House debates

Monday, 4 September 2006

Adjournment

Federal Courts

9:14 pm

Photo of Nicola RoxonNicola Roxon (Gellibrand, Australian Labor Party, Shadow Attorney-General) Share this | Hansard source

I would like to raise in parliament tonight a number of issues affecting our federal courts and federal judiciary, particularly the Attorney’s lack of a long-term plan for dealing with the growth in federal jurisdiction. Our courts, as everyone in this House knows, are the vital third arm of government in our system of democracy yet the judiciary does not get the careful attention, consideration and debate that it deserves.

There are a number of pressing concerns that I want to highlight tonight: the question of how the various federal courts are structured, the work we expect them to do and whether they have adequate resources to do it well and in the manner that we expect for the community. While the federal judicial system has expanded in size and function since Federation, the federal courts have grown exponentially over recent years. Initially of course we had only the High Court. The Family Court was established in 1976 and the Federal Court in 1977. Most recently we have seen the establishment of the Federal Magistrates Court in 2000. We have gone from 76 judges in 1979 to 138 federal judicial officers today.

In the time that I have been in the parliament we have created that new court, the Federal Magistrates Court, which seems to be constantly having its jurisdiction extended. We have increasingly complex family law disputes involving violence and substance abuse, and a new, intensive method for handling children’s matters more quickly. These are only a few of the very many examples of change that I could go to tonight, but the point that I really want to make is just how different our federal judiciary is now from what it was even a few decades ago.

I want to expressly put on the record my concern that Mr Ruddock does not appear to have a plan for the federal judiciary—no map for how the federal courts should interact with one another, no strategy for the number of judges that are needed and no concern for the prompt resolution of federal legal matters. Family Court judges are retiring and not being replaced; federal magistrates are being appointed for their apparent expertise in particular areas but the court itself does not recognise these specialised streams; and there is media and public concern, quite legitimately, about delays in hearings that seem to be quite excessive.

Yet amongst all of these and many other issues we have not seen or heard anything from the Attorney about a long-term direction for our federal courts, a full debate over the resources that they need, nor any real discussion about reforms that are occurring in other countries. Given that the effect and importance of these issues will last long beyond the life of any one government or any one Attorney, if Mr Ruddock does not intend—

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