Queensland Council for Civil Liberties

OrganisationReferenced in 21 bills

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Corrective Services (Emerging Technologies and Security) and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2022

This bill modernises Queensland's corrective services and youth justice legislation to address emerging security threats and improve emergency preparedness. It criminalises drone use over prisons and youth detention centres, authorises new search and surveillance technologies, strengthens information sharing between agencies, and creates a comprehensive emergency response framework for correctional facilities.

29/11/2022· PASSED· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyTechnology & Digital
10

Justice and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2019

This bill amends over 30 Acts and regulations within the justice portfolio to improve how Queensland's courts, tribunals, and administrative agencies operate. It modernises the coronial system, strengthens protections for vulnerable witnesses, speeds up the handling of property offences, and fixes various anomalies across the justice system.

28/11/2019· PASSED with amendment· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & RightsSafety & Emergency
16

Child Protection (Offender Reporting and Offender Prohibition Order) and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2022

This bill updates Queensland's child protection offender registry scheme to address technology-based offending that has become more prevalent since the COVID-19 pandemic. It strengthens police monitoring powers over convicted child sex offenders, particularly their use of digital devices, anonymising software, and online platforms.

26/10/2022· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsChildren & FamiliesSafety & Emergency
27

Criminal Code (Non-consensual Sharing of Intimate Images) Amendment Bill 2018

This bill creates new criminal offences for sharing intimate images without consent, commonly known as 'revenge porn'. It criminalises both the actual distribution of intimate images and threats to distribute them, with penalties of up to 3 years imprisonment. Courts can also order offenders to remove or delete the images.

22/8/2018· PASSED· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & RightsTechnology & Digital
36

Community Based Sentences (Interstate Transfer) Bill 2019

This bill establishes Queensland's participation in a national scheme for transferring community based sentences — such as probation, community service and intensive correction orders — between Australian states and territories. It replaces informal interstate supervision arrangements that had no enforcement powers, ensuring offenders who move interstate can be properly supervised and held accountable for breaches in their new jurisdiction.

21/8/2019· PASSED· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsGovernment & Elections
18

Youth Justice and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2016

This bill undoes tougher youth justice laws from 2012 and 2014 and returns to a more rehabilitative approach. It closes youth justice proceedings to the public (but lets victims attend), raises the age for transfer to adult prison from 17 to 18, and brings back court-referred restorative justice conferencing as a way to divert young offenders from the formal court system.

21/4/2016· PASSED with amendment· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & RightsChildren & FamiliesFirst Nations

Counter-Terrorism and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2016

This bill expands police powers to respond to terrorist attacks and other declared emergencies in Queensland. It lets police compel anyone to hand over information needed to manage an emergency, creates new 'evacuation area' powers, allows detention orders against terrorism suspects whose name isn't known, and makes operational changes to corrective services and Commonwealth intelligence agency assumed identities.

19/4/2016· PASSED· Hon B Byrne MP
Safety & EmergencyJustice & RightsGovernment & Elections
13

Police Powers and Responsibilities and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2019

This bill amends ten pieces of legislation to modernise police powers, strengthen domestic violence protections, improve prostitution regulation enforcement, and reform weapons licensing. It clarifies that police can access cloud-based and social media data from digital devices under warrant, and makes a range of operational improvements for the Queensland Police Service.

18/9/2019· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & Emergency
24

Relationships (Civil Partnerships) and Other Acts Amendment Bill 2015

This bill restores the right for adult couples of any gender in Queensland to hold an official civil partnership ceremony before registering their relationship. It renames the Relationships Act back to the Civil Partnerships Act, sets up a new scheme for registering civil partnership notaries who can conduct ceremonies, and modernises the Births, Deaths and Marriages registry by moving to electronic lodgement of birth and death records.

17/9/2015· PASSED with amendment· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & RightsGovernment & Elections

Transport and Other Legislation (Road Safety, Technology and Other Matters) Amendment Bill 2020

This bill introduces a Digital Licence App so Queenslanders can carry their driver licence and proof of identity on their phone. It also enables cameras to detect seatbelt and mobile phone offences, fixes technical issues with drink driving interlock laws, preserves legal interests in rail and busway corridor land, and gives Transport and Main Roads access to private land for environmental management.

17/3/2020· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Bailey MP
Transport & RoadsTechnology & DigitalJustice & Rights
11

Corrective Services and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2020

This bill strengthens anti-corruption measures in Queensland prisons following the Crime and Corruption Commission's Taskforce Flaxton report, reforms the parole system based on the Queensland Parole System Review, creates a permanent firearms amnesty, and regulates the possession of replica firearms including gel blasters.

17/3/2020· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & Emergency
36

Police Legislation (Efficiencies and Effectiveness) Amendment Bill 2021

This bill streamlines Queensland Police Service operations by cutting red tape and updating outdated processes. It lets senior police officers witness certain affidavits instead of requiring a Justice of the Peace, expands police powers to seek court-ordered access to seized digital devices, introduces faster saliva drug testing for officers after critical incidents, and makes several changes to weapons licensing administration.

16/9/2021· PASSED· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyGovernment & Elections
5

Counter-Terrorism and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2015

This bill keeps Queensland's preventative detention terrorism laws from expiring and extends police counter-terrorism powers beyond state borders. It also widens who is responsible for fire safety in buildings, protects police review commissioners from being sued, and updates Queensland laws to recognise the new federal Australian Border Force.

16/9/2015· PASSED with amendment· Hon J-A Miller MP
Justice & RightsSafety & Emergency
16

Heavy Vehicle National Law and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2018

This bill strengthens safety obligations for heavy vehicle businesses, increases penalties for driving offences that cause death or serious injury, and introduces several road safety improvements. It also establishes a national database of heavy vehicles and facilitates the transition from the Federal Interstate Registration Scheme to state-based registration.

15/2/2018· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Bailey MP
Transport & RoadsWork & EmploymentSafety & Emergency

Counter-Terrorism and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2017

This bill gives Queensland Police broader powers to respond to terrorist attacks, bomb threats, hostage situations and other critical incidents. Police can search phones and require passwords, photograph and fingerprint people in an emergency area, use tracking and surveillance devices more freely, and destroy explosives on the spot. It also makes preventative detention orders easier to obtain and allows senior sergeants to declare emergencies.

14/6/2017· PASSED· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyTechnology & Digital

Police Service Administration (Discipline Reform) and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2019

This bill overhauls the Queensland police discipline system, replacing a framework that had been largely unchanged since 1990. It introduces faster investigation timeframes, a broader range of sanctions (from reprimands to dismissal), a new fast-track process for undisputed matters, and formal professional development strategies as alternatives to punishment. The Crime and Corruption Commission gains significantly expanded powers to review police disciplinary decisions.

13/2/2019· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsGovernment & Elections
21

Justice Legislation (Links to Terrorist Activity) Amendment Bill 2018

This bill implements a national agreement to make it much harder for people with links to terrorism to get bail or parole in Queensland. It amends four Acts to create a presumption against bail and parole for anyone convicted of a terrorism offence or subject to a Commonwealth control order, requiring them to prove exceptional circumstances before being released.

13/11/2018· PASSED· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & RightsSafety & Emergency
20

Police Powers and Responsibilities and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2018

This bill updates police powers and several related laws to improve community safety and front-line policing. It creates new search powers for high-risk missing persons, simplifies crime scene rules, strengthens evade police provisions, streamlines parole board processes, and adds Commonwealth child sex offences to Queensland's reportable offender scheme.

12/6/2018· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyChildren & Families
34

Criminal Code and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2019

This bill strengthens Queensland's criminal law response to child homicide, following a Sentencing Advisory Council inquiry that found community expectations were not being met. It requires courts to treat a child's vulnerability as an aggravating factor in manslaughter sentencing, expands the definition of murder to include reckless indifference to human life, and increases the maximum penalty for failing to supply necessaries to dependants from 3 to 7 years.

12/2/2019· PASSED· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & RightsChildren & Families
37

Crime and Corruption Amendment Bill 2015

This bill reforms the Crime and Corruption Commission (CCC), Queensland's anti-corruption watchdog, by restoring its independence and broadening how people can report corruption. It reverses several changes made in 2014, separating the CEO role from the commissioners, requiring cross-party agreement on senior appointments, and bringing back the CCC's power to prevent corruption and run its own research.

1/12/2015· PASSED with amendment· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & RightsGovernment & Elections
19

Youth Justice and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2015

This bill rolls back a package of tough-on-youth-crime laws introduced in 2013 and 2014. It abolishes youth boot camps, ends the offence of breaching bail for children, restores a ban on naming children in the media, and reinstates the principle that detention or imprisonment should only be used as a last resort.

1/12/2015· PASSED with amendment· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & RightsChildren & Families