why the WA Aboriginal cultural heritage bill will not prevent another Juukan Gorge-like disaster
- Written by Joe Dortch, Adjunct Senior Research Fellow, The University of Western Australia
Western Australia’s Aboriginal Cultural Heritage Bill 2021 is set to become law[1], replacing the Aboriginal Heritage Act 1972. The Bill will be read tonight for the third and final time in Western Australia’s state parliament upper house.
It has been spruiked[2] by the McGowan government as a step forward for the management of heritage in WA in the wake of the 2020 Juukan Gorge disaster.
However many First Nations peoples in WA instead fear[3] it will continue a long tradition of Labor and Liberal WA Aboriginal Affairs ministers signing off on heritage destruction.
The key objection to the new legislation is that a single elected official will have the final say on whether a heritage site can be destroyed for development.
Read more: Australia has a heritage conservation problem. Can farming and Aboriginal heritage protection co-exist?[4]
A history of failure to protect Aboriginal heritage
In the 49 years since the existing Act was created, successive ministers on both sides of politics have proven weak on heritage protection in Western Australia. Almost every minister for Aboriginal affairs, on either side of the political spectrum, has failed to protect Aboriginal heritage.
*Look at the history. *
Read more: The NSW government needs to stop prosecuting Aboriginal fishers if it really wants to Close the Gap[5]
How this proposed bill is more of the same
No matter how important the site, the minister for Aboriginal affairs has rarely rejected a development application. Of 463 mining-related applications to impact sites under section 18 of the Act since 2010, none were rejected[6]. This bill gives little reason to expect change.
Much like the old Aboriginal Heritage Act, the proposed bill allows that when a developer wishes to impact a site despite objections by Aboriginal Traditional Owners or custodians, a government-appointed council overseen by the minister will be the one to make decisions.
However the developer can appeal to the state administrative tribunal over ministerial decisions they don’t like. The Aboriginal custodians for that area will not have an equivalent right of appeal.
There is a convoluted process requiring engagement between Aboriginal people and developers. However, developers will be able to decide when they must talk to Aboriginal parties about possible impact on a cultural heritage site. Aboriginal people will not have the right to prevent such an impact, only the right to be told about it.
Aboriginal parties will have no on-going resourcing to fulfil new responsibilities to manage heritage listings and protect sites. This is a concern for smaller and less resourced groups and sets up obvious conflicts if the developer is to fund all costs for managing heritage on a project, as currently proposed.
Read more: Why the Australian government must listen to Torres Strait leaders on climate change[7]
We need a better way forward
All this flies in the face of the findings of the recommendations of the report released in October of the federal inquiry into the Juukan Cave disaster, A Way Forward[8]. This report called for, among other things, the right for Indigenous people to withhold consent to destruction of an important place.
This fundamental human right[9] is not a veto against development. Impacting Juukan Gorge was not critical[10] to the success of the Brockman 4 mine proposal. A robust business case does not depend on access to a single site.
Where the Bill fails heritage, it creates risk[11] for business certainty and undermines “social license” - the support that large businesses need in the community. Last month, ACSI and HESTA, representing major funds commanding hundreds of billions of dollars, publicised their concerns [12]about investing in WA projects that would be approved under the proposed system.
Aboriginal community support is thin. In October, Aboriginal Affairs Minister Stephen Dawson was unable[13] to identify any Aboriginal organisation that supports the bill. Since then, one Aboriginal organisation voiced support[14]. Their view must be respected, but this does not represent consensus across affected communities.
A Way Forward sets out better models. For example, in the Northern Territory there is an authority board [15]of Aboriginal law men and women who administer the functions of their Act, with practical independence from the NT Minister for Aboriginal Affairs.
To Premier McGowan and Minister Dawson, we say: If you want to change a history of heritage destruction to a future of heritage protection, Aboriginal people should have an independent right of review for ministerial decisions, and have genuine power to make decisions about heritage sites.
References
- ^ set to become law (www.parliament.wa.gov.au)
- ^ spruiked (www.mediastatements.wa.gov.au)
- ^ many First Nations peoples in WA instead fear (nit.com.au)
- ^ Australia has a heritage conservation problem. Can farming and Aboriginal heritage protection co-exist? (theconversation.com)
- ^ The NSW government needs to stop prosecuting Aboriginal fishers if it really wants to Close the Gap (theconversation.com)
- ^ none were rejected (www.parliament.wa.gov.au)
- ^ Why the Australian government must listen to Torres Strait leaders on climate change (theconversation.com)
- ^ A Way Forward (www.aph.gov.au)
- ^ fundamental human right (www.un.org)
- ^ was not critical (parlinfo.aph.gov.au)
- ^ creates risk (acsi.org.au)
- ^ publicised their concerns (www.afr.com)
- ^ was unable (www.parliament.wa.gov.au)
- ^ voiced support (www.abc.net.au)
- ^ authority board (www.aapant.org.au)