Public Transport Authority Amendment Act 2008 (WA)
Western Australia
Public Transport Authority Amendment Act
2008
Western Australia
Public Transport Authority Amendment Act
2008
CONTENTS
| 1. | Short title | 1 |
| 2. | Commencement | 1 |
| 3. | The Act amended | 1 |
| 4. | Section 58 amended | 1 |
| 5. | Sections 64A and 64B inserted | 2 |
| 64A. | Prohibiting people from being on or in a | ||
| |||
| 64B. |
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| Western Australia |
Public Transport Authority Amendment
Act 2008
No. 42 of 2008
An Act to amend the Public Transport Authority Act 2003.
[Assented to 3 July 2008]
The Parliament of Western Australia enacts as follows:
1. Short title
This is the Public Transport Authority Amendment Act 2008.
2. Commencement
This Act comes into operation as follows:
| (a) | sections 1 and 2 — on the day on which this Act receives the Royal Assent; |
| (b) | the rest of the Act — on a day fixed by proclamation, and different days may be fixed for different provisions. |
3. The Act amended
| The amendments in this Act are to the Public Transport Authority Act 2003. |
4. Section 58 amended
After section 58(3) the following subsection is inserted —
Public Transport Authority Amendment Act 2008
s. 5
“
| (4) | If a security officer or a member of the Police Force has reason to believe that a person has committed an offence under section 64B(1), the security officer or member of the Police Force may, without warrant other |
| than this subsection, take the offender into custody and take the offender to a police station or other place for the offender to be dealt with for the offence according to law. |
”.
5. Sections 64A and 64B inserted
After section 64 the following sections are inserted —
| “ |
| 64A. | Prohibiting people from being on or in a conveyance or facility |
| (1) | In this section — |
| “conveyance” means a road bus, ferry or railway train |
involved in the provision of a public passenger
transport service by the Authority;
“facility” means a place associated with the provision
of a public passenger transport service provided by
the Authority.
| (2) | For the purposes of this section, an offence is a relevant offence if it — |
| (a) | is an offence specified in subsection (3); and |
| (b) |
is an offence committed on or after the day Transport Authority Amendment Act 2008 section 5 comes into operation.
| (3) | The specified offences are — |
Public Transport Authority Amendment Act 2008
s. 5
| (a) |
an offence under The Criminal Code on or in a conveyance or facility;
| (b) |
an offence under The Criminal Code property, a conveyance or a facility;
| (c) | an offence under the Government Railways Act 1904 section 43(5) committed on or in a conveyance or facility and involving behaving |
| in a violent or offensive manner to the annoyance of others; | |
| (d) | an offence under the Public Transport Authority Regulations 2003 regulation 40; |
| (e) | an offence under the Public Transport Authority Regulations 2003 regulation 42 committed when regulation 41(g) was the paragraph relevant to the belief on the grounds of which the offender was advised. |
| (4) | If the chief executive officer proposes to give a person a prohibition order under subsection (5), the chief executive officer must, by written notice, give the offender 14 days beginning on the date of the notice to show cause — |
| (a) | why the order should not be given to the offender; and |
| (b) | why the order should specify circumstances (an “exception”) in which the offender may be on or in a conveyance or facility despite the person |
| being prohibited from being on or in a conveyance or facility for the period specified in the order. |
| (5) | If a person has been found guilty of or pleaded guilty to — |
Public Transport Authority Amendment Act 2008
s. 5
| (a) | at least 2 relevant offences committed within a period of 12 months beginning on the day on which the first offence was committed; or |
| (b) | 3 or more relevant offences committed within a period of 18 months beginning on the day on which the first offence was committed, |
and the offences do not arise from the same acts or
circumstances, the chief executive officer may give the
person (the “offender”) an order (a “prohibition
order”), in a form approved in writing by the chief
executive officer, prohibiting the offender from being
on or in a conveyance or facility for the period and
subject to any exception specified in the order.
| (6) | The period specified in the order — |
| (a) | must not exceed one month if the offender has been found guilty of or pleaded guilty to not more than 2 relevant offences committed within a period of 12 months beginning on the day on which the first offence was committed; and |
| (b) | must not exceed 3 months if the offender has been found guilty of or pleaded guilty to more than 2 relevant offences committed within a period of 18 months beginning on the day on which the first offence was committed. |
| (7) | For the purposes of subsections (5) and (6), if a person is found guilty of or pleads guilty to more than one relevant offence at one hearing, those relevant offences are to be taken to be one relevant offence committed by the person on the date on which the latest of those offences was committed. |
| (8) | On the application of an offender the subject of a prohibition order, the chief executive officer may — |
(a) revoke the order; or
Public Transport Authority Amendment Act 2008
s. 5
| (b) | make the order subject to an exception; or |
| (c) | amend any exception to which the order is subject. |
| 64B. | Contravention of prohibition order |
| (1) | A person who, without reasonable excuse, contravenes a prohibition order given to the person under section 64A(5) commits an offence. |
| Penalty: imprisonment for 9 months. | |
| (2) | Despite the Sentencing Act 1995 section 41(2), a court sentencing a person for an offence under subsection (1) may use only the sentencing options in the Sentencing |
| Act 1995 section 39(2)(d) to (h). | |
| (3) | The Young Offenders Act 1994 section 71 does not apply to the sentencing of a young person, as defined in section 3 of that Act (the “young offender”), for an offence under subsection (1). |
| (4) | If a young offender is being dealt with by a juvenile justice team for an offence under subsection (1), the chief executive officer is to be taken to be a victim, as |
| referred to in the Young Offenders Act 1994 section 31(1), for the purposes of Part 5 Division 2 of that Act. |
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