SULPHUR BOUNTY.
No. 21 of 1923.
An Act to provide for the Payment of a Bounty on
Sulphur.
[Assented to 1st September, 1923.]
Preamble.
BE it enacted by the King’s Most Excellent Majesty,
the Senate, and the House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Australia,
for the purpose of appropriating the grant originated in the House of
Representatives, as follows:—
Short title and commencement.
1. This Act may be cited as the Sulphur Bounty Act 1923, and shall
commence on a date to be fixed by Proclamation.
Appropriation for payment of bounty.
2.There shall be payable out of the
Consolidated Revenue Fund, which is hereby appropriated accordingly, the bounty
specified in this Act.
Specification of bounty.
3.—(1.) The bounty under this Act shall be payable
in respect of the production in Australia, after the commencement of this Act,
of sulphur from Australian pyrites and other sulphide ores or concentrates.
(2.) The
bounty payable in respect of the production of sulphur in accordance with this
Act shall be payable at the rate of Two pounds five shillings per ton.
Production of sulphur.
4.When sulphuric acid is produced in Australia
from Australian pyrites or other sulphide ores or concentrates, sulphur shall,
for the purposes of this Act, be deemed to have been produced to the quantity
of the sulphur or brimstone of good commercial quality which it would be
necessary to use in producing that sulphuric acid, which quantity shall be
ascertained in the prescribed manner.
Certificate to be supplied by claimant in support of
claim.
5.Every claimant of bounty under this Act shall
supply with his claim a certificate, from the manufacturer of the sulphuric
acid containing the sulphur in respect of which bounty is claimed, stating the
number of tons of that sulphuric acid calculated to a strength of one hundred
per centum, and that the sulphuric acid has been manufactured from Australian
pyrites or other sulphide ores or concentrates.
Persons entitled to bounty.
6.The person who is, at the time when any
pyrites or other sulphide ores or concentrates are treated for and in connexion
with the production therefrom of sulphuric acid, the owner of the pyrites or
other ores or concentrates shall, subject to this Act, be deemed to be the
producer of the sulphur, and shall be the person who is entitled, under this
Act, to claim bounty in respect of the production of the sulphur in the sulphuric
acid.
Minister may require
information.
7. The Minister may, in relation to any claim
for bounty under this Act, require such information as to the correctness of
any certificate, or otherwise, as he deems necessary.
Limit of total amount of bounties.
8.—(1.)The
total amount of the bounty authorized to be paid in any one year shall not
exceed the sum of One hundred thousand pounds.
(2.) Where the
maximum amount of bounty which may be paid in any year has not been paid in
that year the unpaid balance, or any part thereof, may be paid in any
subsequent year in addition to the maximum amount for that year.
Proof of good quality and of compliance with the Act
to be furnished.
9. No bounty shall be authorized to be paid to
any person other than the producer of the sulphur, nor unless the producer of
the sulphur furnishes proof to the satisfaction of the Minister that the
requirements of this Act and the Regulations have been com plied with.
Conditions of employment and rates of wages.
10.—(1.) The Minister may make application to the
President of the Commonwealth Court of Conciliation and Arbitration, or to any
Judge of a Federal or State Court or to any person or persons who compose a
State Industrial Authority, for a declaration as to what wages and conditions
of employment are fair and reasonable for labour employed in the production of
the goods.
(2.) On the
hearing and determination of the application, the President, Judge, person or
persons shall have all the powers which under the Excise Procedure Act 1907 belong to the President of the
Commonwealth Court of Conciliation and Arbitration, and all witnesses and
persons summoned to appear or appearing before him or them shall be subject to
the same liabilities and penalties, as witnesses or persons summoned to appear
or appearing before the President on an application within the meaning of that
Act, and the provisions of that Act, shall, so far as they are applicable,
apply accordingly, mutatis mutandis, as
if the application were an application within the meaning of that Act.
(3.) Every
person who claims the bounty payable under the Act shall, in making his claim,
certify to the Minister the conditions of employment and the rates of wages
paid to any labour employed by him in connexion with the production of sulphur,
other than the labour of members of his family.
(4.) If the
Minister finds that the rates of wages and conditions of employment, or any of
them—
(a) are below the standard rates and conditions of employment prescribed by
any Commonwealth or State Industrial Authority, or
(b) are
below the standard rates and conditions applicable to the locality and agreed
upon between representatives of associations of employers and employees
registered under any Commonwealth or State Act, or
(c) are
below the rates and conditions declared, as in the first sub-section of this
section mentioned, to be fair and reasonable,
the Minister may withhold
the whole or any part of the bounty payable.
Offences against Act.
11. No person shall—
(a)obtain any bounty which is not payable
;
(b)obtain payment of any bounty by means
of any false or misleading statement; or
(c)
present to any officer or other person doing duty in relation to this Act or
the Regulations any document, or make to any such officer or person any
statement, which is false in any particular.
Penalty : One hundred pounds or imprisonment for
twelve months.
Return to be laid before Parliament.
12. A return setting forth—
(a)the names of all persons to whom bounty
was paid during the preceding financial year;
(b) the amounts of all such bounty;
(c)the names of the places and States in
which the goods were produced;
(d)the number of persons employed in each
of the works, wages paid, and hours observed in the production of the goods,
shall be prepared
in the month of July in each year and shall be laid before both Houses of the
Parliament within thirty days after its preparation if the Parliament is then
sitting, and if not, then within thirty days after the next meeting thereof.
Regulations.
13.The Governor-General may make regulations,
not inconsistent with this Act, prescribing all matters which by this Act are
required or permitted to be prescribed or are necessary or convenient to be
prescribed for giving effect to this Act, and in particular for any of the
following purposes:—
(a) For
prescribing the minimum quantity of goods to be produced to entitle the
producer to claim the bounty;
(b) For
prescribing the proportion in which bounty shall be payable to claimants who
have complied with the prescribed conditions, in cases where there is not
sufficient money available to pay the full bounty in respect of all the claims;
(c) For
requiring each producer to keep books showing in detail the cost of production,
and for the inspection of all books and balance-sheets of each producer, and of
the process of production, for the purposes of—
(i) ascertaining and reporting on the conditions of
employment obtaining and the rates of wages paid; and
(ii) ascertaining the cost of production and the
percentage of profits earned; and
(d)