Is anyone else concerned about the publication of personal health information about shooters and their families in NSW Civil and Administrative Tribunal decisions? i.e. NSW appears to be the only jurisdiction that doesn't routinely protect applicants for review of firearms licence decisions who are alleged to have mental health conditions.
There are heaps of decisions where they seem to list in extensive detail personal, often very embarrassing, mental health and minor traffic offences or summary offences in a way that in other types of matters seems to be protected. It seems to go beyond what is reasonable.
In the ACT, their tribunal has a practice that where an application for review of a firearms licence decision involves mental health concerns, the decision should not be made public in a way which identifies an applicant as its subject. Likewise in QLD, their legislation makes reference to non-publication orders to avoid mental health.
In SA, they have an Anonymisation of Decisions Policy and part of their legislation de-identifies and allocates a randomly selected pseudonym for applicants for review of firearms decisions involving mental health information.
The Victorian Tribunal makes orders under the Open Courts Act to prohibit any information from proceedings identifying an applicant with material mental health concerns. Similarly the WA Act provides for non-publication orders to avoid endangering the mental health of any person. Its practice appears to be to make orders where an application for review of a firearms decision is alleged to have a mental health condition. In JG and COMMISSIONER OF POLICE [2022] WASAT 65 the Tribunal specifically stated that they don't want to deter other applicants for firearms licences from seeking review in the Tribunal because they fear that issues concerning their mental fitness to hold a licence will be laid bare to the public without appropriate protection of their identity
NSW is an outlier. There effect of the decisions being published is to dissuade applicants from seeking review because of public opprobrium and shame attached to the process, even though they are otherwise fit to hold a licence.