Policing

Justice and Law Enforcement56 bills

Classified using AGIFT/ANZSIC Australian government standards

View connections →

Mental Health (Recovery Model) Bill 2015

Withdrawn

This bill replaces Queensland's Mental Health Act 2000 with a new framework for treating people with mental illness who cannot consent to their own care. It is built around a recovery model that treats people in the community wherever possible, strengthens patient rights, and provides clearer ways to divert people with mental illness from the criminal justice system while protecting the community.

5/5/2015· Discharged· Mr M McArdle MP
HealthJustice & Rights
3

Justice and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2026

Awaiting Debate

This bill is a wide-ranging omnibus that tackles metal theft with new criminal offences and penalties up to 25 years imprisonment, improves the coronial system to handle deaths in custody more efficiently and cover deaths of people with disability receiving Commonwealth supports, raises the District Court's civil jurisdiction from $750,000 to $1.5 million, and makes numerous other updates to justice and administrative legislation including repealing the Brisbane Casino Agreement Act.

4/3/2026· 2nd reading to be moved· Hon D Frecklington MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyRegional Queensland

Domestic and Family Violence Protection and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2025

Passed (amended)

This bill reforms Queensland's response to domestic and family violence by giving police the power to issue 12-month protection directions without going to court, piloting GPS electronic monitoring for high-risk perpetrators, and expanding video-recorded evidence across all Magistrates Courts statewide. It aims to reduce the operational burden on police while providing faster, longer-term protection for victim-survivors.

30/4/2025· PASSED with amendment· Hon A Camm MP
Justice & RightsSafety & Emergency
49

Police Powers and Responsibilities (Jack’s Law) Amendment Bill 2022

Passed

This bill extends and expands 'Jack's Law' — police powers to scan people for concealed knives without a warrant using hand-held metal detectors. Named after 17-year-old Jack Beasley who was fatally stabbed in Surfers Paradise in 2019, the law now applies to all 15 safe night precincts across Queensland and all public transport stations and vehicles.

30/11/2022· PASSED· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyTransport & Roads
7

Police Powers and Responsibilities and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2022

Passed (amended)

This bill strengthens Queensland's response to child sex offending, cybercrime, organised crime, and hooning. It doubles reporting periods for child sex offenders, gives police new covert investigation tools for online fraud and identity theft, allows civilians to assist in undercover operations, and creates offences targeting hooning spectators, organisers, and promoters.

30/11/2022· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyTechnology & Digital
20

Criminal Law Amendment Bill 2016

Passed

This bill removes the so-called 'gay panic' defence by stopping killers from using an unwanted sexual advance as grounds for reducing murder to manslaughter, except in exceptional cases. It also packages a long list of other criminal law tidy-ups, covering criminal proceeds confiscation, court evidence, juries, Magistrates Court procedure, and sentencing enforcement.

30/11/2016· PASSED· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & RightsFirst Nations

Holidays and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2015

Passed (amended)

This bill moves Labour Day back to the first Monday in May and the Queen's Birthday to the first Monday in October from 2016 onwards. It also lets people apply online for high risk work licences (for cranes, forklifts and scaffolding) by reusing driver licence photos, and consolidates the rules about digital photos and signatures across six transport and ID laws into one place.

3/6/2015· PASSED with amendment· Hon C Pitt MP
Work & EmploymentGovernment & ElectionsTransport & Roads
23

Expanding Adult Crime, Adult Time and Taking a Strong Stance on Drugs and Anti-Social Behaviour Amendment Bill 2026

Passed (amended)

This bill expands the Adult Crime, Adult Time youth sentencing scheme to 12 additional serious offences, replaces the existing police drug diversion program with a stricter one-chance framework, and creates new Designated Business and Community Precincts where police have enhanced powers to tackle anti-social behaviour.

3/3/2026· PASSED with amendment· Hon L Gerber MP
Justice & RightsHealthSafety & Emergency
55

Criminal Code (Serious Vilification and Hate Crimes) and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2023

Passed (amended)

This bill strengthens Queensland's hate crime laws by creating higher penalties for offences motivated by hatred based on race, religion, sexuality, sex characteristics or gender identity. It also bans the public display of hate symbols like Nazi imagery, and makes it easier to prosecute serious vilification offences. The bill implements recommendations from the Legal Affairs and Safety Committee's inquiry into serious vilification and hate crimes.

29/3/2023· PASSED with amendment· Hon S Fentiman MP
Justice & RightsSafety & Emergency
31

Summary Offences (Prevention of Knife Crime) and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2023

Passed (amended)

This bill makes it illegal to sell knives, swords, machetes, axes, spear guns, spears, and replica firearms (including Gel Blasters) to anyone under 18 in Queensland. It also bans the sale of weapons marketed as suitable for violence and requires retailers to display prohibition signs and securely store dangerous items.

29/11/2023· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyChildren & Families
33

Child Protection (Offender Reporting) and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2016

Passed (amended)

This bill merges Queensland's two child sex offender laws into a single combined Act, tightens the rules that reportable offenders must follow, and gives police new powers to inspect the phones and computers of offenders most at risk of reoffending. It responds to a 2013 review by the Crime and Corruption Commission and is aimed at helping police intervene before further offences occur.

29/11/2016· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Ryan MP
Children & FamiliesJustice & RightsTechnology & Digital

Domestic and Family Violence Protection and Another Act Amendment Bill 2015

Passed

This bill strengthens Queensland's domestic violence laws in response to the 'Not Now, Not Ever' taskforce report. It changes how courts handle competing protection order applications, makes courts actively consider ordering perpetrators out of the family home, gives victims a stronger voice in decisions, and clearly authorises police to use body-worn cameras on duty.

29/10/2015· PASSED· Hon S Fentiman MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyChildren & Families
25

Community Protection and Public Child Sex Offender Register (Daniel’s Law) Bill 2025

Passed

This bill creates a public child sex offender register in Queensland, named Daniel's Law in honour of Daniel Morcombe. It establishes a three-tiered system allowing police to publish details of missing non-compliant offenders, residents to view photos of offenders in their area, and parents to check whether someone in contact with their child is a registered offender. The government committed $10 million to establish the register.

27/8/2025· PASSED· Hon D Purdie MP
Children & FamiliesJustice & RightsSafety & Emergency
25

Police Service Administration and Other Legislation Amendment Bill (No. 2) 2022

Passed

This bill makes operational improvements to the Queensland Police Service and Queensland Fire and Emergency Services. It reforms police discipline processes, introduces automatic dismissal of officers sentenced to imprisonment, creates stronger protections for confidential police information, streamlines weapons licensing, and modernises fire safety and emergency management laws.

27/10/2022· PASSED· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyGovernment & Elections
11

Workers' Compensation and Rehabilitation and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2020

FAKE_OLD_STATUS

This bill makes it easier for first responders to claim workers' compensation for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). It creates a presumptive system where PTSD in eligible workers is automatically assumed to be caused by their work, removing the burden on injured workers to prove the connection. This responds to evidence from Beyond Blue and other reviews showing first responders experience mental health conditions at substantially higher rates than the general workforce.

26/11/2020· FAKE_OLD_STATUS· Hon G Grace MP
Work & EmploymentHealthSafety & Emergency
50

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

Passed (amended)

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

Transport and Other Legislation (Managing E-mobility Use and Protecting Our Communities) Amendment Bill 2026

Awaiting Debate

This bill introduces nation-leading reforms to regulate e-mobility devices in Queensland, responding to a near-doubling of injuries and 12 deaths in 2025. It sets a minimum rider age of 16 with a learner licence requirement, gives police powers to seize and destroy non-compliant devices, introduces drink-riding offences with random breath testing, and makes parents responsible when their children ride illegally.

25/3/2026· 2nd reading to be moved· Hon B Mickelberg MP
Transport & RoadsSafety & EmergencyJustice & Rights

Youth Justice and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2021

Passed (amended)

This bill tightens bail rules for serious repeat young offenders, gives police new powers to scan for knives in Gold Coast entertainment precincts, and makes it harder for hooning drivers to avoid identification. It responds to a small cohort of recidivist youth offenders responsible for nearly half of all youth crime, tragic knife murders in Surfers Paradise, and ongoing community concerns about dangerous driving.

25/2/2021· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsChildren & FamiliesSafety & Emergency
49

Australian Crime Commission (Queensland) and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2016

Passed (amended)

This bill updates Queensland laws to reflect the merger of the national CrimTrac policing database into the Australian Crime Commission, and bundles in several unrelated police, weapons and fire safety changes. It expands police powers to arrest on another officer's instruction, search vehicles for knives, and deploy explosives detection dogs in public places, while also giving fire officers new powers to identify building occupiers.

24/5/2016· PASSED with amendment· Hon B Byrne MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyGovernment & Elections
11

Public Safety Business Agency and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2016

Passed

This bill reshapes the Public Safety Business Agency, which provides shared back-office services to Queensland's police and fire agencies. It sets up a new Board of Management led by the Police and Fire Commissioners, hands some operational functions back to the Queensland Police Service and Queensland Fire and Emergency Services, moves Blue Card Services to the Department of Justice and Attorney-General, and absorbs the State Government Protective Security Service into the police service.

24/5/2016· PASSED· Hon B Byrne MP
Government & ElectionsSafety & EmergencyChildren & Families
14

Corrective Services (No Body, No Parole) Amendment Bill 2017

Passed (amended)

This bill introduces a 'No Body, No Parole' rule in Queensland. Prisoners serving time for murder, manslaughter or related homicide offences cannot be released on parole if the victim's body or remains have not been found, unless the Parole Board is satisfied they have cooperated satisfactorily with police to help locate the victim.

23/5/2017· PASSED with amendment· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & Rights

Crime and Corruption and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2017

Lapsed

This bill broadens what counts as 'corrupt conduct' in Queensland and gives the Crime and Corruption Commission (CCC) wider powers to investigate corruption, including conduct by people outside the public sector. It also forces the CCC to give people a chance to respond before publishing damaging findings about them, and cleans up the disciplinary rules for officers moving between the CCC, public service, ambulance and fire services.

23/3/2017· Lapsed· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & RightsGovernment & Elections

Tow Truck and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2017

Lapsed

This bill brings private property towing under the Tow Truck Act for the first time, capping charges and requiring licensed operators with written consent from property occupiers. It also keeps 17-year-old drivers subject to mandatory disqualifications and SPER enforcement, and lets toll operators combine multiple unpaid tolls into a single demand notice.

22/8/2017· Lapsed· Hon Dr S Miles MP
Transport & RoadsCost of LivingJustice & Rights

Summary Offences (Protection of the Australian Flag) Amendment Bill 2026

In Committee

This bill creates a new criminal offence for burning an Australian flag in a public place where the conduct is likely to provoke public disorder, intimidate people, or cause significant offence to the community. It is a private member's bill introduced by Mr R Katter MP.

22/4/2026· Referred to Committee· Mr R Katter MP
Justice & Rights

Youth Justice and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2016

Passed (amended)

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

Police Powers and Responsibilities and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2024

Passed (amended)

This bill modernises Queensland's search and inspection laws to recognise trans and gender diverse people, replacing outdated same-sex rules with gender-responsive safeguards across police, corrections, mental health and public health legislation. It also restricts how often prisoners can reapply for parole after being refused and expands the health professionals who can assess prisoners at risk of self-harm.

21/3/2024· PASSED with amendment· Hon N Boyd MP
Justice & RightsHealthSafety & Emergency
10

Child Protection and Education Legislation (Reporting of Abuse) Amendment Bill 2017

Lapsed

This bill would have required ministers of religion who work with or are associated with a school to report suspected child sexual abuse to police. It amended the Child Protection Act 1999 and the Education (General Provisions) Act 2006 in response to the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. The bill lapsed at the end of the 55th Parliament and did not become law.

21/3/2017· Lapsed· Mr R Pyne MP
Children & FamiliesJustice & RightsEducation

Police Powers and Responsibilities and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2023

Passed

This bill makes several changes to policing and emergency services laws in Queensland. It expands the Police Drug Diversion Program so people caught with small quantities of any dangerous drug — not just cannabis — can be diverted to health services instead of going to court. It also increases the maximum penalty for drug trafficking to life imprisonment, creates tougher penalties for evading police in dangerous circumstances, and introduces a new offence for assaulting fire and emergency services workers.

21/2/2023· PASSED· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsHealthSafety & Emergency
7

Disability Services and Other Legislation (Worker Screening) Amendment Bill 2018

Passed

This bill ensures that sole traders providing disability services under the NDIS in Queensland must undergo the same criminal history screening (yellow card system) as employees of disability service providers. It also enables Queensland Police to share expanded criminal history information with interstate worker screening units to support nationally consistent NDIS worker screening.

20/3/2018· PASSED· Hon C O'Rourke MP
HealthWork & Employment
10

Police Powers and Responsibilities (Making Jack’s Law Permanent) and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2025

Passed (amended)

This bill makes Jack's Law permanent and expands police powers to use hand held scanners to detect knives and weapons in public places across Queensland. It also extends terrorism preventative detention powers by 15 years, confirms Marine Rescue Queensland can receive charitable gifts, and validates past SES volunteer appointments.

2/4/2025· PASSED with amendment· Hon D Purdie MP
Justice & RightsSafety & Emergency
50

Summary Offences and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2019

Passed (amended)

This bill creates new criminal offences for using dangerous attachment devices — such as sleeping dragons, dragon's dens, monopoles, and tripods — during protests. It responds to incidents where activists used these devices to block transport infrastructure and businesses, endangering themselves, emergency workers, and the public.

19/9/2019· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & Emergency
41

Counter-Terrorism and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2016

Passed

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

Passed (amended)

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

Police Legislation (Efficiencies and Effectiveness) Amendment Bill 2021

Passed

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

Passed (amended)

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

Domestic and Family Violence Protection and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2016

Passed (amended)

This bill strengthens Queensland's domestic and family violence protections following the 'Not Now, Not Ever' taskforce report. It gives police more power to protect victims on the spot, makes protection orders last longer, lets agencies share information to respond to serious threats, and joins the national scheme that recognises domestic violence orders across state borders.

16/8/2016· PASSED with amendment· Hon S Fentiman MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyChildren & Families
24

Corrective Services (Parole Board) and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2017

Passed (amended)

This bill replaces Queensland's three separate parole boards with a single, professionalised Parole Board Queensland led by a former judge. It also gives corrective services officers clearer power to electronically monitor parolees through GPS devices and curfews. The reforms respond to the 2016 Sofronoff review of the parole system.

16/2/2017· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & Emergency

Police Service Administration and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2021

Passed

This bill modernises the security framework for Queensland Government buildings by repealing the State Buildings Protective Security Act 1983 and integrating Protective Services into the Queensland Police Service. It creates a single category of protective services officer (PSO) with standardised powers and introduces new accountability measures including a register of enforcement acts.

16/11/2021· PASSED· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyGovernment & Elections
10

Police Powers and Responsibilities and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2021

Passed

This bill makes broad changes across policing, corrective services, and child protection law. It tackles knife crime in entertainment precincts, overhauls parole rules for the most serious murderers, strengthens 'No Body, No Parole' laws, creates tougher penalties for harming police and corrective services animals, and updates child sexual abuse offence lists to include modern Commonwealth offences.

15/9/2021· PASSED· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyChildren & Families
23

Criminal Law (Domestic Violence) Amendment Bill 2015

Passed (amended)

This bill toughens Queensland's response to domestic violence by increasing penalties for breaching protection orders, flagging domestic violence offences on criminal histories, and giving victims better protections when they give evidence in court. It delivers three recommendations from the 'Not Now, Not Ever' Taskforce report on domestic and family violence.

15/9/2015· PASSED with amendment· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyChildren & Families
26

Ministerial and Other Office Holder Staff and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2018

Passed (amended)

This bill gives the Director-General of the Department of the Premier and Cabinet and the Clerk of the Parliament formal legal authority to conduct criminal history checks on people working in ministerial offices, electorate offices, and the Parliamentary Service. It formalises interim arrangements that were already in place since December 2017, bringing these checks in line with the powers that already exist for Queensland public service employees.

15/5/2018· PASSED with amendment· Hon A Palaszczuk MP
Government & ElectionsJustice & Rights
10

Police and Other Legislation (Identity and Biometric Capability) Amendment Bill 2018

Passed

This bill enables Queensland to participate in national facial biometric identity matching services, removes restrictions on police accessing driver licence photos for serious crime investigations, increases penalties for explosive offences, and provided temporary extended liquor trading for the 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast.

15/2/2018· PASSED· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyTechnology & Digital
22

Counter-Terrorism and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2017

Passed

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

Bail (Domestic Violence) and Another Act Amendment Bill 2017

Passed (amended)

This bill strengthens protections for domestic violence victims by making it harder for accused offenders to get bail and giving victims more information about what happens next. It reverses the presumption in favour of bail for domestic violence offences, allows GPS tracking as a bail condition, and requires victims to be notified when a defendant applies for or is granted bail.

14/2/2017· PASSED with amendment· Mr T Nicholls MP
Justice & RightsSafety & Emergency

Liquor and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2017

Passed (amended)

This bill rolls back two key parts of Queensland's 2016 alcohol-fuelled violence laws after an interim review found venues were routinely working around them. It scraps the 1am lock-out and the two-tier '3am safe night precinct' system, keeping a uniform 3am last drinks across all 15 precincts, while tightening the rules on one-off late-night trading permits and letting courts ban drug traffickers and suppliers from licensed areas.

14/2/2017· PASSED with amendment· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Safety & EmergencyHealthBusiness & Economy

Police Powers and Responsibilities (Commonwealth Games) Amendment Bill 2017

Passed (amended)

This bill gives Queensland police temporary extra powers to keep crowds safe during the 2018 Gold Coast Commonwealth Games. It creates 'protective security zones' around Games venues, pedestrian routes and transport hubs where police can search people, vehicles and premises without a warrant, use detection dogs and direct crowds. The powers expire on 22 April 2018, one week after the Games end.

14/2/2017· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & Emergency

Serious and Organised Crime Legislation Amendment Bill 2016

Passed (amended)

This bill dismantles Queensland's 2013 anti-bikie laws and replaces them with a new Organised Crime Regime. It repeals the VLAD Act and Criminal Organisation Act 2009, removes mandatory minimum penalties targeting gang members, and introduces a new consorting offence, control orders, public safety orders and a mandatory seven-year jail 'top-up' for serious organised crime. It also toughens laws on online child exploitation, boiler-room fraud and drug trafficking, and restores fair process rights for people applying for licences in regulated industries such as tattooing and security.

13/9/2016· PASSED with amendment· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyChildren & Families
40

Corrective Services (Promoting Safety) and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2024

Passed (amended)

This bill amends Queensland's corrective services laws to improve safety for victims, frontline officers, prisoners, and the community. It strengthens the Victims Register, cracks down on prisoners misusing phone systems to perpetrate domestic violence, extends police monitoring powers for dangerous child sex offenders, and introduces body-worn cameras and gel blaster protections for corrective services officers.

13/2/2024· PASSED with amendment· Hon N Boyd MP
Justice & RightsSafety & Emergency
13

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

Passed (amended)

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

Police Powers and Responsibilities and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2018

Passed (amended)

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

Tackling Alcohol-Fuelled Violence Legislation Amendment Bill 2015

Passed (amended)

This bill targets alcohol-fuelled violence by cutting late-night liquor trading hours, banning rapid intoxication drinks after midnight, and stopping new extended trading approvals for takeaway alcohol. It also reforms drug and alcohol bail conditions to focus on treatment instead of punishment, and tidies up a range of liquor rules covering craft beer, community clubs, bed and breakfasts and car park events.

12/11/2015· PASSED with amendment· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Safety & EmergencyHealthJustice & RightsBusiness & Economy
43

Criminal Law (Historical Homosexual Convictions Expungement) Bill 2017

Passed (amended)

This bill creates a scheme for people to apply to have historical convictions or charges for consensual adult homosexual activity wiped from their criminal records. It covers offences from before homosexuality was decriminalised in Queensland on 19 January 1991. Once expunged, a person is treated in law as never having been convicted or charged.

11/5/2017· PASSED with amendment· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & RightsWork & Employment

Penalties and Sentences (Drug and Alcohol Treatment Orders) and Other Legislation Amendment Bill 2017

Passed

This bill brings back a drug court in Queensland by creating a new sentencing option called a Drug and Alcohol Treatment Order. Designated magistrates can suspend a prison sentence of up to four years while the offender completes a court-supervised treatment program of at least two years. The bill also tightens the dangerous drug definition, clarifies that long prison sentences can never be 'spent', and gives extra court protections to victims of domestic strangulation.

10/8/2017· PASSED· Hon Y D'Ath MP
Justice & RightsHealthTechnology & Digital

Fighting Antisemitism and Keeping Guns out of the Hands of Terrorists and Criminals Amendment Bill 2026

Passed (amended)

This bill responds to the December 2025 Bondi Beach terrorist attack by strengthening Queensland's laws against hate speech and antisemitism, and significantly toughening firearms regulations. It bans hate symbols of terrorist organisations, criminalises prohibited expressions that incite hatred, creates new protections for worshippers at religious sites, and imposes some of Australia's strongest penalties for weapons offences including new crimes targeting 3D-printed firearms.

10/2/2026· PASSED with amendment· Hon D Purdie MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyGovernment & Elections
54

Queensland Community Safety Bill 2024

Passed (amended)

This bill implements a wide-ranging package of community safety reforms across policing, criminal law, weapons regulation, youth justice, domestic violence protections, and road safety. It expands police powers to scan for knives in more public places, introduces Firearm Prohibition Orders against high-risk individuals, creates new offences to protect emergency workers, and establishes a framework for removing criminal content from social media.

1/5/2024· PASSED with amendment· Hon M Ryan MP
Justice & RightsSafety & EmergencyChildren & Families
17

Crime and Corruption Amendment Bill 2015

Passed (amended)

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