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Tasmania regulation
This is a Tasmanian government order that cancels (revokes) a previously granted exemption under public health law.
What it does: It removes an exemption that had been in place under Tasmania's Public Health Act. When an exemption is revoked, whoever previously benefited from it — whether a business, organisation, or individual — must now fully comply with the public health rules that the exemption had let them avoid.
Who it affects: Anyone or any organisation that was relying on the specific public health exemption being cancelled. Without knowing the exact exemption being revoked, it is not possible to name the specific affected parties — but the practical effect is that those people/entities must now meet the standard public health requirements they were previously excused from.
Why it matters: Revoking an exemption tightens public health compliance obligations. This could affect areas such as food safety, sanitation, disease control, or other regulated public health matters in Tasmania.
Bottom line: A previously granted 'get out of jail free card' from a public health rule has been cancelled. Anyone who had that exemption now has to play by the same rules as everyone else.
⚠️ Note: The full substantive content of this order (i.e., exactly which exemption is being revoked) does not appear in the text provided, which limits a more detailed analysis.
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Direct links to the current provisions in Public Health (Exemption) Revocation Order 2012.
Zoe has indexed the source text for search and analysis. Use the official register for the original document and download formats.
View on official registerSourced from Tasmanian Legislation Online (legislation.tas.gov.au), CC BY 4.0.