House debates
Wednesday, 27 August 2025
Bills
Commonwealth Workplace Protection Orders Bill 2025; Second Reading
6:53 pm
Mary Doyle (Aston, Australian Labor Party) Share this | Hansard source
I rise today in strong support of the Commonwealth Workplace Protection Orders Bill 2025. This bill introduces new legislation and with it a new national scheme designed to provide Commonwealth workers with the safety, dignity and protection they deserve in the course of their duties. This is a bill about safety. This is a bill about fairness. And, most importantly, this is a bill about respect—respect for the thousands of Australians who dedicate themselves to delivering critical services on behalf of the Commonwealth.
Let me begin with why we are here. This bill is borne out of both necessity and tragedy. In 2023 the Albanese Labor government commissioned the Services Australia Security Risk Management Review, led by Graham Ashton AM APM, a respected law enforcement and public safety leader. That review, commonly referred to as the Ashton review, was triggered by what happened to a 55-year-old Services Australia team leader, Joeanne Cassar, one day in May of 2023 at a branch in Melbourne. Earlier that morning, a man whom Services Australia had already deemed a risk to workers, but whom they had no legal authority to ban from the branch, had turned up again. As team leader, Joeanne asked him to leave, and he did so immediately, but then he came back later with a knife. Joeanne had stepped in to cover for a security guard taking a lunch break. When the man returned with the knife, he lunged at Joeanne, chasing her back into the office. He punched her in the face and stabbed her once in the lower back, just missing her spine and kidneys but leaving her with life-changing injuries and enduring pain. This should never have been allowed to happen. Joeanne said only last month: 'We should all be safe at work. We all have family we want to get back to. It took me seven days to get home. And I'm one of the lucky ones.' No-one should ever go to work fearing that they may not come home safely or, worse, not come home at all.
The Ashton review looked into the risks faced by Commonwealth frontline workers, especially those in public-facing roles. It made 44 recommendations to strengthen safety, security and protections. The government agreed to all 44 recommendations. One of those recommendations, recommendation 17, was that the current ACT workplace protection order provisions should be adapted for use by the Commonwealth as a staff protection mechanism nationwide, and that is precisely what this bill does.
Some may ask: Is there really such a need? Are Commonwealth workers really at such risk? The answer is absolutely yes.
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