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Television Captioning: Proposed recommendation to terminate complaints as adequately remedied

Issued: 1 December 2000
Updated: 1 February January 2001

See now withdrawal of this proposal

See also submissions responding to this proposal:

Further action to be announced shortly after considering submissions.

Captioning standards under the Broadcasting Services Act have now been made. These standards take effect from 1 January 2001 and will require licensees and national broadcasters to provide a captioning service for

except that for regional television broadcasts requirements regarding unscripted speech on news programs are deferred until 31 December 2003. These provisions also exclude advertising and sponsorship material.

As foreshadowed in my "Update on Inquiry on television captioning complaints under Disability Discrimination Act", dated and published 16 March 2000, I now propose to recommend to the President of HREOC that she exercise her power to terminate these complaints under section 46PH(1)(d) of the Human Rights and Equal Opportunity Commission Act, which provides for complaints to be terminated if another remedy has been sought and the President is satisfied that the subject matter of the complaint has been adequately dealt with.

As I stated in my earlier views, an adequate remedy for the purposes of this decision is not necessarily a perfect, complete or final remedy. A remedy can be, and in my view in this case is, "adequate" for present and interim purposes although it is less than the state of affairs which is desirable and may be required in the longer term.

I note again the comment by Acting Disability Discrimination Commissioner Susan Halliday in her published decision regarding a complaint concerning access to Summer Hill railway station in Sydney:

"I regard a complaint about a particular station as adequately remedied by an acceptable overall rate of achievement of accessibility of stations, whether or not the particular station is first on the list of stations to be made accessible."

In this case, although these captioning standards provide for accessibility only of programs of some types or at some times, and do not address some of the programs with which the present complaints are concerned, I believe the same principle should be applied, and that the complaints should be regarded as adequately remedied by these standards.

My proposed recommendation at this point that the captioning standards provide an adequate remedy does not mean that the same decision would have to be made regarding other complaints in future. In particular:

Request for comments

Particularly in view of the lack of legislative provision, under the arrangements brought into effect by the Human Rights Legislation Amendment Act number 1, for a review procedure on termination decisions to replace the former procedure whereby the President could be asked to review decisions by Commissioners to decline complaints, I think it is desirable that an opportunity to comment on a proposed termination decision be provided in this matter before a decision is finally recommended or made. I consider that a period of four weeks would ordinarily be appropriate for this purpose, but in view of the time of year I am requesting responses by Monday 15 January 2001. Responses should be sent by email if possible to disabdis@hreoc.gov.au but may also be sent by mail to Disability Rights Unit, HREOC, GPO Box 5218, Sydney 1042.

In view of the broad implications of this matter and the public nature of the inquiry conducted so far I am making this proposed recommendation and request for comment available on the internet after providing it directly to the representatives of the complainant.

GRAEME INNES AM
1 December 2000