The alleged unlawful discrimination
135 In oral argument, when invited to identify the acts of discrimination the subject of his application, Mr Chircop pointed to five matters: (1) being informed during the third panel meeting in March 2019 that he could not complete the draping unit in which he was enrolled because of the unavailability of support services during the evening classes; (2) being told by Ms Malvern on 26 March 2019 that studying in 2020 was "only a possibility"; (3) the lack of tutorials offered in substitution for the draping unit and being prevented from progressing to the latter stages of his course due to the failure to provide "reasonable adjustments"; (4) being told by Ms O'Dell rather than the millinery teacher, Bronwyn Shooks, on 14 October 2019 that he could not complete his millinery unit; and (5) being prevented from completing his second year units, which was inconsistent with the lesson plan offered as part of the HOVB procedure.
136 TAFE is unquestionably an "educational authority". The evidence adduced on the application indicates that it at least limited Mr Chircop's access to certain benefits it provided. It also indicates that TAFE refused Mr Chircop access to its premises. TAFE accepts that at all relevant times Mr Chircop had a disability within the meaning of the DDA. But these matters alone are insufficient to raise a prima facie case of unlawful discrimination.
137 There are several problems with Mr Chircop's case.
138 First, while in his application and submissions Mr Chircop repeatedly asserts that TAFE's actions involved discrimination, in many instances his real complaint was that he was unfairly treated. Without more, unfair treatment is not unlawful discrimination.
139 Second, Mr Chircop did not point to a factual basis to support his claim that TAFE discriminated against him "on the ground of" his disability for the purpose of ss 5, 6, 22 and 23 of the DDA. The person's disability must be the "true basis" or "real reason" reason for the discrimination: Purvis v State of New South Wales (Department of Education and Training) (2003) 217 CLR 92 at [13] (Gleeson CJ), [166] (McHugh and Kirby JJ); Munday v Commonwealth (No 2) (2014) 226 FCR 199 at [59] (Katzmann J). In other words, there must be a causal connection between the disability and the discrimination. While it is not necessary to show that the discriminator had any intention or motive to discriminate, motive or purpose may be relevant to the question of causation: Waters at 359 (Mason CJ and Gaudron J); Purvis at [160] (McHugh and Kirby JJ), [236] (Gummow, Hayne and Heydon JJ).
140 Here, Mr Chircop has alleged that TAFE discriminated against him by imposing various conditions and requirements on him under the HOVB procedure, or by failing to offer reasonable adjustments. He broadly asserts that conditions and requirements were imposed on him because of his "mental health breakdown". As Mr Chircop frankly acknowledged in argument, however, the proposition that he was unlawfully discriminated against on the ground of his disability was based, at its highest, on inferences he drew and suppositions he made. He also volunteered that he could not identify the person or persons responsible:
It's probably speculative, but I don't know how much conference there was between the panel and between the section, and I don't know who devised actually the lesson plan, because that doesn't actually say that. But I don't really know if the panel gave the orders here or if this is really just Tracey Malverne having to pick up the pieces because the panel was just, like, "Deal with it".
141 The stated purpose of the HOVB procedure is to "provide a framework to assess any current risk to TAFE staff, students and visitors posed by current or prospective students with a history of violent behaviour". The evidence discloses that it was developed to support a TAFE management policy and assist TAFE institutes "to meet the requirements under Work Health and Safety (WHS) legislation and the Disability Discrimination Act 1992". For the purposes of the procedure "violence" is defined broadly. It is not restricted to physical acts. It includes "any behaviour that seriously interferes with the physical or psychological safety and wellbeing of staff and students" and expressly captures "threats to commit violence, aggressive behaviour which is non-contact in nature and may also include offensive, aggressive or abusive language directed to staff and students".
142 The behaviour management plan, implemented as part of the HOVB procedure, refers only to issues with Mr Chircop's behaviour and the measures to manage and respond to it. The lesson plan also appears to have been implemented to ensure he would complete classes when appropriate supports were available. Understandably, having regard to the reasons for its development, the HOVB procedure specifically contemplates circumstances where a student has a disability, stating that regard must be had to the student's behaviour not their disability:
Is it relevant that the student has a disability?
If the student has a disability TAFE NSW has a legal obligations, under the Disability Standards for Education 2005, to provide the student with reasonable accommodation and support and reasonable adjustments should be made to the TAFE NSW environment to accommodate the student.
The fact that a student has a disability does not constitute reasonable grounds for TAFE NSW to determine that he or she is a risk to the health and safety of people at TAFE. It is the behaviour of the student that needs to be considered in assessing whether or not the student poses a risk of violence and not whether or not they have a disability.
(Original emphasis.)
143 While Mr Chircop submitted that his behaviour during the incident on 4 March 2019 was distinguishable from the violent behaviour of the student in Purvis, this is not to the point. The question is why TAFE imposed the HOVB procedure. On the material before the Court, TAFE identified Mr Chircop as engaging in behaviour, both on 4 March 2019 and on other occasions, which met the broad definition of "violence" under the HOVB procedure. It seems tolerably clear that the only reason the HOVB procedure was put in place was to protect the safety and welfare of staff and other students. Mr Chircop submitted that TAFE failed to recognise that some of his behaviour was linked to his anxiety (and hence his disability) and was "[b]rand[ed]" as "behavioural issues". I do not doubt that certain behavioural problems could be a manifestation of a mental illness or disorder. But Mr Chircop's submission was not supported by evidence. Expert evidence would be required to show that the behaviour which prompted TAFE to act as it did was a manifestation of his disability. No such evidence was adduced. Nor did Mr Chircop point to the availability of any such evidence.
144 Further, without more, Mr Chircop's claim that he was discriminated on the ground of his disability because "the new Headteacher calle[ed] security on [him] after [he] chastised her for telling [him] to leave campus" is bound to fail.
145 In the result, while I acknowledge that a high bar should not be imposed for the grant of leave under s 46PO(3A)(a) of the AHRC Act, based on the evidence before the Court and the way Mr Chircop framed his case, I am not satisfied that it is reasonably arguable that the alleged unlawful discrimination occurred because of Mr Chircop's disability: cf. Owen v Serendipity at [27]; Wilson at [121], [124].
146 Third, in his originating application Mr Chircop noted that TAFE was "firm" that it had not treated him any differently from other students "without disability" but could not prove it. But it is Mr Chircop, not TAFE, who carries the burden of proof. He has to prove that TAFE treated him less favourably than it would treat a student without his disability.
147 Fourth, the comparison the DDA requires is between TAFE's treatment of him and the way TAFE would treat a person without his disability "in circumstances that are not materially different". Before the comparison can be made, it is necessary to identify and examine the circumstances attending the treatment given or proposed and an examination of "what would have been done in those circumstances if the person concerned was not disabled": Purvis at [223] (Gummow, Hayne and Heydon JJ). In Purvis the High Court held that, where a disabled child had a disability that caused him to behave violently at school and was excluded from school, the relevant comparison was between the child concerned and another child without the disability who behaved in a similarly violent way: Purvis at [12] (Gleeson CJ), [221]-[225] (Gummow, Hayne and Heydon JJ), [273] (Callinan J). All the "objective features" that surround the disabled person's treatment must be identified first, because the comparison the Act requires between the person with the disability and the person without it must be made in circumstances that are not materially different: Purvis at [224].
148 Here, Mr Chircop did not identify critical objective features that would enable the requisite comparison to be made. Instead, he merely claimed that the other student also engaged in disruptive conduct "and committed breaches of student conduct" but "did not receive an exclusion, an investigation, a penalty, a ban, and the need for an appeal since he was in class the following day after he had had a meeting about [the complaint he had made against the student]".
149 Mr Chircop submitted that the approach of the majority in Purvis "gives rise to nonsensical comparators". Regardless, I am bound to apply it. While the DDA has been amended since Purvis, none of the amendments affect this aspect of the judgment.
150 In a statement attached to his second complaint (JWC-53), Mr Chircop stated that "the 'exact same' discipline I am receiving is not given to other students". Assuming this to be true, it begs the question.
151 In his originating application Mr Chircop identified as a comparator another student about whom he had complained:
A comparator to how he was treated contrary to other students without disability exhibiting similar or heavier misbehaviour is when he made a complaint against a fellow student to the TAFE NSW online complaints process. Said student was still attending class by next lesson after one meeting with the Headteacher and did not receive the severe level of discipline and process the Applicant received - class exclusion, a panel to discuss allegations, a decision and penalty (a behavioural management plan), any campus ban, or a need for an appeal process - despite having made transphobic remarks about a transitioning student, stealing property of staff, taking an unsolicited photo of a student on campus to mock them, comparing a teacher to a stroke victim because of her speaking voice, and using foul language to humiliate students in class and to criticise TAFE NSW staff for self-created perceptions. None of this behaviour is due to mental health issues.
152 In his submissions, he claimed to have "comparators in three undisciplined students without disabilities that manifest similar 'disruptive' behaviours". But he provided no further details.
153 The comparator offered in the originating application appears to have been the subject of the complaint lodged by Mr Chircop in November 2020.
154 There are problems with the comparison. There is no suggestion, for example, that the student in question had a history of misbehaviour. Mr Chircop did not contend that other complaints had been made against the student, that the alleged conduct occurred over an extended period, or that the misconduct was substantiated after an investigation. Nor did he say that the student had previously been found to have breached student policies.
155 In his complaint about that student, Mr Chircop mentioned another student he claimed had also engaged in disruptive behaviour on one occasion. Even if Mr Chircop could prove that the students engaged in the conduct complained of, this is the wrong approach: Wilson at [118]-[119].
156 Mr Chircop bears the burden of establishing that his case is reasonably arguable. I am not satisfied (accepting the low bar for determining leave) that he can show that the circumstances of the two cases are sufficiently alike so as to enable him to establish a case of direct discrimination.
157 Fifth, Mr Chircop's claim of indirect discrimination is misconceived. It is described in the originating application as "bringing up alleged breaches of student conduct only after I suffered a mental health breakdown in an empty classroom, and in that they did not find reasonable adjustment to a unit I was banned from". On its face Mr Chircop's complaint appears to be that, by implementing the HOVB procedure which led to a lesson plan being developed resulted in Mr Chircop not being permitted to complete his draping unit, TAFE indirectly discriminated against him by not offering him "reasonable adjustments". There are several problems with such a claim.
158 A "requirement or condition" for the purposes of s 6 must be one of "general application" and be "facially neutral": Abela v State of Victoria [2013] FCA 832 at [85]-[92] (Tracey J). Here, the alleged requirement or condition is neither general nor neutral as it was directed to addressing Mr Chircop's behavioural issues.
159 Mr Chircop claimed that he was required not to attend the draping class on Monday nights as support services would not be available then. Despite his assertion that evening classes "always disenfranchise students with disabilities", there is no evidence that this was a requirement imposed on anyone else. If anything, this would be a case of direct discrimination within s 5(2).
160 While Mr Chircop has effectively claimed that the same conduct constituted direct discrimination in education in contravention of s 22 of the DDA, the definitions of direct and indirect discrimination are mutually exclusive: Waters at 392-3 (Dawson and Toohey JJ), 400 (McHugh J); Sklavos v Australian College of Dermatologists (2017) 256 FCR 247 at [13]-[14] (Bromberg J); [179] (Griffiths J); [213] (Bromwich J). In other words the same conduct cannot amount to both direct and indirect discrimination: Sklavos at [13], [16]. Although it might have been open to him to allege that the conduct amounted to direct discrimination and in the alternative indirect discrimination, he has not done so: Sklavos at [16] (Bromberg J); cf. Munday at [157].
161 In his submissions Mr Chircop asserted that:
TAFE courses that run from the afternoon to the late evening when disability services are not available will always disenfranchise students with disabilities, and constitutes as indirect discrimination.
162 Mr Chircop claims that Deborah Hyam (Head of Skills for Creative and Design Ideation in Fashion Technology) told him at the meeting of the panel on 25 March 2019 that "[o]ur intent is for you to be only studying in the day because that is when our support services are available". According to his own account of that meeting, Gillian Blackburn (Head of Disabilities Counselling and Support Services) said that "[t]here are concerns about you not being able to pass the course and that people around you are finding it difficult to participate fully in the classroom as a consequence of your behaviour". This was the reason Mr Chircop could not continue with the draping unit. In any event, on 6 May 2020 the six month ban was lifted and Mr Chircop was told that he could do half a draping unit and a theory unit for the Major Project. At his own request, TAFE also arranged for him to be provided with additional tutorial support for the draping unit. He was in the draping class with Fiona Holley when the incident of 19 November 2020 occurred which led to the 12-month ban. This account undermines Mr Chircop's case that reasonable adjustments were not made and that he was unable to attend and participate in a draping unit (or second year units more generally). In any event Mr Chircop did not point to a particular requirement or condition imposed upon him by TAFE with which he was unable to comply because of his disability.
163 Whether his claim arises under s 6(1) or (2), Mr Chircop has not alleged, let alone identified, a basis for demonstrating that he could not comply with any of TAFE's requirements or conditions "because of his disability" or that, "because of his disability", he could only comply with a requirement or condition if there were reasonable adjustments. Mr Chircop did not identify the "reasonable adjustments" he claims TAFE should have implemented. It is one thing to say that a condition or requirement was imposed on a person because of his disability. That is a question of direct discrimination. It is another thing, however, to say that he could not comply with that condition or requirement because of his disability. Yet that is what ss 6(1)(b) and (2)(b) require.
164 Sixth, to the extent that Mr Chircop claims to have been directly discriminated against by not being permitted to undertake a draping class on Monday nights when support services were not available, and not being offered reasonable alternatives, the exemption in s 45(1)(b)(i) of the DDA would surely apply.
165 Section 45(1)(b)(i) relevantly provides that it is not unlawful to do an act that is reasonably intended to afford persons who have a disability access to facilities or services to meet their special needs in relation to education. It reads:
Special measures
(1) This Part does not render it unlawful to do an act that is reasonably intended to:
…
(b) afford persons who have a disability or a particular disability, goods or access to facilities, services or opportunities to meet their special needs in relation to:
(i) employment, education, accommodation, clubs or sport [.]
166 As Sackville and Stone JJ observed in Catholic Education Office v Clarke (2004) 138 FCR 121 at [129]:
Section 45 is primarily designed to make lawful affirmative conduct, "reasonably intended" to provide services or facilities to disabled people that are not available to the general community or to provide benefits to particular classes of disabled persons to meet their special needs, even though the benefits are not made available to other disabled people[.]
167 According to Mr Chircop's submissions, "[f]unds for private tutorials [were] put in place after the HOVB" to provide an alternative class to the draping unit he could not do which were allocated to a first year unit he had not completed. Without delving into the question of whether the alternative class was "reasonably intended" to afford Mr Chircop access to services to meet his needs, this would appear to be a particular weakness in Mr Chircop's case, particularly as TAFE's lesson plan was apparently designed to ensure that he could access TAFE's support services.