporations Act.\n\n\t50 Audit of other companies\n\n(1) If the University—\n\n(a) forms, participates in the formation of, or is a member of, a company under section 48 that is not incorporated or taken to be incorporated under the Corporations Act; and\n\n(b) has control, within the meaning of section 3 of the **Audit Act 1994**, of that company—\n\nthe accounts of the company must be audited annually by the Auditor-General.\n\n(2) The Auditor-General is not required to audit the accounts of a company incorporated or formed in a place outside Australia under this section if—\n\n(a) under the law applying to that company in that place, the Auditor-General cannot be appointed as auditor of the company; or\n\n(b) in the Auditor-General's opinion, it is impracticable or unreasonable for the Auditor-General to audit, or be required to audit, the accounts.\n\n\t51 Audits under section 49 and 50 generally\n\n(1) For the purposes of an annual audit under section 49 or 50—\n\n(a) the Auditor-General and any person assisting the Auditor-General has, with respect to the accounts of the limited company or other company, as the case requires, all the powers conferred on the Auditor-General by any law relating to the auditing of public accounts;\n\n(b) the limited company or other company, as the case requires, must within 3 months after the company's accounts are balanced cause a statement of accounts to be prepared and submitted to the Auditor-General;\n\n(c) the statement of accounts must—\n\n(i) be prepared in the manner and in the form approved by the Minister administering Part 7 of the **Financial Management Act 1994**; and\n\n(ii) present fairly the financial transactions of the limited company or other company during the year and the financial position of the company at the end of the year;\n\n(d) the Auditor-General must forward to the Minister administering Part 7 of the **Financial Management Act 1994** a copy of the audited annual accounts.\n\n(2) Without limiting subsection (1)(a) or any powers of the Auditor-General under the **Audit Act 1994**, the Auditor-General and any person assisting the Auditor-General—\n\n(a) has right of access at all times to the books, securities, accounts and vouchers of the limited company or other company; and\n\n(b) may require from an officer or employee of the limited company, other company or the University any information, assistance and explanations necessary for the performance of the duties of the Auditor-General or person in relation to the audit.\n\n(3) The University must pay to the Consolidated Fund an amount to be determined by the Auditor-General to defray the costs and expenses of an audit under section 49 or 50.\n\n(4) Sections 49 and 50 do not apply to any limited company or other company of which the University has ceased to be a member before the last preceding annual audit.\n\nDivision 6—Guidelines\n\nS. 52 amended by No. 71/2010 s. 71(Sch. item 1.6).\n\n\t52 Declarations—*university commercial activity*\n\nAfter consultation with the University, the Minister may, by order published in the Government Gazette, declare—\n\n(a) an activity to be a university commercial activity for the purposes of paragraph (a) of the definition of ***university commercial activity***;\n\n(b) a commercial activity not to be a university commercial activity for the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of ***university commercial activity***.\n\n\t53 University may submit guidelines to the Minister\n\n(1) The University may submit to the Minister for approval guidelines for or with respect to—\n\n(a) the carrying out of university commercial activities;\n\n(b) auditing under this Part;\n\n(c) finance and property matters;\n\n(d) any other matter related to the exercise of any functions, powers or duties under this Part;\n\n(e) any combination of the matters referred to in paragraphs (a) to (d).\n\n(2) Without limiting the content of the guidelines, the guidelines may provide for or with respect to—\n\n(a) requirements for feasibility and due diligence assessment;\n\n(b) requirements for identifying appropriate governance and administrative arrangements, including legal structures and audit requirements;\n\n(c) requirements for undertaking risk assessment and risk management measures;\n\n(d) maintaining any register of university commercial activities or the publication of information relating to university commercial activities in annual reports;\n\n(e) regulating the delegation by the Council of any of its functions under this Act in connection with the University's commercial activities;\n\n(f) the rights and responsibilities of members of the Council in relation to commercialisation for the purposes of avoiding real or apparent conflicts of interest;\n\n(g) any other matters the Council considers appropriate.\n\n\t54 Consultation\n\nBefore approving or making any guidelines, the Minister must consult with—\n\n(a) the Treasurer; and\n\nS. 54(b) amended by No. 71/2010 s. 71(Sch. item 1.7).\n\n(b) the University—\n\non the final form and content of the guidelines.\n\n\t55 Ministerial approval of guidelines and power to make guidelines\n\n(1) On the submission under section 53 by the University of guidelines for approval, the Minister may—\n\n(a) approve the guidelines; or\n\n(b) refer the guidelines back to the University for amendment in accordance with any comments the Minister may make; or\n\n(c) refuse to approve the guidelines.\n\n(2) The Minister may make interim guidelines for or with respect to the matters specified in section 53 pending—\n\n(a) the submission of guidelines by the University; or\n\n(b) the approval by the Minister of guidelines submitted by the University.\n\n(3) Unless sooner revoked by the Minister, interim guidelines made under subsection (2) operate until the Minister approves guidelines submitted by the University.\n\n\t56 Publication and availability\n\n(1) The Minister—\n\n(a) must cause the guidelines to be published in the Government Gazette; and\n\n(b) may publish the guidelines on the Internet.\n\n(2) The guidelines take effect—\n\n(a) on the date of publication in the Government Gazette; or\n\n(b) such later date as is specified in the guidelines.\n\n\t57 Guidelines and university statutes\n\nThe guidelines must not be inconsistent with a university statute or university regulation.\n\n\t58 Council to ensure compliance\n\n(1) The Council must ensure that any guidelines are complied with in carrying out the activities, functions, powers or duties to which the guidelines relate.\n\n(2) The failure of the Council to ensure compliance with a guideline in relation to a university commercial activity does not of itself invalidate any commercial agreement entered into, or action taken, by the Council or the University in respect of a university commercial activity to which the guideline relates.\n\n\t59 Reports to Minister\n\nThe Minister may request the University to provide a report on—\n\n(a) university commercial activities generally; or\n\n(b) any particular university commercial activity; or\n\n(c) any aspect of a university commercial activity.\n\n\t60 Referral to Auditor-General\n\n(1) The Minister may refer to the Auditor-General for investigation and report to the Minister—\n\n(a) a university commercial activity; or\n\n(b) any aspect of a university commercial activity.\n\n(2) A referral under subsection (1) may be made whether or not the university commercial activity was the subject of a report under section 59.\n\nPart 7—General\n\n\t61 Fine is civil debt recoverable summarily\n\nA fine imposed under the university statutes or university regulations on a member of the staff of the University, a student or any person entering or on land or other property of the University or using University facilities is a civil debt recoverable summarily by the University in any court of competent jurisdiction.\n\n\t62 Certificate is evidence of amount of fine\n\nA certificate in writing—\n\n(a) signed by the Vice-Chancellor or a person appointed by him or her for the purpose as to the amount of a fine imposed under the university statutes or university regulations on a member of the staff of the University, a student or any person entering or on land or other property of the University or using University facilities; and\n\n(b) giving particulars of the date of, and reasons for, the imposition of the fine—\n\nis prima facie evidence of the facts stated in the certificate in all courts and before all persons acting judicially.\n\nNew s. 63 inserted by No. 73/2012 s. 36.\n\n\t63 Orders in Council\n\n(1) The Governor in Council may make Orders for or with respect to—\n\nS. 63(1)(a) amended by No. 69/2015 s. 19.\n\n(a) fixing the number of members of the Council or the number of government appointed members and Council appointed members of the Council for the purposes of section 11;\n\n(b) the method of calculating the terms of office of government appointed members and Council appointed members so that their terms of office do not fall vacant in the same year;\n\n**Note**\n\nThis method will override clause 1(2) of Schedule 1.\n\n(c) making transitional provisions including—\n\n(i) application or saving provisions about the Council or the membership of the Council arising from any change of membership of the Council as the result of the making of an Order in Council under paragraph (a); and\n\n(ii) provision for members to go out of office or to be appointed to an office on a change of membership as the result of the making of an Order in Council under paragraph (a).\n\n(2) The Governor in Council must not make an Order under subsection (1) except on the recommendation of the Minister after the Minister has received a request from the Council for the Order made by a resolution of the Council and passed by a two thirds majority of the current members of the Council.\n\n(3) An Order in Council takes effect on the day specified in the Order in Council or, if no date is specified, on the day the Order in Council is published in the Government Gazette.\n\n(4) A copy of every Order in Council under this section must be  published in the Government Gazette  as soon as practicable after it is made.\n\n(5) A copy of every Order in Council made under this section must be laid before both Houses of Parliament on or before the 6th sitting day after the publication of the Order in accordance with subsection (4).\n\n(6) Part 5A of the **Subordinate Legislation Act 1994** applies to an Order in Council under this section as if the Order in Council were a legislative instrument within the meaning of that Act laid before each House of the Parliament under section 16B of that Act.\n\nPart 8—Repeals and transitional matters\n\nPt 8 Div. 1 (Heading and s. 63) repealed by No. 71/2009 s. 74.\n\n* * * * *\n\nDivision 2—Transitional provisions\n\n\t64 Definitions for this Division\n\nIn this Division—\n\n***commencement date*** means the day on which section 63 comes into operation;\n\n***old Act*** means the **Deakin University Act 1974**.\n\n\t65 Operation of Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984\n\nUnless the contrary intention expressly appears, this Division does not affect or take away from the **Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984**.\n\n**Note**\n\nSee in particular sections 14 and 16 of the **Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984**.\n\n\t66 University\n\n(1) Subject to section 4, on and from the commencement date, the University is taken to be the same body as it was immediately before that commencement, despite any changes to the constitution of the University and no decision, matter or thing is to be affected because of those changes.\n\n(2) On and from the commencement date, all property vested in the University under the old Act, including all money standing immediately before that date to the credit of a fund or account of the University under the old Act and any other money belonging to the University as at that date may, after that date, be used or invested by the University in accordance with this Act.\n\n\t67 Council\n\n(1) On and from the commencement date, the Council—\n\n(a) subject to paragraph (b), is taken to be the same body as it was immediately before that commencement, despite any changes to the constitution of the Council and no decision, matter or thing is to be affected because of those changes; and\n\n(b) continues in existence as if established under Division 2 of Part 2.\n\n(2) On and from the commencement date, all property vested in the Council under the old Act, including all money standing immediately before that date to the credit of a fund or account of the Council under the old Act and any other money belonging to the Council as at that date may, after that date, be used or invested by the Council in accordance with this Act.\n\n\t68 Members of Council\n\n(1) On and from the commencement date, the members of the Council in office under the old Act immediately before that date, subject to subsection (2)—\n\n(a) are taken to be the members of the Council appointed or elected in accordance with Part 2; and\n\n(b) continue in office on the same terms and conditions as those on which they were originally appointed or elected for the remainder of their original terms as if appointed or elected, as the case requires, under this Act.\n\n(2) A member of the Council referred to in subsection (1), other than a member elected by and for the students, whose term is due to cease—\n\n(a) in December 2010, continues in office until 30 June 2011; and\n\n(b) in December 2011, continues in office until 30 June 2012.\n\n\t69 Staff\n\n(1) A person employed immediately before the commencement date by the Council in accordance with section 22 of the old Act continues to be employed under this Act, subject to the same terms and conditions as applied to that employment immediately before the commencement date.\n\n(2) Nothing in subsection (1) prevents—\n\n(a) any of the terms and conditions of employment of a person referred to in subsection (1) from being altered by or under any law, award or agreement or under this Act, the university statutes or university regulations with effect from any time after the commencement date; or\n\n(b) a person referred to in subsection (1) from resigning or being dismissed at any time after the commencement date in accordance with the then existing terms and conditions of his or her employment by the Council.\n\n\t70 Construction of references\n\nOn and from the commencement date, in any Act (other than this Act), or in any subordinate instrument made under any Act or in any other document of any kind, unless the context otherwise requires—\n\n(a) a reference to the **Deakin University Act 1974** is to be construed as a reference to the **Deakin University Act 2009**; and\n\n(b) a reference to the Council constituted under the old Act is to be construed as a reference to the Council constituted under section 8; and\n\n(c) a reference to statutes of the University or regulations of the University made under the old Act is to be construed as a reference, as the case requires, to—\n\n(i) the university statutes; or\n\n(ii) the university regulations.\n\n\t71 Gifts, trusts and other dispositions\n\n(1) This section applies to—\n\n(a) a gift, disposition or trust of property or a trust fund to which the old Act applied immediately before the commencement date; or\n\n(b) a gift, disposition or trust of property or a trust fund—\n\n(i) made or declared, or deemed to have been made or declared, or created (as the case requires) before, on or after the commencement date, by deed, will or otherwise, to, in favour of, for the use of, or for the purposes of the University as established under the old Act; and\n\n(ii) which takes effect, or may take effect, or, in the case of a trust fund may be applied, on or after the commencement date.\n\n(2) A gift, disposition, trust or trust fund to which this section applies does not fail only because of the repeal of the old Act but, in relation to any other matter occurring on or after the commencement date—\n\n(a) in the case of a gift, disposition or trust of property, takes effect as if made or declared to, or in favour of, the University for a purpose of the University that corresponds with, or is similar to, the purposes for which it was made or declared; or\n\n(b) in the case of a trust fund, may be applied as if created in favour of the University for a purpose of the University that corresponds with, or is similar to, the purposes for which the fund was created.\n\n\t72 University statutes and university regulations\n\nOn and from the commencement date, any statute of the University or regulation of the University made under the old Act and in force as at that date—\n\n(a) is taken to be a university statute or university regulation made under this Act, as the case requires; and\n\n(b) may be amended or revoked in accordance with this Act.\n\n\t73 Regulations dealing with transitional matters\n\n(1) The Governor in Council may make regulations containing provisions of a transitional nature, including matters of an application or savings nature, arising as a result of the enactment of this Act, including the repeals and amendments made by this Act.\n\n(2) Regulations made under this section may—\n\n(a) have a retrospective effect to a day on or from the date that this Act receives the Royal Assent; and\n\n(b) be of limited or general application; and\n\n(c) leave any matter or thing to be decided by a specified person or class of persons; and\n\n(d) provide for the exemption of persons or matters or a class of persons or matters from any of the regulations made under this section.\n\n(3) Regulations under this section have effect despite anything to the contrary in any Act (other than this Act or the **Charter of Human Rights and Responsibilities Act 2006**) or in any subordinate instrument.\n\nPt 8 Div. 3 (Heading and s. 74) substituted as Pt 8 Div. 3 (Heading and ss 74–78) by No. 73/2012 s. 37.\n\nDivision 3—Further transitional provisions\n\nS. 74 substituted by No. 73/2012 s. 37.\n\n\t74 Definition for this Division\n\nIn this Division—\n\n***commencement day*** means the day on which Part 6 of the **Education Legislation Amendment (Governance) Act 2012** comes into operation.\n\nS. 75 inserted by No. 73/2012 s. 37.\n\n\t75 Operation of Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984\n\nUnless the contrary intention expressly appears, this Division does not affect or take away from the **Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984**.\n\n**Note**\n\nSee in particular section 16 of the **Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984**.\n\nS. 76 inserted by No. 73/2012 s. 37, repealed by No. 69/2015 s. 20.\n\n* * * * *\n\nS. 77 inserted by No. 73/2012 s. 37.\n\n\t77 Saving of reconstituted Council\n\n(1) On and from the commencement day, the Council—\n\n(a) continues in existence as if established under Division 2 of Part 2; and\n\n(b) is taken to be the same body as it was immediately before that day, despite any changes to the constitution of the Council and no decision, matter or thing is to be affected because of those changes.\n\n(2) On and from the commencement day of an Order in Council under section 63, the Council—\n\n(a) continues in existence as if established under Division 2 of Part 2; and\n\n(b) is taken to be the same body as it was immediately before that day, despite any changes to the constitution of the Council and no decision, matter or thing is to be affected because of those changes.\n\nS. 78 inserted by No. 73/2012 s. 37.\n\n\t78 Members of Council\n\n(1) On and from the commencement day, the members of the Council in office under section 11 immediately before that day except elected members—\n\n(a) are taken to be the members of the Council appointed in accordance with section 76; and\n\n(b) continue in office on the same terms and conditions as those on which they were originally appointed for the remainder of their original terms as if appointed under this Act.\n\nS. 78(2) repealed by No. 69/2015 s. 21.\n\n* * * * *\n\nPt 8 Div. 4 (Heading and s. 79) inserted by No. 69/2015 s. 22.\n\nDivision 4—Further transitional provisions\n\nS. 79 inserted by No. 69/2015 s. 22.\n\n\t79 Transitional provisions—Education Legislation Amendment (TAFE and University Governance Reform) Act 2015\n\n(1) Despite the commencement of Part 4 of the amending Act, the Council is not required to include elected members until 6 months after the commencement day.\n\n(2) The University must ensure that elections are held to elect the required number of elected members within 6 months after the commencement day.\n\n(3) Despite the commencement of Part 4 of the amending Act—\n\n(a) the Council may consist of 11 or 12 members until 6 months after the commencement day; and\n\n(b) the Council may consist of more than 21 members until 31 December in the second year next following the year in which elections are first held in accordance with subsection (2).\n\n(4) On and from the commencement day—\n\n(a) the Council is taken to be the same body despite the changes to its constitution made by Part 4 of the amending Act and no decision, matter or thing is affected by those changes; and\n\n(b) the members of the Council in office immediately before the commencement day continue in office, subject to this Act, on the same terms and conditions on which they held office immediately before the commencement day for the remainder of their current terms of office.\n\n(5) In this section—\n\n***amending Act*** means the **Education Legislation Amendment (TAFE and University Governance Reform) Act 2015**;\n\n***commencement day*** means the day on which Part 4 of the amending Act comes into operation.\n\nPt. 8 Div. 5 (Heading and s. 80) inserted by No. 31/2018 s. 73.\n\nDivision 5—Further transitional provisions\n\nS. 80 inserted by No. 31/2018 s. 73.\n\n\t80 Transitional provision—Education Legislation Amendment (Victorian Institute of Teaching, TAFE and Other Matters) Act 2018\n\n(1) Clause 1(1)(a) and (b) of Schedule 1 as substituted by Part 6 of the amending Act apply only to a government appointed member or Council appointed member appointed on or after the commencement day.\n\n(2) In this section—\n\n***amending Act*** means the **Education Legislation Amendment (Victorian Institute of Teaching, TAFE and Other Matters) Act 2018**;\n\n***commencement day*** means the day on which Part 6 of the amending Act comes into operation.\n\nSchedule 1—Membership and procedure of the Council\n\nSection 17\n\n\t1 Terms and conditions of office of Council members\n\nSch. 1 cl. 1(1) amended by No. 73/2012 s. 39(1).\n\n(1) Subject to this Act, including an Order in Council made under section 63—\n\nSch. 1 cl. 1(1)(a) amended by No. 73/2012 s. 40(1), substituted by No. 31/2018 s. 74(1).\n\n(a) a government appointed member holds office for the term, not exceeding 3 years, specified in the member's instrument of appointment;\n\nSch. 1 cl. 1(1)(b) amended by Nos 73/2012 s. 40(2)(b), 69/2015 s. 23(a), substituted by No. 31/2018 s. 74(2).\n\n(b) a Council appointed member holds office for the term, not exceeding 3 years, specified in the member's instrument of appointment;\n\nSch. 1 cl. 1(1)(c) repealed by No. 73/2012 s. 40(2)(a), new Sch. 1 cl. 1(1)(c) inserted by No. 69/2015 s. 23(b).\n\n(c) an elected member elected by staff of the University holds office for a term, not exceeding 3 years, fixed by the Council in accordance with the university statutes and any university regulations;\n\nSch. 1 cl. 1(1)(d) repealed by No. 73/2012 s. 40(2)(a), new Sch. 1 cl. 1(1)(d) inserted by No. 69/2015 s. 23(b).\n\n(d) an elected member elected by students of the University holds office for a term, not exceeding 2 years, fixed by the Council in accordance with the university statutes and any university regulations.\n\nSch. 1 cl. 1(2) amended by No. 73/2012 s. 40(1), repealed by No. 31/2018 s. 74(3).\n\n* * * * *\n\nSch. 1 cl. 1(3) inserted by No. 73/2012 s. 39(2), repealed by No. 31/2018 s. 74(3).\n\n* * * * *\n\n\t2 Members eligible for reappointment\n\nSch. 1 cl. 2(1) amended by Nos 73/2012 s. 40(2)(c), 69/2015 s. 24.\n\n(1) A member of the Council is eligible to be re‑appointed or re-elected to the Council at the end of the member's term of office, provided that the member's period in office does not exceed 12 years of membership, whether consecutive or not.\n\n(2) Subclause (1) does not apply to a member of the Council whose membership exceeds 12 years if the Council passes a resolution that the person may continue to be a member beyond that period.\n\n\t3 Council's power of removal\n\n(1) The Council may remove a member from office in accordance with this clause.\n\n(2) The Council may only remove a member from office if it is of the opinion that the member has failed to comply with the responsibilities of a member of the Council.\n\n(3) The Council must not remove a member from office unless—\n\n(a) another member gives notice at an ordinary meeting of the Council of an intention to move a motion for the member to be removed from the Council and sets out in the notice the grounds for removal; and\n\n(b) the member gives that notice no later than at the last ordinary meeting of the Council before the meeting at which the motion to remove the member will be put to the Council; and\n\n(c) if the member to be removed is not present at the meeting at which that notice is given, the Council gives the member written notice of the intention and sets out in the notice the grounds for removal; and\n\n(d) the Council gives the member to be removed an opportunity, at or before the meeting where the motion for removal is to be considered, to make submissions in writing or personally before the Council of the reasons why the member should not be removed from the Council; and\n\n(e) by a majority of two-thirds of the members present at the meeting, the Council passes a resolution removing the member from office on the grounds stated in the notice given under this clause.\n\n\t4 Vacancies in membership of Council\n\n(1) A member's office becomes vacant—\n\n(a) on the expiry of his or her term of office; or\n\n(b) if he or she resigns from office; or\n\n(c) if he or she is removed from office; or\n\n(d) if he or she is convicted of an indictable offence or an offence that, if committed in Victoria, would be an indictable offence; or\n\n(e) if he or she becomes an insolvent under administration; or\n\n(f) if he or she is elected as a member of the Parliament of Victoria or of the Commonwealth or of any other State or Territory; or\n\n(g) if he or she is or becomes disqualified from managing corporations under Part 2D.6 of the Corporations Act; or\n\n(h) if he or she ceases to be eligible for the category of member for which the member was elected or appointed; or\n\n(i) if he or she has failed to attend 3 consecutive ordinary meetings of the Council, without the Council's prior approval.\n\n(2) If a member of the Council becomes entitled to be a member ex officio—\n\n(a) that member is deemed to hold office ex officio; and\n\n(b) the vacated office of that member must be filled in the manner set out for the filling of casual vacancies.\n\nSch. 1 cl. 4A inserted by No. 39/2012 s. 53.\n\n\t4A Leave of Absence\n\n(1) The Council may, in accordance with this Schedule, grant to or approve for a member of the Council such leave of absence as the Council determines and subject to such terms and conditions as the Council determines.\n\nSch. 1 cl. 4A(2) amended by No. 73/2012 s. 40(1).\n\n(2) The Council may grant a government appointed member of the Council leave of absence for a period not exceeding 3 months.\n\nSch. 1 cl. 4A(3) amended by No. 73/2012 s. 40(1).\n\n(3) The Council, with the prior approval of the Minister, may grant a government appointed member of the Council leave of absence for a period not exceeding 12 months.\n\n**Notes**\n\n1 Clause 4(1)(i) refers to leave of absence from ordinary meetings of the Council.\n\n2 Section 41 of the **Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984** provides for the appointment of a person to act in place of the holder of an office if the holder of the office is absent or unable to act.\n\nSch. 1 cl. 4B inserted by No. 39/2012 s. 53.\n\n\t4B Terms and conditions of appointment of acting members\n\nThe Minister may determine the terms and conditions of appointment of an acting member of the Council including remuneration and fees (if any) to be paid to the acting member.\n\nSch. 1 cl. 4C inserted by No. 39/2012 s. 53.\n\n\t4C Operation of Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984\n\nUnless the contrary intention expressly appears, this Schedule does not affect or take away from section 41 of the **Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984**.\n\nSch. 1 cl. 5 amended by Nos 73/2012 s. 40(2)(d), 69/2015 s. 25.\n\n\t5 Filling of vacancies on retirement\n\nThe appointment or election of a person as a member of the Council to fill a vacancy caused by the retirement of a member at the end of a term of office—\n\n(a) except in the case of Council appointed members, may be made within 6 months before the date of the end of the term of office of the retiring member and takes effect at the end of that term of office; and\n\n(b) in the case of Council appointed members, must be made on or before the last scheduled meeting of the Council before the end of the term of office of the retiring member.\n\nSch. 1 cl. 6 repealed by No. 73/2012 s. 40(2)(e), new Sch. 1 cl. 6 inserted by No. 69/2015 s. 26.\n\n\t6 Conduct of elections\n\nElections of members of the Council are to be conducted in accordance with the requirements of this Act and the university statutes and any university regulations.\n\nSch. 1 cl. 7 repealed by No. 73/2012 s. 40(2)(e), new Sch. 1 cl. 7 inserted by No. 69/2015 s. 26.\n\n\t7 Elected member vacancies taken to be casual vacancies\n\n(1) This clause applies if—\n\n(a) at any election for elected members of the Council—\n\n(i) no vacancies are filled; or\n\n(ii) a number of vacancies less than the whole number which should have been filled is filled; or\n\n(b) an election for elected members of the Council to fill vacancies should have been held but is not held.\n\n(2) The vacancies referred to in subclause (1) which should have been filled and are not filled are taken to be casual vacancies.\n\n(3) A member of Council eventually elected to fill a casual vacancy referred to in subclause (1) is entitled to continue in office as if elected at an election referred to in that subclause.\n\n\t8 Filling of casual vacancies generally\n\nSch. 1 cl. 8(1) amended by No. 73/2012 s. 40(1)(2)  \n(f)(g), substituted by No. 69/2015 s. 27(1).\n\n(1) A casual vacancy in the office of an elected member, a government appointed member or a Council appointed member must be filled by the election or appointment, as the case requires, of a member to fill the vacancy.\n\nSch. 1 cl. 8(2) amended by No. 73/2012 s. 40(2)(h), substituted by No. 69/2015 s. 27(2), amended by No. 31/2018 s. 75(1).\n\n(2) A person who is to be elected as a member of the Council must have the like eligibility or qualification (if any) as that of the member whose office has become vacant.\n\nSch. 1 cl. 8(3) amended by No. 73/2012 s. 40(2)(g)(i), substituted by No. 69/2015 s. 27(3).\n\n(3) Subject to clause 9, the election or appointment must be made by the person or body of persons who or which elected or appointed, as the case requires, the member whose office has become vacant.\n\nSch. 1 cl. 8(4) amended by Nos 73/2012 s. 40(2)(h), 69/2015 s. 27(4), 31/2018 s. 75(2).\n\n(4) Subject to this Act, a member elected to fill a casual vacancy is entitled to hold office during the remainder of the term of the member whose office the new member fills.\n\nSch. 1 cl. 8(4A) inserted by No. 31/2018 s. 75(3).\n\n(4A) Subject to this Act, a government appointed member or a Council appointed member who has been appointed to fill a casual vacancy is entitled to hold office for the term, not exceeding 3 years, specified in the member's instrument of appointment.\n\nSch. 1 cl. 8(5) amended by No. 73/2012 s. 40(1)(2)(f), substituted by No. 69/2015 s. 27(5), amended by No. 31/2018 s. 75(4).\n\n(5) Despite subclauses (4) and (4A), it is not obligatory to fill a casual vacancy for the remainder of the term if—\n\n(a) in the case of a government appointed member or a Council appointed member, the vacancy occurs within 3 months before the expiry of the term of office;\n\n(b) in the case of an elected member, the vacancy occurs within 6 months before the expiry of the term of office.\n\n\t9 Interim Ministerial appointments\n\nSch. 1 cl. 9(1) amended by No. 73/2012 s. 40(1).\n\n(1) Despite section 12 and clause 8, after consultation with the Chancellor, the Minister may make an interim appointment of a person to a vacancy in the office of a government appointed member.\n\n(2) An interim appointment under subclause (1)—\n\n(a) is made by order published in the Government Gazette; and\n\n(b) is for the period specified in the order, being a period not exceeding 6 months; and\n\n(c) may be made despite the requirements of section 12.\n\n\t10 Chairperson\n\nAt every meeting of the Council—\n\n(a) the Chancellor or, in his or her absence, a deputy chancellor elected by the meeting, is to preside as chairperson; and\n\nSch. 1 cl. 10(b) amended by No. 69/2015 s. 28.\n\n(b) in the absence of the Chancellor and a deputy chancellor, the members of the Council present must elect a government appointed member or Council appointed member as chairperson.\n\n\t11 Declaration of interests of Council members\n\n(1) A member of the Council who has an interest in a matter being considered or about to be considered by the Council must, as soon as practicable after the relevant facts have come to his or her knowledge, declare the nature of the interest—\n\n(a) at a meeting of the Council; or\n\n(b) in writing addressed to the Chancellor.\n\n(2) If the Chancellor receives a written declaration under subclause (1), the Chancellor must report it or cause it to be reported, at the next meeting of the Council.\n\n(3) The person presiding at a meeting at which a declaration is made under subclause (1) or reported under subclause (2) must cause a record of the declaration to be made in the minutes of the meeting.\n\n(4) After a declaration is made under subclause (1) by a member of the Council—\n\n(a) unless the Council otherwise directs, the member must not be present during any deliberation with respect to that matter; and\n\n(b) the member is not entitled to vote on the matter; and\n\n(c) if the member does vote on the matter, the vote must be disallowed .\n\n\t12 How questions are to be decided and quorum\n\nSch. 1 cl. 12(1) substituted by No. 73/2012 s. 41.\n\n(1) No question must be decided at any meeting of the Council unless there is a quorum of at least the majority of members holding office for the time being other than a member who is on leave of absence granted under clause 4A.\n\n(2) Subject to any university statute made under subclause (3), all questions which come before any meeting of the Council must be decided by the majority of the members present.\n\n(3) Subject to there being a quorum as required by subclause (1), the Council, by university statute, may provide that certain resolutions, or resolutions of certain classes, have effect only if passed by a specified majority of members or of members present and voting.\n\n(4) The Chairperson at any meeting has—\n\n(a) a vote; and\n\n(b) in case of an equality of votes, a casting vote.\n\n(5) Subject to this Act, the university statutes and the university regulations, the Council may regulate its own proceedings.\n\n\t13 Resolutions without meetings of the Council\n\n(1) If a majority of the members for the time being of the Council sign a document circulated by, or on behalf of, the Chancellor containing a statement that those members are in favour of a resolution in terms set out in the document, a resolution in those terms must be taken to have been passed at a meeting of the Council—\n\n(a) held on the day on which the document is signed; or\n\n(b) if the members do not sign it on the same day, on the day on which the last member to sign signs the document.\n\n(2) If a resolution is taken to have been passed at a meeting of the Council under subclause (1), each member must—\n\n(a) be advised as soon as practicable; and\n\n(b) be given a copy of the terms of the resolution.\n\n(3) For the purposes of subclause (1), 2 or more separate documents containing a statement in identical terms, each of which is signed by one or more members, is to be taken to constitute one document.\n\n(4) In this clause, ***member***, in relation to a resolution, does not include a member who, by reason of clause 11, is not permitted to vote on the resolution.\n\n\t14 Approved methods of communication for Council meetings\n\n(1) If not less than two-thirds of the members of the Council so agree, a meeting of the Council may be held by means of a method of communication, or by means of a combination of methods of communication, approved by the Chancellor for the purposes of that meeting.\n\n(2) For the purposes of this Schedule, a member of the Council who participates in a meeting held in accordance with subclause (1) is present at the meeting even if he or she is not physically present at the same place as another member participating in the meeting.\n\n(3) In this clause, ***meeting*** includes a part of a meeting.\n\n\t15 Committees and delegation of powers\n\n(1) The Council, by resolution, may constitute and appoint any committees as it thinks fit.\n\n(2) At least one-third of the members of any committee must be members of the Council.\n\n(3) The Council, by resolution, may delegate to any committee or to any member of a committee all or any of its powers, authorities, duties and functions other than—\n\n(a) this power of delegation; and\n\n(b) the power to make university statutes and, except in accordance with section 30, university regulations.\n\n(4) A delegation under this clause is revocable by resolution of the Council.\n\n**Note**\n\nSee also sections 42 and 42A of the **Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984**.\n\n\t16 Validation of acts or decisions despite vacancy or disqualification\n\n(1) An act or decision of the Council or a committee of the Council is not invalid merely because of—\n\nSch. 1 cl. 16(1)(a) amended by Nos 73/2012 s. 42, 69/2015 s. 29(1)(a).\n\n(a) a defect or irregularity in, or in connection with, the appointment or election of a member of the Council; or\n\nSch. 1 cl. 16(1)(b) amended by No. 69/2015 s. 29(1)(b).\n\n(b) a vacancy in the membership of the Council, including a vacancy arising from the failure to appoint or elect a member of the Council.\n\n(2) Anything done by or in relation to a person purporting to act as Chairperson, a member of the Council or on a committee is not invalid merely because—\n\nSch. 1 cl. 16(2)(a) amended by Nos 73/2012 s. 42, 69/2015 s. 29(2).\n\n(a) the occasion for the appointment or election had not arisen; or\n\nSch. 1 cl. 16(2)(b) amended by Nos 73/2012 s. 42, 69/2015 s. 29(2).\n\n(b) there was a defect or irregularity in, or in connection with, the appointment or election; or\n\nSch. 1 cl. 16(2)(c) amended by Nos 73/2012 s. 42, 69/2015 s. 29(2).\n\n(c) the appointment or election had ceased to have effect.\n\n\n\nEndnotes\n\n1 General information\n\nSee [www.legislation.vic.gov.au](http://www.legislation.vic.gov.au) for Victorian Bills, Acts and current Versions of legislation and up-to-date legislative information.\n\n *Minister's second reading speech—*\n\n *Legislative Assembly: 17 September 2009*\n\n *Legislative Council: 15 October 2009*\n\nThe long title for the Bill for this Act was \"A Bill for an Act to re-enact with amendments the law relating to Deakin University, to repeal the **Deakin University Act 1974**, the **Deakin University (Warrnambool) Act 1990** and the **Deakin University (Victoria College) Act 1991** and for other purposes.\"\n\nThe **Deakin University Act 2009** was assented to on 1 December 2009 and came into operation on 1 January 2011: section 2(2).\n\nINTERPRETATION OF LEGISLATION ACT 1984 (ILA)\n\nStyle changes\n\nSection 54A of the ILA authorises the making of the style changes set out in Schedule 1 to that Act.\n\nReferences to ILA s. 39B\n\nSidenotes which cite ILA s. 39B refer to section 39B of the ILA which provides that where an undivided section or clause of a Schedule is amended by the insertion of one or more subsections or subclauses, the original section or clause becomes subsection or subclause (1) and is amended by the insertion of the expression \"(1)\" at the beginning of the original section or clause.\n\nInterpretation\n\nAs from 1 January 2001, amendments to section 36 of the ILA have the following effects:\n\n• Headings\n\nAll headings included in an Act which is passed on or after 1 January 2001 form part of that Act. Any heading inserted in an Act which was passed before 1 January 2001, by an Act passed on or after 1 January 2001, forms part of that Act. This includes headings to Parts, Divisions or Subdivisions in a Schedule; sections; clauses; items; tables; columns; examples; diagrams; notes or forms. See section 36(1A)(2A).\n\n• Examples, diagrams or notes\n\nAll examples, diagrams or notes included in an Act which is passed on or after 1 January 2001 form part of that Act. Any examples, diagrams or notes inserted in an Act which was passed before 1 January 2001, by an Act passed on or after 1 January 2001, form part of that Act. See section 36(3A).\n\n• Punctuation\n\nAll punctuation included in an Act which is passed on or after 1 January 2001 forms part of that Act. Any punctuation inserted in an Act which was passed before 1 January 2001, by an Act passed on or after 1 January 2001, forms part of that Act. See section 36(3B).\n\n• Provision numbers\n\nAll provision numbers included in an Act form part of that Act, whether inserted in the Act before, on or after 1 January 2001. Provision numbers include section numbers, subsection numbers, paragraphs and subparagraphs. See section 36(3C).\n\n• Location of \"legislative items\"\n\nA \"legislative item\" is a penalty, an example or a note. As from 13 October 2004, a legislative item relating to a provision of an Act is taken to be at the foot of that provision even if it is preceded or followed by another legislative item that relates to that provision. For example, if a penalty at the foot of a provision is followed by a note, both of these legislative items will be regarded as being at the foot of that provision. See section 36B.\n\n• Other material\n\nAny explanatory memorandum, table of provisions, endnotes, index and other material printed after the Endnotes does not form part of an Act.  \nSee section 36(3)(3D)(3E).\n\n2 Table of Amendments\n\nThis publication incorporates amendments made to the **Deakin University Act 2009** by Acts and subordinate instruments.\n\n–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––\n\n**Deakin University Act 2009, No. 71/2009**\n\n| Assent Date: | 1.12.09 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 74 on 1.1.12: s. 74 |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Deakin University Act 2009** |\n\n\n**Education and Training Reform Amendment (Skills) Act 2010, No. 71/2010**\n\n| Assent Date: | 19.10.10 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 71(Sch. item 1) on 1.4.11: Special Gazette (No. 102) 29.3.11 p. 1 |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Deakin University Act 2009** |\n\n\n**Education Legislation Amendment (VET Sector, Universities and Other Matters) Act 2012, No. 39/2012**\n\n| Assent Date: | 27.6.12 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | S. 53 on 27.6.12: s. 2(1) |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Deakin University Act 2009** |\n\n\n**Education Legislation Amendment (Governance) Act 2012, No. 73/2012**\n\n| Assent Date: | 4.12.12 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | Ss 34–42 on 1.1.13: s. 2(3) |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Deakin University Act 2009** |\n\n\n**Education Legislation Amendment (TAFE and University Governance Reform) Act 2015, No. 69/2015**\n\n| Assent Date: | 15.12.15 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | Ss 15–30 on 1.1.16: Special Gazette (No. 403) 15.12.15 p. 1 |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Deakin University Act 2009** |\n\n\n**Education Legislation Amendment (Victorian Institute of Teaching, TAFE and Other Matters) Act 2018, No. 31/2018**\n\n| Assent Date: | 7.8.18 |\n| --- | --- |\n| Commencement Date: | Ss 73–75 on 15.10.18: Special Gazette (No. 466) 10.10.18 p. 1 |\n| Current State: | This information relates only to the provision/s amending the **Deakin University Act 2009** |\n\n\n–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––\n\n3 Amendments Not in Operation\n\nThere are no amendments which were Not in Operation at the date of this publication.\n\n4 Explanatory details\n\nNo entries at date of publication.","sortOrder":0}],"analysis":{"flash_summary":{"complexity_score":7,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"Yes. The 2009 Act re-enacts and modernises earlier legislation, but subsequent insertions and the structure of the Act materially broaden state oversight and financial governance compared with a simple founding statute. Notable scope expansions include:\n\n- Ministerial and Governor in Council powers to set Council size and appoint members (ss 12, 63) and to approve university statutes and make or approve guidelines governing commercial activities (ss 31, 55). These introduce greater executive oversight than a bare institutional constitution.\n- A formal framework for declaring and regulating \"university commercial activities\" with Ministerial declaration power, Minister‑approved guidelines, reporting obligations and referral to the Auditor‑General (ss 52–56, 59–60). That creates a statutory regulatory overlay for the University’s commercialisation activity that goes beyond traditional academic governance.\n- Mandatory Auditor‑General audits of companies the University controls and a requirement that the University finance those audit costs (ss 49–51), extending public‑sector audit reach into entities that may operate commercially.\n- Stricter asset‑management constraints (Ministerial consent for certain land disposals and long leases; monetary thresholds) that limit the University’s unfettered asset disposal powers (ss 36–38).\n- Governance quality controls added by amendments (requirements for financial and commercial expertise on the Council (s 11(5A)); detailed conflict/declaration provisions and indemnities), which increase regulatory oversight of university governance.\n\nMechanically, these additions shift the Act from a purely internal governance statute toward a hybrid model combining institutional autonomy with layered public accountability and financial controls (see ss 11, 12, 31, 52–56, 49–51, 36–38)."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple Parts and a detailed Schedule (8 Parts plus Schedule 1) with extensive transitional divisions (Part 8)","Large number of defined terms and cross-references (definitions in s 3; cross-references to Corporations Act, Audit Act 1994, Interpretation of Legislation Act 1984, Land Acquisition and Compensation Act 1986, Financial Management Act 1994)","Significant conditional and staged rules (e.g. Council composition depends on Orders in Council and transitional arrangements: ss 11, 11A, 63, Part 8)","Nested delegation and non-delegation rules (delegation allowed but with express prohibitions: s 18; Schedule 1 cl. 15)","Multiple overlapping oversight layers (Council control, Minister approval of statutes/guidelines, Minister/Governor appointment powers, Auditor‑General audits: ss 9, 31, 55, 12, 49–51)","Exceptions and qualifications that produce edge cases (e.g. declaration power to include/exclude activities as \"university commercial activity\" (s 52); failure to comply with guidelines does not invalidate contracts (s 58(2)))","Complex land and property regime with monetary thresholds, Crown land provisions and carve-outs for investment lands (ss 36–38)","Extensive transitional provisions and amendment history (several amending Acts and staggered commencement provisions), increasing interpretive complexity","Multiple different appointment and vacancy filling rules (government appointed, Council appointed, elected, interim appointments, casual vacancies; Schedule 1 clauses 8–9 and ss 12–13)"],"plain_english_summary":"**What this law does (mechanically)**\n\n- Re-establishes Deakin University as a statutory body corporate and sets out its objects (teaching, research, awards, community service and commercial use of its resources) (ss 4–6, 5(h)–(i)).\n- Creates the governing body (the Council) and prescribes its composition, powers and duties, meeting procedures and member protections (Part 2; Schedule 1). The Council is the University’s primary decision-maker for strategy, senior appointments and approval of significant commercial activities (ss 8, 9, 11, 63).\n- Gives the Council power to make university statutes and, where authorised by those statutes, the Vice‑Chancellor or academic board power to make university regulations (Part 5: ss 28–31). University statutes must be submitted to the Minister for approval and come into force on Ministerial approval (s 31–32).\n- Provides detailed rules about property, land acquisition and disposal, trust funds, borrowing, investment and audit (Part 6: ss 35–51). In particular, land granted by the Crown and disposals above monetary thresholds require Ministerial approval (ss 36–38), and the University must follow guidelines for commercial activities (ss 52–60).\n- Establishes the process and ministerial role for approving guidelines that govern university commercial activities, and gives the Minister power to declare whether particular activities are \"university commercial activities\" (ss 52–56). The Minister can request reports and refer commercial activities to the Auditor‑General (ss 59–60).\n- Requires audits of the University’s income/expenditure and, where the University controls companies, the Auditor‑General may audit those companies and the University must pay costs as determined by the Auditor‑General (ss 47, 49–51).\n- Prescribes transitional arrangements, limits on membership, terms of office, grounds for removal, conflict-of-interest rules and indemnities for Council members and certain officeholders (Part 8; Schedule 1; ss 15, 19).\n\n**Who this affects**\n\n- Deakin University (the corporate entity) — its Council, officers (Chancellor, Vice‑Chancellor), staff, students and graduates (s 4(2)–(3), ss 24–27).\n- Members of the Council and committees — rules on appointment, duties, conflicts, indemnities and possible remuneration (ss 11–19; Schedule 1; s 16).\n- The Victorian Government (Minister, Governor in Council, Treasurer) — powers to appoint certain Council members, fix Council numbers by Order in Council, approve university statutes and guidelines, declare commercial activities, and to request reports or refer matters to the Auditor‑General (ss 12, 31, 52–56, 59–63).\n- Third parties who contract, partner or form companies or joint ventures with the University — relationships governed by university statutes and the Minister‑approved guidelines; Auditor‑General may audit controlled companies (ss 48–51, 53–56).\n\n**Why it matters (practical effects and decisionmakers)**\n\n- Governing authority: The Council runs the University, appoints senior officers and decides strategic and financial matters (ss 8–9). The Minister and Governor in Council have structured powers of intervention (appointments, approval of statutes/guidelines, Orders in Council to set Council size) (ss 12, 31, 55, 63).\n- Commercial activity oversight: The Act creates a two-tier system — the Council runs commercial activity subject to guidelines, but the Minister may approve, make interim guidelines and declare what counts as a university commercial activity; the Auditor‑General can audit commercial ventures under the Act (ss 52–56, 59–60, 49–51). This places operational control with the University while giving the State oversight tools.\n- Property and finance constraints: The University can buy, invest, borrow and commercialise, but land disposals and long leases often need Ministerial consent, and there are auditing and reporting obligations (ss 35–38, 44–46, 47, 49–51). These provisions affect how the University can raise capital, manage assets and enter long-term leases or disposals.\n- Accountability and risk allocation: Council members must act in good faith and with care; they are indemnified by the University for acts done in good faith (ss 15, 19). The University bears many costs of oversight — it applies its fees to its objects (s 44), must fund audits of controlled companies as directed by the Auditor‑General (s 51(3)), and is responsible for complying with (and implementing) Minister‑approved guidelines (ss 47, 53–56, 58).\n\n**Official purpose-claims (as stated) and practical trade-offs**\n\n- The Act is presented as a re‑enactment and modernisation of the university’s founding law to deliver consistent governance and reporting (s 1). That purpose is implemented by centralising governance rules in statute, specifying Council composition and duties (Part 2), and formalising processes for statutes, regulations and oversight (Part 5).\n\n- Costs and compliance burdens: formal approval steps (Ministerial approval of university statutes; Minister approval/creation of guidelines; Orders in Council to change Council size) add administrative steps and create ministerial discretion that can delay or shape internal University rules (ss 31–32, 55, 63). Preparing and complying with Minister‑approved guidelines, reporting to the Minister, and potential Auditor‑General investigations impose additional compliance, record‑keeping and audit costs (ss 53–56, 59–60, 51(3)).\n\n- Incentives and decision effects: the Council retains primary control over operations and commercialisation (ss 8–9, 48), but the Minister’s role in classifying commercial activities (s 52) and approving relevant guidelines (s 55) creates an external checkpoint. Because failure to comply with guidelines does not, by itself, invalidate contracts (s 58(2)), the Act preserves contractual certainty for third parties while keeping oversight and inquiry powers with government officials (ss 58–60).\n\n- Effects on private parties and markets: the University may enter joint ventures, form companies and exploit intellectual property (ss 48, 29(1)(v)–(x)). Where the University controls companies, those entities can be audited by the Auditor‑General (ss 49–51), introducing public‑sector style scrutiny over commercially‑facing entities. Restrictions on land disposal and the need for Ministerial approval for large transfers or long leases (ss 36–38) limit the University’s unilateral ability to monetise or encumber property — a constraint on asset management and revenue strategies.\n\n**Who pays, who decides, what changes**\n\n- Who pays: the University funds its operations from fees and other revenue applied to University objects (s 44); it must pay audit costs for Auditor‑General audits of controlled companies as determined by the Auditor‑General (s 51(3)). Council members (other than specified judges) may be paid remuneration fixed by the Minister, at the Council’s discretion (s 16).\n- Who decides: the Council decides most internal matters (ss 8–9, 28). The Minister and Governor in Council appoint some Council members and approve statutes/guidelines and Orders in Council (ss 12, 31, 55, 63). The Auditor‑General audits certain companies and may be asked to investigate by the Minister (ss 49–51, 60).\n- Behaviour changes imposed: formalised governance procedures, new or clearer reporting and audit obligations, restrictions on certain property transactions, mandatory financial/commercial expertise on the Council (s 11(5A)), and a framework of Ministerial oversight for commercial activities (ss 36–38, 11, 52–60).\n\n**Implementation and risk points to watch**\n\n- Ministerial approval and Orders in Council create discretionary gates that can shape university practice and timing (ss 31, 55, 63).\n- The requirement that certain commercial entities be auditable by the Auditor‑General (ss 49–51) increases public scrutiny and compliance costs; the University must reimburse audit costs (s 51(3)).\n- Conflicts-of-interest rules and indemnities (ss 11, 15, Schedule 1 cl. 11, s 19) create a balance between protecting decision-makers and requiring transparent declarations — enforcement depends on Council processes and minutes.\n\n(References are to sections in the Deakin University Act 2009.)"},"kimi_summary":{"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":6,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The legislation has grown significantly beyond its original 2009 re-enactment purpose. The original Act was a consolidation of three previous Acts (1974, 1990, 1991) to modernise governance. However, subsequent amendments have substantially expanded the scope: (1) the 2012 Governance Act restructured Council membership categories and added detailed procedural requirements; (2) the 2015 TAFE and University Governance Reform Act introduced elected member positions with complex transitional arrangements allowing temporary oversized Councils; (3) the 2018 amendments added specific expertise requirements (financial and commercial) for appointed members. The Act now functions as much as a framework for ongoing ministerial oversight of university commercial activities and governance compliance as it does a constituting document, with extensive provisions for guidelines, audits, and reporting that go well beyond the original 'modernisation' intent."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple amendment layers (2010, 2012, 2015, 2018) creating fragmented transitional provisions across four separate Division schedules","Nested membership categories with conditional logic: government appointed vs Council appointed vs elected members, with different term limits (2-3 years) and eligibility rules","Cross-referencing between Act, university statutes, university regulations, and ministerial guidelines creates a four-tier regulatory hierarchy","Conditional land disposal provisions requiring ministerial approval based on monetary thresholds ($5M) or lease duration (21 years)","Schedule 1 contains detailed procedural rules for Council meetings, quorums, conflict declarations, and removal of members requiring two-thirds majority votes","Multiple definitions of 'commencement day' across different transitional divisions referring to different amending Acts","Complex delegation framework: Council can delegate to committees/staff, but cannot delegate the power to make statutes or the power of delegation itself"],"plain_english_summary":"This Act is the governing law for Deakin University, a public university in Victoria. It establishes the university as a legal entity, sets out its purposes (teaching, research, community service), and creates its governing body, the Council.\n\n**Key things the Act does:**\n\n*   **Creates the University:** It continues Deakin University's legal existence (originally established in 1974) as a body that can own property, enter contracts, and sue or be sued.\n*   **Sets up the Council:** The Council is the university's governing body, responsible for strategic direction, appointing the Vice-Chancellor (the chief executive), overseeing finances, and ensuring proper governance. It includes government appointees, Council appointees, elected staff and student representatives, and senior university officers.\n*   **Defines powers:** The University can award degrees, employ staff, buy and sell property (with some ministerial approval needed for major land deals), borrow money, invest funds, and engage in commercial activities.\n*   **Allows subordinate laws:** The Council can make \"university statutes\" and \"university regulations\" (internal rules) on matters like student discipline, fees, academic dress, and elections, provided they don't conflict with this Act.\n*   **Provides for oversight:** The Minister can approve guidelines for commercial activities, and the Auditor-General audits certain university-controlled companies.\n\n**Who it affects:** Students, staff, graduates, Council members, and anyone dealing with the university's property or commercial activities.\n\n**Why it matters:** It provides the legal foundation for how Deakin University operates, makes decisions, and remains accountable to the public."},"flash_summary_failed":{"failed":true,"reason":"Unauthenticated. Configure AI_GATEWAY_API_KEY or use a provider module. Learn more: https://ai-sdk.dev/unauthenticated-ai-gateway","source":"analysis-cron"},"summary":{"complexity_score":3,"scope_assessment":{"changed":false,"description":"Based on available information, the Act appears to have maintained its original scope as a university establishment and governance statute. The consolidated version suggests amendments have been made over time, but these are typical administrative updates rather than fundamental changes to the legislation's purpose or reach."},"complexity_factors":["Standard university establishment legislation following a well-worn Victorian template — limited novel complexity","Interaction between university-made statutes/regulations and the parent Act creates a layered regulatory structure","Governance provisions (council composition, quorum, conflict of interest rules) require careful reading","Limited technical legal terminology but some concepts (corporate body, delegated authority) may be unfamiliar to laypeople","The provided text is heavily truncated — version history metadata rather than substantive provisions — making full analysis difficult"],"plain_english_summary":"## Deakin University Act 2009\n\nThis Victorian law establishes the legal foundation for **Deakin University** — it creates the university as an official legal entity, sets out how it is governed, and defines its powers and responsibilities.\n\n**Who does this affect?**\n- Students at Deakin University\n- Staff and academics employed by the university\n- The university's governing council and management\n- Anyone who contracts with, or is otherwise connected to, Deakin University\n\n**What does it actually do?**\n- Formally establishes Deakin University as a legal body (meaning it can own property, enter contracts, and be sued in its own name)\n- Sets the rules for how the university is run — including the composition and powers of its governing council\n- Defines the university's core purposes, such as teaching, research, and community engagement\n- Gives the university authority to make its own internal rules (called 'statutes' and 'regulations')\n- Replaces the previous legislation that governed Deakin University\n\n**Why does it matter?**\nWithout this Act, Deakin University would have no legal standing. Everything from your enrolment contract to staff employment agreements ultimately rests on this foundational law."}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/deakin-university-act-2009","history":"/api/acts/deakin-university-act-2009/history","analysis":"/api/acts/deakin-university-act-2009/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/deakin-university-act-2009/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/deakin-university-act-2009/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/deakin-university-act-2009/documents"}}