Qld Act definition
Examples of Qld Act in a sentence
The Pharmacy Business Ownership Act 2001 (Qld) (Act) should not be amended to allow any non- pharmacist party to own a pharmacy in the interests of protecting the public.
Therefore, if an operator does not comply with a legislative requirement which is included in the Qld Code, then action may be taken against the operator under, for example, the Qld Act.
Sections 171 and 172 of the Working with Children (Risk Management and Screening) Act 2000 (Qld) (Act) require persons employing employees, volunteers, board members and managers in regulated employment and persons conducting regulated businesses to develop and implement a written risk management strategy about the regulated employment or regulated business that implements employment practices and procedures to promote the wellbeing of a child affected by the regulated employment or regulated business.
The Qld Act provides for player setting of pre-commitment levels and self-exclusion.
Many of these provisions are in substantially similar form to the Qld Act.
SIMILARITIES For an adjudicator at first instance, as distinct from a ‘review adjudicator’, an adjudication under the Act is almost identical to adjudication under the NSW Act or the Qld Act.
Transitional (Qld) 310(1) and (2) (Qld Act) Schedule 2 – Trans-Tasman Mutual Recognition Act delegations Part 3 Division 2 – Occupations – Entitlement to registration s.18(1) Receive lodgement of written notice seeking registration.
They then seized the phone “to search its database for any sign of use in connection with drug dealing and presumably to preserve any evidentiary material”, and found some incriminating text messages.Held: While the first two searches were lawful, the search of the iphone was not, and the evidence obtained as a consequence was inadmissible.The provisions in the Qld Act regarding warrantless searches (ss29-30, 160) share some similarity with equivalent provisions in LEPRA.
The HCA heard two cases:Mabo No 1 the HCA held that the Qld Act was inconsistent with the Racial Discrimination Act 1975 and therefore invalid under section 109.
When the Planning Act 2016 (Qld) (Act) and the Planning and Environment Court Act 2018 (Qld) (Court Act) commenced, the Court Act provided the "legislative foundation" for the Rules (at Section 13) "to ensure the Court's efficient operation"3 and enabled the 2010 Rules to continue for one year to enable the Rules to be drafted.