{"id":"salaries-and-allowances-act-1975","name":"Salaries and Allowances Act 1975","slug":"salaries-and-allowances-act-1975","collection":"act","jurisdiction":"wa","status":"in_force","isInForce":true,"actNumber":null,"makingDate":null,"administeringDepartment":null,"currentVersion":{"id":110095,"registerId":"wa-salaries-and-allowances-act-1975-current","compilationNumber":null,"startDate":"2026-04-03","status":"InForce","reasons":null,"registeredAt":null},"sections":[{"sectionNumber":"1","sectionType":"section","heading":"Salaries and Allowances Act 1975","content":"![Crest]()Western Australia\n\nSalaries and Allowances Act 1975\n\nWestern Australia\n\nSalaries and Allowances Act 1975\n\nContents\n\nPart I — The Tribunal\n\nDivision 1 — Preliminary\n\n1. Short title 2\n\n2. Commencement 2\n\n4. Terms used 2\n\nDivision 2 — Tribunal established\n\n5. Establishment of Tribunal 4\n\nDivision 3 — Inquiries, determinations and reports\n\n5A. Inquiry into and determination of remuneration of Governor 5\n\n6. Other inquiries into and determinations of remuneration 7\n\n6A. Tribunal’s functions under *Parliamentary Superannuation Act 1970* 11\n\n6AA. Redundancy benefits for members of Parliament 11\n\n6B. Determinations relating to entitlements of former Premiers, Ministers and members of Parliament 12\n\n6C. Forfeiture of former office entitlements 12\n\n7. Inquiry into and report on judicial salaries 14\n\n7A. Determinations as to remuneration of local government CEOs 15\n\n7B. Determinations as to fees and allowances of local government councillors 16\n\n7BAA. Determinations as to fees and allowances of members of local government committees 16\n\n7BA. Term used: Government entity 17\n\n7C. Determinations as to remuneration of executive officers of Government entities 17\n\n7D. Determinations as to remuneration of directors of certain Government entities 18\n\n7E. Determinations as to allowance for directors of certain GTEs: audit and risk committee members 18\n\n8. Tribunal to report and make a determination annually 19\n\n9. Meetings of Tribunal 20\n\n9A. Resolution without meeting 21\n\n9B. Quorum 22\n\n10. Method of inquiry by Tribunal 22\n\n10A. Tribunal to have regard to government financial matters 24\n\nDivision 4 — No remuneration increases before 1 July 2021\n\n10B. Term used: commencement day 26\n\n10C. No increases in Governor’s remuneration before 1 July 2021 26\n\n10D. No increases in remuneration under s. 6 before 1 July 2021 27\n\n10E. No increases in judicial remuneration before 1 July 2021 29\n\n10F. No increases in remuneration of certain executive officers of Government entities before 1 July 2021 29\n\n10G. Compensatory and catch-up determinations after 1 July 2021 prohibited 31\n\nDivision 5 — Miscellaneous\n\n11. Fees and allowances 32\n\nPart IA — General\n\n11A. Arrangements for payment of travelling expenses by Treasurer 33\n\n12. Regulations 34\n\nPart 1B — Transitional provisions\n\n12A. Transitional provisions for *Salaries and Allowances Amendment Act 2025* 35\n\nPart 1C — Validation\n\n12B. Validation provisions relating to s. 5(7) 36\n\nSchedule 1 — Offences\n\nSchedule 2 — Entities that may be prescribed as Government entities and their executive officers\n\nNotes\n\nCompilation table 42\n\nUncommenced provisions table 47\n\nOther notes 47\n\nDefined terms\n\n  \n\nWestern Australia\n\nSalaries and Allowances Act 1975\n\nAn Act to establish a Tribunal to determine or report upon the remuneration to be paid or provided to the Governor and to holders of ministerial, parliamentary, judicial and certain other public offices, to determine certain matters relating to the superannuation of members of Parliament, to repeal the *Parliamentary Salaries and Allowances Act 1967* 1, to authorise the making of arrangements for the payment of certain travelling expenses, and for incidental and other purposes.\n\n[Long title amended: No. 34 of 1980 s. 2; No. 58 of 1986 s. 14; No. 19 of 1989 s. 7; No. 68 of 1992 s. 4(3).]\n\n## Part I — The Tribunal\n\n### Division 1 — Preliminary\n\n[Heading inserted: No. 1 of 2018 s. 4.]\n\n##### 1. Short title\n\nThis Act may be cited as the *Salaries and Allowances Act 1975*.\n\n[Section 1 amended: No. 34 of 1980 s. 3.]\n\n##### 2. Commencement\n\n(1) Subject to subsection (2) this Act shall come into operation on the date on which this Act receives the Royal Assent.\n\n(2) Section 13 shall come into operation on the date on which the first determination made under section 6 comes into operation.\n\n[**3.** Deleted: No. 58 of 1986 s. 15.]\n\n##### 4. Terms used\n\n(1) In this Act, unless the contrary intention appears —\n\nChairperson means Chairperson of the Tribunal and includes a member appointed to act temporarily in place of the Chairperson under the *Interpretation Act 1984* section 52;\n\nGTE has the meaning given in the *Government Trading Enterprises Act 2023* section 3(1);\n\n  member means a member of the Tribunal and includes a person appointed to act temporarily in place of a member under the *Interpretation Act 1984* section 52;\n\n  Minister of the Crown means a person who holds any of the principal executive offices of the Government liable to be vacated on political grounds that are referred to in section 43 of the *Constitution Acts Amendment Act 1899*;\n\n  remuneration includes salary, allowances, fees, emoluments and benefits (whether in money or not);\n\n  section means section of this Act;\n\n  Tribunal means the Tribunal established by section 5.\n\n(2) For the purposes of this Act a person is an officer of Parliament if the person is the holder for the time being of the office of —\n\n(a) President of the Legislative Council;\n\n(b) Speaker of the Legislative Assembly;\n\n(c) Chairman and deputy of Committees in either House;\n\n(d) Leader of the Opposition in the Legislative Council;\n\n(e) Leader of the Opposition in the Legislative Assembly;\n\n(f) Deputy Leader of the Opposition in the Legislative Assembly;\n\n(g) Government Whip in the Legislative Council;\n\n(h) Opposition Whip in the Legislative Council;\n\n(i) Government Whip in the Legislative Assembly;\n\n(j) Opposition Whip in the Legislative Assembly;\n\n(k) the person who not being a Minister of the Crown is the leader in the Parliament of a party of at least 5 members of Parliament other than a party whose leader is the Premier or the Leader of the Opposition;\n\n(l) the person who is the Whip in the Legislative Council or the Legislative Assembly of a party of at least 7 members other than a party whose leader is the Premier or the Leader of the Opposition and the first mentioned party in the case of the Whip in the Legislative Council has 7 members or more in that House or in the case of the Whip in the Legislative Assembly has 7 or more members in that House.\n\n[Section 4 amended: No. 78 of 1984 s. 20; No. 34 of 1986 s. 4; No. 19 of 1989 s. 8; No. 38 of 1990 s. 7; No. 68 of 1992 s. 4(1) and (2); No. 56 of 2006 s. 6; No. 46 of 2016 s. 4; No. 13 of 2023 s. 248; No. 3 of 2025 s. 4.]\n\n### Division 2 — Tribunal established\n\n[Heading inserted: No. 1 of 2018 s. 5.]\n\n##### 5. Establishment of Tribunal\n\n(1) For the purposes of this Act there is hereby established a Tribunal to be known as the Salaries and Allowances Tribunal.\n\n(2) The Tribunal shall consist of 3 members appointed by the Governor.\n\n(3) Subject to this Act, a member —\n\n(a) holds office for the period, not exceeding 3 years, specified in the member’s instrument of appointment; and\n\n(b) is eligible for reappointment.\n\n(4) If a member —\n\n(a) is, according to the *Interpretation Act 1984* section 13D, a bankrupt or a person whose affairs are under insolvency laws; or\n\n(b) becomes permanently incapable of performing their duties as a member; or\n\n(c) resigns their office by writing under their hand addressed to the Governor,\n\nthe office of that member becomes vacant.\n\n(6) A member shall be paid such fees and allowances as are determined from time to time by the Governor.\n\n(7) A person shall not be appointed as a member if they are a person whose remuneration is determined or reported upon by the Tribunal under this Act.\n\n(8) The Governor shall appoint one of the members to be the Chairperson of the Tribunal.\n\n[Section 5 amended: No. 63 of 1978 s. 2; No. 42 of 1997 s. 8; No. 18 of 2009 s. 78; No. 3 of 2025 s. 5.]\n\n### Division 3 — Inquiries, determinations and reports\n\n[Heading inserted: No. 1 of 2018 s. 6.]\n\n##### 5A. Inquiry into and determination of remuneration of Governor\n\n(1) The Premier shall, before an appointment is made to the office of Governor, request the Tribunal to inquire into, and determine, the remuneration to be paid to the Governor.\n\n(2) The Tribunal shall, on receiving a request made under subsection (1), comply with that request.\n\n(3) The Tribunal may, in complying with a request made under subsection (1), in its determination specify a method of altering from time to time the remuneration payable to the Governor during the subsistence of the appointment referred to in that subsection.\n\n(4) A determination made by the Tribunal under this section shall —\n\n(a) be in writing; and\n\n(b) be signed by the members; and\n\n(c) come into operation, or be deemed to have come into operation, on the day on which the appointment referred to in subsection (1) is made.\n\n(5) The Tribunal shall cause one copy of each determination made under this section to be given to the Premier who shall, not later than 14 days from the date on which the Premier receives the determination, inform the Tribunal that the Premier agrees or does not agree with that determination and, where the Premier does not agree, set out the grounds for the Premier’s disagreement and recommendations as to the alterations that the Premier believes should be made.\n\n(6) The Tribunal, having considered the Premier’s recommendations following the Premier’s disagreement with the determination, shall either amend the determination or reaffirm the determination.\n\n(7) The text of the determination as finally settled shall be published in the *Gazette*.\n\n(8) Any remuneration payable under, or under any method of alteration specified in, any determination made under this section shall, notwithstanding any other written law, be paid in accordance with that determination out of the Consolidated Account, which is appropriated accordingly.\n\n(9) The remuneration payable under a determination which has come into operation under this section in respect of a particular appointment to the office of Governor shall not, subject to any alteration effected under any method of alteration specified in that determination, be altered while that appointment subsists.\n\n(10) Notwithstanding anything in this section, the Tribunal shall forthwith on the coming into operation of section 9 of the *Acts Amendment (Remuneration of Governor) Act 1989* proceed to inquire into, and determine, the remuneration to be paid to the Governor and this section shall apply to and in relation to that determination as if that determination had been made in compliance with a request made under subsection (1).\n\n[Section 5A inserted: No. 19 of 1989 s. 9; amended: No. 77 of 2006 s. 4; No. 3 of 2025 s. 6.]\n\n##### 6. Other inquiries into and determinations of remuneration\n\n(1) The Tribunal shall, from time to time as provided by this Act, inquire into, and determine, the remuneration to be paid or provided to —\n\n(a) Ministers of the Crown and the Parliamentary Secretary of the Cabinet; and\n\n(ab) subject to section 44A(4) and (5) of the *Constitution Acts Amendment Act 1899*, a Parliamentary Secretary appointed under section 44A(1) of that Act; and\n\n(b) officers and members of the Parliament including additional remuneration to be paid or provided to a member, other than an officer, of Parliament who is the Chairman, Deputy Chairman or a member of a standing committee of a House or a joint standing committee of both Houses; and\n\n(c) Clerk of the Legislative Council or Clerk of the Legislative Assembly or the Deputy Clerk of either House; and\n\n(d) officers of the Public Service holding offices included in the Special Division of the Public Service; and\n\n(ea) a person holding any of the following offices —\n\n(i) member of the Council of Curtin University;\n\n(ii) member of the Kalgoorlie Campus Council of Curtin University;\n\n(iii) member of the Council of Edith Cowan University;\n\n(iv) member of the ECU South West Campus (Bunbury) Advisory Board of Edith Cowan University;\n\n(v) member of the Advisory Board of the Academy of Edith Cowan University;\n\n(vi) member of the Senate of Murdoch University;\n\n(vii) member of the Senate of the University of Western Australia;\n\nand\n\n(e) a person holding any other office of a full‑time nature, created or established under a law of the State, that is prescribed for the purposes of this section, but not being an office the remuneration for which is determined by or under any industrial award or agreement made or in force under any other law of the State.\n\n(2) A determination of the Tribunal —\n\n(a) shall be in writing; and\n\n(b) shall be signed by the members; and\n\n(c) shall come into operation, or shall be deemed to have come into operation, on such date as is specified therein.\n\n(3) A copy of every determination made by the Tribunal, shall be published in the *Government Gazette*.\n\n(4) Any remuneration which is payable pursuant to a determination shall, notwithstanding the provisions of any other law of the State, be paid in accordance with the determination and charged to the Consolidated Account, which is appropriated accordingly, or, where the law creating an office to which a determination applies provides for the remuneration of the holder of the office to be paid from some other fund or source, out of that fund or source.\n\n(5) Except where the Tribunal otherwise determines, a member of the Legislative Assembly who ceases to be a member thereof by reason of the dissolution of that House or the expiry thereof by effluxion of time shall nevertheless be deemed for the purposes of this Part and the provisions of any determination to have continued to have been such a member until the day fixed for the taking of the poll next following the dissolution or expiry.\n\n(5a) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act or any determination, where a person elected as a member of Parliament is a person to whom section 36 or section 37 of the *Constitution Acts Amendment Act 1899* applies, that person shall not be entitled to any remuneration as such a member in respect of any period for which they remain a person to whom that section applies.\n\n(5b) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act or any determination —\n\n(a) a person elected as a member of the Legislative Council at a general election shall not be entitled to any remuneration as such a member in respect of any period before 22 May next following the general election unless that person was a member of the Legislative Council immediately before the general election or is declared elected under section 156D of the *Electoral Act 1907* to complete the unexpired portion of a term of office ending on that 22 May; and\n\n(b) where an election held as part of a general election for the Legislative Council fails wholly or partially or is declared to be absolutely void and an election held by reason of that failure or declaration (the fresh election) is held before 22 May next following the general election, a person elected as a member of the Legislative Council at the fresh election shall not be entitled to any remuneration as such a member in respect of any period before that 22 May unless that person was a member of the Legislative Council immediately before the fresh election or is declared elected under section 156D of the *Electoral Act 1907* to complete the unexpired portion of a term of office ending on that 22 May.\n\n(6) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Act, where any provision of a determination dealing with the payment of electorate allowances or other allowances to members of Parliament which vary according to the electoral district of a member becomes inapplicable, or, in the opinion of the Chairperson, inequitable as a consequence of a subsequent division of the State into electoral districts, the Chairperson may without further authority than this subsection alter the determination in that regard to such extent as the Chairperson thinks necessary for that purpose, and any variation of the determination shall be published in the *Government Gazette*.\n\n(7) Where a member of Parliament (not being a Minister of the Crown, a Parliamentary Secretary appointed under section 44A(1) of the *Constitution Acts Amendment Act 1899*, or the Parliamentary Secretary of the Cabinet) travels in this State or elsewhere in order to perform any duty or function as a representative of the Government or of a Minister of the Crown —\n\n(a) the member of Parliament is not entitled to have their fares for that travel paid by the State, or to receive reimbursement from the State in respect of those fares, unless that payment or reimbursement is made —\n\n(i) with the written approval of the Treasurer; or\n\n(ii) under arrangements made under section 11A(1);\n\n(b) the member of Parliament is not entitled to receive any remuneration from the State in respect of accommodation or other expenses incurred in the course of or in connection with that travel other than an allowance payable in accordance with a determination made by the Tribunal.\n\n(8) Where a payment or reimbursement in respect of the fares of a member of Parliament is made with the approval of the Treasurer as referred to in subsection (7)(a)(i), no payment or reimbursement shall be made in respect of those fares under arrangements made under section 11A(1), but that payment or reimbursement shall not be regarded as being in satisfaction of any part of the entitlements of the member under those arrangements.\n\n[Section 6 amended: No. 33 of 1979 s. 2; No. 34 of 1980 s. 5; No. 78 of 1984 s. 21; No. 40 of 1987 s. 104; No. 38 of 1990 s. 8; No. 49 of 1991 s. 3; No. 68 of 1992 s. 4(3) and 5; No. 6 of 1993 s. 11; No. 1 of 1995 s. 37; No. 49 of 1996 s. 64; No. 36 of 2000 s. 57; No. 22 of 2001 s. 3; Gazette 15 Aug 2003 p. 3691; Act No. 1 of 2005 s. 10(2); No. 56 of 2006 s. 7; No. 77 of 2006 s. 4; No. 32 of 2016 s. 192; No. 20 of 2021 s. 96(2); No. 3 of 2025 s. 7.]\n\n##### 6A. Tribunal’s functions under *Parliamentary Superannuation Act 1970*\n\n(1) The Tribunal shall from time to time, as it sees fit, inquire into and determine, for the purposes of the *Parliamentary Superannuation Act 1970*, any matter that under that Act is to be determined by the Tribunal.\n\n(2) Section 6(2) and (3) apply to a determination under this section.\n\n[Section 6A inserted: No. 37 of 2000 s. 20.]\n\n##### 6AA. Redundancy benefits for members of Parliament\n\n(1) The Tribunal may inquire into and determine the entitlements and benefits to be paid or provided to a member of Parliament if the member ceases to be a member.\n\n(2) The Tribunal shall make such an inquiry and determination if the Tribunal makes a determination under section 28 of the *Parliamentary Superannuation Act 1970* that benefits shall not be payable until a former member attains an age specified by the Tribunal in its determination.\n\n(3) Section 6(2) and (3) apply to a determination under this section.\n\n(4) Any amount payable in accordance with a determination under this section shall be charged to the Consolidated Account which is appropriated accordingly.\n\n[Section 6AA inserted: No. 37 of 2000 s. 20; amended: No. 77 of 2006 s. 4.]\n\n##### 6B. Determinations relating to entitlements of former Premiers, Ministers and members of Parliament\n\n(1) The Tribunal shall from time to time, as it sees fit, inquire into and determine the entitlements and benefits to be paid or provided to former Premiers of the State, former Ministers of the Crown and former members of the Legislative Assembly or Legislative Council of the State.\n\n(2) Section 6(2) and (3) apply in relation to a determination under this section.\n\n(3) Any amount that is payable in accordance with a determination under this section shall be charged to the Consolidated Account which is appropriated accordingly.\n\n[Section 6B inserted: No. 13 of 1987 s. 3; amended: No. 6 of 1993 s. 11; No. 73 of 1994 s. 4; No. 49 of 1996 s. 64; No. 77 of 2006 s. 4.]\n\n##### 6C. Forfeiture of former office entitlements\n\n(1) In this section —\n\n  former office entitlement means an entitlement or benefit that a person would be entitled to receive in accordance with a determination under section 6B if this section did not apply;\n\n  holding public office means being the Premier of the State, a Minister of the Crown, or a member of the Legislative Assembly or Legislative Council of the State;\n\n  Schedule 1 offence means an offence prescribed in Schedule 1 or an offence that, in a particular case, is determined under subsection (2) to be a Schedule 1 offence.\n\n(2) A court convicting a person of an offence that the person committed while holding public office may, if it considers that the person’s holding public office was in any way relevant to the commission of the offence and the gravity of the offence warrants the determination, determine that, for the purposes of this section, the offence was a Schedule 1 offence even though it is not prescribed in Schedule 1.\n\n(3) A person is disqualified from receiving any former office entitlement if —\n\n(a) the person is sentenced to imprisonment upon conviction of any offence other than for a term of less than 12 months; or\n\n(b) the person is convicted of a Schedule 1 offence that the person committed while holding public office.\n\n(4) A former office entitlement is not to be paid or provided to a person who is disqualified under this section from receiving it except to the extent that the entitlement arose before the person was disqualified and related to a time before the person was disqualified or to anything done before the person was disqualified.\n\n(5) The person ceases to be disqualified and the former office entitlement is restored with effect from the time when the person became disqualified if —\n\n(a) the person’s conviction is quashed; or\n\n(b) if the offence was not a Schedule 1 offence that the person committed while holding public office, the sentence is quashed —\n\n(i) without substituting for it another sentence of imprisonment; or\n\n(ii) substituting for it a sentence of imprisonment for a term ending less than 12 months after the person began serving the sentence quashed.\n\n[Section 6C inserted: No. 45 of 1995 s. 4 2.]\n\n##### 7. Inquiry into and report on judicial salaries\n\n(1) Subject to section 5(1) and (1b) of the *Judges’ Salaries and Pensions Act 1950* and section 12(3a) of the *District Court of Western Australia Act 1969*, the Tribunal shall, from time to time as provided by this Act, inquire into, and report to the Minister on, the question whether any alterations are desirable in the remuneration to be paid or provided to judges, District Court judges, masters of the Supreme Court and magistrates and the Parliamentary Inspector of the Corruption and Crime Commission appointed under the *Corruption, Crime and Misconduct Act 2003*, and if the Tribunal reports that any such alterations are desirable it shall, in its report, recommend the nature and extent of the alterations that should be made.\n\n(2) The report of the Tribunal —\n\n(a) shall be in writing; and\n\n(b) shall be signed by the members; and\n\n(c) shall be furnished to the Minister.\n\n(3) A copy of every report made by the Tribunal under this section shall be laid before each House of Parliament within 5 sitting days of that House after the report is received by the Minister.\n\n(4) Except as provided in subsection (5), a recommendation contained in a report made by the Tribunal under this section shall come into operation or shall be deemed to have come into operation on such date as is specified in the report of the Tribunal, and for that purpose the provisions of section 6(4) apply to and in relation to any remuneration recommended to be payable in such a report as if it were remuneration payable pursuant to a determination made under section 6.\n\n(5) Subject to subsection (6) if either House of Parliament, within 15 sitting days of that House after a copy of a report has been laid before that House pursuant to subsection (3), passes a resolution disapproving a recommendation made by the Tribunal, then —\n\n(a) if the recommendation has not yet come into operation — the recommendation shall not come into operation;\n\n(b) if the recommendation has come into operation — the recommendation shall cease to have any force or effect in respect of any period commencing on or after the day on which the resolution is passed.\n\n(6) For the purposes of applying the provisions of subsection (5) to the report made by the Tribunal and tabled in each House of Parliament on 16 October 1975, the reference in that subsection to “within 15 sitting days of that House after a copy of a report has been laid before that House” shall be construed as a reference to within 15 sitting days of that House after 7 November 1975.\n\n[Section 7 amended: No. 89 of 1975 s. 3; No. 33 of 1979 s. 3; No. 34 of 1980 s. 6; No. 68 of 1992 s. 4(3) and 6; No. 14 of 1994 s. 20; No. 29 of 1996 s. 26; No. 23 of 1997 s. 19; No. 48 of 2003 s. 62; No. 78 of 2003 s. 74(2); No. 45 of 2004 s. 37; No. 8 of 2009 s. 114; No. 35 of 2014 s. 39.]\n\n##### 7A. Determinations as to remuneration of local government CEOs\n\n(1) The Tribunal is to, from time to time as provided by this Act, inquire into and determine, the amount of remuneration, or the minimum and maximum amounts of remuneration, to be paid or provided to chief executive officers of local governments.\n\n(2) Section 6(2) and (3) apply to a determination under this section.\n\n[Section 7A inserted: No. 2 of 2012 s. 38.]\n\n##### 7B. Determinations as to fees and allowances of local government councillors\n\n(1) In this section —\n\nelected council member means a person elected under the *Local Government Act 1995* as a member of the council of a local government.\n\n(2) The Tribunal is to, from time to time as provided by this Act, inquire into and determine —\n\n(a) the amount of fees, or the minimum and maximum amounts of fees, to be paid under the *Local Government Act 1995* to elected council members for attendance at meetings; and\n\n(b) the amount of expenses, or the minimum and maximum amounts of expenses, to be reimbursed under the *Local Government Act 1995* to elected council members; and\n\n(c) the amount of allowances, or the minimum and maximum amounts of allowances, to be paid under the *Local Government Act 1995* to elected council members.\n\n(3) Section 6(2) and (3) apply to a determination under this section.\n\n[Section 7B inserted: No. 2 of 2012 s. 39.]\n\n##### 7BAA. Determinations as to fees and allowances of members of local government committees\n\n(1) In this section —\n\ncommittee member has the meaning given in the *Local Government Act 1995* section 5.100(1).\n\n(2) The Tribunal must, from time to time as provided by this Act, inquire into and determine —\n\n(a) the amount of fees, or the minimum and maximum amounts of fees, to be paid under the *Local Government Act 1995* to committee members for attendance at meetings; and\n\n(b) the amount of expenses, or the minimum and maximum amounts of expenses, to be reimbursed under the *Local Government Act 1995* to committee members.\n\n(3) Section 6(2) and (3) apply to a determination under this section.\n\n[Section 7BAA inserted: No. 11 of 2023 s. 105.]\n\n##### 7BA. Term used: Government entity\n\nIn sections 7C and 7D —\n\nGovernment entity means an entity —\n\n(a) that is described in column 1 of Schedule 2; and\n\n(b) that is not prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n[Section 7BA inserted: No. 13 of 2023 s. 249.]\n\n##### 7C. Determinations as to remuneration of executive officers of Government entities\n\n(1) In this section —\n\nexecutive officer, of an entity described in column 1 of Schedule 2, means a person whose office —\n\n(a) is described in column 2 of Schedule 2 for the entity, other than as that of director of the entity; and\n\n(b) is not prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph;\n\n(2) The Tribunal must, from time to time as provided by this Act, inquire into and determine the minimum and maximum amounts of remuneration to be paid or provided to executive officers of Government entities.\n\n(3) Section 6(2) and (3) apply to a determination under subsection (2).\n\n(4) However, a person who holds an office described in column 2 of Schedule 2 for an entity immediately before the day on which the entity is described in column 1 of Schedule 2 must be treated, for the purposes of subsection (2), as if they were not an executive officer of the entity during the balance of the person’s term of office that remained immediately before that day.\n\n[Section 7C inserted: No. 13 of 2023 s. 249.]\n\n##### 7D. Determinations as to remuneration of directors of certain Government entities\n\n(1) In this section —\n\ndirector, of an entity described in column 1 of Schedule 2, means a person whose office —\n\n(a) is described in column 2 of Schedule 2 for the entity as that of director of the entity; and\n\n(b) is not prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this paragraph.\n\n(2) The Tribunal must, from time to time as provided by this Act, inquire into and determine the minimum and maximum amounts of remuneration to be paid or provided to directors of Government entities.\n\n(3) Section 6(2) and (3) apply to a determination under subsection (2).\n\n[Section 7D inserted: No. 13 of 2023 s. 249.]\n\n##### 7E. Determinations as to allowance for directors of certain GTEs: audit and risk committee members\n\n(1) For the purposes of the *Government Trading Enterprises Act 2023* section 27(2), the Tribunal must, from time to time as provided by this Act, inquire into and determine the allowance to be paid or provided to members of audit and risk management committees of GTEs who are also directors of the GTE concerned.\n\n(2) The allowance must be the same for all such members for a particular GTE, other than for the chair of the committee.\n\n(3) Section 6(2) and (3) apply to a determination under subsection (1).\n\n[Section 7E inserted: No. 13 of 2023 s. 249.]\n\n##### 8. Tribunal to report and make a determination annually\n\n(1) The Tribunal shall ensure that —\n\n(a) not more than a year elapses between one determination under section 6(1) in respect of an office or other position referred to in that subsection and another; and\n\n(b) not more than a year elapses between one report under section 7(1) and another; and\n\n(c) not more than a year elapses between one determination under section 7A and another; and\n\n(d) not more than a year elapses between one determination under section 7B(2) and another; and\n\n(da) not more than a year elapses between one determination under section 7BAA(2) and another; and\n\n(e) not more than a year elapses between one determination under section 7C(2) and another; and\n\n(f) not more than 4 years elapse between one determination under section 7D(2) and another; and\n\n(g) not more than 4 years elapse between one determination under section 7E(1) and another.\n\n(2) Despite subsection (1) —\n\n(a) the Tribunal is not required to make an annual determination under section 6(1), or an annual report under section 7(1), before 1 July 2021; and\n\n(b) the Tribunal must not make a determination under section 7C(2) that comes into operation while section 10F applies.\n\n(3) Subsection (2)(a) does not prevent the Tribunal from making a determination or report referred to in that subsection if the Tribunal considers the circumstances require it.\n\n[Section 8 inserted: No. 37 of 2000 s. 21; amended: No. 49 of 2004 s. 13; No. 2 of 2012 s. 40; No. 46 of 2016 s. 6; No. 1 of 2018 s. 7; No. 13 of 2023 s. 250; No. 11 of 2023 s. 106.]\n\n##### 9. Meetings of Tribunal\n\n(1) The Chairperson may convene meetings of the Tribunal and shall preside at all meetings of the Tribunal at which the Chairperson is present.\n\n(2) In the event of the absence of the Chairperson from a meeting —\n\n(a) another member nominated by the Chairperson for that purpose shall preside; or\n\n(b) if another member has not been so nominated by the Chairperson, another member nominated by the Minister for that purpose shall preside.\n\n(3) At a meeting of the Tribunal —\n\n(a) the procedure shall be as determined by the Tribunal; and\n\n[(b) deleted]\n\n(c) all questions shall be decided by a majority of the votes of the members present and voting; and\n\n(d) the member presiding has a deliberative vote; and\n\n(e) in the event of an equality of votes being cast on any question, the question shall be deferred until a subsequent meeting of the Tribunal.\n\n(4) The Tribunal must ensure that accurate minutes are kept of each of its meetings.\n\n(5) A meeting of the Tribunal may be held —\n\n(a) in person; or\n\n(b) using remote communication; or\n\n(c) by a mix of those 2 ways of meeting.\n\n(6) A person (including the member presiding) who participates in a meeting of the Tribunal using remote communication is taken to be present at the meeting.\n\n(7) In subsections (5) and (6) —\n\nremote communication, in relation to a meeting, means any technology that enables all the persons taking part in the meeting to communicate with each other at the same time in a reasonably continuous way.\n\n[Section 9 amended: No. 3 of 2025 s. 8.]\n\n##### 9A. Resolution without meeting\n\n(1) A written resolution that is signed, or otherwise assented to in writing, by the members has the same effect as if it had been passed at a meeting of the Tribunal.\n\n(2) If the resolution constitutes the making of a determination or report, a member may comply with section 5A(4)(b), 6(2)(b) or 7(2)(b) by assenting to the determination or report in writing otherwise than by signing it.\n\nNote for this subsection:\n\nThe reference to section 6(2)(b) includes section 6(2)(b) as applied under section 6A(2), 6AA(3), 6B(2), 7A(2), 7B(3), 7BAA(3), 7C(3), 7D(3) or 7E(3).\n\n(3) A resolution that has effect under subsection (1) must be recorded in the minutes of the Tribunal’s next meeting.\n\n[Section 9A inserted: No. 3 of 2025 s. 9.]\n\n##### 9B. Quorum\n\nTwo members constitute a quorum at a meeting of the Tribunal and the functions of the members under sections 5A(4)(b), 6(2)(b) and 7(2)(b) may be performed by 2 members.\n\nNote for this section:\n\nThe reference to section 6(2)(b) includes section 6(2)(b) as applied under section 6A(2), 6AA(3), 6B(2), 7A(2), 7B(3), 7BAA(3), 7C(3), 7D(3) or 7E(3).\n\n[Section 9B inserted: No. 3 of 2025 s. 9.]\n\n##### 10. Method of inquiry by Tribunal\n\n(1) In the performance of the functions of the Tribunal —\n\n(a) the Tribunal may inform itself in such manner as it thinks fit; and\n\n(b) the Tribunal may receive written or oral statements; and\n\n(c) the Tribunal is not required to conduct any proceeding in a formal manner; and\n\n(d) the Tribunal is not bound by the rules of evidence.\n\n(2) For the purposes of the exercise and performance of its powers and functions under this Act, the Tribunal has all the powers, rights and privileges that are specified in the *Royal Commissions Act 1968*, as appertaining to a Royal Commission and the provisions of that Act have effect as if they were enacted in this Act and in terms made applicable to the Tribunal.\n\n(3) The Minister may, if the Minister thinks fit, appoint a person or persons to assist the Tribunal in an inquiry.\n\n(4) Without limiting the provisions of subsection (3) the Minister shall —\n\n(a) appoint a person nominated from time to time in writing by the President of the Legislative Council and the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly to assist the Tribunal in an inquiry in so far as it relates to the remuneration of Ministers of the Crown, a Parliamentary Secretary appointed under section 44A(1) of the *Constitution Acts Amendment Act 1899*, the Parliamentary Secretary of the Cabinet and officers and members of the Parliament; and\n\n(b) appoint a person nominated from time to time in writing by the Public Sector Commissioner to assist the Tribunal in an inquiry in so far as it relates to the remuneration to be paid or provided to the officers and persons referred to in section 6(1)(d) and (e); and\n\n(ca) appoint a person nominated from time to time in writing by the Public Sector Commissioner to assist the Tribunal in an inquiry insofar as it relates to the remuneration to be paid or provided to persons holding the offices referred to in section 6(1)(ea); and\n\n(c) appoint a person nominated from time to time in writing by the chief executive officer of the department principally assisting the Minister in the administration of the *Local Government Act 1995* to assist the Tribunal in an inquiry in so far as it relates to —\n\n(i) the remuneration to be paid or provided to chief executive officers of local governments referred to in section 7A; or\n\n(ii) the fees, expenses and allowances to be paid to elected council members referred to in section 7B; or\n\n(iii) the fees and expenses to be paid to committee members referred to in section 7BAA;\n\nand\n\n(d) appoint a person nominated from time to time in writing by the chief executive officer of the department of the Public Service principally assisting in the administration of the *Financial Management Act 2006* to assist the Tribunal in an inquiry in so far as it relates to the minimum and maximum amounts of remuneration to be paid or provided to executive officers or directors of Government entities referred to in section 7C(2) or 7D(2) or the amount of remuneration to be paid or provided to those officers as referred to in section 10F(3) or the allowance to be paid or provided under section 7E(1).\n\n[Section 10 amended: No. 33 of 1979 s. 4; No. 38 of 1990 s. 9; No. 68 of 1992 s. 4(3); No. 32 of 1994 s. 19; No. 73 of 1994 s. 4; No. 49 of 2004 s. 13; No. 39 of 2010 s. 83; No. 2 of 2012 s. 41; No. 32 of 2016 s. 193; No. 46 of 2016 s. 7; No. 1 of 2018 s. 8; No. 13 of 2023 s. 251; No. 11 of 2023 s. 107; No. 3 of 2025 s. 10.]\n\n##### 10A. Tribunal to have regard to government financial matters\n\n(1) In this section —\n\nGovernment Financial Projections Statement means whichever is the most recent of the following —\n\n(a) the most recent Government Financial Projections Statement that is —\n\n(i) released under the *Government Financial Responsibility Act 2000* section 12(1); and\n\n(ii) made publicly available in the budget papers tabled in the Legislative Assembly under the title “Economic and Fiscal Outlook” or, if the regulations prescribe another part of the budget papers, that other part;\n\n(b) the most recent Government Mid-year Financial Projections Statement that is —\n\n(i) released under the *Government Financial Responsibility Act 2000* section 13(1); and\n\n(ii) made publicly available under section 9 of that Act;\n\nPublic Sector Wages Policy Statement means —\n\n(a) the Public Sector Wages Policy Statement 2014 issued by the State government that applies to industrial agreements expiring after 1 November 2013; or\n\n(b) if any Public Sector Wages Policy Statement is issued in substitution for that statement, the later statement.\n\n(2) In making a determination under section 6(1)(a), (ab), (d) or (e), 7C(2), 7D(2) or 7E(1) the Tribunal must take into consideration the following —\n\n(a) any Public Sector Wages Policy Statement, irrespective of whether or not the statement applies to a person or office in respect of whom or which the determination is made;\n\n(b) the financial position and fiscal strategy of the State as set out in the following —\n\n(i) the most recent Government Financial Strategy Statement released under the *Government Financial Responsibility Act 2000* section 11(1) and made publicly available under section 9 of that Act;\n\n(ii) the Government Financial Projections Statement;\n\n(iii) any submissions made to the Tribunal on behalf of the State government.\n\n[Section 10A inserted: No. 8 of 2014 s. 19; amended: No. 46 of 2016 s. 8; No. 13 of 2023 s. 252.]\n\n### Division 4 — No remuneration increases before 1 July 2021\n\n[Heading inserted: No. 1 of 2018 s. 9.]\n\n##### 10B. Term used: commencement day\n\nIn this Division —\n\ncommencement day means the day on which the *Salaries and Allowances Amendment (Debt and Deficit Remediation) Act 2018* section 9 comes into operation.\n\n[Section 10B inserted: No. 1 of 2018 s. 9.]\n\n##### 10C. No increases in Governor’s remuneration before 1 July 2021\n\n(1) This section applies to a determination made by the Tribunal under section 5A that comes into operation before 1 July 2021.\n\n(2) The Tribunal must not make a determination under which the remuneration to be paid to the Governor is more than the remuneration paid to the person who held the office of Governor immediately before commencement day.\n\n(3) If immediately before commencement day there was a vacancy in the office of Governor, the remuneration determined by the Tribunal to be paid to the Governor must not be more than the remuneration paid to the last person to hold the office of Governor before commencement day.\n\n(4) If, as referred to in section 5A(3), the Tribunal specifies in a determination a method of altering from time to time the remuneration payable to the Governor, the Tribunal must not specify a method that allows for the remuneration of the Governor to be increased before 1 July 2021.\n\n(5) The regulations may prescribe a kind or class of remuneration to which this section does not apply.\n\n[Section 10C inserted: No. 1 of 2018 s. 9.]\n\n##### 10D. No increases in remuneration under s. 6 before 1 July 2021\n\n(1) In this section —\n\nclassification framework means a framework under which the Tribunal, in respect of the offices referred to in section 6(1)(d) —\n\n(a) assesses the work value of each of the offices using established principles and methodologies; and\n\n(b) based on that assessment, assigns each of the offices to a level of classification, known as a band; and\n\n(c) specifies in respect of each band minimum and maximum amounts of annual salary.\n\n(2) This section applies to a determination made by the Tribunal under section 6 that comes into operation before 1 July 2021, other than a determination made under section 6(1)(ea).\n\n(3) The Tribunal must not make a determination under which the remuneration to be paid or provided in respect of an office or other position referred to in section 6(1) is more than the remuneration paid or provided in respect of the office or position immediately before commencement day.\n\n(4) If an office referred to in section 6(1)(d) or (e) was vacant immediately before commencement day, unless subsection (6) applies, the remuneration determined by the Tribunal to be paid or provided in respect of the office must not be more than the remuneration paid or provided to the last person to hold the office before commencement day.\n\n(5) Subsection (6) applies if —\n\n(a) an office referred to in section 6(1)(d) or (e) was vacant immediately before commencement day, and the last person to hold the office before commencement day was not in office on or after 1 July 2016; or\n\n(b) the Tribunal has not previously determined the remuneration to be paid or provided in respect of an office referred to in section 6(1)(d) or (e), for example because it is a new office.\n\n(6) In determining the remuneration to be paid or provided in respect of the office, the Tribunal —\n\n(a) must, in the case of the first determination made by the Tribunal after commencement day, take into consideration the remuneration paid or provided immediately before commencement day in respect of other offices with which the office is comparable; and\n\n(b) must not, in the case of any subsequent determination, determine remuneration that is more than the remuneration determined by the Tribunal in accordance with paragraph (a).\n\n(7) If a determination made by the Tribunal includes a classification framework in respect of the offices referred to in section 6(1)(d) —\n\n(a) the principles and methodologies the Tribunal uses to assess the work value of each of the offices must not differ from the principles and methodologies the Tribunal used immediately before commencement day; and\n\n(b) the number of bands in the classification framework must not differ from the number of bands in the classification framework that applied immediately before commencement day; and\n\n(c) the minimum and maximum amounts of salary specified in respect of a band must not differ from the minimum and maximum amounts of salary that applied in respect of that band immediately before commencement day.\n\n(8) Nothing in this section prevents the Tribunal from determining to increase the remuneration to be paid or provided in respect of an office referred to in section 6(1)(d) as a consequence of the Tribunal assigning the office to a higher level of classification under a classification framework included in a determination.\n\n(9) The regulations may prescribe a kind or class of remuneration to which this section does not apply.\n\n[Section 10D inserted: No. 1 of 2018 s. 9.]\n\n##### 10E. No increases in judicial remuneration before 1 July 2021\n\n(1) This section applies to a report made by the Tribunal under section 7 that comes into operation before 1 July 2021.\n\n(2) The Tribunal must not make a report under which the remuneration recommended to be paid or provided in respect of an office referred to section 7(1) is more than the remuneration paid or provided in respect of the office immediately before commencement day.\n\n(3) The regulations may prescribe a kind or class of remuneration to which this section does not apply.\n\n[Section 10E inserted: No. 1 of 2018 s. 9.]\n\n##### 10F. No increases in remuneration of certain executive officers of Government entities before 1 July 2021\n\n(1) In this section —\n\nentity means an entity that is specified in column 1 of Schedule 2;\n\nexecutive officer, of an entity, has the meaning given in section 7C(1) and (4).\n\n(2) This section applies until the beginning of 1 July 2021.\n\n(3) If, on or after commencement day, an entity is prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of paragraph (b) of the definition of Government entity in section 7C(1), the Tribunal is to inquire into and determine the amount of remuneration to be paid or provided to executive officers of the entity.\n\n(4) The amount of remuneration the Tribunal determines under subsection (3) in respect of an executive officer of an entity must not be more than the amount of remuneration that was paid or provided to the person who held the office immediately before commencement day.\n\n(5) If, in respect of an executive officer of an entity, there was no person holding the office immediately before commencement day, the Tribunal —\n\n(a) must, in the case of the first determination made by the Tribunal under subsection (3) in respect of the executive officer, take into consideration the remuneration paid or provided immediately before commencement day in respect of executive officers of other entities with which the entity is comparable; and\n\n(b) must not, in the case of any subsequent determination under subsection (3), determine remuneration that is more than the remuneration determined by the Tribunal in accordance with paragraph (a).\n\n(6) Section 6(2) and (3) apply to a determination under subsection (3).\n\n(7) Once the Tribunal has made its first determination under subsection (3) in respect of an executive officer of an entity, the Tribunal may make subsequent determinations under that subsection in respect of the executive officer if it considers the circumstances require it, but nothing in this section requires the Tribunal to do so.\n\n(8) While this section applies —\n\n(a) a provision in the written law under which an entity is established that provides for the entity’s governing body to set the remuneration of an executive officer within the range determined by the Tribunal under section 7C(2) does not apply; and\n\n(b) the executive officer is to be paid or provided the remuneration determined by the Tribunal under subsection (3).\n\n(9) A determination made under subsection (3) in respect of an executive officer of an entity, and in force when this section ceases to apply, continues to apply in respect of the executive officer until the remuneration of the executive officer is determined in accordance with section 7C and the written law under which the entity is established.\n\n(10) The regulations may prescribe a kind or class of remuneration to which this section does not apply.\n\n[Section 10F inserted: No. 1 of 2018 s. 9.]\n\n##### 10G. Compensatory and catch-up determinations after 1 July 2021 prohibited\n\n(1) This section applies to a determination or report of the Tribunal that comes into operation on or after 1 July 2021.\n\n(2) The Tribunal must not make a determination under section 5A, 6 or 7C, or a report under section 7, which —\n\n(a) has the effect of providing for the payment or provision of remuneration on the basis that the remuneration was not paid or provided before 1 July 2021 by reason of the operation of section 10C, 10D, 10E or 10F (as the case requires); or\n\n(b) takes into account any increase in the cost of living that occurred between commencement day and 1 July 2021.\n\n[Section 10G inserted: No. 1 of 2018 s. 9.]\n\n### Division 5 — Miscellaneous\n\n[Heading inserted: No. 1 of 2018 s. 10.]\n\n##### 11. Fees and allowances\n\nAny person appointed under section 10(3) to assist the Tribunal may be paid such fees and allowances as the Governor determines.\n\n## Part IA — General\n\n[Heading inserted: No. 34 of 1980 s. 7.]\n\n##### 11A. Arrangements for payment of travelling expenses by Treasurer\n\n(1) The Treasurer of the State may from time to time make arrangements under which, in such circumstances, and subject to such conditions, restrictions and limitations, as the Treasurer determines, —\n\n(a) the fares of a member of Parliament for travel in this State or elsewhere; and\n\n(b) the fares of a member of the family of a member of Parliament for travel in this State or elsewhere associated with travel by that member of Parliament; and\n\n(c) accommodation or other expenses incurred by a member of Parliament in the course of or in connection with travel by that member of Parliament in this State or elsewhere,\n\nshall be payable by the Treasurer.\n\n(2) Arrangements made under subsection (1)(c) shall not authorise the payment of expenses in respect of which an allowance is payable or reimbursement may be obtained pursuant to a determination made under Part I.\n\n(3) Any moneys payable under arrangements made under subsection (1) —\n\n(a) may be paid directly or by way of reimbursement or, in the case of expenses referred to in paragraph (c) of that subsection, by way of an allowance in respect of those expenses; and\n\n(b) shall be charged to the Consolidated Account, which is appropriated accordingly.\n\n(4) Subject to this section, where a person ceases to be a member of the Legislative Assembly by reason of the dissolution of that House or the expiry thereof by effluxion of time arrangements made under subsection (1) shall continue to apply to and in relation to the person during the period between the dissolution or expiry and the day fixed for the taking of the poll next following the dissolution or expiry.\n\n(5) Without limiting the generality of subsection (1) the Treasurer may determine that arrangements made under that subsection —\n\n(a) shall not apply; or\n\n(b) shall apply to a restricted or limited extent,\n\nin relation to the period between the issue of the writ for a general election or writs for a conjoint election pursuant to the *Electoral Act 1907* and the day fixed by the writ or writs for the taking of the poll.\n\n[Section 11A inserted: No. 34 of 1980 s. 7; amended: No. 6 of 1993 s. 11; No. 49 of 1996 s. 64; No. 36 of 2000 s. 26; No. 77 of 2006 s. 4; No. 3 of 2025 s. 11.]\n\n##### 12. Regulations\n\nThe Governor may make regulations, not inconsistent with this Act, prescribing all matters required or permitted by this Act to be prescribed, or necessary or convenient to be prescribed for carrying out or giving effect to this Act.\n\n## Part 1B — Transitional provisions\n\n[Heading inserted: No. 3 of 2025 s. 12.]\n\n##### 12A. Transitional provisions for *Salaries and Allowances Amendment Act 2025*\n\n(1) In this section —\n\namendment Act means the *Salaries and Allowances Amendment Act 2025*;\n\namendment day means the day on which section 12 of the amendment Act comes into operation.\n\n(2) The amendment made by section 5(1) of the amendment Act does not affect the term of office of a member whose appointment was made before amendment day.\n\n(3) The member who, immediately before amendment day, is the Chairman appointed under section 5(8) is taken to be appointed as the Chairperson under section 5(8), as amended by section 5(5) of the amendment Act, at the beginning of amendment day.\n\n[Section 12A inserted: No. 3 of 2025 s. 12.]\n\n## Part 1C — Validation\n\n[Heading inserted: No. 3 of 2025 s. 12.]\n\n##### 12B. Validation provisions relating to s. 5(7)\n\n(1) In this section —\n\nvalidation day means the day on which the *Salaries and Allowances Amendment Act 2025* section 12 comes into operation;\n\nvalidation period means the period beginning on 7 September 2021 and ending on the day before validation day.\n\n(2) Section 5(7) is taken to have had no effect during the validation period.\n\n(3) Subsections (4) to (9) —\n\n(a) supplement subsection (2); and\n\n(b) are not to be construed as limiting the effect of subsection (2) or of each other.\n\n(4) Any written law (including this Act) in force at any time on or after 7 September 2021 is taken to have, or to have had, the same effect at that time as if section 5(7) had had no effect during the validation period.\n\n(5) An appointment of a person as a member, or a resignation under section 5(4)(c), that was made, or purportedly made, during the validation period is taken to be, and to have always been, as lawful, valid and effective as it would be, or would have been, if section 5(7) had had no effect during the validation period.\n\n(6) Subsection (5) applies to make a person’s resignation, or purported resignation, lawful, valid and effective even if, at the time, the reason for the resignation was that the person had not been validly appointed as a member.\n\n(7) Anything done, or purportedly done, on or after 7 September 2021 is taken to be, and to have always been, as lawful, valid and effective as it would be, or would have been, if section 5(7) had had no effect during the validation period.\n\n(8) In subsection (7), a reference to the doing of anything includes a reference to an omission to do anything.\n\n(9) The functions, rights, obligations and liabilities of the State, and of all persons and bodies, are taken to be, and to have always been, the same as if section 5(7) had had no effect during the validation period.\n\n(10) Without limiting the effect of this section, this section has effect for the purposes of any civil proceedings before a court (including appeal proceedings) that relate to an act or omission occurring, or other matter arising, on or after 7 September 2021  and that —\n\n(a) are commenced on or after validation day; or\n\n(b) were commenced, but not completed, before validation day.\n\n[Section 12B inserted: No. 3 of 2025 s. 12.]\n\n[Part II deleted: No. 37 of 2000 s. 22.]\n\nSchedule 1 — Offences\n\n[Section 6C]\n\n1. An offence against section 60, 61, 81, 82, 83, 85, 88, 122, 124, 169, 170, 378, 409, 414, 419, 424, 440A, 473, 529, 530, 532, 533, 534, 535, or 536 of *The Criminal Code*.\n\n2. An offence against section 24, 25, 26, or 27 of the *Royal Commissions Act 1968*.\n\n3. An offence against section 552, 553, 558, or 562 of *The Criminal Code* relating to an offence prescribed in item 1 or 2.\n\n[Schedule 1 inserted: No. 45 of 1995 s. 5.]\n\nSchedule 2 — Entities that may be prescribed as Government entities and their executive officers\n\n[s. 7BA, 7C and 7D]\n\n[Heading inserted: No. 46 of 2016 s. 9; amended: No. 13 of 2023 s. 253.]\n\n| **Column 1: entities** | **Column 2: executive officers** |\n| --- | --- |\n| A GTE. | 1. A person appointed as a director of the GTE. |\n|  | 2. The person appointed as the chief executive officer of the GTE. |\n|  | 3. A person appointed to act in place of the chief executive officer of the GTE. |\n| A wholly‑owned subsidiary (as defined in the *Government Trading Enterprises Act 2023* section 117). | 1. A person appointed as a director of the subsidiary.<br>2. The person appointed as the chief executive officer (however described) of the subsidiary. |\n| Gold Corporation as defined in the *Gold Corporation Act 1987* section 3(1). | 1. The person appointed under the *Gold Corporation Act 1987* section 7(4) as the chief executive officer of Gold Corporation. |\n|  | 2. The person appointed under the *Gold Corporation Act 1987* section 7(4) as the deputy chief executive officer of Gold Corporation. |\n| GoldCorp as defined in the *Gold Corporation Act 1987* section 3(1). | The person appointed under the *Gold Corporation Act 1987* section 51(1) as the managing director of GoldCorp. |\n| The Mint as defined in the *Gold Corporation Act 1987* section 3(1). | The person appointed under the *Gold Corporation Act 1987* section 40(1) as managing director of the Mint. |\n| A port authority as defined in the *Port Authorities Act 1999* section 3(1). | 1. The person appointed under the *Port Authorities Act 1999* section 14(2) as the chief executive officer of the port authority. |\n|  | 2. A person appointed under the *Port Authorities Act 1999* section 14(6) to act in the office of chief executive officer of the port authority. |\n| RWWA as defined in the *Racing and Wagering Western Australia Act 2003* section 3(1). | 1. The person appointed under the *Racing and Wagering Western Australia Act 2003* section 20(2) as the CEO of RWWA. |\n|  | 2. A person appointed under the *Racing and Wagering Western Australia Act 2003* section 20(5) to act in the office of CEO of RWWA. |\n| The Corporation as defined in the *Western Australian Treasury Corporation Act 1986* section 3(1). | 1. The person appointed under the *Western Australian Treasury Corporation Act 1986* section 8(2) as the chief executive officer of the Corporation. |\n|  | 2. A person appointed under the *Western Australian Treasury Corporation Act 1986* section 8(5) to act in place of the chief executive officer of the Corporation. |\n\n\n[Schedule 2 inserted: No. 46 of 2016 s. 9; amended: No. 13 of 2023 s. 253.]\n\n![dline]()\n\nNotes\n\nThis is a compilation of the *Salaries and Allowances Act 1975* and includes amendments made by other written laws. For provisions that have come into operation, and for information about any reprints, see the compilation table. For provisions that have not yet come into operation see the uncommenced provisions table.\n\nCompilation table\n\n| **Short title** | **Number and year** | **Assent** | **Commencement** |\n| --- | --- | --- | --- |\n| *Salaries and Allowances Tribunal Act 1975* 3 | 27 of 1975 | 16 May 1975 | Act other than s. 13: 16 May 1975 (see s. 2(1));    s. 13: 8 Aug 1975 (see s. 2(2) and *Gazette* 12 Aug 1975 p. 2951) |\n| *Salaries and Allowances Tribunal Act Amendment Act 1975* | 89 of 1975 | 20 Nov 1975 | 19 Sep 1975 (see s. 2) |\n| *Salaries and Allowances Tribunal Act Amendment Act 1978* | 63 of 1978 | 22 Sep 1978 | 22 Sep 1978 |\n| *Salaries and Allowances Tribunal Act Amendment Act 1979* | 33 of 1979 | 11 Oct 1979 | 11 Oct 1979 |\n| *Salaries and Allowances Tribunal Amendment Act 1980* | 34 of 1980 | 5 Nov 1980 | 5 Nov 1980 |\n| *Acts Amendment and Repeal (Disqualification for Parliament) Act 1984* Pt. X | 78 of 1984 | 14 Nov 1984 | 1 Jul 1985 (see s. 2 and *Gazette* 17 May 1985 p. 1671) |\n| *Salaries and Allowances Amendment Act 1986* | 34 of 1986 | 1 Aug 1986 | 1 Aug 1986 (see s. 2) |\n| *Acts Amendment (Parliamentary Superannuation) Act 1986* Pt. II | 58 of 1986 | 26 Nov 1986 | 24 Dec 1986 |\n| *Salaries and Allowances Amendment Act 1987* | 13 of 1987 | 25 Jun 1987 | 25 Jun 1987 (see s. 2) |\n| *Acts Amendment (Electoral Reform) Act 1987* Pt. VII | 40 of 1987 | 12 Jul 1987 | 30 Oct 1987 (see s. 2 and *Gazette* 30 Oct 1987 p. 3977) |\n| *Acts Amendment (Parliamentary Superannuation) Act 1987* Pt. II | 103 of 1987 | 16 Dec 1987 | 16 Dec 1987 (see s. 2) |\n| *Acts Amendment (Parliamentary Superannuation) and Transitional Arrangements Act 1988* Pt. 2 | 6 of 1988 | 30 Jun 1988 | 30 Jun 1988 (see s. 2(1)) |\n| **Reprint of the *Salaries and Allowances Act 1975* as at 16 Nov 1988** (includes amendments listed above) | | | |\n| *Acts Amendment (Remuneration of Governor) Act 1989* Pt. 3 | 19 of 1989 | 1 Dec 1989 | 1 Dec 1989 (see s. 2(1)) |\n| *Acts Amendment (Parliamentary Superannuation) Act 1989* Pt. 5 | 31 of 1989 | 15 Dec 1989 | 15 Dec 1989 (see s. 2) |\n| *Acts Amendment (Parliamentary Secretaries) Act 1990* Pt. 3 | 38 of 1990 | 8 Nov 1990 | 8 Nov 1990 (see s. 2) |\n| *Salaries and Allowances Amendment Act 1991* | 49 of 1991 | 17 Dec 1991 | 17 Dec 1991 (see s. 2) |\n| *Salaries and Allowances Amendment Act 1992* | 68 of 1992 | 11 Dec 1992 | 11 Dec 1992 (see s. 2) |\n| *Financial Administration Legislation Amendment Act 1993* s. 11 | 6 of 1993 | 27 Aug 1993 | 1 Jul 1993 (see s. 2(1)) |\n| *Acts Amendment (Official Corruption Commission) Act 1994* s. 20 | 14 of 1994 | 22 Apr 1994 | 24 May 1994 (see s. 2 and *Gazette* 24 May 1994 p. 2193) |\n| **Reprint of the *Salaries and Allowances Act 1975* as at 26 Apr 1994** (includes amendments listed above except the *Acts Amendment (Official Corruption Commission) Act 1994*) | | | |\n| *Acts Amendment (Public Sector Management) Act 1994* s. 19 | 32 of 1994 | 29 Jun 1994 | 1 Oct 1994 (see s. 2 and *Gazette* 30 Sep 1994 p. 4948) |\n| *Statutes (Repeals and Minor Amendments) Act 1994* s. 4 | 73 of 1994 | 9 Dec 1994 | 9 Dec 1994 (see s. 2) |\n| *Industrial Legislation Amendment Act 1995* s. 37 | 1 of 1995 | 9 May 1995 | 9 May 1995 (see s. 2(1)) |\n| *Salaries and Allowances Amendment Act 1995* 2 | 45 of 1995 | 18 Oct 1995 | 18 Oct 1995 (see s. 2) |\n| *Official Corruption Commission Amendment Act 1996* s. 26 | 29 of 1996 | 28 Aug 1996 | 30 Aug 1996 (see s. 2 and *Gazette* 30 Aug 1996 p. 4365) |\n| *Financial Legislation Amendment Act 1996* s. 64 | 49 of 1996 | 25 Oct 1996 | 25 Oct 1996 (see s. 2(1)) |\n| *Acts Amendment (Auxiliary Judges) Act 1997* Pt. 9 | 23 of 1997 | 18 Sep 1997 | 18 Sep 1997 (see s. 2) |\n| *Equal Opportunity Amendment Act (No. 3) 1997* s. 8 | 42 of 1997 | 9 Dec 1997 | 6 Jan 1998 (see s. 2(1)) |\n| **Reprint of the *Salaries and Allowances Act 1975* as at 8 Sep 2000** (includes amendments listed above) | | | |\n| *Electoral Amendment Act 2000* s. 26 and 57 | 36 of 2000 | 10 Oct 2000 | 21 Oct 2000 (see s. 2 and *Gazette* 20 Oct 2000 p. 5899) |\n| *Parliamentary Superannuation Legislation Amendment Act 2000* Pt. 3 | 37 of 2000 | 10 Oct 2000 | 10 Oct 2000 (see s. 2) |\n| *Salaries and Allowances Amendment Act 2001* | 22 of 2001 | 26 Nov 2001 | 26 Nov 2001 (see s. 2) |\n| *Corruption and Crime Commission Act 2003* Sch. 4 cl. 9 | 48 of 2003 | 3 Jul 2003 | 1 Jan 2004 (see s. 2 and *Gazette* 30 Dec 2003 p. 5723) |\n| *Labour Relations Reform (Consequential Amendments) Regulations 2003* r. 17 published in *Gazette* 15 Aug 2003 p. 3685‑92 | | | 15 Sep 2003 (see r. 2) |\n| *Corruption and Crime Commission Amendment and Repeal Act 2003* s. 74(2) | 78 of 2003 | 22 Dec 2003 | 7 Jul 2004 (see s. 2 and *Gazette* 6 Jul 2004 p. 2697) |\n| *Acts Amendment (Court of Appeal) Act 2004* s. 37 | 45 of 2004 | 9 Nov 2004 | 1 Feb 2005 (see s. 2 and *Gazette* 14 Jan 2005 p. 163) |\n| *Local Government Amendment Act 2004* s. 13 | 49 of 2004 | 12 Nov 2004 | 1 Apr 2005 (see s. 2 and *Gazette* 31 Mar 2005 p. 1029) |\n| *Electoral Amendment and Repeal Act 2005* s. 10 | 1 of 2005 | 20 May 2005 | 20 May 2005 (see s. 2) |\n| **Reprint 4: The *Salaries and Allowances Act 1975* as at 10 Jun 2005** (includes amendments listed above) | | | |\n| *Parliamentary Legislation Amendment Act 2006* Pt. 3 | 56 of 2006 | 16 Nov 2006 | 17 Nov 2006 (see s. 2) |\n| *Financial Legislation Amendment and Repeal Act 2006* s. 4 | 77 of 2006 | 21 Dec 2006 | 1 Feb 2007 (see s. 2(1) and *Gazette* 19 Jan 2007 p. 137) |\n| *Statutes (Repeals and Miscellaneous Amendments) Act 2009* s. 114 | 8 of 2009 | 21 May 2009 | 22 May 2009 (see s. 2(b)) |\n| *Acts Amendment (Bankruptcy) Act 2009* s. 78 | 18 of 2009 | 16 Sep 2009 | 17 Sep 2009 (see s. 2(b)) |\n| **Reprint 5: The *Salaries and Allowances Act 1975* as at 2 Jul 2010** (includes amendments listed above) | | | |\n| *Public Sector Reform Act 2010* s. 83 | 39 of 2010 | 1 Oct 2010 | 1 Dec 2010 (see s. 2(b) and *Gazette* 5 Nov 2010 p. 5563) |\n| *Local Government Amendment Act 2012* Pt. 4 (s. 38-41) | 2 of 2012 | 4 Apr 2012 | s. 38, 40(a), (c) and 41 to the extent that it inserts s. 10(4)(c)(i): 21 Apr 2012 (see s. 2(b) and *Gazette* 20 Apr 2012 p. 1695);   s. 39, 40(b) and 41 to the extent that it inserts s. 10(4)(c)(ii): 9 Feb 2013 (see s. 2(b) and *Gazette* 8 Feb 2013 p. 863) |\n| *Workforce Reform Act 2014* Pt. 4 | 8 of 2014 | 20 May 2014 | 1 Jul 2014 (see s. 2(b) and *Gazette* 27 Jun 2014 p. 2301) |\n| *Corruption and Crime Commission Amendment (Misconduct) Act 2014* s. 39 | 35 of 2014 | 9 Dec 2014 | 1 Jul 2015 (see s. 2(b) and *Gazette* 26 Jun 2015 p. 2235) |\n| *Universities Legislation Amendment Act 2016* Pt. 7 Div. 8 | 32 of 2016 | 19 Oct 2016 | 1 Oct 2017 (see s. 2(b) and *Gazette* 9 Dec 2016 p. 5557) |\n| *Executive Officer Remuneration (Government Entities) Legislation Amendment Act 2016* Pt. 2 | 46 of 2016 | 7 Dec 2016 | 8 Dec 2016 (see s. 2(b)) |\n| *Salaries and Allowances Amendment (Debt and Deficit Remediation) Act 2018* | 1 of 2018 | 27 Feb 2018 | s. 1 and 2: 27 Feb 2018 (see s. 2(a));   Act other than s. 1 and 2: 28 Feb 2018 (see s. 2(b)) |\n| **Reprint 6: The *Salaries and Allowances Act 1975* as at 24 Aug 2018** (includes amendments listed above) | | | |\n| *Constitutional and Electoral Legislation Amendment (Electoral Equality) Act 2021* s. 96 | 20 of 2021 | 24 Nov 2021 | 25 Nov 2021 (see s. 2(b)) |\n| *Government Trading Enterprises Act 2023* Pt. 12 Div. 7 | 13 of 2023 | 22 Jun 2023 | 1 Jul 2023 (see s. 2(b) and SL 2023/89 cl. 2) |\n| *Local Government Amendment Act 2023* Pt. 3 Div. 3 | 11 of 2023 | 18 May 2023 | 1 Jan 2024 (see s. 2(d) and SL 2023/92 cl. 2(b)) |\n| *Salaries and Allowances Amendment Act 2025* Pt. 2 | 3 of 2025 | 19 Jun 2025 | 20 Jun 2025 (see s. 2(b)) |\n\n\nUncommenced provisions table\n\nTo view the text of the uncommenced provisions see *Acts as passed* on the WA Legislation website.\n\n| **Short title** | **Number and year** | **Assent** | **Commencement** |\n| --- | --- | --- | --- |\n| *TAB (Disposal) Act 2019* s. 156 | 21 of 2019 | 18 Sep 2019 | To be proclaimed (see s. 2(1)(b)(xiii)) |\n\n\nOther notes\n\n1 The provision in this Act repealing the *Parliamentary Salaries and Allowances Act 1967* was repealed by the *Parliamentary Superannuation Legislation Amendment Act 2000* s. 22.\n\n2 The *Salaries and Allowances Amendment Act 1995* s. 6 reads as follows:\n\n6. Transitional provision\n\n(1) Section 6C of the principal Act applies whether or not the offence was committed before the day when this Act commences and whether or not the person was dealt with before that day, but if the person was dealt with before that day the disqualification takes effect on that day instead of the day when the person was dealt with.\n\n(2) For the purposes of subsection (1) a person is dealt with —\n\n(a) if the offence was a Schedule 1 offence committed by the person while holding public office, on the day when the person is convicted;\n\n(b) in any other case, on the day when the person was sentenced.\n\n3 Now known as the *Salaries and Allowances Act 1975*; short title changed (see note under s. 1).\n\nDefined terms\n\n*[This is a list of terms defined and the provisions where they are defined. The list is not part of the law.]*\n\n**Defined term Provision(s)**\n\namendment Act 12A(1)\n\namendment day 12A(1)\n\nChairperson 4(1)\n\nclassification framework 10D(1)\n\ncommencement day 10B\n\ncommittee member 7BAA(1)\n\ndirector 7D(1)\n\nelected council member 7B(1)\n\nentity 10F(1)\n\nexecutive officer 7C(1), 10F(1)\n\nformer office entitlement 6C(1)\n\nfresh election 6(5b)\n\nGovernment entity 7BA, 10F(3)\n\nGovernment Financial Projections Statement 10A(1)\n\nGTE 4(1)\n\nholding public office 6C(1)\n\nmember 4(1)\n\nMinister of the Crown 4(1)\n\nPublic Sector Wages Policy Statement 10A(1)\n\nremote communication 9(7)\n\nremuneration 4(1)\n\nSchedule 1 offence 6C(1)\n\nsection 4(1)\n\nTribunal 4(1)\n\nvalidation day 12B(1)\n\nvalidation period 12B(1)\n\n© State of Western Australia 2025.\n\nThis work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence (CC BY 4.0). To view relevant information and for a link to a copy of the licence, visit www.legislation.wa.gov.au.\n\nAttribute work as: © State of Western Australia 2025.\n\nBy Authority: GEOFF O. LAWN, Government Printer\n","sortOrder":0}],"analysis":{"summary":{"complexity_score":2,"scope_assessment":{"changed":false,"description":"Scope cannot be assessed — the legislative text was not retrievable. No comparison between original intent and current provisions is possible."},"complexity_factors":["Insufficient legislative text available to assess true complexity","Title suggests a relatively narrow and procedural subject matter (remuneration setting)","Acts of this type typically involve a tribunal mechanism which can add moderate procedural complexity","Age of the Act (1975) suggests possible accumulated amendments that could increase complexity"],"plain_english_summary":"## ⚠️ Content Unavailable\n\nThe text of the **Salaries and Allowances Act 1975 (WA)** could not be retrieved — the source page is no longer available due to a website system upgrade.\n\n**What we know from context:**\n- This is a **Western Australian** law that has been in place since 1975\n- Based on its title, it likely governs the **salaries, fees, and allowances** paid to senior public officials — such as politicians, judges, or senior public servants — in Western Australia\n- Laws of this type typically establish a **tribunal or body** with the power to set and review remuneration (pay and entitlements) for these roles, so that politicians cannot simply vote themselves pay rises without independent oversight\n\n**Who it may affect:**\n- Members of the WA Parliament\n- Senior government officials and executives\n- Judges or other statutory officeholders\n- Indirectly, **all Western Australians** as taxpayers funding these salaries\n\n⚠️ *A full analysis cannot be provided without access to the actual legislative text. Please visit the Western Australian Parliamentary Counsel's Office website directly to locate the current version of this Act.*"},"flash_summary":{"complexity_score":6,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The Act’s scope has been expanded from its original function of establishing a Tribunal to determine parliamentary and ministerial pay to cover many additional categories and restraints. Amendments added determinations for local government CEOs, councillors and committee members (s.7A, s.7B, s.7BAA), executive officers and directors of specified Government entities and GTE audit committee allowances (s.7C–7E and Schedule 2), and introduced time‑limited freezes on increases and a prohibition on compensatory increases covering multiple classes of offices (s.10C–10G). The 2016–2023 and 2025 amendments also inserted detailed transitional and validation provisions (s.10F, s.12A, s.12B) and modernised procedural provisions (remote meetings, written resolutions, quorum rules) (s.9, s.9A, s.9B). These changes broaden the Tribunal’s remit and add fiscal and procedural constraints not present in the original statute (see s.5, s.6, s.7 and the cited amendment sections)."},"complexity_factors":["Large number of distinct office categories covered (Governor, Ministers, parliamentary officers, judiciary (reports), local government CEOs/councillors, GTE executives/directors, former office entitlements) (s.5A, s.6, s.7, s.7A–7E, s.6B).","Multiple cross‑references to other Acts and external fiscal documents that the Tribunal must consider (e.g. Constitution Acts Amendment Act 1899, Government Financial Responsibility Act 2000, Government Trading Enterprises Act 2023) (s.6(1)(ab), s.10A, s.7BA/Schedule 2).","Detailed transitional and time‑limited provisions (freezes before 1 July 2021 and prohibition of compensatory catch‑ups) that change the Tribunal’s powers for defined periods (s.10C–10G).","Validation and retrospective protection clauses affecting the legal status of appointments and acts during a prior period (s.12B).","Broad procedural and evidentiary discretion for the Tribunal, including Royal Commission powers, combined with formal publication and reporting obligations (s.10(1)–(2), s.6(2)–(3), s.7(1)–(3)).","Interaction between Tribunal determinations and existing written laws/funds for payment (Consolidated Account vs alternative funds) creates layered payment rules (s.6(4), s.5A(8)).","Prescriptive administrative details (meeting rules, quorum, remote participation, resolution without meeting) with modernised provisions (s.9, s.9A, s.9B).","Forfeiture rules tied to criminal convictions and a Schedule of serious offences, with court discretion to expand that Schedule for particular cases (s.6C, Schedule 1)."],"plain_english_summary":"# What this law does, who it affects, and how it works\n\n- Mechanically, the Act creates and governs a Salaries and Allowances Tribunal (the Tribunal) that investigates and sets or reports on pay and related entitlements for a range of public offices. The Tribunal is a three‑member body appointed by the Governor (s.5). It makes written determinations or reports that specify remuneration, allowances, and sometimes methods for altering remuneration over time (s.5A, s.6, s.7). Determinations generally take effect on dates specified in them and are published in the Government Gazette (s.5A(4), s.6(2)–(3)).\n\n- Who is covered: the Tribunal has functions across several classes of offices: the Governor (s.5A); Ministers, Parliamentary Secretaries and many parliamentary offices (s.6); officers and members of Parliament and committee positions (s.6); judicial officers (reports only) and certain other statutory judicial positions (s.7); local government chief executives, councillors and committee members (s.7A, s.7B, s.7BAA); executive officers and directors of specified Government entities and certain GTE audit committee members (s.7C–7E and Schedule 2). It can also determine redundancy and former‑office entitlements for past holders of parliamentary or ministerial office (s.6AA, s.6B).\n\n- How payments are funded and enforced: remuneration and amounts determined by the Tribunal are to be paid in accordance with its determinations and are charged to the Consolidated Account unless the written law creating the office provides another source (s.5A(8), s.6(4), s.6AA(4), s.6B(3)). Where the Act overrides other written laws, the Tribunal’s determination controls the payment (s.6(4)).\n\n- Decision‑making and procedure: the Tribunal may inform itself as it thinks fit, receive written or oral statements, is not bound by formal procedural rules or the rules of evidence, and has the powers of a Royal Commission for inquiry purposes (s.10(1)–(2)). It must keep accurate minutes, may meet remotely, and may pass written resolutions without a meeting (s.9, s.9A). Two members form a quorum (s.9B).\n\n- Fiscal constraints and factors required to be considered: for certain determinations the Tribunal is required to take into account public fiscal documents and the Public Sector Wages Policy Statement (s.10A). The Act also contains time‑limited controls introduced in 2018 that prevented increases to many categories of remuneration before 1 July 2021 and prohibited later “catch‑up” or compensatory increases (s.10C–10G).\n\n- Restrictions, forfeiture and validation: the Act disqualifies persons from receiving certain former‑office entitlements where they are imprisoned for 12 months or more or convicted of specified serious offences committed while holding public office; courts can designate other offences as falling into that list in particular cases (s.6C; Schedule 1). Recent amendments include a validation provision treating a previously effective change to s.5(7) as having had no effect during a specified period (s.12B), and transitional clauses for 2025 amendments (s.12A).\n\n- Administrative details: Tribunal members serve up to three years and are eligible for reappointment; the Governor determines members’ fees (s.5). The Governor may make regulations to carry the Act into effect (s.12). The Treasurer may make arrangements to pay travel expenses for members of Parliament (s.11A).\n\nStated purpose and operational test\n\n- The Act’s stated purpose is to establish a Tribunal to determine or report upon remuneration and related matters for the offices listed in the Act (long title; s.5, s.6, s.7). This is implemented by giving the Tribunal exclusive powers to set remuneration for those offices (s.6(4), s.7(4)).\n\n- Assessing costs and incentives against that purpose:\n  - Who pays: amounts determined by the Tribunal are charged to the Consolidated Account (s.5A(8), s.6(4), s.6AA(4), s.6B(3)). That means the fiscal cost is borne by the State budget rather than being negotiated at arm’s length by individual employing entities.  \n  - Who decides: the Tribunal (three members appointed by the Governor) decides remuneration within the statutory powers; the Tribunal has wide inquiry powers and discretion in procedure (s.5, s.10). The Tribunal’s decisions displace other written law on remuneration (s.6(4)).  \n  - Incentives created: centralised determinations standardise pay across covered offices (e.g. minimum/maximum bands for public service Special Division or Government entity executives in Schedule 2) (s.6(1)(d), s.7C(2), s.7D(2)). This reduces autonomy for employer bodies to set remuneration where the Act requires Tribunal determinations (s.7C(2), s.7D(2); while s.10F applies it can suspend governing‑body powers to set executive pay).  \n  - Compliance and administrative burden: covered offices and employer bodies must implement Tribunal determinations and publish changes (s.6(2)–(3)); the Tribunal must produce determinations or reports at least as often as the schedules in s.8 require (annual for many categories). Preparing submissions and operating within the Tribunal’s inquiry processes incurs administrative time and cost for the State, agencies and local governments (s.8, s.10).  \n  - Bureaucratic discretion and implementation risk: the Tribunal’s broad fact‑gathering and Royal Commission powers (s.10(1)–(2)) create substantial discretion about how inquiries are run and what evidence will be taken into account. The fiscal consideration requirement (s.10A) formally directs the Tribunal to consider government budget documents and wages policy when making certain determinations, which limits unfettered discretion but embeds a policy constraint into decision‑making.  \n\nTrade‑offs and potential practical consequences (mechanism‑focused)\n\n- Concentrated vs diffuse effects: benefits of higher remuneration accrue to individual office‑holders (concentrated), while the cost falls on the State budget (diffuse) via the Consolidated Account (s.6(4)).  \n- Limits on employer flexibility: where the Tribunal sets bands or specific remuneration for executives and directors of prescribed Government entities, the entity governing bodies’ legal power to set pay can be curtailed while the Act requires Tribunal determinations (s.7C(2), s.7D(2), s.10F(8)(a)).  \n- Transitional and freeze mechanics: the Act contains explicit freeze and anti–catch‑up rules that affected multiple categories of pay until 1 July 2021 and barred later determinations that sought to compensate for that freeze (s.10C–10G). Those rules directly limit the Tribunal’s ability to raise pay retrospectively.  \n- Legal certainty and validation: the 2025 validation clause treats a particular provision (s.5(7)) as having had no effect during a historic validation period to preserve the lawfulness of appointments, resignations and acts done in that period (s.12B). That resolves retrospective legal risk for acts taken in that period.\n\nBottom line (procedural and fiscal): the Act centralises setting of pay and related entitlements for a defined set of public offices in an appointed Tribunal whose determinations are binding on payment and funded from the Consolidated Account (s.5, s.6, s.5A(8), s.6(4)). The Tribunal has broad inquiry powers and must, in key areas, consider government fiscal documents (s.10, s.10A). The Act also contains specific transitional and validation rules which constrain and clarify the Tribunal’s scope in particular periods (s.10C–10G, s.12B)."},"kimi_summary":{"content_quality":"ok","complexity_score":6,"scope_assessment":{"changed":true,"description":"The legislation has expanded significantly beyond its original 1975 purpose. Initially focused on parliamentary and ministerial salaries, it now covers: local government CEOs and councillors (added 2012), local government committee members (added 2023), government trading enterprise executives and directors (added 2016/2023), university council members (added 2016), and includes complex debt/deficit remediation pay freezes (2018). The forfeiture provisions for corrupt officials (1995) and parliamentary superannuation functions (2000) also represent substantial scope creep from pure salary-setting to broader governance and integrity mechanisms."},"complexity_factors":["Multiple overlapping jurisdictions: The Act covers Governor, Parliament, judiciary, public service, local government, universities, and government trading enterprises, each with different procedural rules","Extensive cross-referencing: Heavy reliance on external statutes including Constitution Acts Amendment Act 1899, Government Trading Enterprises Act 2023, Local Government Act 1995, Parliamentary Superannuation Act 1970, and Judges' Salaries and Pensions Act 1950","Conditional logic and temporal restrictions: Division 4 (sections 10B-10G) contains complex freeze provisions with multiple exceptions, deeming provisions, and cut-off dates (1 July 2021)","Nested definitions: Terms like 'executive officer' and 'Government entity' rely on Schedule 2 tables and external statutory definitions (e.g., GTE definition imported from Government Trading Enterprises Act 2023)","Validation provisions: Section 12B contains retrospective validation provisions that effectively nullify section 5(7) for a specific period (7 September 2021 to validation day), with cascading effects on appointments and actions","Multiple determination types with different procedural requirements: Some determinations require Premier agreement (s. 5A), some can be disallowed by Parliament (s. 7), others have different timing requirements (annual vs 4-yearly in s. 8)","Transitional provisions: Recent amendments (2025) include specific transitional rules preserving existing appointments while changing terminology (Chairman to Chairperson)"],"plain_english_summary":"This Western Australian law creates an independent body called the **Salaries and Allowances Tribunal** that decides how much senior public officials should be paid.\n\n**What it does:**\n- **Sets up the Tribunal**: A three-person panel appointed by the Governor (who must not be people whose pay they set).\n- **Decides pay for key roles**: The Tribunal determines salaries, allowances and benefits for:\n  - The Governor\n  - Ministers and Members of Parliament (including parliamentary officers like the Speaker)\n  - Judges, magistrates and court officers\n  - Senior public servants in the \"Special Division\"\n  - University council members (Curtin, ECU, Murdoch, UWA)\n  - Local government CEOs and councillors\n  - Executive officers and directors of government businesses (like port authorities and government trading enterprises)\n- **Handles superannuation and redundancy**: The Tribunal also sets rules for parliamentary superannuation and redundancy payouts for MPs who lose their seats.\n- **Can strip entitlements from corrupt officials**: If a former Premier, Minister or MP is convicted of serious crimes (especially those committed while in office), they can lose their post-office perks.\n- **Includes pay freeze provisions**: Special rules prevented most pay increases before 1 July 2021 and banned \"catch-up\" pay rises afterwards.\n\n**Why it matters:**\nThis law keeps politicians and senior officials from setting their own pay, which helps prevent conflicts of interest and maintains public trust. It ensures pay decisions are made by an independent body considering factors like government budgets and wage policies."},"issue_detection":{"absurdities":[],"contradictions":[]}},"importantCases":[],"_links":{"self":"/api/acts/salaries-and-allowances-act-1975","history":"/api/acts/salaries-and-allowances-act-1975/history","analysis":"/api/acts/salaries-and-allowances-act-1975/analysis","conflicts":"/api/acts/salaries-and-allowances-act-1975/conflicts","importantCases":"/api/acts/salaries-and-allowances-act-1975/important-cases","documents":"/api/acts/salaries-and-allowances-act-1975/documents"}}