Tourist and Heritage Railways Act
The Tourist and Heritage Railways Act 2010 is a law enacted by the Parliament of the State of Victoria, Australia and is the prime statute regulating the activities of tourist and heritage rail operators in the State. The Act covers the bulk of Victoria's operational tourist and heritage railways including many heavy and light rail operations and tramways, predominantly in regional areas of Victoria.
The Tourist and Heritage Railways Act and the supporting regulations were developed by the Transport Legislation Review conducted by the Department of Transport. The Act was the first dedicated statute in Victoria for the tourist and heritage railways sector and is also the only dedicated principal statute for the THR sector in Australia. The Act was passed in late 2010 and came into force on 1 October 2011. It replaced provisions regulating the THR sector in the Transport Act 1983.
The Tourist and Heritage Railways Act is part of the transport policy and legislation framework in Victoria headed by the Transport Integration Act.
Outline
The broad purpose of the Act is ". . . to promote the long term viability of the tourist and heritage railway sector and promote an improvement in the operations of that sector as part of an integrated and sustainable transport system . . ."The Act establishes a regulatory scheme with the following key elements:
- development of an asset register for tourist and heritage assets including state-owned assets
- provision for new lease agreements for the state rail assets used by tourist and heritage operators
- creation of a voluntary registration scheme
- establishment of a Tourist and Heritage Railways Registrar and advisory committee.
Industry background
Parts
The Act is divided into seven parts:- Preliminary
- Administration
- Tourist and Heritage Rail Asset Register
- Lease Agreements
- Voluntary Accreditation Scheme
- General
- Consequential Amendments and Savings
Coverage
- Alexandra Timber and Tramway Museum
- Ballarat Tramway Museum
- Bellarine Railway
- Daylesford Spa Country Railway
- Melbourne Tramcar Preservation Society
- Mornington Railway Preservation Society
- Portland Cable Tram
- R707 Operations
- Seymour Railway Heritage Centre
- South Gippsland Railway
- Steamrail Victoria
- Victorian Goldfields Railway
- Walhalla Goldfields Railway
- Yarra Valley Railway.
Regulators
The prime regulator of the tourist and heritage railway sector in Victoria is the Director, Transport Safety or Transport Safety Victoria. The prime regulators of the tourist and heritage railway sector in Victoria are VicTrack and the Public Transport Development Authority.VicTrack holds all State owned rail land, infrastructure and assets. VicTrack leases assets to tourist and heritage railway operators when they are not required for mainstream transport operations and therefore non operational. Public Transport Victoria provides general coordination and support to the THR sector and is a regulator under the Act.
VicTrack
is established under the Transport Integration Act and is required under that Act to ". . . provide or enable access to the non-operational transport-related land, infrastructure or assets where this supports the transport system . . . ". VicTrack is charged with considering providing this access for a variety of reasons including for ". . . tourist and heritage rail operations . . ." and ". . . through the granting of leases for business or community purposes . . . ". As part of this function, VicTrack is required to collaborate with the Secretary of the Department of Transport, or more particularly Public Transport Victoria, in protecting land, infrastructure and assets which are registered on the Victorian Heritage Register. VicTrack must do this ". . . whilst ensuring that reasonable access is provided for public enjoyment and historical appreciation and that support is provided to tourist and heritage operators . . . ".The Registrar
Part 2 of the Act provides that the Director must appoint a person to be the Tourist and Heritage Railway Registrar. The Registrar is the key administrator for the purposes of the Act. The function of the Registrar is to compile and maintain an asset register for the sector, a register of lease agreements granted by VicTrack and a group register for THR railway groups.Advisory committee
The Act enables Public Transport Victoria to establish an advisory committee to provide advice to PTV on—- the voluntary registration scheme for T and H operators; and
- other matters relating to the provision of historical and heritage related rail services.
Rail asset register
Part 3 of the provides for establishment and operation of a tourist and heritage rail asset register. The broad purpose of the Part is to gather and maintain accurate information about THR assets. The register is required to be established by Public Transport Victoria and divided into three divisions listing assets owned by the State, assets owned by custodians and assets owned by persons other than the State or the custodian which the owner has elected to include on the register. The remainder of the provisions regulate the information to be included in the register, the form of the register and access, currency and accuracy of information, inspection of assets and the relationship of the register to the separate Victorian Heritage Register established under the .Lease agreements
Part 4 of the sets out a scheme to facilitate the leasing of land and assets by VicTrack for tourist and heritage railways purposes. The provides power for VicTrack to grant leases of land which must include a range of matters including a description of the land and fixtures, the term of the lease, the amount of rent, maintenance and insurance arrangements, subleasing rights or restrictions, reclamation rights and other matters. Similar provision is made for the leasing of assets and these also require the lease to include certain minimum terms. The Part also imposes a duty on VicTrack to provide copies of leases to the Registrar who must keep a register of the agreements and details about duration and renewal.Voluntary accreditation scheme
Part 5 of the provides for a voluntary accreditation scheme for tourist and heritage railway operators. Public Transport Victoria is required to establish the scheme and a register known as the Tourist and Heritage Railway Group Register. The purpose of the scheme is to enable operators which meet certain criteria to register in order to demonstrate their commitment to best business practice and continuous improvement and to access programs and initiatives made available under the scheme.The other provisions in the Part regulate the matters to be recorded in the register, applications for registration, registration itself, changes of details, removal from the register and rights of review to the Victorian Civil and Administrative Tribunal concerning decisions made by the Registrar.
Other notable provisions
The contains two general provisions in Part 6. The first provision confirms that THR operators are not required to fence railways or contribute to fencing costs and that operators are not liable for any damage which may be caused by the railway not being fenced. The remaining and final provision in the confers power on the Governor in Council to make regulations to support the including in relation to the asset register, criteria for registration on the group register, fees for registration, safety in connection with TH railways, powers of THR operators, conduct requirements, trespassing and interference with equipment, fixtures and other things.Development
The development of the proposal for the was managed by the Department of Transport in Victoria as part of its Transport Legislation Review project.The Department commenced the process by holding an inter Government agency workshop in June 2008 followed by workshops with the THR sector in August of that year. This was followed by a period of research and policy development leading into further workshops and target consultation with the industry in April 2010 where new regulatory concepts were outlined in detail. Ultimately, the proposal for a new regulatory scheme for the tourist and heritage railways sector was presented to the Victorian Parliament as proposed legislation in late July 2010.
Parliamentary approval
Introduction
The was introduced into the upper house of the Victorian Parliament, the Legislative Council, as the Tourist and Heritage Railways Bill 2010. The responsible Minister for the proposal was the Minister for Public Transport, the Hon Martin Pakula MLC. The Hon Justin Madden MLC, the Minister for Planning, moved the second reading of the Bill on 27 July 2010 on behalf of the Public Transport Minister.Second reading speech
The Minister set the context for the Bill in his second reading speech in support of the Bill as follows:Debate and passage
The Tourist and Heritage Railways Bill was strongly supported by the Opposition parties and other members during its passage through the Victorian Parliament.Upper house
The lead Liberal Party speaker in the first house of passage the Legislative Council, David Koch MLC, observed that—The Bill was passed by the Legislative Council on 12 August 2010 after a short debate and introduced into the lower house, the Legislative Assembly, on the same day.