{"id":"C2004A00776","name":"Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001","slug":"defence-reserve-service-protection-act-2001","collection":"act","jurisdiction":"commonwealth","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":"11 of 2001","makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":6151,"registerId":"commonwealth-C2004A00776-current","compilationNumber":null,"startDate":"2026-03-30","status":"InForce","reasons":null,"registeredAt":null},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"Part 1","sectionType":"part","heading":"Introduction","content":"## Part 1—Introduction","sortOrder":0},{"sectionNumber":"1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Short title","content":"#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.","sortOrder":1},{"sectionNumber":"2","sectionType":"section","heading":"Commencement","content":"#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.","sortOrder":2},{"sectionNumber":"3","sectionType":"section","heading":"Overview of the Act","content":"#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.","sortOrder":3},{"sectionNumber":"4","sectionType":"section","heading":"Act binds the Crown","content":"#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.","sortOrder":4},{"sectionNumber":"5","sectionType":"section","heading":"Application of Criminal Code","content":"#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.","sortOrder":5},{"sectionNumber":"6","sectionType":"section","heading":"Act extends to the external Territories","content":"#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.","sortOrder":6},{"sectionNumber":"Part 2","sectionType":"part","heading":"Interpretation","content":"## Part 2—Interpretation","sortOrder":7},{"sectionNumber":"7","sectionType":"section","heading":"Definitions","content":"#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.","sortOrder":8},{"sectionNumber":"9","sectionType":"section","heading":"Meaning of dependant","content":"#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.","sortOrder":9},{"sectionNumber":"10","sectionType":"section","heading":"Meaning of contract of employment","content":"#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.","sortOrder":10},{"sectionNumber":"Part 3","sectionType":"part","heading":"Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service","content":"## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service","sortOrder":11},{"sectionNumber":"11","sectionType":"section","heading":"Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service","content":"#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```","sortOrder":12},{"sectionNumber":"13","sectionType":"section","heading":"Call outs and operational service","content":"#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.","sortOrder":13},{"sectionNumber":"Part 4","sectionType":"part","heading":"Protection against discrimination because of defence service","content":"An Act to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Introduction\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.\n\n#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.\n\n#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.\n\n#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.\n\n## Part 2—Interpretation\n\n#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.\n\n#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.\n\n## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.\n\n## Part 4—Protection against discrimination because of defence service\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.\n\n### Division 2—Discrimination in employment\n\n#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 3—Discrimination in partnerships\n\n#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 4—Discrimination against commission agents\n\n#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 5—Discrimination against contractors\n\n#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 6—Harassment\n\n#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n## Part 5—Employment protection\n\n### Division 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.\n\n#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.\n\n### Division 2—Entitlement to be absent during defence service\n\n#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.\n\n#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).\n\n### Division 3—Resuming work after defence service\n\n#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.\n\n#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.\n\n#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.\n\n### Division 4—Effect of defence service on particular entitlements of members\n\n#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.\n\n#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n\n#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.\n\n### Division 5—Termination of employment after resumption of employment etc.\n\n#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).\n\n### Division 6—No additional obligations on employers\n\n#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.\n\n## Part 6—Partnership protection\n\n#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.\n\n#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n## Part 7—Education protection\n\n#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.\n\n#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.\n\n#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.\n\n## Part 8—Financial liability protection\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.\n\n### Division 2—Which financial liabilities this Part applies to\n\n#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.\n\n#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.\n\n#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).\n\n#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.\n\n#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.\n\n#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Payments postponed and proceedings stayed\n\n#### Subdivision A—Postponement\n\n#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.\n\n#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.\n\n#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.\n\n#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.\n\n#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.\n\n#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.\n\n#### Subdivision B—Proceedings stayed\n\n#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.\n\n#### Subdivision C—Court may order all or part of Division does not apply\n\n#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.\n\n### Division 4—General matters\n\n#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.\n\n#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.\n\n#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).\n\n#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.\n\n#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.\n\n## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection\n\n#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.\n\n#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.\n\n#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.\n\n## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members\n\n#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n\n#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.\n\n#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.\n\n#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.\n\n#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.\n\n#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.\n\n#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.\n\n#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).\n\n## Part 11—Enforcement and remedies\n\n### Division 1A—Overview of Part\n\n#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).\n\n### Division 1B—Complaints and investigations\n\n#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.\n\n#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.\n\n#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1C—Dispute resolution\n\n#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.\n\n#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.\n\n#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.\n\n#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1—Civil enforcement\n\n#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.\n\n### Division 2—Orders that courts may make\n\n#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n\n#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.\n\n#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Civil penalties\n\n#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.\n\n### Division 4—Victimisation\n\n#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n## Part 12—Other matters\n\n#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.\n\n#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.\n\n#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.\n\n#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.\n\n#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.\n\n#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.\n\n#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.\n\n#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":14},{"sectionNumber":"Division 1","sectionType":"division","heading":"Overview of Part","content":"An Act to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Introduction\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.\n\n#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.\n\n#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.\n\n#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.\n\n## Part 2—Interpretation\n\n#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.\n\n#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.\n\n## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.\n\n## Part 4—Protection against discrimination because of defence service\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.\n\n### Division 2—Discrimination in employment\n\n#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 3—Discrimination in partnerships\n\n#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 4—Discrimination against commission agents\n\n#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 5—Discrimination against contractors\n\n#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 6—Harassment\n\n#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n## Part 5—Employment protection\n\n### Division 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.\n\n#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.\n\n### Division 2—Entitlement to be absent during defence service\n\n#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.\n\n#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).\n\n### Division 3—Resuming work after defence service\n\n#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.\n\n#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.\n\n#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.\n\n### Division 4—Effect of defence service on particular entitlements of members\n\n#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.\n\n#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n\n#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.\n\n### Division 5—Termination of employment after resumption of employment etc.\n\n#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).\n\n### Division 6—No additional obligations on employers\n\n#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.\n\n## Part 6—Partnership protection\n\n#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.\n\n#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n## Part 7—Education protection\n\n#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.\n\n#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.\n\n#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.\n\n## Part 8—Financial liability protection\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.\n\n### Division 2—Which financial liabilities this Part applies to\n\n#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.\n\n#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.\n\n#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).\n\n#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.\n\n#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.\n\n#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Payments postponed and proceedings stayed\n\n#### Subdivision A—Postponement\n\n#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.\n\n#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.\n\n#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.\n\n#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.\n\n#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.\n\n#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.\n\n#### Subdivision B—Proceedings stayed\n\n#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.\n\n#### Subdivision C—Court may order all or part of Division does not apply\n\n#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.\n\n### Division 4—General matters\n\n#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.\n\n#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.\n\n#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).\n\n#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.\n\n#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.\n\n## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection\n\n#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.\n\n#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.\n\n#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.\n\n## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members\n\n#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n\n#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.\n\n#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.\n\n#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.\n\n#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.\n\n#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.\n\n#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.\n\n#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).\n\n## Part 11—Enforcement and remedies\n\n### Division 1A—Overview of Part\n\n#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).\n\n### Division 1B—Complaints and investigations\n\n#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.\n\n#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.\n\n#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1C—Dispute resolution\n\n#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.\n\n#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.\n\n#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.\n\n#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1—Civil enforcement\n\n#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.\n\n### Division 2—Orders that courts may make\n\n#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n\n#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.\n\n#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Civil penalties\n\n#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.\n\n### Division 4—Victimisation\n\n#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n## Part 12—Other matters\n\n#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.\n\n#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.\n\n#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.\n\n#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.\n\n#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.\n\n#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.\n\n#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.\n\n#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":15},{"sectionNumber":"14","sectionType":"section","heading":"Overview of Part","content":"#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.","sortOrder":16},{"sectionNumber":"Division 2","sectionType":"division","heading":"Discrimination in employment","content":"An Act to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Introduction\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.\n\n#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.\n\n#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.\n\n#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.\n\n## Part 2—Interpretation\n\n#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.\n\n#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.\n\n## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.\n\n## Part 4—Protection against discrimination because of defence service\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.\n\n### Division 2—Discrimination in employment\n\n#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 3—Discrimination in partnerships\n\n#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 4—Discrimination against commission agents\n\n#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 5—Discrimination against contractors\n\n#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 6—Harassment\n\n#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n## Part 5—Employment protection\n\n### Division 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.\n\n#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.\n\n### Division 2—Entitlement to be absent during defence service\n\n#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.\n\n#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).\n\n### Division 3—Resuming work after defence service\n\n#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.\n\n#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.\n\n#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.\n\n### Division 4—Effect of defence service on particular entitlements of members\n\n#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.\n\n#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n\n#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.\n\n### Division 5—Termination of employment after resumption of employment etc.\n\n#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).\n\n### Division 6—No additional obligations on employers\n\n#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.\n\n## Part 6—Partnership protection\n\n#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.\n\n#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n## Part 7—Education protection\n\n#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.\n\n#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.\n\n#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.\n\n## Part 8—Financial liability protection\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.\n\n### Division 2—Which financial liabilities this Part applies to\n\n#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.\n\n#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.\n\n#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).\n\n#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.\n\n#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.\n\n#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Payments postponed and proceedings stayed\n\n#### Subdivision A—Postponement\n\n#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.\n\n#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.\n\n#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.\n\n#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.\n\n#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.\n\n#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.\n\n#### Subdivision B—Proceedings stayed\n\n#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.\n\n#### Subdivision C—Court may order all or part of Division does not apply\n\n#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.\n\n### Division 4—General matters\n\n#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.\n\n#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.\n\n#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).\n\n#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.\n\n#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.\n\n## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection\n\n#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.\n\n#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.\n\n#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.\n\n## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members\n\n#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n\n#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.\n\n#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.\n\n#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.\n\n#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.\n\n#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.\n\n#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.\n\n#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).\n\n## Part 11—Enforcement and remedies\n\n### Division 1A—Overview of Part\n\n#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).\n\n### Division 1B—Complaints and investigations\n\n#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.\n\n#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.\n\n#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1C—Dispute resolution\n\n#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.\n\n#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.\n\n#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.\n\n#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1—Civil enforcement\n\n#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.\n\n### Division 2—Orders that courts may make\n\n#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n\n#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.\n\n#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Civil penalties\n\n#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.\n\n### Division 4—Victimisation\n\n#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n## Part 12—Other matters\n\n#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.\n\n#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.\n\n#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.\n\n#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.\n\n#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.\n\n#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.\n\n#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.\n\n#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":17},{"sectionNumber":"15","sectionType":"section","heading":"Refusing to employ a person","content":"#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.","sortOrder":18},{"sectionNumber":"16","sectionType":"section","heading":"Dismissing etc. an employee","content":"#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.","sortOrder":19},{"sectionNumber":"17","sectionType":"section","heading":"Hindering employee from serving in Reserves","content":"#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.","sortOrder":20},{"sectionNumber":"Division 3","sectionType":"division","heading":"Discrimination in partnerships","content":"An Act to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Introduction\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.\n\n#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.\n\n#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.\n\n#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.\n\n## Part 2—Interpretation\n\n#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.\n\n#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.\n\n## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.\n\n## Part 4—Protection against discrimination because of defence service\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.\n\n### Division 2—Discrimination in employment\n\n#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 3—Discrimination in partnerships\n\n#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 4—Discrimination against commission agents\n\n#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 5—Discrimination against contractors\n\n#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 6—Harassment\n\n#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n## Part 5—Employment protection\n\n### Division 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.\n\n#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.\n\n### Division 2—Entitlement to be absent during defence service\n\n#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.\n\n#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).\n\n### Division 3—Resuming work after defence service\n\n#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.\n\n#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.\n\n#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.\n\n### Division 4—Effect of defence service on particular entitlements of members\n\n#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.\n\n#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n\n#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.\n\n### Division 5—Termination of employment after resumption of employment etc.\n\n#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).\n\n### Division 6—No additional obligations on employers\n\n#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.\n\n## Part 6—Partnership protection\n\n#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.\n\n#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n## Part 7—Education protection\n\n#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.\n\n#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.\n\n#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.\n\n## Part 8—Financial liability protection\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.\n\n### Division 2—Which financial liabilities this Part applies to\n\n#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.\n\n#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.\n\n#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).\n\n#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.\n\n#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.\n\n#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Payments postponed and proceedings stayed\n\n#### Subdivision A—Postponement\n\n#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.\n\n#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.\n\n#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.\n\n#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.\n\n#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.\n\n#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.\n\n#### Subdivision B—Proceedings stayed\n\n#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.\n\n#### Subdivision C—Court may order all or part of Division does not apply\n\n#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.\n\n### Division 4—General matters\n\n#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.\n\n#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.\n\n#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).\n\n#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.\n\n#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.\n\n## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection\n\n#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.\n\n#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.\n\n#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.\n\n## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members\n\n#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n\n#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.\n\n#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.\n\n#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.\n\n#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.\n\n#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.\n\n#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.\n\n#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).\n\n## Part 11—Enforcement and remedies\n\n### Division 1A—Overview of Part\n\n#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).\n\n### Division 1B—Complaints and investigations\n\n#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.\n\n#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.\n\n#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1C—Dispute resolution\n\n#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.\n\n#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.\n\n#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.\n\n#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1—Civil enforcement\n\n#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.\n\n### Division 2—Orders that courts may make\n\n#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n\n#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.\n\n#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Civil penalties\n\n#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.\n\n### Division 4—Victimisation\n\n#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n## Part 12—Other matters\n\n#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.\n\n#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.\n\n#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.\n\n#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.\n\n#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.\n\n#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.\n\n#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.\n\n#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":21},{"sectionNumber":"18","sectionType":"section","heading":"Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.","content":"#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.","sortOrder":22},{"sectionNumber":"18A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Dissolving partnership etc.","content":"#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.","sortOrder":23},{"sectionNumber":"19","sectionType":"section","heading":"Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves","content":"#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.","sortOrder":24},{"sectionNumber":"Division 4","sectionType":"division","heading":"Discrimination against commission agents","content":"An Act to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Introduction\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.\n\n#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.\n\n#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.\n\n#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.\n\n## Part 2—Interpretation\n\n#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.\n\n#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.\n\n## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.\n\n## Part 4—Protection against discrimination because of defence service\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.\n\n### Division 2—Discrimination in employment\n\n#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 3—Discrimination in partnerships\n\n#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 4—Discrimination against commission agents\n\n#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 5—Discrimination against contractors\n\n#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 6—Harassment\n\n#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n## Part 5—Employment protection\n\n### Division 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.\n\n#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.\n\n### Division 2—Entitlement to be absent during defence service\n\n#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.\n\n#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).\n\n### Division 3—Resuming work after defence service\n\n#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.\n\n#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.\n\n#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.\n\n### Division 4—Effect of defence service on particular entitlements of members\n\n#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.\n\n#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n\n#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.\n\n### Division 5—Termination of employment after resumption of employment etc.\n\n#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).\n\n### Division 6—No additional obligations on employers\n\n#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.\n\n## Part 6—Partnership protection\n\n#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.\n\n#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n## Part 7—Education protection\n\n#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.\n\n#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.\n\n#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.\n\n## Part 8—Financial liability protection\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.\n\n### Division 2—Which financial liabilities this Part applies to\n\n#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.\n\n#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.\n\n#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).\n\n#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.\n\n#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.\n\n#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Payments postponed and proceedings stayed\n\n#### Subdivision A—Postponement\n\n#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.\n\n#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.\n\n#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.\n\n#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.\n\n#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.\n\n#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.\n\n#### Subdivision B—Proceedings stayed\n\n#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.\n\n#### Subdivision C—Court may order all or part of Division does not apply\n\n#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.\n\n### Division 4—General matters\n\n#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.\n\n#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.\n\n#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).\n\n#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.\n\n#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.\n\n## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection\n\n#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.\n\n#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.\n\n#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.\n\n## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members\n\n#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n\n#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.\n\n#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.\n\n#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.\n\n#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.\n\n#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.\n\n#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.\n\n#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).\n\n## Part 11—Enforcement and remedies\n\n### Division 1A—Overview of Part\n\n#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).\n\n### Division 1B—Complaints and investigations\n\n#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.\n\n#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.\n\n#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1C—Dispute resolution\n\n#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.\n\n#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.\n\n#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.\n\n#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1—Civil enforcement\n\n#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.\n\n### Division 2—Orders that courts may make\n\n#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n\n#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.\n\n#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Civil penalties\n\n#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.\n\n### Division 4—Victimisation\n\n#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n## Part 12—Other matters\n\n#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.\n\n#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.\n\n#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.\n\n#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.\n\n#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.\n\n#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.\n\n#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.\n\n#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":25},{"sectionNumber":"20","sectionType":"section","heading":"Refusing to engage commission agent","content":"#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.","sortOrder":26},{"sectionNumber":"21","sectionType":"section","heading":"Terminating etc. contract for services","content":"#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.","sortOrder":27},{"sectionNumber":"Division 5","sectionType":"division","heading":"Discrimination against contractors","content":"An Act to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Introduction\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.\n\n#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.\n\n#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.\n\n#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.\n\n## Part 2—Interpretation\n\n#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.\n\n#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.\n\n## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.\n\n## Part 4—Protection against discrimination because of defence service\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.\n\n### Division 2—Discrimination in employment\n\n#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 3—Discrimination in partnerships\n\n#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 4—Discrimination against commission agents\n\n#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 5—Discrimination against contractors\n\n#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 6—Harassment\n\n#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n## Part 5—Employment protection\n\n### Division 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.\n\n#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.\n\n### Division 2—Entitlement to be absent during defence service\n\n#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.\n\n#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).\n\n### Division 3—Resuming work after defence service\n\n#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.\n\n#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.\n\n#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.\n\n### Division 4—Effect of defence service on particular entitlements of members\n\n#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.\n\n#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n\n#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.\n\n### Division 5—Termination of employment after resumption of employment etc.\n\n#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).\n\n### Division 6—No additional obligations on employers\n\n#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.\n\n## Part 6—Partnership protection\n\n#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.\n\n#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n## Part 7—Education protection\n\n#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.\n\n#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.\n\n#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.\n\n## Part 8—Financial liability protection\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.\n\n### Division 2—Which financial liabilities this Part applies to\n\n#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.\n\n#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.\n\n#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).\n\n#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.\n\n#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.\n\n#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Payments postponed and proceedings stayed\n\n#### Subdivision A—Postponement\n\n#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.\n\n#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.\n\n#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.\n\n#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.\n\n#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.\n\n#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.\n\n#### Subdivision B—Proceedings stayed\n\n#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.\n\n#### Subdivision C—Court may order all or part of Division does not apply\n\n#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.\n\n### Division 4—General matters\n\n#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.\n\n#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.\n\n#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).\n\n#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.\n\n#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.\n\n## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection\n\n#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.\n\n#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.\n\n#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.\n\n## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members\n\n#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n\n#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.\n\n#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.\n\n#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.\n\n#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.\n\n#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.\n\n#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.\n\n#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).\n\n## Part 11—Enforcement and remedies\n\n### Division 1A—Overview of Part\n\n#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).\n\n### Division 1B—Complaints and investigations\n\n#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.\n\n#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.\n\n#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1C—Dispute resolution\n\n#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.\n\n#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.\n\n#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.\n\n#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1—Civil enforcement\n\n#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.\n\n### Division 2—Orders that courts may make\n\n#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n\n#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.\n\n#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Civil penalties\n\n#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.\n\n### Division 4—Victimisation\n\n#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n## Part 12—Other matters\n\n#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.\n\n#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.\n\n#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.\n\n#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.\n\n#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.\n\n#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.\n\n#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.\n\n#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":28},{"sectionNumber":"22","sectionType":"section","heading":"Refusing to engage contractor","content":"#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.","sortOrder":29},{"sectionNumber":"23","sectionType":"section","heading":"Terminating etc. contract for services","content":"#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.","sortOrder":30},{"sectionNumber":"Division 6","sectionType":"division","heading":"Harassment","content":"An Act to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Introduction\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.\n\n#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.\n\n#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.\n\n#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.\n\n## Part 2—Interpretation\n\n#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.\n\n#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.\n\n## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.\n\n## Part 4—Protection against discrimination because of defence service\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.\n\n### Division 2—Discrimination in employment\n\n#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 3—Discrimination in partnerships\n\n#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 4—Discrimination against commission agents\n\n#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 5—Discrimination against contractors\n\n#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 6—Harassment\n\n#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n## Part 5—Employment protection\n\n### Division 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.\n\n#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.\n\n### Division 2—Entitlement to be absent during defence service\n\n#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.\n\n#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).\n\n### Division 3—Resuming work after defence service\n\n#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.\n\n#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.\n\n#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.\n\n### Division 4—Effect of defence service on particular entitlements of members\n\n#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.\n\n#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n\n#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.\n\n### Division 5—Termination of employment after resumption of employment etc.\n\n#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).\n\n### Division 6—No additional obligations on employers\n\n#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.\n\n## Part 6—Partnership protection\n\n#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.\n\n#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n## Part 7—Education protection\n\n#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.\n\n#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.\n\n#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.\n\n## Part 8—Financial liability protection\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.\n\n### Division 2—Which financial liabilities this Part applies to\n\n#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.\n\n#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.\n\n#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).\n\n#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.\n\n#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.\n\n#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Payments postponed and proceedings stayed\n\n#### Subdivision A—Postponement\n\n#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.\n\n#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.\n\n#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.\n\n#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.\n\n#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.\n\n#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.\n\n#### Subdivision B—Proceedings stayed\n\n#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.\n\n#### Subdivision C—Court may order all or part of Division does not apply\n\n#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.\n\n### Division 4—General matters\n\n#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.\n\n#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.\n\n#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).\n\n#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.\n\n#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.\n\n## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection\n\n#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.\n\n#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.\n\n#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.\n\n## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members\n\n#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n\n#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.\n\n#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.\n\n#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.\n\n#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.\n\n#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.\n\n#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.\n\n#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).\n\n## Part 11—Enforcement and remedies\n\n### Division 1A—Overview of Part\n\n#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).\n\n### Division 1B—Complaints and investigations\n\n#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.\n\n#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.\n\n#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1C—Dispute resolution\n\n#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.\n\n#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.\n\n#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.\n\n#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1—Civil enforcement\n\n#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.\n\n### Division 2—Orders that courts may make\n\n#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n\n#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.\n\n#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Civil penalties\n\n#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.\n\n### Division 4—Victimisation\n\n#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n## Part 12—Other matters\n\n#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.\n\n#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.\n\n#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.\n\n#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.\n\n#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.\n\n#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.\n\n#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.\n\n#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":31},{"sectionNumber":"23A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Harassment","content":"#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.","sortOrder":32},{"sectionNumber":"23B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Obligations of employers etc.","content":"#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.","sortOrder":33},{"sectionNumber":"Part 5","sectionType":"part","heading":"Employment protection","content":"An Act to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Introduction\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.\n\n#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.\n\n#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.\n\n#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.\n\n## Part 2—Interpretation\n\n#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.\n\n#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.\n\n## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.\n\n## Part 4—Protection against discrimination because of defence service\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.\n\n### Division 2—Discrimination in employment\n\n#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 3—Discrimination in partnerships\n\n#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 4—Discrimination against commission agents\n\n#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 5—Discrimination against contractors\n\n#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 6—Harassment\n\n#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n## Part 5—Employment protection\n\n### Division 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.\n\n#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.\n\n### Division 2—Entitlement to be absent during defence service\n\n#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.\n\n#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).\n\n### Division 3—Resuming work after defence service\n\n#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.\n\n#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.\n\n#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.\n\n### Division 4—Effect of defence service on particular entitlements of members\n\n#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.\n\n#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n\n#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.\n\n### Division 5—Termination of employment after resumption of employment etc.\n\n#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).\n\n### Division 6—No additional obligations on employers\n\n#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.\n\n## Part 6—Partnership protection\n\n#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.\n\n#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n## Part 7—Education protection\n\n#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.\n\n#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.\n\n#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.\n\n## Part 8—Financial liability protection\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.\n\n### Division 2—Which financial liabilities this Part applies to\n\n#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.\n\n#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.\n\n#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).\n\n#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.\n\n#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.\n\n#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Payments postponed and proceedings stayed\n\n#### Subdivision A—Postponement\n\n#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.\n\n#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.\n\n#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.\n\n#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.\n\n#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.\n\n#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.\n\n#### Subdivision B—Proceedings stayed\n\n#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.\n\n#### Subdivision C—Court may order all or part of Division does not apply\n\n#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.\n\n### Division 4—General matters\n\n#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.\n\n#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.\n\n#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).\n\n#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.\n\n#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.\n\n## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection\n\n#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.\n\n#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.\n\n#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.\n\n## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members\n\n#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n\n#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.\n\n#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.\n\n#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.\n\n#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.\n\n#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.\n\n#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.\n\n#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).\n\n## Part 11—Enforcement and remedies\n\n### Division 1A—Overview of Part\n\n#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).\n\n### Division 1B—Complaints and investigations\n\n#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.\n\n#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.\n\n#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1C—Dispute resolution\n\n#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.\n\n#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.\n\n#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.\n\n#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1—Civil enforcement\n\n#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.\n\n### Division 2—Orders that courts may make\n\n#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n\n#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.\n\n#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Civil penalties\n\n#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.\n\n### Division 4—Victimisation\n\n#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n## Part 12—Other matters\n\n#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.\n\n#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.\n\n#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.\n\n#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.\n\n#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.\n\n#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.\n\n#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.\n\n#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":34},{"sectionNumber":"24","sectionType":"section","heading":"Overview of Part","content":"#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.","sortOrder":36},{"sectionNumber":"24A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Meaning of absent on defence service","content":"#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.","sortOrder":37},{"sectionNumber":"25","sectionType":"section","heading":"No requirement to take leave during defence service","content":"#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.","sortOrder":39},{"sectionNumber":"26","sectionType":"section","heading":"Member entitled to be absent during defence service","content":"#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).","sortOrder":40},{"sectionNumber":"27","sectionType":"section","heading":"Applying to resume work after defence service","content":"#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.","sortOrder":42},{"sectionNumber":"28","sectionType":"section","heading":"Employer must allow member to resume work","content":"#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.","sortOrder":43},{"sectionNumber":"28A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Other rights to resume work not affected","content":"#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.","sortOrder":44},{"sectionNumber":"29","sectionType":"section","heading":"Which entitlements this Division applies to","content":"#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.","sortOrder":46},{"sectionNumber":"30","sectionType":"section","heading":"Continuous full‑time defence service","content":"#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.","sortOrder":47},{"sectionNumber":"31","sectionType":"section","heading":"Other defence service","content":"#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.","sortOrder":48},{"sectionNumber":"32","sectionType":"section","heading":"Termination after resuming employment etc.","content":"#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).","sortOrder":50},{"sectionNumber":"33","sectionType":"section","heading":"No additional obligations on employers","content":"#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.","sortOrder":52},{"sectionNumber":"Part 6","sectionType":"part","heading":"Partnership protection","content":"## Part 6—Partnership protection","sortOrder":53},{"sectionNumber":"34","sectionType":"section","heading":"Overview of Part","content":"#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.","sortOrder":54},{"sectionNumber":"35","sectionType":"section","heading":"Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member","content":"#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.","sortOrder":55},{"sectionNumber":"36","sectionType":"section","heading":"Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member","content":"#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.","sortOrder":56},{"sectionNumber":"Part 7","sectionType":"part","heading":"Education protection","content":"## Part 7—Education protection","sortOrder":57},{"sectionNumber":"37","sectionType":"section","heading":"Overview of Part","content":"#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.","sortOrder":58},{"sectionNumber":"38","sectionType":"section","heading":"Obligations of body administering education institution","content":"#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.","sortOrder":59},{"sectionNumber":"39","sectionType":"section","heading":"Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.","content":"#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.","sortOrder":60},{"sectionNumber":"Part 8","sectionType":"part","heading":"Financial liability protection","content":"An Act to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Introduction\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.\n\n#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.\n\n#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.\n\n#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.\n\n## Part 2—Interpretation\n\n#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.\n\n#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.\n\n## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.\n\n## Part 4—Protection against discrimination because of defence service\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.\n\n### Division 2—Discrimination in employment\n\n#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 3—Discrimination in partnerships\n\n#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 4—Discrimination against commission agents\n\n#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 5—Discrimination against contractors\n\n#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 6—Harassment\n\n#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n## Part 5—Employment protection\n\n### Division 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.\n\n#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.\n\n### Division 2—Entitlement to be absent during defence service\n\n#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.\n\n#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).\n\n### Division 3—Resuming work after defence service\n\n#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.\n\n#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.\n\n#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.\n\n### Division 4—Effect of defence service on particular entitlements of members\n\n#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.\n\n#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n\n#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.\n\n### Division 5—Termination of employment after resumption of employment etc.\n\n#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).\n\n### Division 6—No additional obligations on employers\n\n#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.\n\n## Part 6—Partnership protection\n\n#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.\n\n#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n## Part 7—Education protection\n\n#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.\n\n#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.\n\n#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.\n\n## Part 8—Financial liability protection\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.\n\n### Division 2—Which financial liabilities this Part applies to\n\n#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.\n\n#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.\n\n#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).\n\n#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.\n\n#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.\n\n#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Payments postponed and proceedings stayed\n\n#### Subdivision A—Postponement\n\n#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.\n\n#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.\n\n#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.\n\n#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.\n\n#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.\n\n#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.\n\n#### Subdivision B—Proceedings stayed\n\n#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.\n\n#### Subdivision C—Court may order all or part of Division does not apply\n\n#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.\n\n### Division 4—General matters\n\n#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.\n\n#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.\n\n#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).\n\n#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.\n\n#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.\n\n## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection\n\n#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.\n\n#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.\n\n#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.\n\n## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members\n\n#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n\n#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.\n\n#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.\n\n#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.\n\n#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.\n\n#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.\n\n#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.\n\n#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).\n\n## Part 11—Enforcement and remedies\n\n### Division 1A—Overview of Part\n\n#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).\n\n### Division 1B—Complaints and investigations\n\n#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.\n\n#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.\n\n#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1C—Dispute resolution\n\n#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.\n\n#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.\n\n#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.\n\n#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1—Civil enforcement\n\n#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.\n\n### Division 2—Orders that courts may make\n\n#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n\n#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.\n\n#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Civil penalties\n\n#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.\n\n### Division 4—Victimisation\n\n#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n## Part 12—Other matters\n\n#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.\n\n#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.\n\n#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.\n\n#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.\n\n#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.\n\n#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.\n\n#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.\n\n#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":61},{"sectionNumber":"40","sectionType":"section","heading":"Overview of part","content":"#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.","sortOrder":63},{"sectionNumber":"40A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Meaning of financial arrangement","content":"#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.","sortOrder":65},{"sectionNumber":"41","sectionType":"section","heading":"Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service","content":"#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.","sortOrder":66},{"sectionNumber":"42","sectionType":"section","heading":"Options exercised on or after start day of service","content":"#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.","sortOrder":67},{"sectionNumber":"43","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rates etc. on land","content":"#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.","sortOrder":68},{"sectionNumber":"44","sectionType":"section","heading":"Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies","content":"#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).","sortOrder":69},{"sectionNumber":"45","sectionType":"section","heading":"Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant","content":"#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.","sortOrder":70},{"sectionNumber":"46","sectionType":"section","heading":"Part does not apply to trustees or representatives","content":"#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.","sortOrder":71},{"sectionNumber":"47","sectionType":"section","heading":"Liability exists even if payment not yet due","content":"#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.","sortOrder":72},{"sectionNumber":"48","sectionType":"section","heading":"Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act","content":"#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.","sortOrder":73},{"sectionNumber":"Subdivision A","sectionType":"subdivision","heading":"Postponement","content":"An Act to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Introduction\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.\n\n#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.\n\n#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.\n\n#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.\n\n## Part 2—Interpretation\n\n#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.\n\n#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.\n\n## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.\n\n## Part 4—Protection against discrimination because of defence service\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.\n\n### Division 2—Discrimination in employment\n\n#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 3—Discrimination in partnerships\n\n#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 4—Discrimination against commission agents\n\n#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 5—Discrimination against contractors\n\n#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 6—Harassment\n\n#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n## Part 5—Employment protection\n\n### Division 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.\n\n#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.\n\n### Division 2—Entitlement to be absent during defence service\n\n#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.\n\n#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).\n\n### Division 3—Resuming work after defence service\n\n#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.\n\n#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.\n\n#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.\n\n### Division 4—Effect of defence service on particular entitlements of members\n\n#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.\n\n#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n\n#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.\n\n### Division 5—Termination of employment after resumption of employment etc.\n\n#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).\n\n### Division 6—No additional obligations on employers\n\n#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.\n\n## Part 6—Partnership protection\n\n#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.\n\n#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n## Part 7—Education protection\n\n#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.\n\n#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.\n\n#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.\n\n## Part 8—Financial liability protection\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.\n\n### Division 2—Which financial liabilities this Part applies to\n\n#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.\n\n#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.\n\n#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).\n\n#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.\n\n#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.\n\n#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Payments postponed and proceedings stayed\n\n#### Subdivision A—Postponement\n\n#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.\n\n#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.\n\n#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.\n\n#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.\n\n#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.\n\n#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.\n\n#### Subdivision B—Proceedings stayed\n\n#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.\n\n#### Subdivision C—Court may order all or part of Division does not apply\n\n#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.\n\n### Division 4—General matters\n\n#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.\n\n#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.\n\n#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).\n\n#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.\n\n#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.\n\n## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection\n\n#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.\n\n#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.\n\n#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.\n\n## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members\n\n#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n\n#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.\n\n#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.\n\n#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.\n\n#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.\n\n#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.\n\n#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.\n\n#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).\n\n## Part 11—Enforcement and remedies\n\n### Division 1A—Overview of Part\n\n#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).\n\n### Division 1B—Complaints and investigations\n\n#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.\n\n#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.\n\n#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1C—Dispute resolution\n\n#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.\n\n#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.\n\n#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.\n\n#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1—Civil enforcement\n\n#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.\n\n### Division 2—Orders that courts may make\n\n#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n\n#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.\n\n#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Civil penalties\n\n#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.\n\n### Division 4—Victimisation\n\n#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n## Part 12—Other matters\n\n#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.\n\n#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.\n\n#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.\n\n#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.\n\n#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.\n\n#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.\n\n#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.\n\n#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":75},{"sectionNumber":"49","sectionType":"section","heading":"Payments postponed","content":"#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.","sortOrder":76},{"sectionNumber":"50","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rescheduling payments","content":"#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.","sortOrder":77},{"sectionNumber":"51","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rescheduling if member or dependant dies","content":"#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.","sortOrder":78},{"sectionNumber":"52","sectionType":"section","heading":"Higher rate of interest not payable","content":"#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.","sortOrder":79},{"sectionNumber":"53","sectionType":"section","heading":"Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement","content":"#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.","sortOrder":80},{"sectionNumber":"54","sectionType":"section","heading":"Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land","content":"#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.","sortOrder":81},{"sectionNumber":"Subdivision B","sectionType":"subdivision","heading":"Proceedings stayed","content":"An Act to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Introduction\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.\n\n#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.\n\n#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.\n\n#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.\n\n## Part 2—Interpretation\n\n#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.\n\n#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.\n\n## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.\n\n## Part 4—Protection against discrimination because of defence service\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.\n\n### Division 2—Discrimination in employment\n\n#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 3—Discrimination in partnerships\n\n#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 4—Discrimination against commission agents\n\n#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 5—Discrimination against contractors\n\n#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 6—Harassment\n\n#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n## Part 5—Employment protection\n\n### Division 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.\n\n#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.\n\n### Division 2—Entitlement to be absent during defence service\n\n#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.\n\n#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).\n\n### Division 3—Resuming work after defence service\n\n#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.\n\n#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.\n\n#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.\n\n### Division 4—Effect of defence service on particular entitlements of members\n\n#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.\n\n#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n\n#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.\n\n### Division 5—Termination of employment after resumption of employment etc.\n\n#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).\n\n### Division 6—No additional obligations on employers\n\n#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.\n\n## Part 6—Partnership protection\n\n#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.\n\n#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n## Part 7—Education protection\n\n#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.\n\n#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.\n\n#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.\n\n## Part 8—Financial liability protection\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.\n\n### Division 2—Which financial liabilities this Part applies to\n\n#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.\n\n#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.\n\n#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).\n\n#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.\n\n#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.\n\n#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Payments postponed and proceedings stayed\n\n#### Subdivision A—Postponement\n\n#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.\n\n#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.\n\n#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.\n\n#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.\n\n#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.\n\n#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.\n\n#### Subdivision B—Proceedings stayed\n\n#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.\n\n#### Subdivision C—Court may order all or part of Division does not apply\n\n#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.\n\n### Division 4—General matters\n\n#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.\n\n#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.\n\n#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).\n\n#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.\n\n#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.\n\n## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection\n\n#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.\n\n#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.\n\n#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.\n\n## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members\n\n#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n\n#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.\n\n#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.\n\n#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.\n\n#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.\n\n#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.\n\n#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.\n\n#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).\n\n## Part 11—Enforcement and remedies\n\n### Division 1A—Overview of Part\n\n#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).\n\n### Division 1B—Complaints and investigations\n\n#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.\n\n#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.\n\n#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1C—Dispute resolution\n\n#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.\n\n#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.\n\n#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.\n\n#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1—Civil enforcement\n\n#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.\n\n### Division 2—Orders that courts may make\n\n#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n\n#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.\n\n#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Civil penalties\n\n#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.\n\n### Division 4—Victimisation\n\n#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n## Part 12—Other matters\n\n#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.\n\n#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.\n\n#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.\n\n#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.\n\n#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.\n\n#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.\n\n#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.\n\n#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":82},{"sectionNumber":"55","sectionType":"section","heading":"Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced","content":"#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.","sortOrder":83},{"sectionNumber":"Subdivision C","sectionType":"subdivision","heading":"Court may order all or part of Division does not apply","content":"An Act to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Introduction\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.\n\n#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.\n\n#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.\n\n#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.\n\n## Part 2—Interpretation\n\n#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.\n\n#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.\n\n## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.\n\n## Part 4—Protection against discrimination because of defence service\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.\n\n### Division 2—Discrimination in employment\n\n#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 3—Discrimination in partnerships\n\n#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 4—Discrimination against commission agents\n\n#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 5—Discrimination against contractors\n\n#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 6—Harassment\n\n#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n## Part 5—Employment protection\n\n### Division 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.\n\n#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.\n\n### Division 2—Entitlement to be absent during defence service\n\n#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.\n\n#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).\n\n### Division 3—Resuming work after defence service\n\n#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.\n\n#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.\n\n#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.\n\n### Division 4—Effect of defence service on particular entitlements of members\n\n#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.\n\n#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n\n#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.\n\n### Division 5—Termination of employment after resumption of employment etc.\n\n#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).\n\n### Division 6—No additional obligations on employers\n\n#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.\n\n## Part 6—Partnership protection\n\n#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.\n\n#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n## Part 7—Education protection\n\n#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.\n\n#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.\n\n#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.\n\n## Part 8—Financial liability protection\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.\n\n### Division 2—Which financial liabilities this Part applies to\n\n#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.\n\n#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.\n\n#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).\n\n#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.\n\n#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.\n\n#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Payments postponed and proceedings stayed\n\n#### Subdivision A—Postponement\n\n#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.\n\n#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.\n\n#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.\n\n#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.\n\n#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.\n\n#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.\n\n#### Subdivision B—Proceedings stayed\n\n#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.\n\n#### Subdivision C—Court may order all or part of Division does not apply\n\n#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.\n\n### Division 4—General matters\n\n#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.\n\n#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.\n\n#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).\n\n#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.\n\n#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.\n\n## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection\n\n#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.\n\n#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.\n\n#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.\n\n## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members\n\n#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n\n#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.\n\n#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.\n\n#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.\n\n#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.\n\n#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.\n\n#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.\n\n#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).\n\n## Part 11—Enforcement and remedies\n\n### Division 1A—Overview of Part\n\n#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).\n\n### Division 1B—Complaints and investigations\n\n#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.\n\n#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.\n\n#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1C—Dispute resolution\n\n#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.\n\n#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.\n\n#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.\n\n#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1—Civil enforcement\n\n#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.\n\n### Division 2—Orders that courts may make\n\n#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n\n#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.\n\n#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Civil penalties\n\n#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.\n\n### Division 4—Victimisation\n\n#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n## Part 12—Other matters\n\n#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.\n\n#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.\n\n#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.\n\n#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.\n\n#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.\n\n#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.\n\n#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.\n\n#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":84},{"sectionNumber":"56","sectionType":"section","heading":"Court may order that all or part of Division not apply","content":"#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.","sortOrder":85},{"sectionNumber":"57","sectionType":"section","heading":"Powers of security holder not affected","content":"#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.","sortOrder":87},{"sectionNumber":"58","sectionType":"section","heading":"Instruments made on or after start day not affected","content":"#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.","sortOrder":88},{"sectionNumber":"59","sectionType":"section","heading":"Joint liability","content":"#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).","sortOrder":89},{"sectionNumber":"60","sectionType":"section","heading":"Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.","content":"#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.","sortOrder":90},{"sectionNumber":"61","sectionType":"section","heading":"Certain rights of member or dependant preserved","content":"#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.","sortOrder":91},{"sectionNumber":"Part 9","sectionType":"part","heading":"Bankruptcy protection","content":"## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection","sortOrder":92},{"sectionNumber":"62","sectionType":"section","heading":"Overview of Part","content":"#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.","sortOrder":93},{"sectionNumber":"63","sectionType":"section","heading":"Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed","content":"#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.","sortOrder":94},{"sectionNumber":"64","sectionType":"section","heading":"Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant","content":"#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.","sortOrder":95},{"sectionNumber":"Part 10","sectionType":"part","heading":"Loans and guarantees to returned members","content":"## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members","sortOrder":96},{"sectionNumber":"65","sectionType":"section","heading":"Overview of Part","content":"#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.","sortOrder":97},{"sectionNumber":"66","sectionType":"section","heading":"The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees","content":"#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.","sortOrder":98},{"sectionNumber":"67","sectionType":"section","heading":"Amount of loan or guarantee","content":"#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.","sortOrder":99},{"sectionNumber":"68","sectionType":"section","heading":"Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee","content":"#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.","sortOrder":100},{"sectionNumber":"69","sectionType":"section","heading":"Interest on loan","content":"#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.","sortOrder":101},{"sectionNumber":"70","sectionType":"section","heading":"Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee","content":"#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.","sortOrder":102},{"sectionNumber":"71","sectionType":"section","heading":"Review by Administrative Review Tribunal","content":"#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.","sortOrder":103},{"sectionNumber":"72","sectionType":"section","heading":"Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.","content":"#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).","sortOrder":104},{"sectionNumber":"Part 11","sectionType":"part","heading":"Enforcement and remedies","content":"An Act to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Introduction\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.\n\n#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.\n\n#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.\n\n#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.\n\n## Part 2—Interpretation\n\n#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.\n\n#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.\n\n## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.\n\n## Part 4—Protection against discrimination because of defence service\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.\n\n### Division 2—Discrimination in employment\n\n#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 3—Discrimination in partnerships\n\n#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 4—Discrimination against commission agents\n\n#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 5—Discrimination against contractors\n\n#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 6—Harassment\n\n#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n## Part 5—Employment protection\n\n### Division 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.\n\n#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.\n\n### Division 2—Entitlement to be absent during defence service\n\n#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.\n\n#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).\n\n### Division 3—Resuming work after defence service\n\n#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.\n\n#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.\n\n#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.\n\n### Division 4—Effect of defence service on particular entitlements of members\n\n#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.\n\n#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n\n#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.\n\n### Division 5—Termination of employment after resumption of employment etc.\n\n#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).\n\n### Division 6—No additional obligations on employers\n\n#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.\n\n## Part 6—Partnership protection\n\n#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.\n\n#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n## Part 7—Education protection\n\n#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.\n\n#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.\n\n#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.\n\n## Part 8—Financial liability protection\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.\n\n### Division 2—Which financial liabilities this Part applies to\n\n#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.\n\n#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.\n\n#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).\n\n#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.\n\n#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.\n\n#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Payments postponed and proceedings stayed\n\n#### Subdivision A—Postponement\n\n#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.\n\n#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.\n\n#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.\n\n#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.\n\n#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.\n\n#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.\n\n#### Subdivision B—Proceedings stayed\n\n#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.\n\n#### Subdivision C—Court may order all or part of Division does not apply\n\n#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.\n\n### Division 4—General matters\n\n#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.\n\n#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.\n\n#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).\n\n#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.\n\n#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.\n\n## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection\n\n#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.\n\n#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.\n\n#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.\n\n## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members\n\n#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n\n#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.\n\n#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.\n\n#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.\n\n#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.\n\n#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.\n\n#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.\n\n#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).\n\n## Part 11—Enforcement and remedies\n\n### Division 1A—Overview of Part\n\n#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).\n\n### Division 1B—Complaints and investigations\n\n#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.\n\n#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.\n\n#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1C—Dispute resolution\n\n#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.\n\n#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.\n\n#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.\n\n#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1—Civil enforcement\n\n#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.\n\n### Division 2—Orders that courts may make\n\n#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n\n#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.\n\n#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Civil penalties\n\n#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.\n\n### Division 4—Victimisation\n\n#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n## Part 12—Other matters\n\n#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.\n\n#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.\n\n#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.\n\n#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.\n\n#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.\n\n#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.\n\n#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.\n\n#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":105},{"sectionNumber":"Division 1A","sectionType":"division","heading":"Overview of Part","content":"An Act to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Introduction\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.\n\n#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.\n\n#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.\n\n#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.\n\n## Part 2—Interpretation\n\n#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.\n\n#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.\n\n## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.\n\n## Part 4—Protection against discrimination because of defence service\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.\n\n### Division 2—Discrimination in employment\n\n#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 3—Discrimination in partnerships\n\n#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 4—Discrimination against commission agents\n\n#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 5—Discrimination against contractors\n\n#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 6—Harassment\n\n#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n## Part 5—Employment protection\n\n### Division 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.\n\n#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.\n\n### Division 2—Entitlement to be absent during defence service\n\n#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.\n\n#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).\n\n### Division 3—Resuming work after defence service\n\n#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.\n\n#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.\n\n#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.\n\n### Division 4—Effect of defence service on particular entitlements of members\n\n#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.\n\n#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n\n#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.\n\n### Division 5—Termination of employment after resumption of employment etc.\n\n#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).\n\n### Division 6—No additional obligations on employers\n\n#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.\n\n## Part 6—Partnership protection\n\n#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.\n\n#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n## Part 7—Education protection\n\n#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.\n\n#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.\n\n#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.\n\n## Part 8—Financial liability protection\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.\n\n### Division 2—Which financial liabilities this Part applies to\n\n#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.\n\n#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.\n\n#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).\n\n#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.\n\n#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.\n\n#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Payments postponed and proceedings stayed\n\n#### Subdivision A—Postponement\n\n#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.\n\n#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.\n\n#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.\n\n#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.\n\n#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.\n\n#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.\n\n#### Subdivision B—Proceedings stayed\n\n#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.\n\n#### Subdivision C—Court may order all or part of Division does not apply\n\n#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.\n\n### Division 4—General matters\n\n#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.\n\n#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.\n\n#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).\n\n#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.\n\n#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.\n\n## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection\n\n#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.\n\n#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.\n\n#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.\n\n## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members\n\n#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n\n#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.\n\n#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.\n\n#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.\n\n#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.\n\n#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.\n\n#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.\n\n#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).\n\n## Part 11—Enforcement and remedies\n\n### Division 1A—Overview of Part\n\n#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).\n\n### Division 1B—Complaints and investigations\n\n#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.\n\n#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.\n\n#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1C—Dispute resolution\n\n#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.\n\n#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.\n\n#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.\n\n#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1—Civil enforcement\n\n#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.\n\n### Division 2—Orders that courts may make\n\n#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n\n#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.\n\n#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Civil penalties\n\n#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.\n\n### Division 4—Victimisation\n\n#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n## Part 12—Other matters\n\n#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.\n\n#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.\n\n#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.\n\n#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.\n\n#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.\n\n#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.\n\n#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.\n\n#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":106},{"sectionNumber":"72A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Overview of Part","content":"#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).","sortOrder":107},{"sectionNumber":"Division 1B","sectionType":"division","heading":"Complaints and investigations","content":"An Act to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Introduction\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.\n\n#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.\n\n#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.\n\n#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.\n\n## Part 2—Interpretation\n\n#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.\n\n#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.\n\n## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.\n\n## Part 4—Protection against discrimination because of defence service\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.\n\n### Division 2—Discrimination in employment\n\n#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 3—Discrimination in partnerships\n\n#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 4—Discrimination against commission agents\n\n#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 5—Discrimination against contractors\n\n#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 6—Harassment\n\n#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n## Part 5—Employment protection\n\n### Division 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.\n\n#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.\n\n### Division 2—Entitlement to be absent during defence service\n\n#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.\n\n#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).\n\n### Division 3—Resuming work after defence service\n\n#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.\n\n#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.\n\n#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.\n\n### Division 4—Effect of defence service on particular entitlements of members\n\n#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.\n\n#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n\n#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.\n\n### Division 5—Termination of employment after resumption of employment etc.\n\n#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).\n\n### Division 6—No additional obligations on employers\n\n#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.\n\n## Part 6—Partnership protection\n\n#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.\n\n#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n## Part 7—Education protection\n\n#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.\n\n#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.\n\n#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.\n\n## Part 8—Financial liability protection\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.\n\n### Division 2—Which financial liabilities this Part applies to\n\n#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.\n\n#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.\n\n#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).\n\n#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.\n\n#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.\n\n#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Payments postponed and proceedings stayed\n\n#### Subdivision A—Postponement\n\n#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.\n\n#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.\n\n#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.\n\n#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.\n\n#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.\n\n#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.\n\n#### Subdivision B—Proceedings stayed\n\n#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.\n\n#### Subdivision C—Court may order all or part of Division does not apply\n\n#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.\n\n### Division 4—General matters\n\n#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.\n\n#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.\n\n#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).\n\n#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.\n\n#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.\n\n## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection\n\n#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.\n\n#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.\n\n#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.\n\n## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members\n\n#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n\n#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.\n\n#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.\n\n#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.\n\n#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.\n\n#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.\n\n#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.\n\n#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).\n\n## Part 11—Enforcement and remedies\n\n### Division 1A—Overview of Part\n\n#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).\n\n### Division 1B—Complaints and investigations\n\n#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.\n\n#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.\n\n#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1C—Dispute resolution\n\n#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.\n\n#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.\n\n#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.\n\n#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1—Civil enforcement\n\n#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.\n\n### Division 2—Orders that courts may make\n\n#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n\n#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.\n\n#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Civil penalties\n\n#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.\n\n### Division 4—Victimisation\n\n#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n## Part 12—Other matters\n\n#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.\n\n#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.\n\n#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.\n\n#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.\n\n#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.\n\n#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.\n\n#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.\n\n#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":108},{"sectionNumber":"72B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Complaints","content":"#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.","sortOrder":109},{"sectionNumber":"72C","sectionType":"section","heading":"Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions","content":"#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.","sortOrder":110},{"sectionNumber":"72D","sectionType":"section","heading":"Notice to produce information or documents","content":"#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.","sortOrder":111},{"sectionNumber":"72E","sectionType":"section","heading":"Compliance with notice to produce","content":"#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.","sortOrder":112},{"sectionNumber":"72F","sectionType":"section","heading":"Copies and retention of documents","content":"#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.","sortOrder":113},{"sectionNumber":"72G","sectionType":"section","heading":"Disclosure of information","content":"#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.","sortOrder":114},{"sectionNumber":"72H","sectionType":"section","heading":"Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part","content":"#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.","sortOrder":115},{"sectionNumber":"Division 1C","sectionType":"division","heading":"Dispute resolution","content":"An Act to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes\n\n## Part 1—Introduction\n\n#### 1 Short title\n\n  This Act may be cited as the Defence Reserve Service (Protection) Act 2001.\n\n#### 2 Commencement\n\n  This Act commences on the 28th day after the day on which it receives the Royal Assent.\n\n#### 3 Overview of the Act\n\n  (1) The following is a simplified overview of the Act.\n  (2) This Act sets out entitlements and prohibitions that apply in relation to people who are rendering, or have rendered, defence service as members of the Reserves. In some cases, the entitlements extend to their dependants.\n  (3) The kind of defence service rendered by a particular member determines the scope of the prohibitions and entitlements available in relation to him or her: see Part 3.\n  (4) Part 4 contains prohibitions against conduct that discriminates against members in their employment or other work. This Part applies to all types of defence service.\n  (5) Part 5 sets out the consequences for a member’s employment if he or she was employed when he or she started to render defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (6) Part 6 protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service. This Part applies to all kinds of defence service.\n  (7) Part 7 requires an education institution to make reasonable adjustments for a member who undertakes defence service.\n  (8) Part 8 postpones debts that a member (or his or her dependant) is liable to pay and that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  Interest accrues on the postponed debts. Part 8 also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed debts.\n  (9) Part 9 protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings. It applies only if the member has rendered:\n    (a) defence service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) operational service.\n  (10) Part 10 allows for a member who has rendered defence service as a result of a call out to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n  (11) Part 11 deals with enforcement and remedies. Part 12 deals with minor miscellaneous matters.\n\n#### 4 Act binds the Crown\n\n  (1) This Act binds the Crown in each of its capacities.\n  (2) In particular, obligations that this Act imposes on employers or other persons (however described) are imposed on the Crown just as they are imposed on everyone else.\n  (3) However, this Act does not make the Crown liable to be prosecuted for an offence.\n\n#### 5 Application of Criminal Code\n\n  The Criminal Code applies to all offences against this Act.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out the general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 6 Act extends to the external Territories\n\n  This Act extends to every external Territory.\n\n## Part 2—Interpretation\n\n#### 7 Definitions\n\n  In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears:\n\n> absent on defence service has the meaning given by section 24A and subsections 28(3) and (4).\n\n> ADI (authorised deposit‑taking institution) means a corporation that is an ADI for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959.\n\n> Australian education institution means an education institution (within the meaning of the Student Assistance Act 1973) in Australia.\n\n> body administering an Australian education institution means:\n\n    (a) the institution (if it is a body corporate); or\n    (b) in any other case—the body or other person (including the Crown) who has ultimate responsibility for administering the institution.\n\n> call out means an order under section 28, 33, 34, 35 or 36 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> civil penalty provision has the same meaning as in the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> commission agent means a person who:\n\n    (a) works for another person as the agent of that other person; and\n    (b) is wholly or partly remunerated by commission.\n\n> company title interest, in relation to land, means a right:\n\n    (a) to occupy the land; or\n    (b) to occupy a building or part of a building erected on the land;\n  arising out of the holding of shares, or out of a contract to purchase shares, in a company that owns the land or building.\n\n> contract of employment has the meaning given by section 10.\n\n> contractor means a person who contracts to perform work for another person under a contract for services (other than as an employee).\n\n> defence service means service (including training) as a member of the Reserves.\n\n> dependant has the meaning given by section 9.\n\n> employment includes:\n\n    (a) appointment or employment by the Commonwealth, a State or Territory; and\n    (b) appointment or employment by an authority of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory (including a local government body); and\n    (c) an apprenticeship; and\n    (d) a traineeship arrangement; and\n    (e) full‑time, part‑time and casual work;\n  but does not include:\n    (f) work under a contract for services; or\n    (g) work as a commission agent.\n\n> Finance Minister means the Minister administering the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013.\n\n> financial arrangement has the meaning given by section 40A.\n\n> harass has a meaning affected by subsection 23A(3).\n\n> hire purchase agreement means a contract for the hire of goods where:\n\n    (a) the hirer has the right or obligation to buy the goods; and\n    (b) the charge that is or may be made for the hire, together with any other amount payable under the contract (including an amount to buy the goods or to exercise an option to do so), is more than the price of the goods; and\n    (c) title in the goods does not pass to the hirer until the option to purchase is exercised.\n\n> land includes:\n\n    (a) buildings and improvements on land; and\n    (b) a legal or equitable estate or interest in land; and\n    (c) a right, power or privilege over, or in relation to, land; and\n    (d) a company title interest in land.\n\n> loan includes the provision of credit or any other form of financial accommodation.\n\n> member means a person who is, or has been, a member of a part of the Reserves, but does not include a person called upon to serve in the Defence Force under section 60 of the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> operational service:\n\n    (a) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service in circumstances involving one or more of the following:\n    (i) war (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903) or warlike operations;\n    (ii) a time of defence emergency (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903);\n    (iii) defence preparation;\n    (iv) peacekeeping or peace enforcement;\n    (v) assistance to Commonwealth, State, Territory or foreign government authorities and agencies in matters involving Australia’s national security or affecting Australian defence interests;\n    (vi) support to community activities of national or international significance;\n    (vii) civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief; and\n    (b) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph; and\n    (c) subject to paragraph (d), includes defence service by a member involving:\n    (i) preparing to render particular operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); or\n    (ii) decompressing after rendering operational service covered by paragraph (a) or (b); and\n    (d) does not include defence service prescribed by the rules for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n> protected co‑worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(5).\n\n> protected period, in relation to a member who is rendering, or has rendered, defence service in relation to which Part 5 or Part 8 applies, means the shorter of the following periods:\n\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render the defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after the day on which the member ceased to render that service.\n\n> protected worker has the meaning given by subsection 23A(4).\n\n> reasonable adjustment has the meaning given by subsection 38(4).\n\n> Regulatory Powers Act means the Regulatory Powers (Standard Provisions) Act 2014.\n\n> Reserves has the same meaning as in the Defence Act 1903.\n\n> rules means rules made under section 81.\n\n> Secretary means Secretary of the Department.\n\n> start day of service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies has the meaning given by subsection 13(3).\n\n> this Act includes the rules.\n\n#### 9 Meaning of dependant\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> dependant of a member who is or was rendering service to which Part 8, 9 or 10 applies (see section 13) means:\n\n    (a) the member’s partner; or\n    (b) a person who was wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support immediately before the start day of the service; or\n    (c) a person who became, or becomes, wholly or partly dependent on the member for financial support while the member was or is rendering the service; or\n    (d) a person to whom:\n    (i) a pension is payable under the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986; or\n    (ii) compensation is payable under the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004;\n    because of the member’s incapacity or death; or\n    (e) if the member died while rendering the service—the widow or widower of the member.\n  (2) In this section, the following expressions have the same meanings as in the Veterans’ Entitlements Act 1986:\n    (a) widow;\n    (b) widower.\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> partner has the same meaning as in the Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004.\n\n#### 10 Meaning of contract of employment\n\n  (1) In this Act:\n\n> contract of employment includes:\n\n    (a) a contract of apprenticeship; and\n    (b) an arrangement under which a person is employed.\n\n> Note: For employment, see section 7.\n\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, the appointment or employment of a person under a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory is taken to be employment under a contract of employment.\n\n## Part 3—Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n#### 11 Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service\n\n  The following table sets out which Parts of this Act apply in relation to which kinds of defence service:\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"4\" style=\"width:348.95pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Which protections and benefits apply to the different kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">This Part...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">which deals with...</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span style=\"font-weight:bold\">applies to these kinds of defence service...</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Protection against discrimination</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Employment protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Partnership protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Education protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Financial liability protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>6</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Bankruptcy protection</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) any service as a result of a call out; and</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) continuous full time service that is operational service;</span></p><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>(see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>7</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>10</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Loans and guarantees</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Any service as a result of a call out (see section</span><span> </span><span>13)</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>8</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>11</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Enforcement and remedies</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.75pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>9</span></p></td><td style=\"width:53.1pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Part</span><span> </span><span>12</span></p></td><td style=\"width:95.6pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>Other matters</span></p></td><td style=\"width:143.4pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.35pt; padding-left:5.35pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>All kinds of defence service</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n#### 13 Call outs and operational service\n\n  (1) Parts 8, 9 and 10 apply in relation to service that a member renders as a result of a call out.\n  (2) Parts 8 and 9 also apply in relation to continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (3) The start day of defence service to which subsection (1) or (2) applies is:\n    (a) if subsection (1) applies—the day on which the member becomes liable to render the service; or\n    (b) otherwise—the day on which the member starts to render the service.\n\n## Part 4—Protection against discrimination because of defence service\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 14 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part makes it unlawful to refuse to give work to a person on the ground that the person is rendering, has rendered, or might in the future render, defence service.\n  (2A) It is also unlawful for a person to harass a worker, partner or co‑worker of the person on that ground.\n  (3) A breach of the Part may be a criminal offence or result in a civil penalty. Breaches can also be redressed by other civil means: see Part 11.\n\n### Division 2—Discrimination in employment\n\n#### 15 Refusing to employ a person\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to offer to employ another person for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 16 Dismissing etc. an employee\n\n  (1) An employer must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) change the terms and conditions of employment of an employee to his or her prejudice;\n    (b) discriminate against an employee in his or her terms and conditions of employment;\n    (c) dismiss an employee.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the employee:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 17 Hindering employee from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) An employer must not hinder or prevent a person in the employer’s employment from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 3—Discrimination in partnerships\n\n#### 18 Refusing to offer partnership to another person etc.\n\n  (1) A person who proposes to form a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (2) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not refuse or fail to invite another person to become a partner in the partnership for a prohibited reason or for reasons that include a prohibited reason.\n  (3) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) or (2) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (5) A person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 18A Dissolving partnership etc.\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not, for a prohibited reason relating to another partner in the partnership, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason relating to another partner, do or threaten to do any of the following:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership;\n    (b) expel the other partner from the partnership;\n    (c) require the other partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership;\n    (d) subject the other partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason in relation to another partner if it is engaged in because the other partner:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 19 Hindering fellow partner from serving in Reserves\n\n  (1) A person who is a partner in a partnership must not hinder or prevent another partner in the partnership from:\n    (a) volunteering to render defence service; or\n    (b) rendering defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 4—Discrimination against commission agents\n\n#### 20 Refusing to engage commission agent\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a commission agent for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 21 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a commission agent in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract under which the person deals with the agent;\n    (b) terminate the contract.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the commission agent, or an officer or employee of the commission agent:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 5—Discrimination against contractors\n\n#### 22 Refusing to engage contractor\n\n  (1) A person must not refuse or fail to engage another person as a contractor for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person, or an officer or employee of the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23 Terminating etc. contract for services\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, do, or threaten to do, either of the following:\n    (a) discriminate against a contractor in relation to the terms and conditions of the contract for services that the person has entered into with the contractor;\n    (b) terminate the contract for services.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the contractor, or an officer or employee of the contractor:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n> Note: See section 4AA of the Crimes Act 1914 for the current value of a penalty unit.\n\n  (4) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n### Division 6—Harassment\n\n#### 23A Harassment\n\n  (1) A person must not, for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason, harass another person if the other person is:\n    (a) a protected worker of the person; or\n    (b) a partner in a partnership in which the person is also a partner; or\n    (c) a protected co‑worker of the person.\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in subsection (1) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the other person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Harass includes abuse or bully.\n  (4) Each of the following is a protected worker of a person:\n    (a) an employee of the person;\n    (b) a commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (c) a person who is seeking to become an employee, partner, commission agent or contractor of the person;\n    (d) an officer or employee of:\n    (i) a commission agent or contractor of the person; or\n    (ii) a person who is seeking to become a commission agent or contractor of the person.\n  (5) A person is a protected co‑worker of another person if:\n    (a) the first person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of a third person; and\n    (b) the other person is an employee, commission agent or contractor of:\n    (i) the third person; or\n    (ii) a different person, if the first person and the other person work together in performing the duties of their respective employments, commission agencies or contracts.\n  Penalties\n  (6) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 23B Obligations of employers etc.\n\n  (1) A person is liable to a civil penalty if:\n    (a) an employee, commission agent or contractor of the person harasses a third person for a prohibited reason, or for reasons that include a prohibited reason; and\n    (b) the third person is a protected co‑worker of the employee, commission agent or contractor because of that employment, commission agency or contract.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n  (2) Conduct mentioned in paragraph (1)(a) is for a prohibited reason if it is engaged in because the third person:\n    (a) may volunteer to render defence service; or\n    (b) is rendering defence service; or\n    (c) is, or may become, liable to render defence service; or\n    (d) has previously rendered defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if the first person takes all reasonable steps to ensure that his or her employees, commission agents and contractors do not harass protected co‑workers for prohibited reasons.\n\n> Note: A person who wishes to rely on subsection (3) in proceedings for a civil penalty order bears an evidential burden in relation to the matter in that subsection: see section 96 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n## Part 5—Employment protection\n\n### Division 1—Preliminary\n\n#### 24 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects the status and entitlements, such as accrued leave, of members who render the defence service while subject to employment obligations.\n\n#### 24A Meaning of absent on defence service\n\n  A member who is employed before starting to render defence service is absent on defence service during any of the following periods:\n    (a) any period during which the member is travelling from his or her residence to the place at which he or she is required to report for defence service;\n    (b) any period while he or she is rendering defence service;\n    (c) the period (if any) starting immediately after he or she ceases to render that service and ending (subject to subsections 28(3) and (4)) immediately before the earlier of the following times:\n    (i) when the member resumes work (including under Division 3 of this Part) or is reinstated in employment under that Division;\n    (ii) if the member does not apply to resume work, or to be reinstated in employment, under section 27—30 days after the member ceases to render that service.\n\n### Division 2—Entitlement to be absent during defence service\n\n#### 25 No requirement to take leave during defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member is employed by a person under a contract of employment that allows the member any type of paid or unpaid leave.\n  (2) The employer must not require the member to take the leave concurrently with all or part of his or her absence on defence service.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to the extent that the member agrees to take the leave concurrently with all or part of that absence.\n\n#### 26 Member entitled to be absent during defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is employed before being absent on defence service is entitled to be absent from that employment while the member is absent on defence service.\n  (2) A period during which the member is absent from that employment while absent on defence service is taken not to be a period of employment under the member’s contract of employment unless this Part provides otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply to a period throughout which the member is taking any type of paid or unpaid leave under the member’s contract of employment, as mentioned in subsection 25(3).\n  (4) This section does not:\n    (a) affect the operation of section 25; or\n    (b) limit the ability of a contract of employment to allow a person any type of paid or unpaid leave; or\n    (c) prevent the termination of a member’s contract of employment in accordance with law for a reason other than an absence mentioned in subsection (1).\n\n> Note: The protections in subsections (1) and (2) cease to apply 30 days after the member ceases to render defence service if the member does not apply to resume work under the contract of employment under section 27 before then: see paragraph 24A(c).\n\n### Division 3—Resuming work after defence service\n\n#### 27 Applying to resume work after defence service\n\n  (1) A member who is absent from his or her employment while absent on defence service may apply to the employer to resume work under the member’s contract of employment. An application must be in writing (unless the employer waives that requirement).\n  (2) If the contract of employment was terminated in accordance with law while the member was absent on defence service but another employer (the new employer) is carrying on:\n    (a) the business or undertaking in which the member was employed under the contract; or\n    (b) another business or undertaking which includes that business or undertaking;\n  the member may apply in writing to the new employer for reinstatement.\n  (3) The member must apply to the employer or new employer no later than 30 days after ceasing to render defence service.\n  (4) If an employee is reinstated in employment with a new employer, the contract of employment under which the member was previously employed is novated to the new employer.\n\n#### 28 Employer must allow member to resume work\n\n  (1) As soon as reasonably practicable after receiving an application under section 27, the employer must:\n    (a) allow the member to resume work, or reinstate the member in employment, in the same capacity in which the member was employed immediately before the start of the member’s absence on defence service; and\n    (b) ensure that the member’s terms and conditions of employment (including remuneration) are at least as favourable as those that would have applied to him or her in that capacity but for the service.\n  Exceptions\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply if:\n    (a) the employer agreed to the resumption or reinstatement, but the member:\n    (i) did not make himself or herself available for work as agreed between them; and\n    (ii) did not have a reasonable excuse for not doing so; or\n    (b) because of changed circumstances since the member was employed (except employing someone else to replace the member):\n    (i) it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement; or\n    (ii) the employer offered to employ the member in a capacity, and under terms and conditions, that were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer him or her.\n  (3) If paragraph (2)(a) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service at the time the member was to have made himself or herself available for work under the agreement mentioned in that paragraph.\n  (4) If paragraph (2)(b) applies, the member ceases to be absent on defence service:\n    (a) when the employer informs the member that it was not within the employer’s power to allow the resumption or reinstatement, as mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(i); or\n    (b) if the member accepts the offer mentioned in subparagraph (2)(b)(ii)—when the offered employment starts; or\n    (c) if the member does not accept the offer—when the member declines the offer, or 30 days after the employer makes the offer, whichever occurs first.\n\n#### 28A Other rights to resume work not affected\n\n  This Division does not limit any right of a member to resume work or to be reinstated in employment under:\n    (a) a contract of employment; or\n    (b) any law other than this Division.\n\n### Division 4—Effect of defence service on particular entitlements of members\n\n#### 29 Which entitlements this Division applies to\n\n  This Division deals with determining the entitlements of a member, or of someone else arising because of the entitlements of a member, under a contract of employment or otherwise in relation to the following:\n    (a) annual leave and leave loadings;\n    (b) personal or carer’s leave, including sick leave, family leave, bereavement leave, compassionate leave, cultural leave and other like forms of leave;\n    (c) parental leave, including maternity and adoption leave;\n    (d) long service leave or an amount in place of long service leave;\n    (e) a prescribed matter.\n\n#### 30 Continuous full‑time defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering continuous full time defence service.\n  (2) The entitlements in relation to the member’s employment in respect of the period of the absence on defence service must be no less beneficial than they would have been if the member had been absent on leave without pay from the employment during that period.\n  (3) In particular, the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n\n#### 31 Other defence service\n\n  (1) This section applies if a member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, under this Part after rendering defence service other than continuous full time defence service.\n  Resumption of employment\n  (2) If the member resumes work for the old employer (see subsection 27(1)):\n    (a) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the employment; and\n    (b) the continuity of the member’s employment is taken not to have been broken by his or her absence on defence service.\n  Reinstatement in employment\n  (3) If the member is reinstated in employment with a new employer (see subsection 27(2)):\n    (a) the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer is taken to have been served under the contract of employment entered into on the reinstatement; and\n    (b) the period of the absence is taken to have been paid service in the new employment; and\n    (c) the continuity of the period of employment under the contract of employment with the old employer with the period of employment that commenced on the reinstatement is taken not to have been broken by the member’s absence on defence service.\n\n### Division 5—Termination of employment after resumption of employment etc.\n\n#### 32 Termination after resuming employment etc.\n\n  (1) This section applies if an employer has (in accordance with this Part) permitted a member to resume work or reinstated a member in employment.\n  (2) During the period that begins immediately after the member resumes work, or is reinstated in employment, and that is equal to the length of the member’s absence on defence service, the employer must not:\n    (a) terminate the member’s employment; or\n    (b) vary the member’s employment by employing the member in a capacity, or under terms and conditions, less favourable to the member than the capacity in which, or the terms and conditions under which, the member was employed on resuming work or being reinstated in employment.\n  Exception—changed circumstances\n  (3) Paragraph (2)(a) does not apply if, because of changed circumstances since the member resumed work or was reinstated (except employing someone else to replace the member), it was not within the employer’s power to retain the member in employment.\n  Exception—employee misconduct\n  (4) Subsection (2) does not apply if the termination or variation of the member’s employment was because of misconduct by the member that was serious enough to justify the termination or variation.\n  (5) To avoid doubt, the member’s absence on defence service is not misconduct for the purposes of subsection (4).\n\n### Division 6—No additional obligations on employers\n\n#### 33 No additional obligations on employers\n\n  (1) To avoid doubt, this Act does not oblige an employer of a member who is, or has been, absent on defence service to do any of the following in respect of the period of the absence:\n    (a) to pay the member’s remuneration in respect of the employment; or\n    (b) to grant the member’s entitlements in respect of the employment (except as provided under this Part); or\n    (c) to meet the employer’s obligations under a workers’ compensation law to pay premiums, contributions or similar payments in relation to the member; or\n    (d) to meet the employer’s obligations under the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992 in relation to the member.\n  (2) Paragraphs (1)(a) and (b) do not apply to the extent that the member would have been entitled to the benefit of the things mentioned in those paragraphs anyway if the member’s absence had been for a purpose other than the purpose of rendering defence service.\n\n> Note: Example: An employer would still have to pay the wages of a member who rendered defence service while on paid annual leave, since the member’s absence on paid annual leave would not relieve the employer from having to pay wages. But once the member ran out of paid annual leave, the employer would not have to pay the member any longer until the member returned from rendering defence service.\n\n  (3) In this section:\n\n> workers’ compensation law means a law that provides for compensation or other benefits for work‑related trauma suffered by employees without requiring proof of any breach by employers or by their associates.\n\n## Part 6—Partnership protection\n\n#### 34 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from having their partnerships dissolved while the members are absent on defence service.\n\n#### 35 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving a serving member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a member who is a partner in a partnership to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the member from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the member to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the member to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  while the member is rendering defence service.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n#### 36 Dissolving partnerships etc. involving former member\n\n  (1) A person must not take or continue proceedings or other action against a partner in a partnership who has rendered defence service to:\n    (a) dissolve the partnership; or\n    (b) expel the partner from the partnership; or\n    (c) require the partner to forfeit his or her share in the partnership; or\n    (d) subject the partner to any other detriment concerning the partnership;\n  before the end of the partner’s protected period.\n  (2) It does not matter whether the proceedings are taken or continued under a partnership agreement or otherwise.\n  (3) Subsection (1) does not apply if all the partners consented to taking or continuing the proceedings or other action.\n\n## Part 7—Education protection\n\n#### 37 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies in relation to all kinds of defence service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part:\n    (a) requires a body administering an educational institution to make reasonable adjustments required because a member enrolled in a course at the institution is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) allows a member to re‑enrol in, and resume, a course that was interrupted because the member rendered defence service.\n\n#### 38 Obligations of body administering education institution\n\n  (1) This section applies in relation to a member who is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution before starting to render defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the education institution must make reasonable adjustments to accommodate the member’s defence service.\n  (3) Without limiting subsection (2), the adjustments required by that subsection could involve any of the following:\n    (a) not failing the member;\n    (b) recognising assessment or practical work undertaken by the member before starting to render defence service;\n    (c) allowing the member to defer undertaking or completing assessment or practical work;\n    (d) refunding or crediting fees paid by or for the member.\n  (4) An adjustment is a reasonable adjustment unless making the adjustment would impose an unjustifiable hardship on the body administering the education institution.\n  (5) In determining whether a hardship that would be imposed on the body administering the education institution would be an unjustifiable hardship, all relevant circumstances of the particular case must be taken into account, including the following:\n    (a) the nature of the benefit or detriment likely to accrue to, or to be suffered by, any person concerned;\n    (b) the financial circumstances of, and the estimated amount of expenditure required to be made by, the body;\n    (c) the availability of financial and other assistance to the body.\n  (6) The burden of proving that something would impose unjustifiable hardship lies on the person claiming unjustifiable hardship.\n\n#### 39 Education institution must re‑enrol member etc.\n\n  (1A) This section applies in relation to a member who:\n    (a) is enrolled in a course at an Australian education institution during all or part of the period he or she is rendering defence service; and\n    (b) does not complete the course before ceasing to render the service; and\n    (c) applies to re‑enrol (if necessary) and to resume the course within 30 days after ceasing to render the service.\n  (1) The body administering the Australian education institution must not exclude the member from the course, or subject the member to any other disadvantage, because he or she did not complete a requirement of the course or any assessment for the course:\n    (a) while rendering the defence service; or\n    (b) otherwise because of having rendered the defence service.\n  (2) The body administering the Australian education institution must:\n    (a) allow the member to re‑enrol (if necessary) in the course; and\n    (b) allow the member to resume the course at a point that the body considers appropriate; and\n    (c) ensure that the conditions (if any) on the re‑enrolment and resumption are the same as those that would have applied to a person who is not a member.\n  (3) Subsection (2) does not apply if, because of a change in the nature of courses offered by the institution since the member was previously enrolled:\n    (a) it was not reasonable or practicable to allow the member to re‑enrol or resume the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (b) the body administering the institution offered to enrol the member in another course that most closely corresponded to the course in which he or she was previously enrolled; and\n    (c) the conditions on the re‑enrolment and resumption were the most favourable that it was reasonable or practicable to offer the member.\n  (4) This section does not limit section 38.\n\n## Part 8—Financial liability protection\n\n### Division 1—Overview of Part\n\n#### 40 Overview of part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, many liabilities of a member or dependant that would otherwise fall due after the member starts rendering defence service are postponed. A liability may, for example, relate to principal or interest under a loan or the purchase price of something that the member or dependant has agreed to buy. Generally, the liability must have arisen before the start day of the service.\n  (3) The liabilities are postponed for the shorter of the following:\n    (a) the period that begins immediately after the member ceased to render defence service and that is equal to the length of that service;\n    (b) the period of 12 months beginning immediately after he or she ceased to render that service.\n  (4) Interest accrues on the postponed liabilities. This is so regardless of whether the member or dependant had to pay interest in respect of the original liability.\n  (5) This Part also stays proceedings in respect of the postponed liabilities.\n\n### Division 2—Which financial liabilities this Part applies to\n\n#### 40A Meaning of financial arrangement\n\n  In this Act:\n\n> financial arrangement means any of the following:\n\n    (a) a secured or unsecured loan;\n    (b) a hire purchase agreement;\n    (c) an agreement to buy something (including land);\n    (d) an agreement to lease something (including land);\n    (e) a guarantee.\n\n#### 41 Financial liabilities that arise before start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 42 Options exercised on or after start day of service\n\n  (1) This Part also applies to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose when the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under the financial arrangement to buy or lease something (including land); and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day.\n  (2) This section is subject to the exceptions in sections 44, 45 and 46.\n\n#### 43 Rates etc. on land\n\n  Liabilities that arise before start day\n  (1) This Part applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the liability arose before the start day of the service.\n  Liabilities that arise on or after start day\n  (2) This Part also applies to a liability to pay rates, or other taxes imposed in respect of land, if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) the member or dependant exercised, on or after the start day of the service, an option under a financial arrangement to buy or lease the land to which the rates or other taxes relate; and\n    (c) the option was granted before the start day; and\n    (d) the liability to pay the rates or other taxes arose on or after the day the member or dependant exercised the option.\n  Exceptions\n  (3) This section does not apply to a liability to pay GST (within the meaning of the A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999).\n  (4) This section is subject to section 46.\n\n#### 44 Part does not apply to security holder already exercising remedies\n\n  This Part does not apply to a liability to make a payment under a financial arrangement if:\n    (a) the liability is a liability of:\n    (i) a member who renders defence service; or\n    (ii) a dependant of a member who renders defence service; and\n    (b) before the start day of the service, a court orders that a party to the financial arrangement may exercise all or any of the party’s remedies to enforce any security under the arrangement (including enter land if the security is land).\n\n#### 45 Part does not apply to bankruptcy or insolvency of member or dependant\n\n  (1) This Part does not apply to a liability of a member or his or her dependant to make a payment under a financial arrangement if, while liable to make the payment, the member or dependant:\n    (a) becomes bankrupt; or\n    (b) applies to take the benefit of any law for the relief of bankrupt or insolvent debtors; or\n    (c) compounds with his or her creditors; or\n    (d) makes an assignment of his or her remuneration for the benefit of his or her creditors; or\n    (e) dies and his or her estate is being administered in bankruptcy or insolvency.\n  (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), it does not matter whether the bankruptcy, insolvency, assignment or death happened before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n#### 46 Part does not apply to trustees or representatives\n\n  Member’s liability\n  (1) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the member is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member or one or more dependants of the member.\n  Dependant’s liability\n  (2) This Part does not apply in relation to a liability of a member’s dependant to make a payment as a trustee or in a representative capacity except to the extent that, in incurring the liability, the dependant is acting for the benefit of, or on behalf of, persons who are, or who include, the member, the dependant, or one or more other dependants of the member.\n\n#### 47 Liability exists even if payment not yet due\n\n  For the purposes of this Part, a person is liable to make a payment if he or she is obliged to make it, even if the due date for payment has not arrived.\n\n#### 48 Liability may have arisen before commencement of this Act\n\n  To avoid doubt, a liability to which this Part applies may arise before or after the commencement of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Payments postponed and proceedings stayed\n\n#### Subdivision A—Postponement\n\n#### 49 Payments postponed\n\n  (1) The time for making a payment under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (2) The time for making a payment of rates to which this Part applies is, by force of this section, postponed in accordance with this Division.\n  (3) A time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.\n  (4) However, this section does not prevent a person from making a payment before the time to which payment is postponed.\n\n#### 50 Rescheduling payments\n\n  Payments by instalment\n  (1) If:\n    (a) the payments are to be made by the member or dependant by instalment; and\n    (b) the first instalment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  then:\n    (c) the time for paying the first unpaid instalment is postponed so that the payment falls due at the end of the member’s protected period; and\n    (d) the time for paying each later instalment is postponed for a period of the same length as the member’s protected period.\n  Single payment\n  (2) If:\n    (a) only a single payment is to be made by the member or dependant; and\n    (b) the payment falls due before the end of the member’s protected period;\n  the time for making the payment is postponed so that it falls due at the end of the member’s protected period.\n  Exception in section 51\n  (3) This section is subject to section 51.\n\n#### 51 Rescheduling if member or dependant dies\n\n  Member dies while rendering defence service\n  (1) If the member dies while rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of his or her death.\n  Dependant dies while member is rendering defence service\n  (2) If the person liable to make the payment is a dependant of a member and the dependant dies while the member is rendering defence service, the time for making the payment is postponed so that the payment falls due on the first anniversary of the dependant’s death.\n  If both subsections (1) and (2) apply\n  (3) If both subsections (1) and (2) apply to a payment, the time for making the payment is postponed to the later of the 2 applicable times.\n\n#### 52 Higher rate of interest not payable\n\n  (1) If a financial arrangement to which this Part applies allows interest to be paid or accepted at a reduced or lower rate if it is paid on or before the due date, interest remains payable at the reduced or lower rate even if (because of this Division) it is not so paid.\n  (2) No interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.\n\n#### 53 Interest payable on postponed payments under a financial arrangement\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment under a financial arrangement that is postponed under this Division until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is:\n    (a) the rate or rates specified in the financial arrangement concerned before the interest falls due; or\n    (b) if no rate of interest is specified in the financial arrangement—the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable after the start of the postponement:\n    (a) at the times specified in the financial arrangement for paying interest; or\n    (b) if no times are specified or the times specified have passed—at the end of 3 months after the start of the postponement and at the end of each successive period of 3 months after that.\n\n#### 54 Interest payable on payment of postponed rates etc. on land\n\n  (1) Interest is payable by the member or dependant on a payment that is covered by section 43, and that is postponed, until the payment is made.\n  (2) The interest is payable to the person to whom the postponed payments are required to be made.\n  (3) The rate of the interest is the rate worked out in accordance with the rules as in force at the start of the start day of the member’s defence service.\n  (4) The interest is payable at the end of each quarter that ends after the start of the postponement.\n\n#### Subdivision B—Proceedings stayed\n\n#### 55 Proceedings stayed but rights not otherwise prejudiced\n\n  (1) While one or more payments are postponed, all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act:\n    (a) to enforce the payments; or\n    (b) in respect of, or because of, non‑payment;\n  are stayed.\n  (2) It does not matter how or in what forum the proceedings were instituted.\n  (3) Also, while one or more payments are postponed, all remedies against the member or dependant to recover the payments are stayed.\n  (4) However, this Division does not:\n    (a) prejudice or affect any stayed proceeding or remedy; or\n    (b) affect the rights or obligations of anyone;\n  except so far as is necessary to give effect to this Division.\n  (5) As soon as the postponement ceases:\n    (a) all stayed proceedings may be continued; and\n    (b) all stayed remedies may be pursued.\n\n#### Subdivision C—Court may order all or part of Division does not apply\n\n#### 56 Court may order that all or part of Division not apply\n\n  (1) A court may order that all, or a specified part, of this Division not apply in relation to a particular payment if the court is satisfied that the operation of those provisions would cause hardship or unreasonable loss to someone other than the member or dependant.\n  (2) In considering an application for an order, the court may make any interlocutory or final order (including as to costs) that the court considers just, having regard to:\n    (a) if the liability arose under a financial arrangement—the terms and conditions of the financial arrangement; and\n    (b) the circumstances of the member or dependant; and\n    (c) the circumstances of the other person.\n\n### Division 4—General matters\n\n#### 57 Powers of security holder not affected\n\n  This Part does not affect the power of a security holder under a financial arrangement to which this Part applies to enforce the holder’s rights against the member or dependant if:\n    (a) the security holder was, or is, in possession of the security at the start day of the member’s defence service; or\n    (b) if the security is land—the security holder has appointed or appoints a receiver who, at the start day of the member’s defence service, was, or is:\n    (i) in possession of the land; or\n    (ii) receiving the rents and profits of the land.\n\n#### 58 Instruments made on or after start day not affected\n\n  This Part does not prevent or alter the effect of:\n    (a) any instrument concerning a financial arrangement to which this Part applies that is made on or after the start day of the defence service of the member concerned; or\n    (b) any thing done under the instrument.\n\n#### 59 Joint liability\n\n  (1) If a member or his or her dependant is liable jointly with one or more others to make a payment under a financial arrangement, this Part applies to the member’s or dependant’s liability in the same way as it would apply if the member or dependant were solely liable.\n  (2) However, this Part does not apply to the liability of the other parties who are jointly liable (but who are not members or dependants to whose defence service this Part applies in their own right).\n\n#### 60 Postponement etc. not to be taken into account for purposes of statutes of limitations etc.\n\n  In working out the deadline imposed by a statute of limitations or other Commonwealth, State or Territory law for bringing actions or pursuing other remedies in respect of a liability to which this Part applies, the following periods are not to be taken into account:\n    (a) the period while the time for making payments is postponed under this Part;\n    (b) the period while proceedings, or proposed proceedings, are stayed under this Part.\n\n#### 61 Certain rights of member or dependant preserved\n\n  (1) The right of a member or of his or her dependant to commence a proceeding, or to enforce a right, exercise a power or pursue a remedy, in relation to a liability to which this Part applies, is not barred during the preservation period:\n    (a) by the end of a period of limitation fixed by a Commonwealth, State or Territory law; or\n    (b) by an instrument with respect to the right.\n  (2) The proceeding may be commenced, and the right enforced, power exercised or remedy pursued, at any time before the end of the preservation period.\n  (3) It does not matter whether the right arose or arises before or after the commencement of this Act.\n  (4) This section also applies in relation to a person who became or becomes a member or dependant of a member after the right arose.\n  (5) In this section:\n\n> preservation period means the combined consecutive periods of the member’s absence on defence service (disregarding paragraph 24A(c)) and the member’s protected period.\n\n## Part 9—Bankruptcy protection\n\n#### 62 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies (see Part 3) to:\n    (a) any service as a result of a call out; and\n    (b) continuous full time service that is operational service.\n  (2) Essentially, the Part protects members from bankruptcy proceedings while the member is rendering defence service.\n\n#### 63 Bankruptcy proceedings against member or dependant not allowed\n\n  (1) During a member’s protected period, a bankruptcy notice must not be issued, and a creditor’s petition must not be presented, in relation to the member or a dependant of the member if the notice or petition relates to a debt that arose before the start day of the relevant defence service.\n  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a person who has leave of a court with jurisdiction in bankruptcy or insolvency to issue the notice or present the petition.\n  (3) The court must not grant leave unless the court is satisfied that, having regard to all the circumstances of the case (including the conduct and financial position of the member or dependant, and of the applicant), it would be inequitable to refuse to grant leave.\n\n#### 64 Orders court may make relating to bankruptcy of member or dependant\n\n  (1) If:\n    (a) a creditor presents a bankruptcy petition to a court against a member or his or her dependant; and\n    (b) the member or dependant satisfies the court that he or she was unable to pay the relevant debts because of circumstances directly or indirectly attributable to the member’s defence service;\n  the court may stay the proceedings under the petition for such time and subject to such conditions as the court thinks fit.\n  (2) If:\n    (a) a court has, on the petition of a creditor, made a sequestration order against a person who is a member or a dependant of a member; and\n    (b) on application, the court is satisfied that, if the sequestration order is annulled:\n    (i) the business (if any) of that person will continue to be carried on by the person or on his or her behalf; and\n    (ii) there will be a reasonable prospect of that business being carried on successfully;\n  the court may make an order annulling the sequestration order.\n  (3) An order under subsection (2) annulling a sequestration order has the same effect as an annulment of the sequestration order under the Bankruptcy Act 1966.\n  (4) An order under subsection (2) may be made on such conditions (including the reimbursement of the costs incurred by the petitioning creditor in the bankruptcy proceedings) as the court thinks fit.\n\n## Part 10—Loans and guarantees to returned members\n\n#### 65 Overview of Part\n\n  (1) This Part applies to service rendered as a result of a call out (see Part 3).\n  (2) Essentially, the Part allows for a member who has rendered defence service to get access to loans and guarantees to enable him or her to resume civilian life after returning from that service.\n\n#### 66 The Chief of the Defence Force may make loans and give guarantees\n\n  To enable a member to resume civilian life after he or she stops rendering defence service, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth:\n    (a) make a loan to the member; or\n    (b) guarantee the repayment of a loan to a member and interest on the loan.\n\n#### 67 Amount of loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The amount of a loan made, or guarantee given, to a member must not be more than the amount (the maximum loan amount) prescribed by the rules.\n  (2) If more than one loan is made or guarantee given to a member, the sum of them must not be more than the maximum loan amount.\n  (3) The rules may make provision for and in relation to the indexation of a maximum loan amount.\n\n#### 68 Terms and conditions of loan or guarantee\n\n  A loan is made, or guarantee given, on the security and terms and conditions that the Chief of the Defence Force determines in writing.\n\n#### 69 Interest on loan\n\n  Interest is payable on a loan made under this Part, at the rate and under the conditions prescribed by the rules that were in force when the loan was made.\n\n#### 70 Pre‑conditions for loan or guarantee\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must not make or guarantee a loan on behalf of the Commonwealth unless:\n    (a) the requirements of subsections (2), (3) and (4) are met; and\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force takes into account the matter in subsection (5).\n  (2) The member must apply for the loan or guarantee in the form approved, in writing, by the Chief of the Defence Force:\n    (a) while the member is rendering service as a result of a call out; or\n    (b) within 12 months after the member stops rendering that service.\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force must approve the particular purpose for which the loan is made or guarantee given.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must be satisfied that the applicant is likely to be able to repay the amount of the loan made or guaranteed within a reasonable period.\n  (5) In determining whether to make a loan or give a guarantee, the Chief of the Defence Force must take into account the effect of the applicant’s defence service on his or her capacity and opportunities to establish or re‑establish himself or herself in civilian life without assistance under this Part.\n\n#### 71 Review by Administrative Review Tribunal\n\n  Application may be made to the Administrative Review Tribunal for the review of a decision to refuse to make a loan or give a guarantee.\n\n#### 72 Agreements between the Chief of the Defence Force and States etc.\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, enter into an agreement with a State, a Territory, a State or Territory authority or an ADI (the delegate) for the delegate to perform those functions of the Chief of the Defence Force under this Part that are specified in the agreement.\n  (2) If, under an agreement, the delegate makes or guarantees a loan to a member, the delegate may take any security for the loan or guarantee in its own name.\n  (3) For the purposes of this Part, the Chief of the Defence Force may, on behalf of the Commonwealth, make loans, or give guarantees, to a State or Territory authority or an ADI that is itself making loans or giving guarantees under an agreement.\n  (4) The Chief of the Defence Force must have the Finance Minister’s consent:\n    (a) to enter into an agreement mentioned in subsection (1); and\n    (b) to make a loan or give a guarantee mentioned in subsection (3).\n\n## Part 11—Enforcement and remedies\n\n### Division 1A—Overview of Part\n\n#### 72A Overview of Part\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (1A) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act, and establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving such disputes.\n  (2) A person who suffers loss or damage because of a contravention of this Act may recover the amount of the loss or damage from the person who contravened this Act.\n  (3) A court that finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person may order the guilty person to pay compensation to the other person.\n  (4) An interested person may apply to a court for the following in relation to a contravention of this Act:\n    (a) an injunction under the Regulatory Powers Act;\n    (b) a declaratory or other order.\n  (5) The Chief of the Defence Force may apply to a court for a civil penalty order under the Regulatory Powers Act for a contravention of Part 4 of this Act (protection against discrimination).\n\n### Division 1B—Complaints and investigations\n\n#### 72B Complaints\n\n  (1) A person may make a complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force about an alleged contravention of a provision of this Act.\n  (2) A complaint must be made in a form and manner approved by the Chief of the Defence Force.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, the Chief of the Defence Force may deal with a complaint as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72C Investigation of complaints and suspected contraventions\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may investigate the following:\n    (a) a complaint made under section 72B;\n    (b) a suspected contravention of a provision of this Act, whether or not a complaint has been made under section 72B.\n  (2) For the avoidance of doubt, the Chief of the Defence Force is not required to investigate a complaint made under section 72B.\n  (3) Subject to this Division, an investigation may be conducted in a way that the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit, and the Chief of the Defence Force may, for the purposes of an investigation, obtain information from such persons, and make such inquiries, as the Chief of the Defence Force thinks fit.\n\n#### 72D Notice to produce information or documents\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that a person is capable of providing information, or producing a document, that is relevant to an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to the person, require the person to:\n    (a) give to the Chief of the Defence Force any such information; or\n    (b) produce to the Chief of the Defence Force any such documents;\n  within the period and in the manner specified in the notice.\n  (3) The period specified in the notice must be at least 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  (4) The notice must set out the effect of sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code.\n\n> Note: Sections 137.1 and 137.2 of the Criminal Code create offences for providing false or misleading information or documents.\n\n#### 72E Compliance with notice to produce\n\n  (1) A person who is given a notice under subsection 72D(2) must comply with the notice within the period specified in the notice.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72F Copies and retention of documents\n\n  The Chief of the Defence Force may:\n    (a) inspect a document produced under subsection 72D(2); and\n    (b) make and retain copies of the whole or a part of such a document.\n\n#### 72G Disclosure of information\n\n  (1) This section applies if the Chief of the Defence Force obtains information (including personal information within the meaning of the Privacy Act 1988) as a result of conducting an investigation under section 72C.\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may disclose the information to a person or entity described in an item of the following table, for a purpose described in that item, if the Chief of the Defence Force reasonably believes that the disclosure will serve that purpose.\n\n```html\n<table cellspacing=\"0\" cellpadding=\"0\" style=\"margin-left:0.25pt; border-collapse:collapse\"><thead><tr><td colspan=\"3\" style=\"width:343.6pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Recipients and purposes of disclosure</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Item</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Person or entity to which disclosure may be made</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"TableHeading\"><span>Purpose for which disclosure may be made</span></p></td></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>1</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative) who made a complaint under section</span><span> </span><span>72B relevant to the investigation</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:1.5pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) informing the person of the results of the investigation; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) the person applying to, or deciding whether to apply to, a court of competent jurisdiction under section</span><span> </span><span>73, 75 or 76</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>2</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>a person (or the person’s legal representative):</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) alleged to have contravened a provision of this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) suspected of contravening a provision of this Act</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is reasonably necessary for the purpose of informing the person of the results of the investigation</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>3</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>any of the following:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) the Secretary of the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(c) an APS employee in the Department;</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(d) a member of the Defence Force</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the person in the:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) performance of duties or functions, or the exercise of powers, under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>4</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>an enforcement body within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:0.75pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>sharing the information is reasonably necessary for one or more enforcement related activities (within the meaning of the </span><span style=\"font-style:italic\">Privacy Act 1988</span><span>) conducted by, or on behalf of, the enforcement body</span></p></td></tr><tr><td style=\"width:24.9pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>5</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the Minister</span></p></td><td style=\"width:148.55pt; border-top:0.75pt solid #000000; border-bottom:1.5pt solid #000000; padding-right:5.4pt; padding-left:5.4pt; vertical-align:top\"><p class=\"Tabletext\"><span>the disclosure is likely to assist the Minister:</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(a) to consider a complaint or issue in relation to a matter arising under this Act; or</span></p><p class=\"Tablea\"><span>(b) in the administration or enforcement of this Act</span></p></td></tr></tbody></table>\n```\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n#### 72H Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1C—Dispute resolution\n\n#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.\n\n#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.\n\n#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.\n\n#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.\n\n### Division 1—Civil enforcement\n\n#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.\n\n### Division 2—Orders that courts may make\n\n#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n\n#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.\n\n#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.\n\n### Division 3—Civil penalties\n\n#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.\n\n### Division 4—Victimisation\n\n#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.\n\n## Part 12—Other matters\n\n#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.\n\n#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.\n\n#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.\n\n#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.\n\n#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.\n\n#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.\n\n#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.\n\n#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.\n\n#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":116},{"sectionNumber":"72J","sectionType":"section","heading":"The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services","content":"#### 72J The Chief of the Defence Force may provide dispute resolution services\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may establish dispute resolution services for the purpose of resolving disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act.\n  (2) Without limiting subsection (1), the dispute resolution services may include the following:\n    (a) mediation;\n    (b) conciliation;\n    (c) compulsory conferences.","sortOrder":117},{"sectionNumber":"72K","sectionType":"section","heading":"Conduct of dispute resolution processes","content":"#### 72K Conduct of dispute resolution processes\n\n  (1) A person’s participation in a dispute resolution process may be:\n    (a) voluntary; or\n    (b) for a compulsory conference—required by a direction given to the person under subsection 72L(3).\n  (2) Persons engaged in a dispute resolution process must act in good faith in relation to the conduct of that process.","sortOrder":118},{"sectionNumber":"72L","sectionType":"section","heading":"Compulsory conferences","content":"#### 72L Compulsory conferences\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may refer disputes between persons whose interests are affected by a provision of this Act (the parties) to a compulsory conference for one or more of the following purposes:\n    (a) advising the parties of their rights and obligations;\n    (b) facilitating discussion between the parties;\n    (c) identifying issues in dispute;\n    (d) resolving issues in dispute.\n  (2) In deciding whether to refer parties to a dispute to a compulsory conference, the Chief of the Defence Force may consider the following:\n    (a) whether a compulsory conference will assist the parties in resolving the dispute;\n    (b) any other courses of action available to the parties to resolve the dispute;\n    (c) the steps that have been taken by the parties to try to resolve the dispute;\n    (d) whether the circumstances of the parties require the dispute to be resolved as a matter of urgency;\n    (e) any other matter that the Chief of the Defence Force considers relevant.\n  Direction to attend conference\n  (3) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by written notice given to a person, require the person to attend a compulsory conference.\n  (4) The notice must specify the time and place of the conference, which must not be earlier than 14 days after the day the notice is given.\n  Reimbursement\n  (5) If a person is given a notice under subsection (3), the person is entitled to be paid a reasonable allowance for expenses incurred by the person for transport, meals and accommodation in connection with complying with the notice.\n  Penalty\n  (6) A person who is given a notice under subsection (3) must comply with the notice.\n  (7) A person who contravenes subsection (6) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.","sortOrder":119},{"sectionNumber":"72M","sectionType":"section","heading":"Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process","content":"#### 72M Admissibility of things said in a dispute resolution process\n\n  Evidence of anything said, or any admission made, during a dispute resolution process under this Division is not admissible:\n    (a) in any court (whether exercising federal jurisdiction or not); or\n    (b) in any proceedings before a person authorised by a law of the Commonwealth or of a State or Territory, or by the consent of the parties, to hear evidence.","sortOrder":120},{"sectionNumber":"72N","sectionType":"section","heading":"Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part","content":"#### 72N Division does not limit other Divisions of this Part\n\n  This Division does not limit the other Divisions of this Part.","sortOrder":121},{"sectionNumber":"73","sectionType":"section","heading":"Actions for loss or damage","content":"#### 73 Actions for loss or damage\n\n  (1) A person who suffers loss or damage because another person contravenes, or was involved in contravening, a provision of this Act may bring an action in a court of competent jurisdiction to recover the amount of the loss or damage from the other person. This is so even if the other person did not commit an offence (if the contravention is also an offence) or a civil penalty order has not been made against the person (if the provision is a civil penalty provision).\n  (2) An action mentioned in subsection (1) may be brought by the Chief of the Defence Force on behalf of the person who suffers the loss or damage.\n  (3) An action under subsection (1) may only be begun within 4 years after the day on which the cause of action arose.\n  (4) This section does not affect any right or liability that a person has under any other law.\n  (5) For the purposes of this section, a person is involved in a contravention if, and only if, the person has:\n    (a) aided, abetted, counselled or procured the contravention; or\n    (b) has induced, whether by threats or promises or otherwise, the contravention; or\n    (c) has been in any way, by act or omission, directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in or party to the contravention; or\n    (d) has conspired with others to effect the contravention.","sortOrder":123},{"sectionNumber":"74","sectionType":"section","heading":"Orders for compensation after offence","content":"#### 74 Orders for compensation after offence\n\n  (1) A court that:\n    (a) finds a person guilty of an offence against this Act in relation to another person (whether or not the court imposes a penalty); or\n    (b) makes a civil penalty order (within the meaning of the Regulatory Powers Act) against a person for contravening a civil penalty provision of this Act in relation to another person;\n  may order the first person to pay the other person such compensation as the court thinks reasonable.\n  (2) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.","sortOrder":125},{"sectionNumber":"75","sectionType":"section","heading":"Injunctions","content":"#### 75 Injunctions\n\n  Enforceable provisions\n  (1) The provisions of this Act are enforceable under Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note 1: The expression this Act has an extended meaning (see section 7).\n\n> Note 2: Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act creates a framework for using injunctions to enforce provisions.\n\n  Authorised person\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following persons is an authorised person in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1):\n    (a) an interested person;\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, a court mentioned in subsection 77(1) of this Act is a relevant court in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1) of this section.\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 7 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as that Part applies in relation to the provisions mentioned in subsection (1), extends to every external Territory.","sortOrder":126},{"sectionNumber":"76","sectionType":"section","heading":"Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act","content":"#### 76 Court may make other orders if transaction or proceeding in contravention of this Act\n\n  (1) A court of competent jurisdiction may make any other order (including a declaratory order) it thinks fit if a person enters a transaction, or brings a proceeding, in contravention of this Act.\n  (2) The court may make an order under this section only on application by:\n    (a) an interested person; or\n    (b) the Chief of the Defence Force acting on behalf of an interested person.\n  (3) An order under subsection (1) may be enforced as if it were a judgment of the court.\n  (4) This section does not affect a person’s liability to a penalty for a contravention of this Act.","sortOrder":127},{"sectionNumber":"76A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Civil penalty provisions","content":"#### 76A Civil penalty provisions\n\n  Enforceable civil penalty provisions\n  (1) Each civil penalty provision of this Act is enforceable under Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act.\n\n> Note: Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act allows a civil penalty provision to be enforced by obtaining an order for a person to pay a pecuniary penalty for the contravention of the provision.\n\n  Authorised applicant\n  (2) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, the Chief of the Defence Force is an authorised applicant in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act.\n  Relevant court\n  (3) For the purposes of Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, each of the following courts is a relevant court in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to the matter;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  Extension to external Territories\n  (4) Part 4 of the Regulatory Powers Act, as it applies in relation to the civil penalty provisions of this Act, extends to every external Territory.","sortOrder":129},{"sectionNumber":"76B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Victimisation","content":"#### 76B Victimisation\n\n  (1) A person must not subject, or threaten to subject, another person to any detriment for the reason that, or for reasons that include the reason that, the other person:\n    (a) has made, or proposes to make, a complaint under section 72B; or\n    (b) has given, or proposes to give, any information, or has produced, or proposes to produce, any documents to a person exercising or performing any power or function under Division 1B of this Part; or\n    (c) has brought, or proposes to bring, proceedings under Division 1 or 2 of this Part against any person.\n  (2) A person who contravenes subsection (1) commits an offence.\n\nPenalty: 30 penalty units.\n\n  (3) A person who contravenes subsection (1) is liable to a civil penalty.\n\nCivil penalty: 100 penalty units.","sortOrder":131},{"sectionNumber":"Part 12","sectionType":"part","heading":"Other matters","content":"## Part 12—Other matters","sortOrder":132},{"sectionNumber":"76C","sectionType":"section","heading":"This Act does not limit other protections for members","content":"#### 76C This Act does not limit other protections for members\n\n  This Act does not limit any protection that is afforded to a member, or to a former member, under any other law.","sortOrder":133},{"sectionNumber":"77","sectionType":"section","heading":"Jurisdiction of courts","content":"#### 77 Jurisdiction of courts\n\n  (1) The following courts may hear and determine matters arising under this Act:\n    (a) all State and Territory courts (including courts of summary jurisdiction), so far as their jurisdiction extends to those matters;\n    (b) the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (2) However, this Act does not confer any criminal jurisdiction on the Federal Court of Australia or the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia (Division 2).\n  (3) To avoid doubt, nothing in this Act limits the jurisdiction of a court or other body under any other law of the Commonwealth, a State or a Territory in relation to matters covered by this Act.","sortOrder":134},{"sectionNumber":"78","sectionType":"section","heading":"Unincorporated bodies","content":"#### 78 Unincorporated bodies\n\n  (1) This Act applies to an unincorporated body or association (the body) as if it were a person other than an individual, but it applies with the following change.\n  Imposition of obligations\n  (2) The change is that obligations that would be imposed on the body are imposed instead on:\n    (a) if the body is a partnership—each partner; or\n    (b) in any other case—each member of the committee of management of the body;\n  but they may be discharged by any of the partners or any of those members.","sortOrder":135},{"sectionNumber":"78A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Physical elements of offences","content":"#### 78A Physical elements of offences\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence.\n  (2) For the purposes of applying Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code to the offence, the physical elements of the offence are set out in the conduct provision.\n\n> Note: Chapter 2 of the Criminal Code sets out general principles of criminal responsibility.","sortOrder":136},{"sectionNumber":"78B","sectionType":"section","heading":"Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision","content":"#### 78B Contravening an offence provision or a civil penalty provision\n\n  (1) This section applies if a provision of this Act provides that a person contravening another provision of this Act (the conduct provision) commits an offence or is liable to a civil penalty.\n  (2) For the purposes of this Act, and the Regulatory Powers Act to the extent that it relates to this Act, a reference to a contravention of an offence provision or a civil penalty provision includes a reference to a contravention of the conduct provision.","sortOrder":137},{"sectionNumber":"79","sectionType":"section","heading":"Delegation","content":"#### 79 Delegation\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force may, by signed writing, delegate all or any of his or her powers and functions under this Act (other than under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11) to an officer (within the meaning of the Defence Act 1903).\n  (2) The Chief of the Defence Force may, in writing, delegate all or any of the Chief of the Defence Force’s powers and functions under Part 10, or Division 1B, 1C or 3 of Part 11, to:\n    (a) an SES employee, or acting SES employee, in the Department; or\n    (b) an APS employee who holds or performs the duties of an Executive Level 2 position, or an equivalent, in the Department; or\n    (c) a person who holds a rank not lower than the naval rank of captain, or the rank of colonel or group captain.\n\n> Note: The expressions APS employee, SES employee and acting SES employee are defined in section 2B of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901.\n\n  (3) In performing a delegated function or exercising a delegated power, the delegate must comply with any written directions of the Chief of the Defence Force.","sortOrder":138},{"sectionNumber":"79A","sectionType":"section","heading":"Annual report","content":"#### 79A Annual report\n\n  (1) The Chief of the Defence Force must, as soon as practicable after the end of each financial year, prepare a report on the administration and operation of this Act during that year.\n  (2) The report must be included in the annual report prepared by the Secretary and given to the Minister under section 46 of the Public Governance, Performance and Accountability Act 2013 for the financial year.","sortOrder":139},{"sectionNumber":"80","sectionType":"section","heading":"Severability: additional effect of Act","content":"#### 80 Severability: additional effect of Act\n\n  (1) Without limiting its effect apart from this section, this Act also has effect as provided by this section.\n  (2) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions of corporations to which paragraph 51(xx) of the Constitution applies.\n  (3) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in the course of, or in relation to, trade or commerce:\n    (a) between Australia and places outside Australia; or\n    (b) among the States; or\n    (c) within a Territory, between a State and a Territory or between 2 Territories.\n  (4) This Act also has the effect that it would have if its operation were expressly confined to acts or omissions taking place in a Territory.","sortOrder":140},{"sectionNumber":"81","sectionType":"section","heading":"Rules","content":"#### 81 Rules\n\n  (1) The Minister may, by legislative instrument, make rules prescribing matters:\n    (a) required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed; or\n    (b) necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n  (2) To avoid doubt, the rules may not do the following:\n    (a) create an offence or civil penalty;\n    (b) provide powers of:\n    (i) arrest or detention; or\n    (ii) entry, search or seizure;\n    (c) impose a tax;\n    (d) set an amount to be appropriated from the Consolidated Revenue Fund under an appropriation in this Act;\n    (e) directly amend the text of this Act.","sortOrder":141}],"analysis":{"kimi_summary":{"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":6,"scope_assessment":{"changed":false,"description":"The legislation appears consistent with its original intent as stated in the long title: 'to protect members of the Reserves in their employment and education, to facilitate their return to civilian life, and for related purposes.' The structure follows the overview in section 3, with Parts 4-10 delivering the promised protections and Part 11 providing enforcement mechanisms. No significant scope creep is evident in the provided text."},"complexity_factors":["Tiered protection system requiring cross-referencing between Part 3 (application table), Part 11 table, and individual Part provisions to determine which protections apply to which type of service","Multiple defined terms with deferred meanings (e.g., 'absent on defence service' defined across sections 24A, 28(3), and 28(4); 'dependant' with 5 separate categories in section 9)","Dual criminal/civil penalty structure for most offences (e.g., sections 15-23A specify both 30 penalty unit criminal fines and 100 penalty unit civil penalties)","Nested exceptions within exceptions (e.g., section 28(2) has two exception paragraphs, each with sub-paragraphs; section 32 has termination protections with two separate exception clauses)","Complex temporal calculations for 'protected period' (shorter of service length or 12 months) affecting multiple Parts","Cross-references to external legislation (Defence Act 1903, Veterans' Entitlements Act 1986, Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act 2004, Bankruptcy Act 1966, Regulatory Powers Act)","Conditional application based on service type distinctions: 'defence service' vs 'operational service' vs 'call out' vs 'continuous full time service'","Disclosure permissions table in section 72G with multiple recipients and purposes requiring matrix analysis"],"plain_english_summary":"This law protects Australian Defence Force Reservists from being disadvantaged in civilian life because of their military service. It covers several key areas:\n\n**Who it affects:** Members of the Defence Force Reserves (part-time military personnel) and, in some cases, their families (dependants).\n\n**Main protections:**\n- **Employment:** Employers cannot refuse to hire, fire, or discriminate against reservists because of their service. They must let reservists return to their jobs after deployment with the same pay and conditions.\n- **Partnerships:** Business partners cannot dissolve a partnership or expel a reservist while they're on service.\n- **Education:** Universities and schools must make reasonable adjustments for students who are called up for service, and must let them resume their studies afterwards.\n- **Financial protection:** For serious deployments (call-outs or operational service), debts are postponed and bankruptcy proceedings are blocked while the reservist is serving.\n- **Loans:** Reservists returning from call-outs can access government-backed loans to help restart civilian life.\n\n**How it works:** Different protections apply depending on the type of service. Basic protections (employment, education) apply to all reserve service. Enhanced protections (debt postponement, bankruptcy protection, loans) only apply to serious deployments like war, emergencies, or disaster relief.\n\n**Enforcement:** The Chief of the Defence Force can investigate complaints, and courts can issue penalties, compensation orders, and injunctions. Breaches can result in criminal fines (up to 30 penalty units) or civil penalties (up to 100 penalty units)."},"summary":{"complexity_score":7,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The Act's scope appears broader than a minimal employment-protection statute might suggest. Beyond protecting jobs (which is likely the core original intent suggested by the title), the Act extends to: anti-discrimination rules for contractors and commission agents; partnership dissolution protection; education institution obligations; financial liability postponement covering loans, hire-purchase, land rates and leases; bankruptcy protection; and government-backed loans to help Reservists re-establish civilian life. The inclusion of dependants as protected persons (particularly in the financial and bankruptcy provisions) also significantly expands the scope beyond the Reservist themselves."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple distinct protection regimes that apply to different categories of Reserve service (all service vs. call-out only vs. operational service only), requiring careful navigation","Tiered application of Parts depending on the type of defence service, creating a matrix of rights that varies by circumstance","Extensive and technical definitions (e.g., 'financial arrangement', 'operational service', 'dependant', 'protected period') that significantly affect who qualifies for which protections","Complex financial liability provisions in Part 8 with multiple exceptions, rescheduling rules, interest calculation methods, and court override powers","Interaction with multiple other Commonwealth statutes (Defence Act 1903, Bankruptcy Act 1966, Veterans' Entitlements Act, Military Rehabilitation and Compensation Act, Regulatory Powers Act, etc.)","Dual enforcement regime combining criminal offences AND civil penalty provisions for the same conduct, each with different procedural consequences","The 'protected period' concept — running concurrently and consecutively with absence periods — requires careful mathematical calculation","Broad definition of 'employment' and 'work' covering employees, contractors, commission agents, and partners creates overlapping but distinct obligations","Provisions covering both living and deceased members and dependants, including estate administration scenarios","Employer safe harbour and exception provisions (e.g., 'changed circumstances', 'misconduct', 'unjustifiable hardship') introduce factual and legal uncertainty"],"plain_english_summary":"## What This Law Does\n\nThis law is a **shield for Australian Army, Navy and Air Force Reservists** (part-time military members who have civilian jobs, businesses and lives). When they're called up for military duty, it protects them from being disadvantaged in pretty much every area of life.\n\n## Who It Affects\n\n- **Reservists themselves** (anyone serving or who has served in the Army Reserve, Naval Reserve, or Air Force Reserve)\n- **Their dependants** (partners, children, or others financially dependent on them)\n- **Employers** — who must comply with specific obligations\n- **Businesses, landlords, banks, education institutions, and creditors** — who all face restrictions on what they can do to a Reservist\n\n## The Key Protections (In Plain English)\n\n### 1. 🚫 No Discrimination at Work (applies to ALL Reserve service)\nIt's **illegal** for an employer to:\n- Refuse to hire you because you're a Reservist\n- Fire you, cut your pay, or change your conditions because you're a Reservist\n- Block you from attending Reserve duties\n\nThis also covers contractors, commission agents, and business partners — not just regular employees. Workplace bullying or harassment because of Reserve service is also banned.\n\n### 2. 💼 Your Job is Protected While You're Away (ALL Reserve service)\nIf you had a job before being called up:\n- You have the **right to return to your old job** (in the same role, on the same or better conditions)\n- Your leave entitlements, long service leave, and continuity of employment are protected\n- Your employer **cannot force you to burn through your annual leave** during your absence\n- After you return, you have additional protection against being fired for a period equal to how long you were away (up to 12 months)\n\n### 3. 🤝 Business Partnerships Protected (ALL Reserve service)\nIf you're in a business partnership, your partners **cannot dissolve the partnership or kick you out** while you're away on Reserve service, or during your 'protected period' after you return.\n\n### 4. 🎓 Education Institutions Must Accommodate You (ALL Reserve service)\nIf you're studying and get called up, the education institution **must make reasonable adjustments** — like deferring exams, refunding fees, or letting you re-enrol when you return within 30 days of finishing service.\n\n### 5. 💰 Debt Repayments are Paused (only for call-outs or operational service)\nIf you're called up for a major deployment (a formal 'call out' order, or operational service like peacekeeping or disaster relief):\n- Loan repayments, hire purchase payments, land rates, and other debts **are automatically paused** for the duration of your service, plus an equal period afterwards (up to 12 months)\n- Interest still accrues, but no one can take legal action to recover the debt while it's paused\n- Courts can override this if the pause would unfairly harm a creditor\n\n### 6. 🛡️ Protection from Bankruptcy (call-outs and operational service only)\nDuring the protected period after major service, creditors **cannot issue bankruptcy notices** or file bankruptcy petitions against you or your dependants for debts that existed before your service started — unless a court gives permission.\n\n### 7. 🏠 Loans to Restart Civilian Life (call-outs only)\nIf you were formally called up, the **Chief of the Defence Force can offer you a loan or loan guarantee** to help you get back on your feet in civilian life — for example, to restart a business or buy equipment.\n\n## How It's Enforced\n- You can make a **complaint to the Chief of the Defence Force**\n- Employers who break the rules face **criminal fines** (30 penalty units — roughly $9,900) or **civil penalties** (100 penalty units — roughly $33,000)\n- Courts can order **compensation** to be paid to affected Reservists\n- Courts can also issue **injunctions** to stop ongoing contraventions\n\n## Why It Matters\nWithout this law, many Australians would face a genuine choice between serving in the Reserves and protecting their career, business, or financial security. This law removes that dilemma — ensuring service to the country doesn't cost you your livelihood."},"issue_detection":{"absurdities":[{"type":"self_contradicting","section":"s4(3)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"Section 4(1)-(2) expressly states the Crown is bound and obligations apply to it 'just as they are imposed on everyone else', yet s4(3) immediately carves out criminal immunity. The phrase 'just as everyone else' is rendered meaningless for the most serious category of breach. Civil penalties may still apply, but the asymmetry is stark and logically inconsistent with the universality claim in s4(2).","confidence":0.85,"description":"The Crown is bound by the Act and must comply with all obligations imposed on employers, but cannot be prosecuted for any offence. This creates a two-tiered accountability system where the largest employer in Australia (the Commonwealth) faces no criminal consequences for breaching the very protections the Act creates."},{"type":"self_contradicting","section":"s26(2) and s31(2)(a)","severity":"high","reasoning":"s26(2) establishes the baseline rule that absence is not employment. s31 then deems it to be paid service. While s26(2) contains a caveat 'unless this Part provides otherwise', the contradiction is real and creates confusion about what the default position is and when it applies. A person reading s26(2) in isolation would reach the opposite conclusion from reading s31(2)(a). The saving clause in s26(2) ameliorates but does not eliminate the logical tension.","confidence":0.78,"description":"Section 26(2) states that a period of absence on defence service is taken NOT to be a period of employment under the contract, yet s31(2)(a) deems the same period of absence to BE paid service in the employment for members rendering non-continuous-full-time service. These two provisions operate on the same factual scenario and produce directly opposite legal characterisations of the same period."},{"type":"other","section":"s9(1)(d) and s9(1)(e)","severity":"low","reasoning":"A surviving spouse who receives no pension or compensation and had no prior financial dependency on the member would qualify as a 'dependant' solely by virtue of the marital/partner relationship at death. This extends protections to persons with no demonstrated financial need, while the rest of the definition is anchored in financial dependency or government-recognised loss.","confidence":0.65,"description":"The definition of 'dependant' in s9(1)(e) refers to the 'widow or widower of the member' if the member died while rendering service. However, s9(1)(d) already captures a person to whom a pension or compensation is payable because of the member's death, which would typically include the widow or widower. The widow/widower category in (e) is therefore partially redundant with (d), and its independent existence implies it covers persons who receive neither pension nor compensation — creating an anomalous class of dependant who has no financial dependency on the deceased member."},{"type":"retroactive_impossibility","section":"s49(3)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"Postponing a payment date that has already passed does not merely defer a future obligation — it retrospectively alters a legal state (default/breach) that already existed. A creditor who was legally entitled to sue before the start day finds their accrued cause of action stayed and the default notionally 'unrung'. This conflicts with basic principles of vested rights and creates a retroactive rewriting of legal history.","confidence":0.72,"description":"Section 49(3) states that 'a time is postponed by this section even if the time had already passed when the member began to render the relevant service.' This means a debt that was already overdue and in default before service began is retroactively postponed, potentially extinguishing pre-existing legal rights of creditors that vested before the member even enlisted for the relevant service."},{"type":"retroactive_impossibility","section":"s55(1)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"Parties who instituted proceedings before this Act commenced did so in reliance on the legal framework then in force. Retrospectively staying those proceedings punishes legally compliant conduct. While transitional provisions sometimes have retrospective effect, the absence of any compensation mechanism or grandfathering for creditors who had already incurred litigation costs makes this particularly harsh.","confidence":0.7,"description":"Section 55(1) stays 'all proceedings against the member or dependant concerned that were instituted before the commencement of this Act'. However, s48 separately confirms that Part 8 applies to liabilities arising before commencement. The combined effect is that proceedings lawfully commenced under the law as it existed at the time of institution are retrospectively stayed — parties who complied with all then-applicable laws are penalised for doing so."},{"type":"other","section":"s32(2) and s32(5)","severity":"low","reasoning":"While s32(5) prevents the absence itself being called misconduct, an employer could characterise downstream consequences of absence (e.g. failure to complete training, loss of required certification during absence) as misconduct. The provision does not clearly prevent this indirect characterisation.","confidence":0.6,"description":"Section 32(2) prohibits termination during a protected period equal to the length of the member's absence on defence service. Section 32(5) states that the member's absence on defence service is not misconduct. However, s32(4) allows termination for misconduct 'serious enough to justify' it — yet the Act provides no mechanism to distinguish between misconduct that is causally connected to the defence service (e.g. absence-related performance issues) and wholly independent misconduct, creating an exploitable ambiguity."},{"type":"self_contradicting","section":"s63(1) and s62(2)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"The 'protected period' is defined in s7 as the period beginning immediately after the member ceases to render service (up to 12 months). The overview in s62(2) says protection applies 'while rendering' service. In fact, the operative provision s63(1) applies during the protected period — i.e., after service ends. A member mid-service has no express protection under s63 during actual service; the protection kicks in on cessation. This is the inverse of what s62(2) describes.","confidence":0.8,"description":"Section 62(2) describes the Part as protecting members 'while the member is rendering defence service', yet s63(1) actually applies the prohibition on bankruptcy notices during the member's 'protected period' — which begins AFTER the member ceases to render service. The overview is affirmatively misleading about when the protection operates."},{"type":"other","section":"s7 (definition of 'operational service', paragraphs (a)(vi) and (a)(vii))","severity":"medium","reasoning":"The breadth of paragraphs (vi) and (vii) means the distinction between 'all kinds of defence service' (Parts 4-7) and the enhanced protections for operational service (Parts 8-9) may collapse in practice. The rules can exclude service under s(d), but absent such exclusion rules, a weekend flood-relief deployment could trigger the same debt postponement regime as wartime service. This undermines the tiered structure that is the architectural premise of the Act.","confidence":0.75,"description":"The definition of 'operational service' includes 'support to community activities of national or international significance' and 'civil aid, humanitarian assistance, medical or civil emergency or disaster relief'. These categories are extraordinarily broad and potentially overlap entirely with ordinary peacetime Reserve activities. A member assisting at a major sporting event or a bushfire could qualify for operational service protections (financial liability postponement, bankruptcy protection, loans) identical to those for war service."},{"type":"other","section":"s39(1A) and s38(2)","severity":"low","reasoning":"The gap arises because s38(1) expressly limits its application to members 'enrolled in a course...before starting to render defence service'. A member who enrols mid-service gets re-enrolment rights under s39 if they don't complete the course, but no reasonable adjustment obligation applies to their initial enrolment. This is a minor but real lacuna.","confidence":0.62,"description":"Section 38 requires the education institution to make 'reasonable adjustments' for a member enrolled before starting defence service. Section 39(1A) applies to a member enrolled during service. There is a logical gap: a member who enrols during service may not have the benefit of s38 (which is anchored to enrolment before service), yet s39 requires re-enrolment rights. The Act does not address adjustments for members who first enrol during service."},{"type":"impossible_compliance","section":"s27(3) and s24A(c)(ii)","severity":"medium","reasoning":"A member who is hospitalised, incapacitated, or otherwise unable to make a written application within 30 days of ceasing service loses not only their right to resume work but also their retrospective status as 'absent on defence service'. This could unravel any entitlements that accrued during the absence period — an outcome disproportionate to the administrative failure of missing a deadline. There is no provision for extension of time or incapacity.","confidence":0.73,"description":"Both s24A(c)(ii) and s27(3) impose a 30-day deadline after ceasing defence service — one to define the end of 'absent on defence service' status and the other to apply for resumption of work. These two provisions are consistent but create a logical trap: a member who misses the 30-day application deadline simultaneously loses their 'absent on defence service' status, which retrospectively removes the protection afforded during the absence (since the protected status is preconditioned on the absence continuing). The member thus loses protections that had already accrued."}],"contradictions":[{"severity":"medium","section_a":"s4(2)","section_b":"s4(3)","confidence":0.88,"description":"Section 4(2) states obligations are imposed on the Crown 'just as they are imposed on everyone else', but s4(3) exempts the Crown from criminal prosecution. The universality assertion in s4(2) is directly contradicted by the immunity in s4(3)."},{"severity":"high","section_a":"s26(2)","section_b":"s31(2)(a)","confidence":0.82,"description":"Section 26(2) deems the period of absence on defence service NOT to be a period of employment. Section 31(2)(a) deems the same period to BE paid service in the employment (for non-continuous-full-time service). Both provisions operate on the same factual scenario and reach opposite legal conclusions about the character of the absence period."},{"severity":"medium","section_a":"s62(2)","section_b":"s63(1)","confidence":0.85,"description":"The overview in s62(2) states the Part protects members 'while the member is rendering defence service', but the operative provision s63(1) applies the protection during the 'protected period', which by definition begins after service ceases. The overview and the operative provision describe protection at opposite ends of the temporal spectrum."},{"severity":"low","section_a":"s3(9)","section_b":"s63(1)","confidence":0.65,"description":"Section 3(9) (overview) states Part 9 'protects a member or his or her dependant from bankruptcy proceedings' after the member has rendered qualifying service. Section 63(1) applies the protection 'during a member's protected period' — which is a post-service period. However, s3(9) implies ongoing protection without temporal limitation tied to a post-service period, creating a mismatch between the overview's framing and the actual operative trigger."},{"severity":"medium","section_a":"s40(3)","section_b":"s7 (definition of 'protected period')","confidence":0.77,"description":"Section 40(3) sets out the postponement duration as the shorter of: (a) the period equal to the length of service, or (b) 12 months. The definition of 'protected period' in s7 uses identical language. However, s51 (death during service) overrides both by postponing payment to the first anniversary of death — which can exceed 12 months post-cessation of service. Section 40(3) does not acknowledge this override, creating an apparent contradiction between the stated maximum postponement period and the actual operation of s51."},{"severity":"low","section_a":"s35(1)","section_b":"s18A(1)","confidence":0.68,"description":"Section 35 (Part 6 — Partnership protection) prohibits proceedings to dissolve a partnership while a member is rendering defence service, applying to all kinds of defence service. Section 18A (Part 4 — Discrimination) separately prohibits dissolving a partnership for a prohibited reason (i.e., because of defence service). A dissolution that is both during service AND for a prohibited reason is doubly prohibited under both Parts, but the remedies and enforcement mechanisms differ (Part 4 allows civil penalty and criminal offence; Part 6 has no express penalty provision in the excerpted text). This creates inconsistent consequences for the same conduct."},{"severity":"medium","section_a":"s44","section_b":"s49(3)","confidence":0.72,"description":"Section 49(3) postpones payments even where 'the time had already passed' before service began — i.e., already-overdue debts. Section 44 excludes Part 8 where a court has already ordered enforcement of security before the start day. These provisions point in opposite directions: s49(3) suggests pre-start defaults are swept into the postponement regime, while s44 carves out situations where enforcement was judicially authorised pre-start. The interaction creates uncertainty about debts that are overdue but not yet subject to a court order at the start day."},{"type":"circular_definition","severity":"medium","section_a":"s52(2)","section_b":"s54(4)","confidence":0.66,"description":"Section 52(2) states 'no interest is payable under any other law on the late payment of rates on land if the payments were postponed under this Division.' Section 54 then separately imposes a statutory interest obligation on postponed rate payments. The combined effect is that the Act displaces any other law's interest regime and substitutes its own — but s52(2) could be read as also displacing s54 itself, since s54 is 'interest under a law' (this Act). This creates an internally circular provision."}]}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/defence-reserve-service-protection-act-2001","history":"/api/acts/defence-reserve-service-protection-act-2001/history","analysis":"/api/acts/defence-reserve-service-protection-act-2001/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/defence-reserve-service-protection-act-2001/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/defence-reserve-service-protection-act-2001/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/defence-reserve-service-protection-act-2001/documents"}}