Secure Tenure for Home Ownership on Native Title Lands

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Secure Tenure for Home Ownership on Native Title Lands Ed Wensing, PhD Candidate, NCIS Australian National University. SGS Economics and Planning Jonathan Taylor, KPMG 14 May 2013 Photo: Nulleywah, Kununurra, WA. Ed Wensing April 2011.

1 Proposition The full range of tenure possibilities open to native title holders for home ownership and economic development are often not fully explored. There remains a disjuncture between the exercise of individual property rights on the one hand and the exercise of collective or communal forms of ownership and control on the other. 1

2 Hypothesis Our hypothesis is that, ideally, leasehold forms of tenure offer the best economic and housing opportunities for Aboriginal people who are also seeking to protect their underlying traditional/communal/native title rights and interests in the land. 2

3 Living on Our Lands Study We (Ed Wensing and Jonathan Taylor) explored these issues in terms of options for enabling home ownership and economic development possibilities to be realised in remote Aboriginal communities during the Living on Our Lands study for the WA Dept. of Indigenous Affairs in 2011-12. This examined the case of the Aboriginal Lands Trust (ALT) reserve lands in Western Australia. 3

4 The ALT Estate in WA The ALT Estate comprises about 12% of WA or 27M ha: 255 Reserves held under the LAA Act, of which 84 are proclaimed under the AAPA Act (Total about 23M ha); 6 Pastoral Leases (Total about 1.1M ha); 9 General Purpose Leases (Total about 2.1M ha); and 59 Freehold Titles (Total about 0.83M ha). Approximately 8,000 Aboriginal people inhabit the ALT in largely remote communities. 4

5 The ALT Estate in WA WA is quite unique, because unlike other jurisdictions, WA does not have a statutory Aboriginal land rights system. What is termed Aboriginal land in WA is held in trust as a reserve for the use and benefit of Aboriginal inhabitants and is administered by Ministerial discretion. This reflects a protection style of land holding, reminiscent of 19th Century approaches (ATSISJC 2004 Native Title Report). 5

6 The ALT Estate in WA It is the continued aim of the ALT and of successive State governments in WA to transfer ownership of the Aboriginal estate to Aboriginal people. However, there are a number of restrictions which diminish the utility of ALT land as an economic asset and its use as security against a loan. 6

7 The characteristics of the ALT Estate in WA Land proclaimed under the AAPA Act must be for the use and benefit of the Aboriginal inhabitants. Under existing rules of transfer, the ALT may sell, lease or dispose of land it holds to any Aboriginal person (or entity), PROVIDED the land will continue to be for the use and benefit of Aboriginal people/inhabitants. Any dealings in ALT land must be approved by the Minister. 7

8 The characteristics of the ALT Estate in WA Invariably, ALT held lands are subject to a variety of Aboriginal interests and all dealings in the estate must make reasonable efforts to identify and reconcile these interests. A legitimate interest may amount to: a native title determination; or a registered native title claim; and/or an entity holding a registered Crown title; a lessee or sub-lessee; a resident or inhabitant of the land in question; and/or a historical, heritage or other connection to the land. 8

9 The characteristics of the ALT Estate in WA ALT lands are deemed not to have extinguished native title. Land subject to native title is inalienable, can only be surrendered to the Crown and the native title rights are not able to be assigned, restrained, garnisheed, seized or sold or made subject to any charge or interest as a result of the incurring, creation or enforcement of any debt or other liability of the body corporate. (S.56(5) NTA) ALT land subject to native title is therefore unusable as security against a loan. 9

10 The characteristics of the ALT Estate in WA While the Native Title Act allows for the non-extinguishment principle to be applied, native title holders cannot enter the market to realise the value of their property rights by leasing, mortgaging or selling them. The Crown retains a monopoly over the acquisition and extinguishment of those rights. (Gover 2012). We were asked to examine whether an appropriate form of tenure exists that might assist in the sustainable transfer of the ALT estate to Aboriginal people, or whether a new form of tenure is required. 10

11 Aboriginal people s aspirations relating to land Based on the case studies for the living on Our Lands study, we identified the following as important considerations in Aboriginal people s aspirations relating to land: Connections to country are vital to culture and land is intimately linked to the well-being and identity of Aboriginal people. Having fought for their native title rights, Aboriginal people are reluctant to extinguish them. There is a desire to retain collective responsibility for decision making about land. Aboriginal people want to leverage their land and property rights to be able to participate in the modern economy, the same as anyone else. 11

12 Principles for Indigenous Land Tenure Reform To assess whether existing forms of tenure in WA provide adequate recognition and protection of Aboriginal people s aspirations relating to land, we applied the following principles: The inalienability of Aboriginal lands should be preserved. The elements of customary ownership should be able to combine with Torrens title issued by the Crown. Tenure reform should provide Aboriginal people with stronger forms of ownership and respect Aboriginal decision making authority. Tenure arrangements to distinguish between interests of native title holders, occupants and those with historical ties. Compulsory acquisition to be used only as a last resort, and only after full consideration of economic, social, political and cultural consequences. 12

13 Crucial Question The crucial question is: Are there existing forms of tenure that would enable Aboriginal people to retain their cultural and collective responsibility and decision making for land, and which would also enable them to leverage their land in response to home ownership and economic development opportunities? 13

14 The WA Land Tenure System The WA land tenure system includes a number of different forms of land tenure, including : Delayed freehold (Conditional Purchase LAA s.80) Individual ownership (Absolute Fee Simple LAA s.74) Registered leasehold (General lease fixed term LAA s.79) Individual or communal ownership (Conditional fee simple for use and benefit of Aboriginal people LAA s.83) Individual or communal registered leasehold (Conditional leasehold for use and benefit of Aboriginal people LAA s.83) Reserve (LAA s.41) Pastoral lease (LAA s.101) Survey strata title (STA s.5a). 14

15 Assessing land tenures in WA We developed a tenure assessment matrix that assesses whether any of the existing forms of tenure can satisfy the Indigenous land tenure reform principles mentioned above. 15

Assessing land tenures in WA 16 Table 2. Land Tenure Types in WA and Attributes for Aboriginal Ownership TENURE TYPES (in WA) ATTRIBUTES This form of tenure.. Does NOT require the Combines the elements of extinguishment of native title customary ownership with the rights and interests (A '' answer Crown's Torrens title system i.e. means that native title would need guarantees security of title and to be extinguished.) priority of interests Enables landholder to retain cultural connnections, while also enabling the exercise of proprietary ownership for home ownership or economic development Enables collective ownership and management and is respectful of Aboriginal decision making and authority Is capable of being assigned (subleased) to Aboriginal people, governments, infrastructure agencies and/or other people Is capable of being used as security Enable subsidiary titles to be used Includes provisions to minimise for a mortgage as security for mortgate loans exposure to undue financial risk Enable rental incomes from third parties to flow back to the Aboriginal owner or ownership group Allows interests to revert to the ultimate Aboriginal owner or ownership group Individual Ownership (Absolute Fee Simple) (LAA s.74 Freehold) Yes Yes Maybe Yes, but exercised by financial institutions, not the state Yes Delayed Freehold (LAA s.80 Conditional Purchase, Freehold title issued when conditions met and premium paid) Yes Yes Yes, after conditions have been fulfilled Registered Leasehold (General lease for any purpose) (LAA s.79 Fixed Term) Yes Yes, potentially can Yes Yes, if issued to Aboriginal community Yes, with Ministerial approval Yes, with Minis terial approval Yes, with Ministeral approval Yes, exercised by the state Yes, with Ministerial approval Registered Leasehold (General lease for any purpose) (LAA s.79 In Perpetuity) (a) Yes, potentially can Yes, if issued to Aboriginal community Yes, with Ministerial approval Yes, with Minis terial approval Yes, with Ministeral approval Yes, exercised by the state Yes, with Ministerial approval Individual Ownership (Conditional Fee Simple) (LAA s.83 For use and benefit of Aboriginal people only) Communal Ownership (Conditional Fee Simple) (LAA.S.83 For use and benefit of Aboriginal people only) Registered Leasehold (Individual, Conditional, In Perpetuity) (LAA s.83 For use and benefit of Aboriginal people only) Registered Leasehold (Individual, Conditional, Fixed Term) (LAA s.83 For use and benefit of Aboriginal people only) Registered Leasehold (Communal, Conditional, In Perpetuity) (LAA s.83 For use and benefit of Aboriginal people only) Registered Leasehold (Communal, Conditional, Fixed Term) (LAA s.83 For use and benefit of Aboriginal people only) Pas toral Lease (Fixed Term, maximum 50 years ) (LAA s.101 Pastoral Lease, Pas toral purposes defined LAA s.93) Pas toral Lease (Perpetual) (b) (LAA to be amended. Pastoral purposes defined LAA s.93) Yes, provided the title does not 'affect' the native title rights and interests Yes, provided the title does not 'affect' the native title rights and interests Yes, provided the title does not 'affect' the native title rights and interests Yes, provided the title does not 'affect' the native title rights and interests Yes, provided the title does not 'affect' the native title rights and interests Yes, provided the title does not 'affect' the native title rights and interests Yes, with Ministerial approval Yes, with Ministerial approval Yes, if issued to Aboriginal community Yes, with Ministerial approval Yes, with Ministerial approval Yes, with Ministerial approval Yes, with Ministerial approval Yes, but only for purpose consistent with pastoral lease and with Ministerial approval Yes, but only for purpose consistent with pastoral lease and with Ministerial approval Yes, if issued to Aboriginal community Yes, if issued to Aboriginal community Yes, if issued to Aboriginal community Yes, if issued to Aboriginal community Yes Yes, but only at time of title issue Yes, but only at time of title isse Yes, but only at time of lease issue Yes, but only at time of lease issue Yes, but only at time of lease issue Yes, but only at time of lease issue Yes, but only at time of lease issue Yes Maybe, with Ministerial approval Maybe, with Ministerial approval Maybe, with Ministerial approval Maybe, with Ministerial approval Maybe, with Ministerial approval Maybe, with Ministerial approval Rangelands Lease (b) (LAA to be amended) n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a n/a Multiple individual (horizontal or vertica l) titles through body corporate arrangement (STA s.5a Survey Strata Scheme) Possibly Possibly Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes (a) Currentl y not state policy in WA. (b) Changes foreshadowed by the State Government. n/a = not available 16

17 Assessing land tenures in WA Only two forms of tenure in WA satisfy some of the principles and then only partly, to pass the acceptability test for Aboriginal people. They include a general fixed term lease under s.79 of the LAA and Survey Strata Scheme under the STA, satisfying, partly, 8 out of 10 principles. However both these forms of tenure are not without their difficulties. 17

18 Three Options for transfer to Aboriginal ownership We examined three options for making native title land available for home ownership and/or commercial utilisation comparable to freehold tenure: Surrender and agree to the extinguishment of the native title rights and interests in exchange for freehold titles; Administratively transfer native title lands to the Crown for leasing to third parties; and Create a leasehold titling system on native title lands. Each of these options involves some degree of compromise or risk.. 18

19 Options for securing and protecting long term Aboriginal ownership Option 1 Option 1: Surrender the native title to the Crown and agree to its extinguishment with compensation on just terms, in return for freehold or leasehold titles held in trust. PROS: receipt of a secure and registered title that can be used as security against a loan, may be encumbered by other interest and traded. CONS: means permanent loss of native title rights with one off compensation, and the risk of loss/ alienation. 19

20 Options for securing and protecting long term Aboriginal ownership Option 2 Option 2: Administrative transfer to the Crown for leasing (e.g. Fiji s native Land Trust Board) with powers to lease to third parties. PROS: potential for trade-able sub-leases and may appear more acceptable to investors. CONS: interests are not registered/ recognised by the Torrens title system (so have limited economic value); decision making would be in the hands of the Board rather than local native title interests. 20

21 Another way: Option 3 Option 3: Direct recognition by the Crown of the native title holder s fundamental property rights and the creation of a leasehold titling system particular to it. PROS: decision making would remain in the hands of the Aboriginal land holders, including the native title holders. CONS: changes would be required to s.56(5) of the Native Title Act (Cth) and to s.18 of the LAA (WA). Legislative changes may also be required in other jurisdictions. 21

22 Discussion Four points stand out: 1. Subject to the prevailing legislation it is possible to secure a lease in which the interest may be transferred and therefore be used as security against a loan. 2. A lease avoids the potential for fragmentation of the estate associated with individual freehold titles while retaining the underlying estate management function for the native title holders. 22

23 Discussion 3. The effects of market failure on home ownership possibilities in remote communities can be mitigated through the innovative use of trusts or other vehicles established to manage collective interests in land. 4. Different corporate entities are suited to different local circumstances, depending on the composition of communities, their development potential and the aspirations of the owners and residents. 23

24 Discussion Leasehold forms of tenure offer the greatest potential for Aboriginal people to realise economic development and homeownership opportunities on Aboriginal land and for Aboriginal people seeking to protect their underlying native title rights and interests in the land. Corporate structures such as land trusts and community land trusts offer the greatest potential for Aboriginal people to collectively administer land through head-leasing and subleasing arrangements. 24

25 FURTHER RESEARCH Further research is required to ascertain how customary rights can be more justly accommodated within conventional land tenure systems. To establish what kind of tenure and home ownership opportunities are currently being secured through Indigenous Land Use Agreements; and To establish administrative mechanisms and policy frameworks for a land administration system for lands subject to native title rights and interests, so that native title holders can exercise their property rights without having to surrender and extinguish their native title rights. 25

Thank you! WensingE@law.anu.edu.au jtaylor2@kpmg.com.au Resources: AIATSIS Discussion Paper 31 http://www.aiatsis.gov.au/research/discussion.html 2012 KPMG, an Australian partnership and a member firm of the KPMG network of independent member firms affiliated with KPMG International Cooperative ( KPMG