House debates

Thursday, 3 August 2023

Bills

National Occupational Respiratory Disease Registry Bill 2023, National Occupational Respiratory Disease Registry (Consequential Amendments) Bill 2023; Second Reading

11:56 am

Photo of Michael McCormackMichael McCormack (Riverina, National Party, Shadow Minister for International Development and the Pacific) Share this | Hansard source

I give this address on behalf of the Deputy Leader of the Opposition. This package of legislation—the National Occupational Respiratory Disease Registry Bill 2023 and the National Occupational Respiratory Disease Registry (Consequential Amendments) Bill 2023—delivers on a recommendation of the National Dust Disease Taskforce, established by the former coalition government in 2019, to create a National Occupational Respiratory Disease Registry in response to the growing incidence of silicosis amongst Australian workers. Silicosis is an irreversible fibrotic lung condition caused by inhaling very fine silica dust. While it is preventable, there is currently no cure.

The coalition will support this package of legislation, because it builds on important work that the coalition commenced in government to address the worrying issue of occupational dust diseases in Australia and respond to the growing incidence of silicosis. The National Occupational Respiratory Disease Registry Bill 2023 will create a legislative framework to establish and manage the National Occupational Respiratory Disease Registry, which will collect data on the incidence of respiratory diseases that are thought to be occupationally caused or exacerbated. The national registry will capture key details, including the industry, occupation, main job task and place of business where the exposures are believed to have occurred. The registry will collate respiratory health data to assist in the detection of new and emerging threats to workers' respiratory health and inform incidence trends. The registry will also disclose information on occupational respiratory diseases in Australia to state and territory authorities, reflecting their ongoing role and responsibilities in understanding and responding to occupational respiratory diseases in their jurisdictions.

The National Occupational Respiratory Disease Registry (Consequential Amendments) Bill 2023 makes consequential amendments to existing federal legislation in order to support the effective implementation of the National Occupational Respiratory Disease Registry Bill 2023. The bill amends the Freedom of Information Act 1982 to exempt protected information included in the National Occupational Respiratory Disease Registry from disclosure under the act and protect individuals' privacy or commercial interests. As I said, these bills deliver on the recommendation of the National Dust Disease Taskforce to establish a national registry on this very important issue.

All Australians, regardless of their occupation or how they are engaged, have the right to healthy, safe and well-designed work. However, it is estimated that one in four people who work with silica products will develop silicosis. The rapid emergence of new cases of accelerated silicosis, particularly amongst those working with engineered stone, is of deep concern. That is why the former coalition government established the National Dust Disease Taskforce on 26 July 2019 as part of our $5 million election commitment. We committed to investigate the growing number of silicosis cases among individuals working in the engineered stone industry and to develop a national approach for the prevention, early identification, control and management of occupational dust diseases in Australia. In establishing the task force, the former coalition government committed $5.1 million to support its critical work, including funding for new research to better understand, prevent and treat preventable occupational lung diseases. This funding included $1.6 million for the development of a national dust disease registry. We recognise the government's decision to progress our commitment through the package of bills before us today. The task force's final report was published on 12 July 2021 following extensive consultation with a broad range of stakeholders.

The former coalition government worked with the states and territories to develop a nationally coordinated, all-of-government response to the task force's final report, which was endorsed on 4 April 2022. We also invested $11 million over four years, as part of our 2022-23 budget, to address key recommendations from the task force's final report. This funding package supported an enhanced focus on prevention activities, improved support for affected workers and their families, and a strengthened evidence base and research capability. We also supported upskilling and improving the expertise of medical professionals in relation to dust diseases to ensure the right knowledge was available to provide adequate care and support for affected patients. This package of bills complements all of this work that we undertook in government to respond to this important issue, particularly to protect workers across Australia at risk from dust diseases. This includes—and it's important that we recognise it—the work of former ministers Greg Hunt and Senator Michaelia Cash.

The coalition remain strongly committed to reducing the incidence of silicosis and other dust diseases amongst workers and increasing the quality of life for affected workers and their families. Given our longstanding commitment to this issue and our extensive work undertaken while in government, we recognise the importance of this legislation. The National Occupational Respiratory Disease Register will play a critical role in addressing the growing incidence of silicosis and other occupational respiratory dust diseases in Australia. Once again, the coalition will support this package of bills, which builds on our work to address the increased incidence of silicosis and other occupational respiratory dust diseases in Australia.

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