Senate debates

Monday, 18 April 2016

Business

Days and Hours of Meeting

3:48 pm

Photo of Mitch FifieldMitch Fifield (Victoria, Liberal Party, Manager of Government Business in the Senate) Share this | Hansard source

by leave—I move the motion standing in my name, the terms of which have been circulated in the chamber:

(1) That the days of meeting of the Senate for the remainder of 2016 be as follows:

(a) Tuesday, 19 April and, if required:

  (i) Wednesday, 20 April and Thursday, 21 April, and

  (ii) Tuesday, 26 April to Thursday, 28 April;

(b) Monday, 2 May to Thursday, 5 May;

(c) Monday, 9 May to Thursday, 12 May; and

(d) Monday, 20 June to Thursday, 23 June

Monday, 27 June to Thursday, 30 June

Tuesday, 23 August to Thursday, 25 August

Monday, 29 August to Thursday, 1 September

Monday, 19 September to Thursday, 22 September

Monday, 10 October to Thursday, 13 October

Monday, 7 November to Thursday, 10 November

Monday, 21 November to Thursday, 24 November

Monday, 28 November to Thursday, 1 December.

(2) A day of meeting specified in paragraph (1) (a) shall be taken to be required if the Senate has not finally dealt with the following bills:

Building and Construction Industry (Improving Productivity) Bill 2013 [No. 2]

Building and Construction Industry (Consequential and Transitional Provisions) Bill 2013 [No. 2]

Fair Work (Registered Organisations) Amendment Bill 2014 [No. 3]

Road Safety Remuneration Repeal Bill 2016

Road Safety Remuneration Amendment (Protecting Owner Drivers) Bill 2016.

(3) That the hours of meeting for Tuesday, 3 May 2016 be from 12.30 pm to 6.30 pm and 8.30 pm to adjournment, and for Thursday, 5 May 2016 be from 9.30 am to 6 pm and 8 pm to adjournment, and that:

(a) the routine of business from 8.30 pm on Tuesday, 3 May 2016 shall be:

  (i) Budget statement and documents 2016-17, and

  (ii) adjournment; and

(b) the routine of business from 8 pm on Thursday, 5 May 2016 shall be:

  (i) Budget statement and documents—party leaders and independent senators to make responses to the statement and documents for not more than 30 minutes each, and

  (ii) adjournment.

I will just make some brief remarks. I do not think there could have been a clearer or more public indication of the government's intent and reasons to have the Senate sit for additional weeks. That was outlined by the Prime Minister a number of weeks ago. The purpose of these additional weeks, as you know, Mr Deputy President, is to deal with the Australian Building and Construction Commission package of bills, the registered organisations legislation and an issue that has really come to the fore over recent weeks, the Road Safety Remuneration Tribunal. They are the matters that the government seeks to have addressed in these additional weeks. It has been made clear through the publication, a number of weeks ago, of a draft sitting schedule for the balance of the year to indicate the weeks that we would seek to move a motion for in this place.

We have taken a practical approach to the wording of the motion. We outline, obviously, the necessity to sit for the balance of this week. We outline the sitting pattern from the budget week on through the rest of the year. We also in the motion provide for the Senate to sit next week. But, in relation to the sittings of the Senate next week and indeed for the balance of this week, we make it clear in the motion that those days are required 'if the Senate has not finally dealt with the following bills'. So, if the Senate manages to address the bills that we are seeking to have resolved and does that in short order over the next day or two or three, then there would not be the necessity for the Senate to sit next week. That is the practical approach that we are taking.

I understand that there may be others in this chamber who want to 'reverse engineer' the motion to remove next week and, should it prove necessary to sit next week, then enter discussions to move a subsequent motion to have sitting days next week. I think it is more practical if we take the approach that is in the motion here—that being that we provide for next week but that it is only required if we have not addressed the legislation that the government would like to see resolved. I think it is a practical approach and I commend it to my colleagues.

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