Minister for Fair Trading
The Minister for Better Regulation and Fair Trading is a minister in the Government of New South Wales responsible for administering legislation and policy in relation to consumer affairs and SafeWork regulation in New South Wales, Australia.
Minister for Better Regulation and Fair Trading | |
---|---|
Department of Customer Service | |
Style | The Honourable |
Nominator | Premier of New South Wales |
Appointer | Governor of New South Wales |
Inaugural holder | Frederick Hewitt (as the Minister for Consumer Affairs) |
Formation | 3 December 1973 |
The current minister is Anoulack Chanthivong since 5 April 2023, who also serves as the Minister for Industry and Trade.
The minister assists the Minister for Customer Service and Digital Government administer their portfolios through the Customer Service cluster, in particular NSW Fair Trading.[1]
Ultimately the ministers are responsible to the Parliament of New South Wales.
Roles and responsibilities
The portfolio was established in December 1973 in the sixth Askin ministry and the major task of the portfolio was to ensure consumers were treated fairly. This was handled by consumer education, providing a complaints service, licensing some occupational groups, investigating prices and charges, responsible for weights and measures and landlord and tenant matters.[2] The administrative units responsible to the Ministry included the Consumer Affairs Council and Consumer Affairs Bureau, the Weights and Measures Office, the Prices Branch and Registry of Consumer Claims Tribunals. The establishment of the Ministry also coincided with three entirely new acts of Parliament dealing with important aspects of consumer protection, namely the Consumer Claims Tribunals Act 1974, the Pyramid Sales Act 1974 and the Motor Dealers Act 1974.[3]
The Fair Trading Minister is responsible for the regulation of various occupations, organisations and industries including incorporated associations, hairdressers, charitable fundraisers, pawnbrokers, biofuels and co-operatives.[4]
List of ministers
Ministerial title | Minister [5] | Party | Ministry | Term start | Term end | Time in office | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Minister for Consumer Affairs | Frederick Hewitt | Liberal | Askin (6) Lewis (1) (2) Willis | 3 December 1973 | 14 May 1976 | 2 years, 163 days | ||
Syd Einfeld | Labor | Wran (1) (2) (3) | 14 May 1976 | 2 October 1981 | 5 years, 141 days | |||
Paul Whelan | Wran (4) | 2 October 1981 | 1 February 1983 | 1 year, 122 days | ||||
Paul Landa | Wran (5) (6) (7) | 1 February 1983 | 10 February 1984 | 1 year, 9 days | ||||
George Paciullo | Wran (7) | 5 April 1984 | 6 February 1986 | 1 year, 307 days | ||||
Bob Carr | Wran (8) | 6 February 1986 | 4 July 1986 | 148 days | ||||
Deirdre Grusovin | Unsworth | 4 July 1986 | 21 March 1988 | 1 year, 261 days | ||||
Minister for Business and Consumer Affairs | Gerry Peacocke | National | Grieiner (1) | 25 March 1988 | 6 June 1991 | 3 years, 73 days | ||
Minister for Consumer Affairs | Peter Collins | Liberal | Greiner (2) Fahey (1) | 6 June 1991 | 3 July 1992 | 1 year, 27 days | ||
Kerry Chikarovski | Fahey (2) | 3 July 1992 | 26 May 1993 | 327 days | ||||
Wendy Machin | National | Fahey (3) | 26 May 1993 | 4 April 1995 | 1 year, 313 days | |||
Faye Lo Po' | Labor | Carr (1) | 4 April 1995 | 6 December 1995 | 2 years, 241 days | |||
Minister for Fair Trading | 6 December 1995 | 1 December 1997 | ||||||
Brian Langton | Carr (2) | 1 December 1997 | 30 April 1998 | 150 days | ||||
Jeff Shaw | 30 April 1998 | 8 April 1999 | 343 days | |||||
John Watkins | Carr (3) | 8 April 1999 | 21 November 2001 | 2 years, 227 days | ||||
John Aquilina | 21 November 2001 | 2 April 2003 | 1 year, 132 days | |||||
Reba Meagher | Carr (4) | 2 April 2003 | 21 January 2005 | 1 year, 294 days | ||||
John Hatzistergos | 1 February 2005 | 3 August 2005 | 183 days | |||||
Diane Beamer | Iemma (1) | 3 August 2005 | 2 April 2007 | 1 year, 242 days | ||||
Linda Burney | Iemma (2) | 2 April 2007 | 5 September 2008 | 1 year, 156 days | ||||
Virginia Judge | Rees Keneally | 5 September 2008 | 28 March 2011 | 2 years, 204 days | ||||
Anthony Roberts | Liberal | O'Farrell | 3 April 2011 | 9 December 2013 | 2 years, 250 days | |||
Stuart Ayres | Baird (1) | 9 December 2013 | 6 May 2014 | 148 days | ||||
Matthew Mason-Cox | 6 May 2014 | 2 April 2015 | 331 days | |||||
Minister for Fair Trading | Eleni Petinos | Liberal | Perrottet (2) | 21 December 2021 | 3 August 2022 | 225 days | [6][7][8] | |
Victor Dominello | 3 August 2022 | 28 March 2023 | 237 days | [9] | ||||
Minister for Better Regulation and Fair Trading | Anoulack Chanthivong | Labor | Minns | 5 April 2023 | incumbent | 204 days |
References
- "About Fair Trading". NSW Fair Trading. Retrieved 10 March 2022.
- "PFO-145 Consumer Affairs [I]". NSW State Records & Archives. Retrieved 11 March 2022. This article incorporates text available under the CC BY 4.0 license.
- "AGY-1050 Ministry of Consumer Affairs (1973-1976) Department of Consumer Affairs [I] (1976-1988)". NSW State Records & Archives. Retrieved 11 March 2022. This article incorporates text available under the CC BY 4.0 license.
- "Administrative Arrangements (Second Perrottet Ministry - Allocation of Acts and Agencies) Order 2021". Legislation NSW. 21 December 2021. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
- "Part 6 Ministries since 1856" (PDF). NSW Parliamentary Record. Parliament of New South Wales. Retrieved 10 March 2022.
- "Parliament, Ministerial, Courts and Police (662)" (PDF). Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. 21 December 2021.
- Raper, Ashleigh (31 July 2022). "NSW Minister Eleni Petinos sacked by Premier Dominic Perrottet after anonymous complaint by staffer". Australian Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved 31 July 2022.
- Maddison, Max (31 July 2022). "Dominic Perrottet sacks NSW Small Business Minister Eleni Petinos over alleged bullying". The Australian. Retrieved 1 August 2022.
- "Parliament, Ministerial, Courts and Police (354)" (PDF). Government Gazette of the State of New South Wales. 3 August 2022.