Civil Liability Act 2002

Civil Liability Regulations 2011

 

Civil Liability Regulations 2011

CONTENTS

1.Citation1

2.Commencement1

Notes

Compilation table2

Provisions that have not come into operation2

 

Civil Liability Act 2002

Civil Liability Regulations 2011

1.Citation

These regulations are the Civil Liability Regulations 2011.

2.Commencement

These regulations come into operation as follows —

(a)regulations 1 and 2 — on the day on which these regulations are published in the Gazette;

(b)regulation 3 — on the day on which the Health, Safety and Civil Liability (Children in Schools and Child Care Services) Act 2011 section 6 comes into operation.

[3.Has not come into operation 2.]

Notes

1This is a compilation of the Civil Liability Regulations 2011. The following table contains information about those regulations.

Compilation table

Citation

Gazettal

Commencement

Civil Liability Regulations 2011
r. 1 and 2

22 Jul 2011 p. 3016‑17

22 Jul 2011 (see r. 2(a))

1aOn the date as at which this compilation was prepared, provisions referred to in the following table had not come into operation and were therefore not included in this compilation. For the text of the provisions see the endnotes referred to in the table.

Provisions that have not come into operation

Citation

Gazettal

Commencement

Civil Liability Regulations 2011 r. 3 2

22 Jul 2011 p. 3016‑17

On commencement of the Health, Safety and Civil Liability (Children in Schools and Child Care Services) Act 2011 section 6 (see r. 2(b))

2On the date as at which this compilation was prepared, the Civil Liability Regulations 2011 r. 3 had not come into operation. It reads as follows:

 

3.Emergency medical assistance (s. 5AAA of Act)

For the purposes of the definition of emergency medical assistance in section 5AAA of the Act, the administration of adrenaline to a person reasonably suspected to be suffering an anaphylactic reaction is prescribed as assistance to which Part 1CA of the Act applies.