Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979 (NSW)
24-Hour Economy Legislation Amendment (Vibrancy Reforms) Act 2024 No 76 (not commenced)
Environmental Planning and Assessment Amendment Act 2025 No 24, Sch 1[1] [3]–[25] [35] [42] [45] and [47] (not commenced)
Environmental Planning and Assessment Amendment (60 Day Deemed Approval) Bill 2025 [Non-government Bill— the Hon John Ruddick, MLC]
Environmental Planning and Assessment Amendment (Planning System Reforms) Bill 2025
An Act to institute a system of environmental planning and assessment for the State of New South Wales.
(cf previous s 1)
This Act may be cited as the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act 1979.
(cf previous s 2)
This Act commenced on 1 September 1980.
The Historical notes set out at the end of the Act on the NSW legislation website sets out the various Acts and instruments that have amended this Act and the dates on which each commenced.
(cf previous s 5)
The objects of this Act are as follows—
(a) to promote the social and economic welfare of the community and a better environment by the proper management, development and conservation of the State’s natural and other resources,
(b) to facilitate ecologically sustainable development by integrating relevant economic, environmental and social considerations in decision-making about environmental planning and assessment,
(c) to promote the orderly and economic use and development of land,
(d) to promote the delivery and maintenance of affordable housing,
(e) to protect the environment, including the conservation of threatened and other species of native animals and plants, ecological communities and their habitats,
(f) to promote the sustainable management of built and cultural heritage (including Aboriginal cultural heritage),
(g) to promote good design and amenity of the built environment,
(h) to promote the proper construction and maintenance of buildings, including the protection of the health and safety of their occupants,
(i) to promote the sharing of the responsibility for environmental planning and assessment between the different levels of government in the State,
(j) to provide increased opportunity for community participation in environmental planning and assessment.
(cf previous s 4)
In this Act, except in so far as the context or subject-matter otherwise indicates or requires—
(a) the amendments made by the Board and prescribed by the regulations, and
(b) the variations approved by the Board in relation to New South Wales and prescribed by the regulations, and
(c) the variations prescribed by the regulations.
Under Part 6, a certifier is a council or a person registered as a registered certifier under the Building and Development Certifiers Act 2018 acting in respect of matters to which the registration applies.
(a) consent to, permit, regulate, restrict or prohibit that development or that other act, matter or thing, either unconditionally or subject to conditions, or
(b) confer or impose on a consent authority functions with respect to consenting to, permitting, regulating, restricting or prohibiting that development or that other act, matter or thing, either unconditionally or subject to conditions.
(a) the Eastern Harbour City,
(b) the Central River City,
(c) the Western Parkland City.
(a) the area, shape or frontage of any land, the dimensions of any land, buildings or works, or the distance of any land, building or work from any specified point,
(b) the proportion or percentage of the area of a site which a building or work may occupy,
(c) the character, location, siting, bulk, scale, shape, size, height, density, design or external appearance of a building or work,
(d) the cubic content or floor space of a building,
(e) the intensity or density of the use of any land, building or work,
(f) the provision of public access, open space, landscaped space, tree planting or other treatment for the conservation, protection or enhancement of the environment,
(g) the provision of facilities for the standing, movement, parking, servicing, manoeuvring, loading or unloading of vehicles,
(h) the volume, nature and type of traffic generated by the development,
(i) road patterns,
(j) drainage,
(k) the carrying out of earthworks,
(l) the effects of development on patterns of wind, sunlight, daylight or shadows,
(m) the provision of services, facilities and amenities demanded by development,
(n) the emission of pollution and means for its prevention or control or mitigation, and
(o) such other matters as may be prescribed.
(a) the rebuilding of, the making of alterations to, or the enlargement or extension of, a building, or
(b) the placing or relocating of a building on land, or
(c) enclosing a public place in connection with the construction of a building, or
(d) erecting an advertising structure over a public road, or
(e) extending a balcony, awning, sunshade or similar structure or an essential service pipe beyond the alignment of a public road,
but does not include any act, matter or thing excluded by the regulations (either generally for the purposes of this Act or only for the purposes of specified provisions of this Act).
(a) the sea or an arm of the sea,
(b) a bay, inlet, lagoon, lake or body of water, whether inland or not and whether tidal or non-tidal, and
(c) a river, stream or watercourse, whether tidal or non-tidal, and
(d) a building erected on the land.
(a) a building of any description or any part of it and the appurtenances to it,
(b) manufactured home, moveable dwelling or associated structure within the meaning of the Local Government Act 1993,
(b1) a vehicle of any description,
(c) land, whether built on or not,
(d) a tent,
(e) a swimming pool,
(f) a ship or vessel of any description (including a houseboat).
If any residential building work is involved, the principal contractor must be the holder of a contractor licence under the Home Building Act 1989.
(a) development the carrying out of which is prohibited on land by the provisions of an environmental planning instrument that apply to the land, or
(b) development that cannot be carried out on land with or without development consent.
(a) the safety of persons in the event of fire,
(b) the prevention of fire,
(c) the detection of fire,
(d) the suppression of fire,
(e) the prevention of the spread of fire.
(a) a public or local authority constituted by or under an Act, or
(b) a Public Service agency, or
(c) a statutory body representing the Crown, or
(d) a Public Service senior executive within the meaning of the Government Sector Employment Act 2013, or
(e) a statutory State owned corporation (and its subsidiaries) within the meaning of the State Owned Corporations Act 1989, or
(f) a chief executive officer of a corporation or subsidiary referred to in paragraph (e), or
(g) a person prescribed by the regulations for the purposes of this definition.
The
(a) the renewal of, the making of alterations to, or the enlargement or extension of, a work, or
(b) enclosing a public place in connection with the carrying out of a work.
The Interpretation Act 1987 contains definitions and other provisions that affect the interpretation and application of this Act.
(Repealed)
Where functions are conferred or imposed by or under this Act on a council—
(a) except as provided in paragraph (b), those functions may be exercised in respect of an area by the council of that area, or
(b) if the functions are conferred or imposed in respect of part of an area, those functions may be exercised in respect of that part by the council of that area.
Where functions are conferred or imposed by or under this Act on a public authority, being a Public Service agency or some other unincorporated group of persons, those functions may be exercised by a person who is authorised to exercise those functions on behalf of the public authority.
(Repealed)
A reference in this Act to an authority or person preparing a document includes a reference to the authority or person causing the document to be prepared on the authority’s or person’s behalf.
(Repealed)
A reference in this Act to a direction is a reference to a direction in writing.
(Repealed)
A power, express or implied, to make or give an order, direction, declaration, determination or other instrument under this Act or under an instrument made under this Act includes a power to revoke or amend the order, direction, declaration, determination or other instrument.
(Repealed)
A reference in this Act to any act, matter or thing as specified in an environmental planning instrument includes a reference to any act, matter or thing that is of a class or description as specified in such an instrument.
A reference in this Act to the granting of consent includes a reference to the granting of consent subject to conditions.
Without affecting the generality of section 8(b) of the Interpretation Act 1987, a reference in this Act to the owner or lessee of land includes a reference to joint or multiple owners or lessees of land.
Notes in this Act are explanatory notes and do not form part of this Act.
A reference in this Act to an original document, map or plan includes a reference to a document, map or plan created, or a copy of which is kept, in electronic form.
A reference in this Act to a map includes a reference to a spatial dataset.
(cf previous s 4)
For the purposes of this Act,
(a) the use of land,
(b) the subdivision of land,
(c) the erection of a building,
(d) the carrying out of a work,
(e) the demolition of a building or work,
(f) any other act, matter or thing that may be controlled by an environmental planning instrument.
However, development does not include any act, matter or thing excluded by the regulations (either generally for the purposes of this Act or only for the purposes of specified provisions of this Act).
For the purposes of this Act, the
There are the following categories of development under this Act—
(a) exempt development (development that is exempt from the assessment and consent or approval requirements of this Act),
(b) development requiring development consent under Part 4, including the following—
(i) complying development (development that complies with pre-determined development standards and requires consent in the form of a complying development certificate by a consent authority or registered certifier),
(ii) development that requires consent by a council or other public authority specified as the consent authority (including by a local planning panel or delegated council staff on behalf of a council),
(iii) regionally significant development (development that requires consent by a Sydney district or regional planning panel),
(iv) State significant development (development that requires consent by the Independent Planning Commission or the Minister),
(v) designated development (development, other than State significant development, that requires an environmental impact statement for an application for consent),
(vi) integrated development (development that also requires approvals under other legislation that are integrated under general terms of approval),
(c) development that is an activity requiring environmental assessment under Division 5.1 before it is carried out by a public authority or before a public authority gives approval for the carrying out of the activity,
(d) State significant infrastructure (including critical State significant infrastructure) requiring approval under Division 5.2 by the Minister.
(cf previous s 4)
The carrying out of exempt development does not require—
(a) development consent under Part 4, or
(b) environmental impact assessment under Division 5.1, or
(c) State significant infrastructure approval under Division 5.2, or
(d) a certificate under Part 6 (Building and subdivision certification).
Exempt development is development that is declared to be exempt development by an environmental planning instrument because of its minor impact.
(cf previous s 5AA)
This Act has effect subject to the provisions of Part 7 of the Biodiversity Conservation Act 2016 and Part 7A of the Fisheries Management Act 1994 that relate to the operation of this Act in connection with the terrestrial and aquatic environment.
Those Acts contain additional requirements with respect to assessments, consents and approvals under this Act.
The regulations may amend Schedule 9 as follows—
(a) to add a city to the Six Cities Region,
(b) to remove a city from the Six Cities Region,
(c) to amalgamate 2 or more cities in the Six Cities Region into 1 or more new cities,
(d) to add a local government area, or part of a local government area, to a city in the Six Cities Region,
(e) to remove a local government area, or part of a local government area, from a city in the Six Cities Region.
The regulations may contain provisions of a savings or transitional nature consequent on the making of a regulation under subsection (1).
(cf previous s 7)
The Minister has portfolio responsibility for planning and for the administration of the provisions of this Act allocated to the Minister by an administrative arrangements order under the Constitution Act 1902.
The Minister has the functions conferred or imposed on the Minister under this Act.
(cf previous ss 13, 15, 17)
The Planning Secretary has departmental responsibility for planning and for the administration of the provisions of this Act allocated to the Minister by an administrative arrangements order under the Constitution Act 1902.
The Planning Secretary has the functions conferred or imposed on the Planning Secretary under this Act.
The Planning Secretary may provide advice, recommendations and reports to the Minister in connection with the administration of this Act (whether on the Planning Secretary’s own initiative or as required by the Minister).
The Planning Secretary is, in the exercise of any function under this Act, subject to the control and direction of the Minister (except in relation to the contents of any advice, recommendation or report provided to the Minister by the Planning Secretary).
(cf previous s 22)
The Minister or the Planning Secretary may, by order published on the NSW legislation website, establish panels for the purposes of this Act.
The chairperson and other members of any such panel are to be appointed by the Minister or the Planning Secretary (as the case requires).
The functions of any such panel are to be as specified in the order by which it is established, and (without limitation) may include—
(a) the investigation of any matter relevant to the administration of this Act, or
(b) the provision of advice, recommendations or reports with respect to any such matter to the Minister, the Planning Secretary or other person or body engaged in the administration of this Act.
This subsection does not limit any functions conferred on any such panel under this or any other Act.
Any such panel is not subject to the direction or control of the Minister or the Planning Secretary (except in relation to the procedure of the panel and any directions under section 9.1).
The order establishing any such panel is to specify the name of the panel. The word “panel” is not required to be included in the name of the panel.
Schedule 2 contains provisions with respect to the members and procedure of any such panel.
The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the functions, members and procedure of any such panel.
Any such panel is a NSW Government agency, unless the order by which it is established provides that it is not a NSW Government agency.
By virtue of section 13A of the Interpretation Act 1987, a NSW Government agency has the status, privileges and immunities of the Crown.
(cf previous s 23)
The Minister, the Planning Ministerial Corporation or the Planning Secretary may delegate any of their functions under this Act to—
(a) a person employed in the Department of Planning and Environment, or
(b) (Repealed)
(c) the Independent Planning Commission, or
(d) a Sydney district planning panel, or
(e) a regional planning panel, or
(f) a public authority or member of staff of a public authority, or
(g) a council or member of staff of a council, or
(h) a person, or person of a class, authorised for the purposes of this section by the regulations.
A reference in this section to a function under this Act includes a reference to—
(a) a function of the Minister under any other Act that is conferred or imposed on the Minister in his or her capacity as the Minister administering this Act or in connection with the administration of this Act, or
(b) a function of the Planning Ministerial Corporation under any other Act, or
(c) a function of the Planning Secretary under any other Act that is conferred or imposed on the Planning Secretary in connection with the administration of this Act.
This section does not authorise the delegation of—
(a) the power of delegation conferred by this section, or
(b) the function of the Minister under Division 5.2 of determining an application for approval to carry out critical State significant infrastructure, or
(c) any function of the Minister of giving directions under section 9.1 or of appointing a planning administrator or exercising other functions under section 9.6.
(cf previous s 8)
There is constituted by this Act a corporation with the corporate name of the Planning Ministerial Corporation.
The Planning Ministerial Corporation has such functions as are conferred or imposed on it under this or any other Act.
The Planning Ministerial Corporation is a NSW Government agency.
(cf previous s 8)
The affairs of the Planning Ministerial Corporation are to be managed by the Planning Secretary in accordance with any directions of the Minister.
Any act, matter or thing done in the name of, or on behalf of, the Planning Ministerial Corporation by the Planning Secretary, or with the authority of the Planning Secretary, is taken to have been done by the Corporation.
The regulations may make provision with respect to the seal of the Planning Ministerial Corporation.
The annual report of the Planning Ministerial Corporation is to be published as part of the annual report of the Department of Planning and Environment.
Schedule 2 contains property provisions relating to the Planning Ministerial Corporation and Division 7.3 contains financial provisions relating to the Corporation.
(cf previous s 23B)
There is constituted by this Act a corporation with the corporate name of the Independent Planning Commission of New South Wales.
The Commission is not subject to the direction or control of the Minister (except in relation to the procedure of the Commission and any directions authorised to be given to the Commission under section 9.1 or other provision of this Act).
The Commission is a NSW Government agency.
(cf previous Sch 3, cl 2)
The Independent Planning Commission is to consist of such members as are appointed by the Minister.
One member of the Commission is, in the instrument of appointment or a subsequent instrument, to be appointed as the chairperson of the Commission.
Each member is to have expertise in at least one area of planning, architecture, heritage, the environment, urban design, land economics, soil or agricultural science, hydro-geology, mining or petroleum development, traffic and transport, law, engineering, tourism or government and public administration.
In appointing a member of the Commission, the Minister is to have regard to the need to have a range of expertise represented among the Commission’s members.
The Minister may appoint additional members of the Commission for the purposes of exercising specific functions of the Commission. An additional member is not required to have expertise in an area referred to in this section but is required to have expertise in an area relevant to the functions the member is to exercise.
Without limiting subsection (5), the Minister may appoint as an additional member for the purposes of that subsection a person who is a member of a subcommittee of the Commission. Any such appointment may be limited to a particular matter or matters, in addition to any limitation relating to specific functions.
(cf previous s 23D)
The Independent Planning Commission has the following functions—
(a) the functions of the consent authority under Part 4 for State significant or other development that are (subject to this Act) conferred on it under this Act,
(b) any functions under this Act that are delegated to the Commission,
(c) to advise the Minister or the Planning Secretary on any matter on which the Minister or the Planning Secretary requests advice from the Commission,
(d) to hold a public hearing into any matter into which the Minister requests the Commission to hold a public hearing,
(e) any function of a Sydney district or regional planning panel or a local planning panel in respect of a particular matter that the Minister requests the Commission to exercise (to the exclusion of the panel),
(f) if a Sydney district or regional planning panel has not been appointed for any part of the State, any function that is conferred on any such panel under an environmental planning instrument applicable to that part or that is otherwise conferred on any such panel under this Act,
(g) any other function conferred or imposed on it under this or any other Act.
State Environmental Planning Policy (Resources and Energy) 2021, Chapter 2, Part 2.4, Division 5 provides that a subcommittee appointed by the Independent Planning Commission exercises the gateway functions of the Mining and Petroleum Gateway Panel under that Policy.
The matters on which advice may be provided under subsection (1)(c), or into which a public hearing may be held under subsection (1)(d), include any general or particular planning or development matter, the administration of this Act or any related matter.
(cf previous Sch 3, cl 4)
For the purpose of exercising any of its functions with respect to a particular matter, the Independent Planning Commission is, subject to any direction of the Minister under this section, to be constituted by one or more members determined by the chairperson of the Commission.
The Minister may give any of the following directions to the chairperson with respect to the constitution of the Commission for a particular matter or class of matters—
(a) a direction as to the number of members that are to constitute the Commission,
(b) a direction as to the specified members, or members with specified qualifications or expertise, that are to constitute the Commission.
The Commission may, at any time, exercise by the same or different members one or more of its functions.
(cf previous ss 23C, 23E)
Schedule 2 contains provisions with respect to the Independent Planning Commission (including with respect to public hearings by, and to the members and procedures of, the Commission).
The work of the Independent Planning Commission is, subject to this Act, to be allocated by the chairperson of the Commission. The chairperson may nominate another member to allocate the work of the Commission during any period the chairperson is unavailable.
The allocation of the work of the Commission includes the determination of the constitution of the Commission for the matter in accordance with section 2.10.
The Independent Planning Commission may—
(a) arrange for the use of the services of any staff or facilities of the Department of Planning and Environment or other public authority, and
(b) engage such consultants as it requires to exercise its functions.
The Independent Planning Commission may, with the approval of the Minister, delegate any function of the Commission under this or any other Act (other than this power of delegation) to any person or body specified in the Minister’s approval.
(cf previous s 23G)
The Sydney district planning panels specified in Part 3 of Schedule 2 are constituted for the particular parts of the designated Sydney districts so specified in relation to each such panel.
The regional planning panels specified in Part 3 of Schedule 2 are constituted for the particular parts of the State (other than a part within the designated Sydney districts) so specified in relation to each such panel.
A Sydney district or regional planning panel is not subject to the direction or control of the Minister (except in relation to the procedure of the panel and any directions authorised to be given to the panel under section 9.1 or other provision of this Act).
A Sydney district or regional planning panel is a NSW Government agency.
The Minister may, by order published on the NSW legislation website, amend Part 3 of Schedule 2 for any of the following purposes—
(a) to constitute a Sydney district planning panel and to specify the part of the designated Sydney districts for which it is constituted (including by constituting a single panel for all of the designated Sydney districts),
(b) to constitute a regional planning panel and to specify the part of the State (other than a part within the designated Sydney districts) for which it is constituted,
(c) to abolish a Sydney district or regional planning panel,
(d) to change the name of a Sydney district or regional planning panel or to change the part of the designated Sydney districts or State for which it is constituted,
(e) to make savings and transitional provisions consequent on any of the above.
(cf previous Sch 4, cl 2)
A Sydney district planning panel is to consist of the following 5 members—
(a) 3 members appointed by the Minister (the
State members ),(b) 2 nominees of an applicable council (the
council nominees ) who are councillors, members of council staff or other persons nominated by the council.
A regional planning panel is to consist of the following 5 members—
(a) 3 members appointed by the Minister (the
State members ),(b) 2 nominees of an applicable council (the
council nominees ) who are councillors, members of council staff or other persons nominated by the council.
A person is not eligible to be a member of a Sydney district or regional planning panel if the person is—
(a) a property developer within the meaning of section 53 of the Electoral Funding Act 2018, or
Note. Section 53 of the Electoral Funding Act 2018 provides that
property developer includes a person who is a close associate of a property developer.(b) a real estate agent within the meaning of the Property, Stock and Business Agents Act 2002.
However, a person is not ineligible to be a member of a Sydney district or regional planning panel merely because the person carries on the business of a planning consultant.
The State members of a Sydney district or regional planning panel are to be persons who have expertise in at least one area of planning, architecture, heritage, the environment, urban design, land economics, traffic and transport, law, engineering, tourism or government and public administration. In appointing State members, the Minister is to have regard to the need to have a range of expertise represented among the panel’s members.
At least one of the council nominees of a Sydney district or regional planning panel is to be a person who has expertise in at least one area of planning, architecture, heritage, the environment, urban design, land economics, traffic and transport, law, engineering or tourism.
Each applicable council is to nominate 2 persons as council nominees for the purposes of a Sydney district or regional planning panel. If an applicable council fails to nominate one or more council nominees, a Sydney district or regional planning panel is not required to include 2 council nominees for the purposes of exercising its functions in relation to the area of the council concerned.
For the purposes of exercising the functions of a Sydney district or regional planning panel in relation to a matter, the council nominees on the panel are to be those nominated by the applicable council for the land to which the matter relates.
In this section—
(cf previous Sch 4, cl 2)
One of the State members of a Sydney district or regional planning panel is to be appointed by the Minister as chairperson of the panel.
The Minister is required to obtain the concurrence of Local Government NSW to the appointment of a chairperson unless Local Government NSW—
(a) fails to notify its concurrence or refusal to concur within 21 days of being requested to do so by the Minister, or
(b) refuses to concur in the appointment of 2 different persons proposed by the Minister.
(cf previous s 23G)
A Sydney district or regional planning panel has the following functions—
(a) the functions of the consent authority under Part 4 for regionally significant development that are (subject to this Act) conferred on it under this Act,
(b) any functions under this Act of a council within its area that are conferred on it under section 9.6,
(c) to advise the Minister or the Planning Secretary as to planning or development matters relating to the part of the State for which it is constituted (or any related matters) if requested to do so by the Minister or the Planning Secretary,
(d) any other function conferred or imposed on it under this or any other Act.
Under section 9.7, a panel (or the Independent Planning Commission if acting in place of the panel) is, in the exercise of a function referred to in paragraph (b), taken to be the council and is to exercise the function to the exclusion of the council.
(cf previous ss 23H, 118AD, 118AE)
Schedule 2 contains provisions with respect to the members and procedure of Sydney district or regional planning panels.
A Sydney district or regional planning panel is required to give written reasons for its decisions and make them publicly available on a website of or used by the panel. A decision is not invalid merely because of a failure to give or publish the reasons or all of the reasons for the decision.
The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the following—
(a) the functions conferred under this Act on a Sydney district or regional planning panel, including its procedures in exercising its functions,
(b) without limiting paragraph (a), providing that parties to matters being determined by a Sydney district or regional planning panel are not to be represented (whether by an Australian legal practitioner or any other person) or are only to be represented in specified circumstances,
(c) the provision of information and reports by Sydney district or regional planning panels.
The Planning Secretary is, in the annual report of the Department of Planning and Environment, to report on the activities of Sydney district or regional planning panels during the reporting year under section 9.6.
Legal proceedings by or against a Sydney district or regional planning panel are to be taken in the name of the panel and not by or against the members of the panel.
A Sydney district or regional planning panel may, with the approval of the Minister, delegate any function of the panel under this or any other Act (other than this power of delegation) to—
(a) a council, or
(b) a local planning panel of a council, or
(c) the general manager or other staff of a council,
for any area or part of any area for which the Sydney district or regional planning panel is constituted.
For the avoidance of doubt, a member of a Sydney district or regional planning panel is a public official for the purposes of the Independent Commission Against Corruption Act 1988.
A council may constitute a single local planning panel for the whole of the area of the council.
The following councils must constitute a single local planning panel for the whole of the area of the council—
(a) the council of an area that is wholly within the designated Sydney districts,
(b) the council of the City of Wollongong,
(c) the council of any other area prescribed by the regulations.
A single local planning panel may be constituted by 2 or more councils. In that case, any function exercisable by a council in relation to the panel is to be exercised jointly by all those councils.
The Minister may, under section 9.1, direct 2 or more particular councils referred to in subsection (2) to constitute a single local planning panel.
If a council fails to constitute a local planning panel that it is required to constitute, the Minister may constitute the panel and for that purpose is taken to be the council.
A local planning panel is subject to any directions of the Minister under section 9.1.
A local planning panel is not subject to the direction or control of the council, except in relation to any matter relating to the procedure of the panel (or to the time within which it is to deal with a matter) that is not inconsistent with any directions of the Minister under section 9.1.
The members of a local planning panel are to be appointed by the relevant council.
Each local planning panel is to comprise (subject to this section) the following 4 members—
(a) an approved independent person appointed as the chairperson of the panel with relevant expertise that includes expertise in law or in government and public administration,
(b) 2 other approved independent persons with relevant expertise,
(c) a representative of the local community who is not a councillor or mayor.
A person is not eligible to be a member of a local planning panel constituted by a council if the person is—
(a) a councillor of that or any other council, or
(b) a property developer within the meaning of section 53 of the Electoral Funding Act 2018, or
Note. Section 53 of the Electoral Funding Act 2018 provides that
property developer includes a person who is a close associate of a property developer.(c) a real estate agent within the meaning of the Property, Stock and Business Agents Act 2002.
However, a person is not ineligible to be a member of a local planning panel merely because the person carries on the business of a planning consultant.
For the purposes of this section, an
If the area of the relevant council is divided into wards, the council is to appoint representatives of the local community for each ward as members of the local planning panel. All those representatives are entitled to attend a meeting of the local planning panel, but only one of them designated by the chairperson of the panel comprises the quorum for the meeting and is entitled to vote and be heard on a matter before the panel.
The representative so designated by the chairperson for a matter before the panel is to be the representative for the ward that the chairperson considers is most closely associated with that matter.
Relevant expertise for the purposes of this section is expertise in at least one area of planning, architecture, heritage, the environment, urban design, economics, traffic and transport, law, engineering, tourism or government and public administration.
A local planning panel constituted by a council has the following functions—
(a) the specified functions of a council as a consent authority under Part 4 that are conferred on it under this Act,
(b) to advise the council on any planning proposal that has been prepared or is to be prepared by the council under section 3.33 and that is referred to the panel by the council,
(c) to advise the council on any other planning or development matter that is to be determined by the council and that is referred to the panel by the council.
The Minister may give directions to councils under section 9.1 (either to particular councils or to councils generally) on the planning proposals that are required to be referred to a local planning panel for advice.
This section does not limit the functions that may be exercised by a local planning panel under this Act.
Schedule 2 contains provisions with respect to the members and procedure of local planning panels.
A local planning panel is required to give written reasons for its decisions and make them publicly available on a website of or used by the panel. A decision is not invalid merely because of a failure to give or publish the reasons or all of the reasons for the decision.
The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the following—
(a) the functions conferred under this Act on local planning panels, including the procedures of panels in exercising their functions,
(b) without limiting paragraph (a), providing that parties are not to be represented (whether by an Australian legal practitioner or any other person) or are only to be represented in specified circumstances,
(c) the provision of information or reports by councils with respect to the exercise of functions by local planning panels.
The council is to provide staff and facilities for the purpose of enabling a local planning panel to exercise its functions.
The council is to monitor the performance of local planning panels constituted by the council.
A council that has constituted a local planning panel must provide a report to the Planning Secretary, each year or other period directed by the Planning Secretary, as to the following—
(a) whether a local planning panel had been constituted by the council during the reporting period,
(b) the matters referred to the panel in the reporting period,
(c) the persons appointed to the panel,
(d) any other matters relating to the exercise of functions by the panel as directed by the Planning Secretary.
Legal proceedings by or against a local planning panel are to be taken in the name of the panel and not by or against the members of the panel.
A local planning panel may delegate any function of the panel under this or any other Act (other than this power of delegation) to the general manager or other staff of the council. Section 381 of the Local Government Act 1993 does not apply to any such delegation.
For the avoidance of doubt, a member of a local planning panel is a public official for the purposes of the Independent Commission Against Corruption Act 1988.
This Division applies to the following planning authorities—
(a) the Minister,
(b) the Planning Secretary,
(c) (Repealed)
(d) the Independent Planning Commission,
(e) a Sydney district or regional planning panel,
(f) a council,
(g) a local planning panel,
(h) a determining authority under Part 5,
(i) a public authority prescribed by the regulations.
This Division applies to the exercise of the following planning functions by any such planning authority (
(a) planning instrument functions under Part 3,
(b) development consent functions under Part 4,
(c) environmental impact assessment functions under Division 5.1 if an environmental impact statement is required,
(d) State significant infrastructure approval functions under Division 5.2,
(e) contribution plan functions under Part 7,
(f) any other function under this Act prescribed by the regulations.
Part 1 of Schedule 1 sets out the mandatory requirements for community participation by planning authorities with respect to the exercise of relevant planning functions.
The mandatory requirements include public exhibition for a minimum period, public notification requirements and the giving of reasons for decisions by planning authorities. The regulations under that Schedule may also require community consultation by applicants for consents or other approvals.
Those mandatory requirements for community participation include any other forms of community participation that are set out in a community participation plan under this Division and that are identified in that plan as mandatory requirements.
A planning authority to which this Division applies is required to prepare a community participation plan about how and when it will undertake community participation when exercising relevant planning functions (subject to this section).
Schedule 1 requires a proposed plan to be publicly exhibited for at least 28 days.
A planning authority is to have regard to the following when preparing a community participation plan—
(a) The community has a right to be informed about planning matters that affect it.
(b) Planning authorities should encourage effective and on-going partnerships with the community to provide meaningful opportunities for community participation in planning.
(c) Planning information should be in plain language, easily accessible and in a form that facilitates community participation in planning.
(d) The community should be given opportunities to participate in strategic planning as early as possible to enable community views to be genuinely considered.
(e) Community participation should be inclusive and planning authorities should actively seek views that are representative of the community.
(f) Members of the community who are affected by proposed major development should be consulted by the proponent before an application for planning approval is made.
(g) Planning decisions should be made in an open and transparent way and the community should be provided with reasons for those decisions (including how community views have been taken into account).
(h) Community participation methods (and the reasons given for planning decisions) should be appropriate having regard to the significance and likely impact of the proposed development.
For the purposes of this Division—
(a) a community participation plan prepared by the Planning Secretary applies to the exercise of relevant planning functions by the Minister, and
(b) a general community participation plan prepared by the Planning Secretary applies to the exercise of relevant planning functions by determining authorities under Division 5.1 (other than councils or prescribed public authorities), and
(c) the regulations may provide that the community participation plan of a planning authority applies to the exercise of relevant planning functions by another planning authority and that the other planning authority is not required to prepare its own community participation plan.
A council need not prepare a separate community participation plan if it includes all the matters required under this section in its plan and strategies under the Local Government Act 1993, section 402A.
Community participation plans are to be published on the NSW planning portal.
If the validity of a community participation plan has not been challenged in proceedings commenced in the Court within 3 months after the plan is published, the plan is taken to have been validly made under this Division.
Community participation plans are to be reviewed periodically.
The regulations may make provision for or with respect to—
(a) the form, content and procedures for making and publishing community participation plans (or any amendment of those plans), and
(b) reports on the implementation of community participation plans.
(cf previous ss 158B, 158C)
The Planning Secretary is to establish and facilitate the online delivery of planning services and information (including the NSW planning portal).
Schedule 3 contains provisions relating to the NSW planning portal and the online delivery of those services and information.
(cf previous s 23M)
The Independent Planning Commission or a Sydney district or regional planning panel must not exercise a function that will result in the making of a decision that will have, or that might reasonably be expected to have, a significantly adverse financial impact on a council until after it has consulted with the council.
This section does not apply to the determination of a development application made by a council.
(cf previous s 23N)
The Independent Planning Commission or a Sydney district or regional planning panel is entitled, on request made to the general manager of a council—
(a) to have access to, and to make copies of and take extracts from, records of the council relevant to the exercise of the Commission’s or panel’s functions, and
(b) to the use of the staff and facilities of the council in order to exercise the Commission’s or panel’s functions, and
(c) to any other assistance or action by the council for the purposes of exercising the Commission’s or panel’s functions.
The regulations may make provision with respect to assistance and action under this section.
(cf previous ss 23(9), 158)
A matter or thing done, or omitted to be done, by—
(a) the Minister, or
(b) the Planning Secretary, or
(c) any person employed in the Department of Planning and Environment, or
(d) an investigation officer under Part 9, or
(e) a member of a panel established by the Minister or the Planning Secretary under this Part, or
(f) a member of the Independent Planning Commission, or
(g) a member of a Sydney district or regional planning panel, or
(h) a member of a local planning panel, or
(i) any individual acting under the direction of a person or body referred to above, or
(j) any individual acting as the delegate of a person or body referred to above,
does not subject the Minister, the Planning Secretary or any such person, officer, member or individual so acting personally to any action, liability, claim or demand if the matter or thing was done, or omitted to be done, in good faith for the purpose of the administration of this Act.
(cf previous s 153A)
In this section,
See sections 377–381 of the Local Government Act 1993 in relation to the delegation of functions by councils.
A public authority may delegate any function of the public authority under this Act (other than this power of delegation) to a member of staff of the public authority. If the public authority is a chief executive officer, the function may be delegated to any member of staff of the public authority of which he or she is the chief executive officer.
A member of staff of a public authority may delegate any function of the member of staff under this Act (other than this power of delegation) to any other member of staff of the public authority. However, if the function is a delegated function, the function cannot be subdelegated unless subdelegation is authorised by the terms of the original delegation.
A power conferred by this section is in addition to any other power of delegation of the public authority or member of staff or any power of a person to exercise functions on behalf of the public authority.
Section 381 of the Local Government Act 1993 does not apply to a delegation under this Act to the general manager or other employee of a council.
Any instrument of delegation under this Act by the Minister, the Planning Ministerial Corporation, the Planning Secretary, the Independent Planning Commission, a Sydney district planning panel or a regional planning panel is to be published on the NSW planning portal.
Failure to comply with this section does not affect the validity of any such delegation.
This Part deals with the following planning instruments—
(a) strategic plans (comprising regional strategic plans and district strategic plans) and local strategic planning statements,
(b) environmental planning instruments (comprising State environmental planning policies and local environmental plans),
(c) development control plans.
(cf previous s 75AA)
In this Division—
(a) a city in the Six Cities Region, or
(b) a part of a region declared to be a district under section 3.2(b).
(a) the Six Cities Region, or
(b) any other area declared to be a region under section 3.2(a).
For the purposes of this Division, preparing or making a strategic plan or local strategic planning statement includes preparing or making a strategic plan or local strategic planning statement to amend, replace or repeal a strategic plan or local strategic planning statement.
(cf previous s 75AB)
The Minister may, by order published on the NSW legislation website, declare—
(a) any area of the State (other than the Six Cities Region) to be a region for the purposes of this Division, and
(b) any part of the Six Cities Region or other region to be a district for the purposes of this Division.
The Planning Secretary may, or must if directed to do so by the Minister, prepare a draft regional strategic plan for a region.
A draft regional strategic plan must include or identify the following—
(a) the basis for strategic planning in the region, having regard to economic, social and environmental matters,
(b) a vision statement and objectives consistent with the vision statement,
(c) strategies and actions for achieving the objectives,
(d) the basis on which the Planning Secretary is to monitor and report on the implementation of the actions,
(e) any other matters the Planning Secretary considers relevant to planning for the region.
In preparing a draft regional strategic plan, the Planning Secretary must have regard to the following—
(a) State environmental planning policies that apply to the region,
(b) any other strategic plan that applies to the region,
(c) any 20-year State infrastructure strategy, 5-year infrastructure plan or sectoral State infrastructure strategy statement under the Infrastructure NSW Act 2011, Part 4,
(d) the State disaster mitigation plan, to the extent relevant, and any relevant disaster adaptation plan under the NSW Reconstruction Authority Act 2022,
(e) any other relevant government policies and plans in force at the time the draft plan is prepared,
(f) any matter the Minister directs the Planning Secretary to have regard to in preparing the draft plan,
(g) any other matters the Planning Secretary considers relevant.
The Planning Secretary must prepare a draft district strategic plan for each district in the Six Cities Region.
The Planning Secretary may, or must if directed to do so by the Minister, prepare a draft district strategic plan for a district in a region outside the Six Cities Region.
A draft district strategic plan must include or identify the following—
(a) the basis for strategic planning in the district, having regard to economic, social and environmental matters,
(b) the planning priorities for the district that are consistent with the objectives, strategies and actions specified in the applicable regional strategic plan,
(c) the actions required for achieving the planning priorities,
(d) the basis on which the Planning Secretary is to monitor and report on the implementation of the actions,
(e) areas of State, regional or district significance, including priority growth areas,
(f) any other matters the Planning Secretary considers relevant to planning for the district.
The planning priorities referred to in subsection (3)(b)—
(a) must include housing targets, if the district is in the Six Cities Region, and
(b) may include housing targets, if the district is outside the Six Cities Region.
In preparing a draft district strategic plan, the Planning Secretary must have regard to the following—
(a) any environmental planning instruments that apply to the district,
(b) any other strategic plan that applies to the district or an area adjoining the district,
(c) any 20-year State infrastructure strategy, 5-year infrastructure plan or sectoral State infrastructure strategy statement under the Infrastructure NSW Act 2011, Part 4,
(d) the State disaster mitigation plan, to the extent relevant, and any relevant disaster adaptation plan under the NSW Reconstruction Authority Act 2022,
(e) any other relevant government policies and plans in force at the time the draft plan is prepared,
(f) any matter the Minister directs the Planning Secretary to have regard to in preparing the draft plan,
(g) any other matters the Planning Secretary considers relevant.
If there is no regional strategic plan for a part of the district, the draft district strategic plan may identify for that part of the district matters that may be identified in a regional strategic plan, until there is a regional strategic plan.
This section does not prevent—
(a) the Planning Secretary from issuing housing targets for a district before a draft district strategic plan is publicly exhibited, or
(b) changes being made to the housing targets before the district strategic plan is made under section 3.6 or 3.6A.
The Planning Secretary may, or must if directed to do so by the Minister, submit a draft regional strategic plan for a region to the Minister.
The Minister may—
(a) make a regional strategic plan in the form in which it is submitted or with the modifications the Minister considers appropriate, or
(b) decide not to make the draft regional strategic plan.
The document entitled Greater Sydney Region Plan—A Metropolis of Three Cities continues to be taken to be the regional strategic plan made under this division for the Six Cities Region, but has effect only in relation to the designated Sydney districts.
As soon as practicable after 1 January 2024, the Planning Secretary must—
(a) review the regional strategic plan referred to in subsection (3), and
(b) submit a draft regional strategic plan that applies to the whole of the Six Cities Region to the Minister.
The Planning Secretary must review a regional strategic plan for the Six Cities Region, other than the regional strategic plan referred to in subsection (3), every 5 years after it is made by the Minister.
The Planning Secretary must review a regional strategic plan for a region outside the Six Cities Region as directed by the Minister.
A failure to comply with a provision of this section does not affect the validity of a regional strategic plan, including the continuing validity of an existing regional strategic plan.
The Planning Secretary may make a district strategic plan for a district in the Six Cities Region.
The Planning Secretary must review a district strategic plan for a district in the Six Cities Region every 5 years.
The Planning Secretary may, or must if directed to do so by the Minister, submit a draft district strategic plan for a district outside the Six Cities Region to the Minister.
The Minister may—
(a) make a district strategic plan in the form in which it is submitted or with the modifications the Minister considers appropriate, or
(b) decide not to make the draft district strategic plan.
(cf previous s 75AG)
A strategic plan—
(a) must be published on the NSW planning portal, and
(b) commences on the date of publication or a later date specified in the plan.
(cf previous s 75AI)
In preparing a draft district strategic plan, the Planning Secretary is to give effect to any regional strategic plan applying to the region in respect of which the district is part.
In preparing a planning proposal under section 3.33, the planning proposal authority is to give effect—
(a) to any district strategic plan applying to the local government area to which the planning proposal relates (including any adjoining local government area), or
(b) if there is no district strategic plan applying to the local government area—to any regional strategic plan applying to the region in respect of which the local government area is part.
As soon as practicable after a district strategic plan is made, the council for each local government area in the district to which the plan applies must review the local environmental plans for the area and prepare such planning proposals under section 3.33 as are necessary to give effect to the district strategic plan.
In addition to the requirement under subsection (3), the council for each local government area in the Six Cities Region must, on the making of a district strategic plan that applies to that area, report to the Planning Secretary—
(a) on the review by the council of the local environmental plans for the area, and
(b) on the preparation of planning proposals under section 3.33 to give effect to the district strategic plan.
The council of an area must prepare and make a local strategic planning statement and review the statement at least every 7 years.
The statement must include or identify the following—
(a) the basis for strategic planning in the area, having regard to economic, social and environmental matters,
(b) the planning priorities for the area that are consistent with any strategic plan applying to the area and (subject to any such strategic plan) any applicable community strategic plan under section 402 of the Local Government Act 1993,
(c) the actions required for achieving those planning priorities,
(d) the basis on which the council is to monitor and report on the implementation of those actions.
The statement for an area that is divided into wards may deal separately with each ward. In that case, the councillors of a ward are to be given a reasonable opportunity to participate in the preparation of the provisions of the statement that deal with the ward and those provisions are required to be—
(a) endorsed by those councillors as being consistent with the strategic plans referred to in subsection (2)(b) as they relate to the ward, or
(b) if not so endorsed by those councillors—so endorsed at the request of the council by the Planning Secretary.
However, the Minister may direct that the endorsement of those provisions is not required in specified circumstances (for example, because of the small number of persons living in the ward).
The council for an area that is in the Six Cities Region must not make a local strategic planning statement unless the Planning Secretary has advised the council in writing that the Planning Secretary supports the statement as being consistent with the applicable regional and district strategic plans.
The Planning Secretary may issue requirements with respect to the preparation and making of local strategic planning statements (including requirements with respect to the participation of councillors of a ward).
A local strategic planning statement must be published on the NSW planning portal.
See section 3.33(2) in relation to the requirement for the planning proposal for a proposed local environmental plan to address whether the proposal will give effect to the local strategic planning statement.
(cf previous s 75AJ)
For the purposes of doing any one or more of the following, a strategic plan may be made without compliance with the conditions precedent under this Act to the making of strategic plans—
(a) to correct an obvious error or misdescription,
(b) to make changes that will not have any significant adverse impact on the environment or adjoining land,
(c) to make provision for matters that are, in the opinion of the Minister, of State or regional significance or of significance to a district (but only if the proposed plan has been publicly exhibited for the period determined by the Minister).
The publication of a strategic plan made in reliance on subsection (1) is to contain a statement that it is so made.
(cf previous s 75AK)
In this section—
Legal proceedings (other than those instituted by or with the approval of the Minister) in relation to the validity of a strategic plan or local strategic planning statement cannot be instituted after the period of 3 months following the publication of the strategic plan or local strategic planning statement on the NSW planning portal.
The only requirement of or made under this Act in relation to a strategic plan or local strategic planning statement is the requirement to publicly exhibit the draft plan or statement.
Nothing in this Division prevents a local environmental plan from being made or invalidates the plan once it is made.
This section applies despite any other provision of this Act or any other Act or law.
(cf previous s 75AL)
The regulations may make provision for or with respect to the following—
(a) the review of strategic plans or local strategic planning statements,
(b) the functions of the Planning Secretary under this division,
(c) the form and content of strategic plans or local strategic planning statements (including the standardisation of the provisions of strategic plans or local strategic planning statements),
(d) requirements for the submission of reports and documents relating to the preparation and review of strategic plans or local strategic planning statements,
(e) (Repealed)
(f) any other matter relating to the strategic planning framework under this Division (including, without limitation, the preparation, making and online delivery of strategic plans or local strategic planning statements).
(cf previous s 24)
Without affecting the generality of any other provisions of this Act, an environmental planning instrument may be made in accordance with this Part for the purposes of achieving any of the objects of this Act.
Environmental planning instruments may be made—
(a) under Division 3.3 (called a State environmental planning policy or SEPP), or
(b) under Division 3.4 (called a local environmental plan or LEP).
(cf previous s 26)
Without affecting the generality of section 3.13 or any other provision of this Act, an environmental planning instrument may make provision for or with respect to any of the following—
(a) protecting, improving or utilising, to the best advantage, the environment,
(b) controlling (whether by the imposing of development standards or otherwise) development,
(c) reserving land for use for the purposes of open space, a public place or public reserve within the meaning of the Local Government Act 1993, a national park or other land reserved or dedicated under the National Parks and Wildlife Act 1974, a public cemetery, a public hospital, a public railway, a public school or any other purpose that is prescribed as a public purpose for the purposes of this section,
(d) providing, maintaining and retaining, and regulating any matter relating to, affordable housing,
(e) protecting or preserving trees or vegetation,
(e1) protecting and conserving native animals and plants, including threatened species and ecological communities, and their habitats,
(f) controlling any act, matter or thing for or with respect to which provision may be made under paragraph (a) or (e),
(g) controlling advertising,
(h) such other matters as are authorised or required to be included in the environmental planning instrument by this or any other Act.
(Repealed)
An environmental planning instrument may make provision for any zoning of land or other provision to have effect only for a specified period or only in specified circumstances.
An environmental planning instrument that makes provision for or with respect to protecting or preserving trees or other vegetation may make provision—
(a) for authorising the council (or other person or body) to determine the trees or other vegetation included in or excluded from the relevant provisions, and
(b) for requiring a permit, approval or other authorisation to remove or otherwise affect trees or other vegetation that is granted by the council (or other person or body), and
(c) for an appeal to the Court against a refusal to grant any such permit, approval or other authorisation.
(cf previous s 27)
An environmental planning instrument that reserves land for use exclusively for a purpose referred to in section 3.14(1)(c) must specify an authority of the State that will be the relevant authority to acquire the land if the land is required to be acquired under Division 3 of Part 2 of the Land Acquisition (Just Terms Compensation) Act 1991.
Section 21 of the Land Acquisition (Just Terms Compensation) Act 1991 applies for the purposes of determining whether an environmental planning instrument reserves land for use exclusively for a purpose referred to in section 3.14(1)(c).
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [34]. Renumbered 2000 No 86, Sch 1 [2]. Rep 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [55].
Sec 116G (previously sec 115M)
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [34]. Am 1998 No 54, Sch 1.9 [30]; 1998 No 120, Sch 1.15 [3]. Renumbered 2000 No 86, Sch 1 [2]. Am 2003 No 95, Sch 1 [35]. Renumbered as sec 109R, 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [58].
Sec 116GA
Ins 2001 No 93, Sch 2 [9]. Renumbered as sec 109S, 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [58].
Sec 116H (previously sec 115N)
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [34]. Renumbered 2000 No 86, Sch 1 [2]. Rep 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [55].
Part 6, Div 1, heading
Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [8].
Sec 116
Rep 1991 No 22, Sch 1.
Sec 117
Am 1985 No 228, Sch 3 (19); 2005 No 43, Sch 2 [19] [20]; 2006 No 8, Sch 2 [2] [3]; 2008 No 36, Sch 1.2 [30]–[34]; 2013 No 111, Sch 2.3 [1]; 2017 No 39, Sch 1 [9]; 2017 No 60, Schs 2.2 [6], 3.1 [5].
Sec 117A
Ins 1985 No 228, Sch 8 (11). Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [35]. Ins 2002 No 44, Sch 1 [1]. Am 2005 No 43, Sch 6 [11] [12]; 2009 No 106, Sch 2.11 [8] [9]; 2013 No 44, Sch 2.1; 2014 No 79, Sch 4 [5]; 2015 No 15, Sch 3.25 [14].
Sec 117B
Ins 1985 No 228, Sch 8 (11). Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [35]. Ins 2008 No 36, Sch 4.1 [23]. Am 2015 No 15, Sch 3.25 [15]; 2017 No 60, Sch 6.2 [11] [12].
Sec 117BA
Ins 2015 No 42, Sch 2.1.
Part 6, Div 1AA, heading
Ins 2006 No 8, Sch 2 [4]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [8].
Part 6, Div 1AA
Ins 2006 No 8, Sch 2 [4].
Sec 117C
Ins 2006 No 8, Sch 2 [4]. Am 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [59]; 2010 No 120, Sch 1 [2]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [9].
Sec 118
Am 1985 No 228, Sch 8 (12); 1992 No 34, Sch 1; 1995 No 11, Sch 1.41 [4] [5]; 2002 No 44, Sch 1 [2] [3]; 2002 No 112, Sch 2.4; 2005 No 43, Sch 2 [21]. Subst 2006 No 8, Sch 2 [4]. Am 2008 No 36, Sch 2.1 [39]–[51]; 2009 No 34, Sch 2 [7] [8]; 2010 No 119, Schs 1.12 [5], 3.7; 2010 No 120, Sch 1 [25]; 2012 No 111, Sch 2.3 [2]; 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [7]–[12].
Sec 118AA
Ins 2006 No 8, Sch 2 [4]. Am 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [60] [61]; 2009 No 56, Sch 4.17 [1]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [13].
Sec 118AB
Ins 2006 No 8, Sch 2 [4]. Am 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [62] [63]; 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [14]–[16].
Sec 118AC
Ins 2006 No 8, Sch 2 [4]. Am 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [64]; 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [17].
Sec 118AD
Ins 2006 No 8, Sch 2 [4]. Am 2008 No 36, Schs 2.1 [52], 2.2 [65]; 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [18] [19].
Sec 118AE
Ins 2006 No 8, Sch 2 [4]. Am 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [66].
Sec 118AF
Ins 2006 No 8, Sch 2 [4]. Am 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [67] [68]; 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [20].
Sec 118AG
Ins 2008 No 36, Sch 2.1 [53]. Am 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [21].
Part 6, Div 1A, heading
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [36]. Subst 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [1]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [1].
Part 6, Div 1A
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [36]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [1].
Sec 118A
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [36]. Am 1998 No 120, Sch 1.15 [4]; 2001 No 56, Sch 1.3 [1]; 2002 No 134, Sch 1.1 [31]; 2003 No 95, Sch 1 [36]; 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [2]; 2008 No 36, Sch 4.1 [24]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [1].
Sec 118B
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [36]. Am 1999 No 31, Sch 1.12 [2] [3]; 2001 No 56, Sch 1.3 [1]; 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [3] [4]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [1].
Sec 118BA
Ins 2008 No 36, Sch 4.1 [25]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [1].
Sec 118C
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [36]. Am 1999 No 31, Sch 1.12 [2] [4]; 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [3] [5]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [1].
Sec 118D
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [36]. Am 1999 No 31, Sch 1.12 [2]; 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [3]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [1].
Sec 118E
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [36]. Am 1998 No 54, Sch 1.9 [31]; 1999 No 31, Sch 1.12 [2] [5]; 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [3] [6]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [1].
Secs 118F–118I
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [36]. Am 1999 No 31, Sch 1.12 [2]; 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [3]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [1].
Sec 118J
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [36]. Am 1999 No 72, Sch 4 [12]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [1].
Sec 118K
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [36]. Am 1999 No 31, Sch 1.12 [2]; 2002 No 103, Sch 4.31 [1]–[4]; 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [3]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [1].
Sec 118L
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [36]. Am 1999 No 31, Sch 1.12 [2]; 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [3]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [1].
Sec 118M
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [36]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [1].
Sec 118N
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [36]. Subst 2008 No 36, Sch 4.1 [26]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [1].
Part 6, Div 1B
Ins 2003 No 95, Sch 1 [37]. Rep 2005 No 115, Sch 3.2 [16].
Secs 118O–118Q
Ins 2003 No 95, Sch 1 [37]. Rep 2005 No 115, Sch 3.2 [16].
Sec 118R
Ins 2003 No 95, Sch 1 [37]. Am 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [7]. Rep 2005 No 115, Sch 3.2 [16].
Part 6, Div 1C, heading
Ins 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [2]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [10].
Part 6, Div 1C
Ins 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [2].
Part 6, Div 1C, Subdiv 1
Ins 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [2].
Sec 119A
Ins 2002 No 44, Sch 1 [4]. Rep 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [70]. Ins 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [2] (am 2015 No 15, Sch 1.9 [1]).
Secs 119B, 119C
Ins 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [2].
Part 6, Div 1C, Subdivs 2, 3 (secs 119D–119L)
Ins 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [2] (am 2015 No 15, Sch 2.19).
Part 6, Div 1C, Subdiv 4
Ins 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [2].
Sec 119M
Ins 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [2]. Am 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [11].
Secs 119N–119U
Ins 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [2].
Part 6, Div 2, heading
Am 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [69]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [12].
Sec 119
Am 1985 No 228, Schs 1 (7), 2 (3), 8 (13); 1992 No 90, Sch 1; 1996 No 44, Sch 8 [3] [4]; 1998 No 120, Sch 1.15 [5]; 2005 No 43, Sch 1 [30]. Rep 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [70].
Sec 120
Am 1992 No 112, Sch 1; 1996 No 31, Sch 1 [1]. Rep 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [70].
Sec 120A
Ins 1996 No 31, Sch 1 [2]. Am 1997 No 63, Sch 3 [1]–[7]; 2000 No 92, Sch 8.8 [2]–[11]. Rep 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [70].
Sec 121
Am 1985 No 228, Sch 8 (14); 1999 No 72, Sch 4 [13] [14]; 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [71]; 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [3].
Part 6, Div 2A
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121A
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [8]; 2011 No 22, Sch 1.6 [8] [9]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121B
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [9] [11]; 2006 No 58, Sch 1.10 [1]; 2011 No 22, Sch 1.6 [10]; 2017 No 69, Sch 2.4 [1]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121B, table
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 1998 No 54, Sch 1.9 [32]; 1998 No 120, Sch 1.15 [6]; 1999 No 31, Sch 1.12 [6]; 2000 No 93, Sch 1.8 [10]; 2001 No 93, Sch 2 [10]; 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [10]; 2008 No 36, Schs 4.1 [27], 5.1 [6]; 2011 No 22, Sch 1.6 [11]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121C
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121CA
Ins 2008 No 36, Sch 4.1 [28]. Am 2012 No 93, Sch 1 [13]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121D
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 1998 No 54, Sch 2.12 [11] [12]; 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [12]; 2008 No 36, Sch 4.1 [29]; 2011 No 22, Sch 1.6 [12]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121E
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 1998 No 54, Sch 2.12 [13]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121F
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 2005 No 43, Sch 2 [18]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121G
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121H
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 2003 No 95, Sch 1 [38]; 2017 No 60, Sch 6.2 [13]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121I
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 1998 No 54, Sch 2.12 [14]; 2005 No 98, Sch 3.23 [1]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Secs 121J, 121K
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121L
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 1998 No 54, Sch 2.12 [15]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121M
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121N
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 2001 No 56, Sch 1.3 [10]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121O
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [13]; 2011 No 22, Sch 1.6 [13]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121P
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121Q
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 1998 No 54, Sch 1.9 [33]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121R
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 1998 No 54, Sch 1.9 [34]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121S
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 1998 No 138, Sch 2.2 [3]. Subst 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [5]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Secs 121T–121ZB
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121ZC
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [3]; 2015 No 15, Sch 3.25 [16]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121ZD
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [4]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121ZE
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121ZF
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [14]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121ZG
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 1998 No 54, Sch 1.9 [35]; 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [15]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121ZH
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121ZI
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 1998 No 54, Sch 2.12 [16]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121ZJ
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 2001 No 56, Sch 1.3 [1]; 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [5]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121ZK
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121ZKA
Ins 2008 No 36, Sch 4.1 [30]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Secs 121ZL–121ZO
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121ZP
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [37]. Am 1998 No 54, Sch 1.9 [36]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121ZQ
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [16]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121ZR
Ins 2007 No 29, Sch 1 [2]. Am 2007 No 94, Schs 1.39, 2. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.1 [2].
Sec 121ZS
Ins 2007 No 29, Sch 1 [2]. Am 2007 No 94, Sch 2. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [7].
Part 6, Div 2B, heading
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [13].
Part 6, Div 2B
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17].
Sec 122A
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Am 2011 No 22, Sch 1.6 [14]; 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [15].
Sec 122B
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Am 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [16].
Sec 122C
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Am 2017 No 60, Sch 4.1 [18].
Sec 122D
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17].
Sec 122E
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Am 2014 No 79, Schs 1 [6], 2 [6]; 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [17].
Sec 122F
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17].
Part 6, Div 2C
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [7].
Part 6, Div 2C, Subdiv 1
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [7].
Sec 122G
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Am 2011 No 22, Sch 1.6 [15]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [7].
Sec 122H
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [7].
Sec 122I
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Am 2013 No 111, Sch 1.2 [1] [2]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [7].
Part 6, Div 2C, Subdiv 2
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [7].
Sec 122J
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Am 2006 No 123, Sch 1 [52]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [7].
Secs 122K, 122L
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [7].
Sec 122M
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Am 2006 No 58, Sch 1.10 [2]–[4]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [7].
Secs 122N, 122O
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [7].
Part 6, Div 2C, Subdiv 3
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [7].
Secs 122P–122R
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [7].
Sec 122S
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Am 2006 No 123, Sch 1 [53]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [7].
Part 6, Div 2C, Subdiv 4 (secs 122T–122V)
Ins 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [17]. Rep 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [7].
Part 6, Div 3, heading
Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [18].
Sec 122
Am 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [38]; 2005 No 19, Sch 1 [4]; 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [14].
Sec 123
Am 1995 No 101, Sch 5 [29]; 2002 No 55, Sch 1.1 [1].
Sec 124
Am 1997 No 81, Sch 1 [3].
Sec 124AA (previously sec 124A)
Ins 2002 No 94, Sch 1. Renumbered 2003 No 40, Sch 1.13 [10].
Sec 124AB
Ins 2007 No 29, Sch 1 [3].
Sec 124A
Ins 2002 No 44, Sch 1 [5].
Part 6, Div 4, heading
Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [19].
Sec 125
Am 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [39]; 1998 No 54, Sch 2.12 [17]; 2002 No 134, Sch 1.1 [34]; 2014 No 79, Sch 1 [7]; 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [20] [21].
Secs 125A–125C
Ins 2014 No 79, Sch 1 [8]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [22].
Sec 125D
Ins 2014 No 79, Sch 1 [8].
Sec 126
Am 1992 No 112, Sch 1; 1992 No 90, Sch 1; 1999 No 72, Sch 4 [15] [16]; 2002 No 134, Sch 1.1 [35]; 2007 No 29, Sch 1 [4]; 2014 No 79, Sch 1 [9] [10].
Sec 127
Am 1992 No 112, Sch 1; 1992 No 90, Sch 1; 1993 No 108, Sch 2; 1996 No 44, Sch 5; 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [40] [41]; 1999 No 72, Sch 4 [17]; 1999 No 85, Sch 2.17; 2001 No 121, Sch 2.100 [1] [2]; 2002 No 134, Sch 1.1 [37]; 2003 No 95, Sch 1 [39]; 2006 No 123, Sch 1 [54]; 2007 No 94, Sch 2; 2014 No 79, Sch 2 [8] [9].
Sec 127A
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [42]. Am 1998 No 54, Sch 1.9 [37]; 2002 No 134, Sch 1.1 [38]–[40].
Part 7, heading
Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 7.2 [3].
Sec 130
Am 1999 No 72, Sch 2 [3]; 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [5].
Sec 131
Am 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [5].
Sec 132
Am 1985 No 228, Sch 8 (15); 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [72]; 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [3] [5].
Sec 135
Am 1984 No 153, Sch 16.
Sec 137
Am 1995 No 11, Sch 1.41 [6]; 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [43]; 1999 No 72, Sch 4 [18]; 2006 No 123, Sch 1 [55]; 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [5].
Secs 138, 139
Am 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [5].
Part 7, Div 3
Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 7.2 [6].
Secs 140–142
Rep 1981 No 83, Sch 1.
Sec 143
Am 1985 No 228, Sch 8 (16); 1995 No 11, Sch 1.41 [7]; 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [5].
Part 7, Div 4
Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 7.2 [7].
Sec 144
Am 1983 No 153, Sch 1. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 7.2 [7].
Sec 145
Rep 1983 No 153, Sch 1.
Part 7A
Ins 1996 No 15, Sch 1 [1].
Sec 145A
Ins 1996 No 15, Sch 1 [1]. Am 1997 No 140, Sch 1.2; 1999 No 72, Sch 4 [19]. Renumbered as Sch 6, cl 1, 2017 No 60, Sch 10.2 [1].
Sec 145B
Ins 1996 No 15, Sch 1 [1]. Am 1999 No 72, Sch 4 [20]; 2009 No 106, Sch 1.6 [5] [6]; 2011 No 22, Sch 1.6 [16]; 2015 No 15, Sch 3.25 [17]. Renumbered as Sch 6, cl 2, 2017 No 60, Sch 10.2 [1].
Sec 145C
Ins 1996 No 15, Sch 1 [1]. Renumbered as Sch 6, cl 2, 2017 No 60, Sch 10.2 [1].
Sec 146
Rep 1985 No 228, Sch 8 (17). Ins 2002 No 67, Sch 1 [4]. Am 2012 No 93, Sch 1 [14].
Sec 146A
Ins 2005 No 57, Sch 1. Am 2014 No 79, Sch 1 [11]; 2015 No 50, Sch 4.10. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 6.2 [14].
Sec 147
Rep 1985 No 228, Sch 8 (17). Ins 2008 No 44, Sch 2. Am 2008 No 114, Sch 1.8 [7]; 2011 No 22, Sch 1.6 [17] [18]; 2014 No 79, Sch 4 [6]; 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [23].
Sec 148
Am 1992 No 112, Sch 1; 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [44]–[47]; 2008 No 36, Sch 1.2 [35]; 2010 No 19, Sch 3.38 [1] [2]; 2014 No 79, Sch 1 [12]; 2017 No 60, Schs 2.2 [22], 9.2 [24] [25].
Sec 148A
Ins 2003 No 95, Sch 1 [40]. Rep 2005 No 115, Sch 3.2 [17].
Sec 148B
Ins 2014 No 79, Sch 1 [13]. Am 2017 No 60, Sch 9.2 [26].
Sec 149
Am 1985 No 228, Sch 8 (18); 1996 No 15, Sch 1 [2]; 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [48]–[51].
Sec 149A
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [52]. Am 1998 No 54, Sch 1.9 [38]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 6.2 [15].
Sec 149B
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [52]. Am 2005 No 98, Sch 3.23 [2]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 6.2 [15].
Secs 149C, 149D
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [52]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 6.2 [15].
Sec 149E
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [52]. Subst 1998 No 54, Sch 1.9 [39]. Am 2017 No 69, Sch 2.4 [2]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 6.2 [15].
Secs 149F, 149G
Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [52]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 6.2 [15].
Sec 150
Am 1994 No 44, Sch 19; 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [13]; 2015 No 15, Sch 3.25 [7].
Sec 151
Rep 1994 No 44, Sch 19. Ins 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [53].
Sec 152
Am 2005 No 98, Sch 3.23 [3]; 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [73].
Sec 153
Am 2005 No 43, Sch 5 [18].
Sec 153A
Ins 1996 No 45, Sch 1 [4]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [23].
Sec 154
Am 1995 No 11, Sch 1.41 [8]; 2006 No 43, Sch 2.1 [8]; 2008 No 36, Sch 1.2 [36].
Sec 155
Am 1987 No 48, Sch 32. Rep 2005 No 43, Sch 6 [13]. Ins 2008 No 36, Sch 5.1 [7]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 10.2 [3].
Sec 156
Rep 2005 No 43, Sch 6 [14].
Sec 157
Am 1996 No 44, Sch 9; 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [13]; 1998 No 54, Sch 1.9 [40]; 1999 No 72, Schs 1 [4], 5 [13] [14]; 2001 No 93, Sch 2 [10A] (ins 2006 No 123, Sch 3.2 [5]); 2003 No 40, Sch 1.13 [11]; 2003 No 95, Sch 1 [41]; 2008 No 36, Schs 4.1 [31], 5.1 [8]; 2017 No 60, Schs 6.2 [16], 9.2 [27], 10.1 [1].
Sec 158
Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [54]. Ins 2002 No 134, Sch 1.1 [42]. Am 2005 No 43, Sch 1 [31] [32]; 2008 No 36, Sch 2.1 [54] [55]; 2009 No 34, Sch 2 [9]; 2010 No 120, Sch 1 [26]–[28]; 2015 No 15, Sch 3.25 [18] [19]; 2017 No 39, Sch 1 [10]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [24].
Sec 158A
Ins 2012 No 93, Sch 1 [15]. Am 2014 No 79, Sch 3 [15] [16].
Secs 158B–158E
Ins 2014 No 79, Sch 3 [17]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 2.3 [18].
Sec 159
Ins 1994 No 29, Sch 1 (4). Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 10.1 [2].
Sch 1
Am 1980 No 187, Sch 1; 1989 No 105, Sch 1. Rep 1995 No 36, Sch 6.3 [5].
Sch 2
Am GG No 120 of 29.8.1980, p 4477; GG No 177 of 14.11.1986, p 5572; 1986 No 205, Sch 2; 1988 No 114, Sch 4; 1989 No 30, Sch 2; 1990 No 118, Sch 3. Rep 1992 No 90, Sch 1.
Sch 3
Am GG No 32 of 20.2.1981, p 938; 1987 No 48, Sch 32; 1988 No 114, Sch 4. Subst 2008 No 36, Sch 2.1 [56]. Am 2011 No 22, Sch 1.4 [5]–[9]; 2015 No 15, Sch 3.25 [20] [21]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [25].
Sch 4
Rep 1985 No 228, Sch 8 (19). Ins 2008 No 36, Sch 2.1 [56]. Am 2010 No 120, Sch 1 [2]; 2011 No 22, Sch 1.5 [3] [4]; 2013 No 111, Sch 2.3 [3]–[5]; 2015 No 15, Sch 3.25 [20] [22]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [26].
Sch 4A
Ins 2011 No 22, Sch 1.5 [5]. Am 2014 No 72, Sch 4.2 [1] [2]. Rep 2017 No 39, Sch 1 [11].
Sch 4B
Ins 2017 No 39, Sch 1 [12].
Sch 5
Rep 2008 No 36, Sch 2.1 [56]. Ins 2008 No 36, Sch 5.1 [9]. Am 2012 No 93, Sch 1 [16]–[25]; 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [5]. Renumbered as Sch 7, 2017 No 60, Sch 10.2 [4].
Sch 5A
Ins 2006 No 8, Sch 1 [17]. Am 2007 (29); 2008 (509); 2008 (510); 2009 (512), cl 3; 2010 (15), cl 3; 2011 (20), cl 3. Renumbered as Sch 4, 2017 No 60, Sch 10.2 [5].
Sch 5B
Ins 2006 No 8, Sch 2 [5]. Am 2007 (354), cl 4; 2007 (533), cl 4; 2007 (604), cl 4; 2008 (56), cl 3; 2008 (57), cl 3; 2008 No 36, Sch 2.2 [74]; 2010 (464), cl 4; 2010 (545), cl 4; 2011 (187), cl 4; 2011 (491), cl 4; 2012 (26), cl 4; 2015 No 15, Sch 3.25 [23]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 2.2 [27].
Sch 6
Rep 1981 No 83, Sch 1. Ins 1994 No 29, Sch 1 (5). Am 1995 No 101, Sch 5 [30]; 1996 No 15, Sch 1 [3] [4]; 1996 No 44, Sch 11 [1] [2]; 1996 No 45, Sch 1 [5] [6]; 1996 No 121, Sch 2.9; 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [55] [56]; 1997 No 153, Sch 6.1 [3]; 1998 No 29, Sch 2.4 [1] [2]; 1998 No 32, Sch 2.2 [1] [2]; 1998 No 170, Schs 3.2 [1]–[3], 4.2; 1999 No 72, Schs 5 [15] [16], 6 [1] [2]; 2001 No 93, Sch 2 [14] [15] (am 2006 No 123, Sch 3.2 [6] [7]); 2001 No 126, Sch 1; 2002 No 44, Sch 1 [6]; 2002 No 53, Sch 1.7; 2002 No 55, Sch 1.1 [2]; 2002 No 67, Sch 1 [5] [6]; 2002 No 76, Sch 2 [7]; 2002 No 78, Sch 2.1 [16]; 2002 No 134, Sch 1.1 [43] [44]; 2003 No 40, Sch 1.13 [13]; 2003 No 60, Sch 1 [5] [6]; 2003 No 95, Sch 1 [42]–[44]; 2005 No 19, Sch 1 [5] [6]; 2005 No 43, Schs 1 [33], 2 [22], 3 [8], 4 [5], 6 [15] [16]; 2005 No 64, Sch 1.9 [1] [2]; 2005 No 98, Sch 2.19 [2]; 2005 No 115, Sch 3.2 [18] [19]; 2006 No 8, Sch 1 [18] [19]; 2006 No 43, Sch 2.1 [9]; 2006 No 123, Sch 1 [56] [57]; 2007 No 27, Sch 2.16; 2007 No 29, Sch 1 [5]; 2007 No 82, Sch 4.2 [1] [2]; 2008 No 36, Schs 1.2 [37], 2.2 [75], 4.1 [32], 5.1 [10]–[12]; 2008 No 86, Sch 2.1 [4]; 2008 No 114, Sch 3.1; 2009 No 56, Schs 1.13 [9], 4.17 [2]; 2009 No 58, Sch 2.2 [3]; 2010 No 120, Sch 1 [29] [30]; 2011 (133), Sch 1; 2011 No 22, Sch 1.6 [19], 1.7 [1]; 2012 No 93, Sch 1 [26] [27]; 2014 No 79, Sch 4 [7]; 2017 No 38, Sch 1 [6]; 2017 No 39, Sch 1 [13]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 10.2 [6] (transferred, except Part 1, to the Environmental Planning and Assessment (Savings, Transitional and Other Provisions) Regulation 2017, Sch 1).
Sch 6A
Ins 2011 No 22, Sch 1.7 [2]. Am 2011 (510), Sch 1 [1]–[14]; 2011 (606), Sch 1; 2012 (100), Sch 1; 2012 (346), Sch 1 [1]–[6]; 2012 (397), Sch 1 [1] [2]; 2013 (578), Sch 1; 2013 (579), cl 3; 2014 No 10, Sch 2 [12]; 2014 (463), Sch 1 [1] [2]; 2014 (612), cl 3; 2015 (476), Sch 1; 2016 (297), Sch 1 [1]–[5]. Rep 2017 No 60, Sch 10.2 [7] (transferred to the Environmental Planning and Assessment (Savings, Transitional and Other Provisions) Regulation 2017, Sch 2)
Sch 7, heading
Am 2017 No 47, Sch 1 [3].
Sch 7
Rep 1991 No 22, Sch 1. Ins 2011 No 27, Sch 3.6. Am 2012 No 42, Sch 4.5 [1] [2] (cll 3–5 transferred from the Walsh Bay Development (Special Provisions) Act 1999, secs 11, 12, 14) [3]–[8]; 2017 No 47, Sch 1 [4]; 2017 No 60, Sch 10.2 [8] (Parts 1–3 transferred to the Environmental Planning and Assessment (Savings, Transitional and Other Provisions) Regulation 2017, Sch 3).
The whole Act
Am 1992 No 1, sec 13 (“protected fauna” omitted wherever occurring, “endangered fauna” inserted instead).
The whole Act (except secs 5C (2) (c), 13 (4), 34A)
Am 2000 No 93, Sch 1.8 [2] (“Director” omitted wherever occurring, “Director-General” inserted instead).
The whole Act (except secs 5B (1), 5C (2) (c), 5D, 13 (4) where firstly occurring, 26 (1B), 34A (2), (5) and (7), 79B, 110C, 112B–112E, 115N (5), 117A and 117B (1) and cll 3A and 45 of Sch 6)
Am 2014 No 79, Sch 4 [4] (“Director-General” and “Director-General’s” omitted wherever occurring, “Secretary” and “Secretary’s” inserted instead, respectively). | |
The whole Act | Am 2017 No 60, Schs 3.2 [3]–[5], 4.2 [1] [3], 5.2 [2] [3], 7.2 [1] [2] [4]–[6], 9.2 [7], 10.2 [1] [2] (cross-references updated as a result of renumbering). |
Information concerning Part 4 before the commencement of 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]—
Part 4 | Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Part 4, Div 1 | Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Secs 75, 76 | Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 76A | Ins 1995 No 101, Sch 5 [11]. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 77 | Am 1985 No 228, Sch 8 (5); 1987 No 197, Sch 2; 1991 No 66, Sch 2 (3); 1993 No 32, Sch 2; 1995 No 101, Sch 5 [12] [13]. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 77A | Ins 1995 No 101, Sch 5 [14]. Am 1996 No 30, Sch 2.12 [1]. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Secs 77B, 77C | Ins 1995 No 101, Sch 5 [14]. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 78 | Am 1995 No 101, Sch 5 [15]. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 79 | Am 1995 No 101, Sch 5 [16]. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 80 | Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 81 | Am 1995 No 101, Sch 5 [17]. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 82 | Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 83 | Am 1995 No 101, Sch 5 [18]. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 84 | Am 1985 No 228, Sch 8 (6); 1986 No 218, Sch 13 (2); 1986 No 220, Sch 1; 1996 No 139, Sch 2.15 [3] [4] (am 1997 No 55, Sch 2.18 [1] [2]). Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 85 | Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 86 | Am 1986 No 218, Sch 13 (3). Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 86A | Ins 1992 No 90, Sch 1. Am 1996 No 44, Sch 8 [1]. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 87 | Am 1986 No 218, Sch 13 (4). Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 88 | Am 1986 No 218, Sch 13 (5); 1992 No 90, Sch 1. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 89 | Am 1985 No 228, Sch 1 (1); 1992 No 90, Sch 1. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 90 | Am 1985 No 228, Sch 8 (7); 1987 No 159, Sch 1; 1987 No 197, Sch 2; 1991 No 66, Sch 2 (4); 1992 No 90, Sch 1; 1995 No 101, Sch 5 [19]. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 90A | Ins 1996 No 44, Sch 7. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 91 | Am 1985 No 228, Sch 8 (8); 1993 No 32, Sch 2; 1994 No 29, Sch 1 (2). Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 91AA | Ins 1993 No 32, Sch 2. Am 1994 No 44, Sch 19. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 91AB | Ins 1993 No 32, Sch 2. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 91A | Ins 1985 No 228, Sch 8 (9). Subst 1994 No 29, Sch 1 (3). Am 1996 No 44, Sch 10 [3]. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 92 | Subst 1993 No 32, Sch 2. Am 1996 No 44, Sch 10 [4]. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 93 | Am 1992 No 90, Sch 1; 1993 No 32, Sch 2; 1996 No 44, Sch 10 [5]. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 94 | Am 1985 No 228, Sch 4 (1); 1991 No 64, Sch 1 (1); 1992 No 89, sec 3; 1993 No 32, Sch 2. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Secs 94AA–94AC | Ins 1991 No 64, Sch 1 (2). Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 94A | Ins 1985 No 228, Sch 4 (2). Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 95 | Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 96 | Am 1986 No 218, Sch 13 (6); 1992 No 90, Sch 1; 1996 No 44, Sch 8 [2]. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 97 | Am 1993 No 32, Sch 2; 1994 No 44, Sch 19. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 98 | Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 99 | Am 1985 No 228, Sch 1 (2); 1989 No 32, Sch 1 (2); 1989 No 204, Sch 1; 1990 No 46, Sch 1; 1992 No 90, Sch 1; 1993 No 12, Sch 2; 1993 No 13, Sch 2; 1993 No 32, Sch 2; 1993 No 108, Sch 2; 1996 No 139, Sch 2.15 [5] (am 1997 No 55, Sch 2.18 [1] [2]). Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 100 | Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 100A | Ins 1985 No 228, Sch 1 (3). Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 101 | Subst 1985 No 228, Sch 1 (3). Am 1993 No 32, Sch 2. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 102 | Am 1985 No 228, Schs 1 (4), 8 (10); 1989 No 32, Sch 1 (3); 1992 No 90, Sch 1. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Secs 103, 104 | Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 104A | Ins 1985 No 228, Sch 7 (2). Subst 1986 No 218, Sch 13 (7). Am 1992 No 34, Sch 1. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Secs 104B–104D | Ins 1997 No 81, Sch 1 [2]. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 105 | Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Part 4, Div 2 | Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 106 | Am 1985 No 228, Sch 1 (5); 1989 No 32, Sch 1 (4); 1996 No 44, Sch 10 [6]. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 107 | Am 1985 No 228, Sch 5 (1). Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 108 | Am 1985 No 228, Sch 1 (6); 1986 No 218, Sch 13 (8). Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 109 | Am 1985 No 228, Sch 5 (2). Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 109A | Ins 1985 No 228, Sch 5 (3). Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
Sec 109B | Ins 1992 No 90, Sch 1. Rep 1997 No 152, Sch 1 [32]. |
For the purposes of comparison, this table shows provisions of this Act as in force immediately before the commencement of the Environmental Planning and Assessment Amendment Act 2017 and the corresponding decimal section numbers following amendment by that Act—
Old provision | New provision |
Sec 1 | Sec 1.1 |
Sec 2 | Sec 1.2 |
Sec 4 | Secs 1.4, 1.5, 1.6 |
Sec 4B | Sec 6.2 |
Sec 5 | Sec 1.3 |
Sec 5AA | Sec 1.7 |
Sec 6 | Sec 10.1 |
Sec 7 | Sec 2.1 |
Sec 8 | Secs 2.5, 2.6 |
Sec 9 | Schedule 2 cl 31 |
Sec 10 | Schedule 2 cl 31 |
Sec 11 | Schedule 2 cl 31 |
Sec 12 | Schedule 2 cl 31 |
Sec 13 | Sec 2.2 |
Sec 15 | Sec 2.2 |
Sec 17 | — |
Sec 22 | Sec 2.3 |
Sec 23 | Secs 2.4, 2.28 |
Sec 23A | |
Sec 23B | Sec 2.7 |
Sec 23C | Sec 2.11 |
Sec 23D | Sec 2.9 |
Sec 23E | Sec 2.11 |
Sec 23F | Sec 8.6 |
Sec 23G | Secs 2.12, 2.15 |
Sec 23H | Sec 2.16 |
Sec 23I | Sec 4.8 |
Sec 23J | Sec 2.17 |
Sec 23K | Sec 2.18 |
Sec 23L | Sec 2.19 |
Sec 23M | Sec 2.26 |
Sec 23N | Sec 2.27 |
Sec 23O | |
Sec 24 | Sec 3.13 |
Sec 26 | Sec 3.14 |
Sec 27 | Sec 3.15 |
Sec 28 | Sec 3.16 |
Sec 29 | Sec 3.17 |
Sec 30 | Sec 3.18 |
Sec 31 | Sec 3.19 |
Sec 33A | Sec 3.20 |
Sec 33B | |
Sec 33C | Sec 3.23 |
Sec 34 | Sec 3.24 |
Sec 34A | Sec 3.25 |
Sec 34B | Sec 3.26 |
Sec 35 | Sec 3.27 |
Sec 36 | Sec 3.28 |
Sec 37 | Sec 3.29 |
Sec 38 | Sec 3.30 |
Sec 53 | Sec 3.31 |
Sec 53A | Sec 3.31 |
Sec 54 | Sec 3.32 |
Sec 55 | Sec 3.33 |
Sec 56 | Sec 3.34 |
Sec 57 | Schedule 1 cl 4 |
Sec 58 | Sec 3.35 |
Sec 59 | Sec 3.36 |
Sec 60 | Sec 3.37 |
Sec 72I | Sec 3.38 |
Sec 72J | Sec 3.39 |
Sec 72K | Sec 3.40 |
Sec 73 | Sec 3.21 |
Sec 73A | Sec 3.22 |
Sec 74 | |
Sec 74B | Sec 3.41 |
Sec 74BA | Sec 3.42 |
Sec 74C | Sec 3.43 |
Sec 74D | Sec 3.44 |
Sec 74E | Sec 3.45 |
Sec 74F | Sec 3.46 |
Sec 75AA | Sec 3.1 |
Sec 75AB | Sec 3.2 |
Sec 75AC | Sec 3.3 |
Sec 75AD | Sec 3.4 |
Sec 75AE | Sec 3.5 |
Sec 75AF | Sec 3.6 |
Sec 75AG | Sec 3.7 |
Sec 75AH | Schedule 1 cl 2 |
Sec 75AI | Sec 3.8 |
Sec 75AJ | Sec 3.10 |
Sec 75AK | Sec 3.11 |
Sec 75AL | Sec 3.12 |
Sec 76 | Sec 4.1 |
Sec 76A | Sec 4.2 |
Sec 76B | Sec 4.3 |
Sec 76C | Sec 4.4 |
Sec 77 | Sec 4.9 |
Sec 77A | Sec 4.10 |
Sec 78 | Sec 4.11 |
Sec 78A | Sec 4.12 |
Sec 79 | Schedule 1 cl 8 |
Sec 79A | Schedule 1 |
Sec 79B | Sec 4.13 |
Sec 79BA | Sec 4.14 |
Sec 79C | Sec 4.15 |
Sec 80 | Sec 4.16 |
Sec 80A | Sec 4.17 |
Sec 81 | Sec 4.18 |
Sec 81A | Secs 4.19, 6.6, 6.7, 6.12, 6.13, 6.14 |
Sec 82 | Sec 8.11 |
Sec 82A | Secs 8.2, 8.3, 8.4, 8.5 |
Sec 82B | Secs 8.2, 8.3, 8.4 |
Sec 82C | Sec 8.5 |
Sec 82D | Sec 8.5 |
Sec 83 | Secs 4.20, 8.13 |
Sec 83A | Sec 4.21 |
Sec 83B | Sec 4.22 |
Sec 83C | Sec 4.23 |
Sec 83D | Sec 4.24 |
Sec 84 | Sec 4.25 |
Sec 84A | Sec 4.26 |
Sec 85 | Sec 4.27 |
Sec 85A | Sec 4.28 |
Sec 86 | Sec 6.6 |
Sec 86A | Sec 4.29 |
Sec 87 | Sec 4.30 |
Sec 88 | Sec 4.32 |
Sec 89 | Sec 4.33 |
Sec 89A | Sec 4.34 |
Sec 89B | Sec 4.35 |
Sec 89C | Sec 4.36 |
Sec 89D | Sec 4.37 |
Sec 89E | Sec 4.38 |
Sec 89F | Schedule 1 cl 9 |
Sec 89G | Sec 4.39 |
Sec 89H | Sec 4.40 |
Sec 89J | Sec 4.41 |
Sec 89K | Sec 4.42 |
Sec 89L | Sec 4.43 |
Sec 90 | Sec 4.44 |
Sec 90A | Sec 4.45 |
Sec 91 | Sec 4.46 |
Sec 91A | Sec 4.47 |
Sec 92 | Sec 4.48 |
Sec 92A | Sec 4.49 |
Sec 93 | Sec 4.50 |
Sec 93A | Sec 4.51 |
Sec 93B | Sec 4.52 |
Sec 93C | Sec 7.1 |
Sec 93D | Sec 7.2 |
Sec 93E | Sec 7.3 |
Sec 93F | Sec 7.4 |
Sec 93G | Sec 7.5 |
Sec 93H | Sec 7.6 |
Sec 93I | Sec 7.7 |
Sec 93J | Sec 7.8 |
Sec 93K | Sec 7.9 |
Sec 93L | Sec 7.10 |
Sec 94 | Sec 7.11 |
Sec 94A | Sec 7.12 |
Sec 94B | Sec 7.13 |
Sec 94C | Sec 7.14 |
Sec 94CA | Sec 7.15 |
Sec 94D | Sec 7.16 |
Sec 94E | Sec 7.17 |
Sec 94EA | Sec 7.18 |
Sec 94EAA | Sec 7.19 |
Sec 94EB | Sec 7.20 |
Sec 94EC | Sec 7.21 |
Sec 94ED | Sec 7.22 |
Sec 94EE | Sec 7.23 |
Sec 94EF | Sec 7.24 |
Sec 94EG | Sec 7.25 |
Sec 94EH | Sec 7.26 |
Sec 94EI | Sec 7.27 |
Sec 94EJ | Sec 7.28 |
Sec 94EK | Sec 7.29 |
Sec 94EL | Sec 7.30 |
Sec 94EM | Sec 7.31 |
Sec 94F | Sec 7.32 |
Sec 94G | Sec 7.33 |
Sec 95 | Sec 4.53 |
Sec 95A | Secs 4.54, 8.22 |
Sec 96 | Sec 4.55 |
Sec 96AA | Sec 4.56 |
Sec 96AB | Sec 8.9 |
Sec 96A | Secs 4.57, 8.23 |
Sec 97 | Secs 8.7, 8.10 |
Sec 97AA | Sec 8.9 |
Sec 97A | Sec 8.12 |
Sec 97B | Sec 8.15 |
Sec 98 | Secs 8.8, 8.10 |
Sec 98A | Sec 8.21 |
Sec 99 | Sec 8.15 |
Sec 100 | Sec 4.58 |
Sec 101 | Sec 4.59 |
Sec 102 | Sec 4.60 |
Sec 103 | Sec 4.61 |
Sec 104 | Sec 4.62 |
Sec 104A | Sec 4.63 |
Sec 105 | Secs 4.64, 8.26 |
Sec 106 | Sec 4.65 |
Sec 107 | Sec 4.66 |
Sec 108 | Sec 4.67 |
Sec 109 | Sec 4.68 |
Sec 109A | Sec 4.69 |
Sec 109B | Sec 4.70 |
Sec 109C | Secs 6.3, 6.4, 6.16 |
Sec 109D | Sec 6.17 |
Sec 109E | Sec 6.5 |
Sec 109EA | — |
Sec 109F | Sec 6.8 |
Sec 109G | Sec 6.18 |
Sec 109H | Secs 6.9, 6.10 |
Sec 109I | Sec 6.11 |
Sec 109J | Sec 6.15 |
Sec 109K | Secs 8.16, 8.17 |
Sec 109L | Sec 6.31 |
Sec 109M | Sec 6.9 |
Sec 109N | Sec 6.9 |
Sec 109O | Sec 6.29 |
Sec 109P | Sec 6.30 |
Sec 109Q | Sec 6.33 |
Sec 109R | Sec 6.28 |
Sec 109ZI | Sec 6.19 |
Sec 109ZK | Sec 6.20 |
Sec 109ZL | Sec 6.21 |
Sec 110 | Sec 5.1 |
Sec 110A | Sec 5.2 |
Sec 110B | Sec 5.3 |
Sec 110E | Sec 5.4 |
Sec 111 | Sec 5.5 |
Sec 111A | Sec 5.6 |
Sec 112 | Sec 5.7 |
Sec 113 | Sec 5.8, Schedule 1 cl 11 |
Sec 114 | Sec 5.9 |
Sec 115 | Sec 5.10 |
Sec 115G–115RA | Fisheries Management Act 1994, Schedule 1AA |
Sec 115T | Sec 5.11 |
Sec 115U | Sec 5.12 |
Sec 115V | Sec 5.13 |
Sec 115W | Sec 5.14 |
Sec 115X | Sec 5.15 |
Sec 115Y | Sec 5.16 |
Sec 115Z | Sec 5.17, Schedule 1 cl 12 |
Sec 115ZA | Sec 5.18 |
Sec 115ZB | Sec 5.19 |
Sec 115ZD | Sec 5.20 |
Sec 115ZE | Sec 5.21 |
Sec 115ZF | Sec 5.22 |
Sec 115ZG | Sec 5.23 |
Sec 115ZH | Sec 5.24 |
Sec 115ZI | Sec 5.25 |
Sec 115ZJ | Sec 5.26 |
Sec 115ZK | Sec 5.27 |
Sec 115ZL | Sec 5.28 |
Sec 115ZM | Sec 5.29 |
Sec 117 | Sec 9.1 |
Sec 117A | Sec 9.2 |
Sec 117B | Sec 9.3 |
Sec 117BA | Sec 9.4 |
Sec 117C | Sec 9.5 |
Sec 118 | Sec 9.6 |
Sec 118AB | Sec 9.7 |
Sec 118AC | Sec 9.8 |
Sec 118AD | Secs 2.16, 9.9 |
Sec 118AE | Secs 2.16, 9.10 |
Sec 118AF | Sec 9.11 |
Sec 118AG | Sec 9.12 |
Sec 119A | Sec 9.13 |
Sec 119B | Sec 9.14 |
Sec 119C | Sec 9.15 |
Sec 119D | Sec 9.16 |
Sec 119E | Sec 9.17 |
Sec 119F | Sec 9.18 |
Sec 119G | Sec 9.19 |
Sec 119H | Sec 9.20 |
Sec 119I | Sec 9.21 |
Sec 119J | Sec 9.22 |
Sec 119K | Sec 9.23 |
Sec 119L | Sec 9.24 |
Sec 119M | Sec 9.25 |
Sec 119N | Sec 9.26 |
Sec 119O | Sec 9.27 |
Sec 119P | Sec 9.28 |
Sec 119Q | Sec 9.29 |
Sec 119R | Sec 9.30 |
Sec 119S | Sec 9.31 |
Sec 119T | Sec 9.32 |
Sec 119U | Sec 9.33 |
Sec 121 | Sec 10.2 |
Sec 121A–121ZS | Secs 9.34–9.37 and Schedule 5 |
Sec 122A | Sec 9.38 |
Sec 122B | Sec 9.39 |
Sec 122C | Sec 9.40 |
Sec 122D | Sec 9.41 |
Sec 122E | Sec 9.42 |
Sec 122F | Sec 9.43 |
Sec 122 | Sec 9.44 |
Sec 123 | Sec 9.45 |
Sec 124 | Sec 9.46 |
Sec 124AA | Sec 9.47 |
Sec 124AB | Sec 9.48 |
Sec 124A | Sec 9.49 |
Sec 125 | Secs 9.37, 9.50 |
Sec 125A | Sec 9.52 |
Sec 125B | Sec 9.53 |
Sec 125C | Sec 9.54 |
Sec 125D | Sec 9.55 |
Sec 126 | Sec 9.56 |
Sec 127 | Sec 9.57 |
Sec 127A | Sec 9.58 |
Sec 128 | Sec 7.34 |
Sec 129 | Sec 7.35 |
Sec 130 | Sec 7.36 |
Sec 131 | Sec 7.37 |
Sec 132 | Sec 7.38 |
Sec 133 | Sec 7.39 |
Sec 134 | Sec 7.40 |
Sec 135 | Sec 7.41 |
Sec 136 | Sec 7.43 |
Sec 137 | Sec 7.44 |
Sec 138 | Sec 7.45 |
Sec 139 | Sec 7.46 |
Sec 143 | Sec 7.42 |
Sec 144 | — |
Sec 145A | Schedule 6 cl 1 |
Sec 145B | Schedule 6 cl 2 |
Sec 145C | Schedule 6 cl 3 |
Sec 146 | Sec 10.3 |
Sec 146A | Sec 6.34 |
Sec 147 | Sec 10.4 |
Sec 148 | Sec 10.5 |
Sec 148B | Sec 10.6 |
Sec 149 | Secs 8.25, 10.7 |
Sec 149A | Sec 6.26 |
Sec 149B | Secs 6.22, 6.23 |
Sec 149C | Sec 6.26 |
Sec 149D | Secs 6.24, 6.25, 6.26 |
Sec 149E | Sec 6.25 |
Sec 149F | Sec 8.25 |
Sec 149G | Sec 6.26 |
Sec 150 | Sec 10.8 |
Sec 151 | Sec 10.9 |
Sec 152 | Sec 10.10 |
Sec 153 | Sec 10.11 |
Sec 153A | Sec 2.29 |
Sec 154 | Sec 10.12 |
Sec 157 | Sec 10.13 |
Sec 158 | Sec 2.28 |
Sec 158A | Sec 10.14 |
Sec 158B | Sec 2.25 |
Sec 158C | Sec 2.25, Schedule 3 cl 1 |
Sec 158D | Schedule 3 cl 2 |
Sec 158E | Schedule 3 cl 3 |
Sec 159 | Sec 10.15 |
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