What you can and can't do
As the public health orders change, it's important to do the right thing.
NEW SOUTH WALES CASINO CONTROL AUTHORITY 15 December 2003 The Hon Grant McBride MP Minister for Gaming and Racing Level 13, 55 Hunter Street SYDNEY NSW 2000 Dear Minister I wish to advise that the Authority has completed its investigation of the casino operator pursuant to s.3 1 of the Casino Control Act 1992.
New South Wales Casino Control Authority Official
- 1996 No 482 New South Wales Casino Control Amendment (Liquor Act Application) Regulation 1996 under the Casino Control 1992 Act His Excellency the Governor, with the advice of the Executive Council, has made the following Regulation under the Casino Control Act 1992. RICHARD FACE, M.P.
- The Casino Liquor and Gaming Control Authority exists within Communities NSW. The staff who undertake responsibilities under the Casino Control Act for the Casino Liquor and Gaming Control Authority are made available to the Authority by Communities NSW.
- The New South Wales Casino Control Authority was established on 23 September 1992, by the Casino Control Act 1992. AIMS AND OBJECTIVES The objects of the Authority, as set out in Section 140 of the Act, are to maintain and administer systems for the licensing, supervision and control of a casino, for the purpose of.
About the rules | Travel restrictions
What you can and can't do
As the public health orders change, it's important to do the right thing.
NEW SOUTH WALES CASINO CONTROL AUTHORITY 15 December 2003 The Hon Grant McBride MP Minister for Gaming and Racing Level 13, 55 Hunter Street SYDNEY NSW 2000 Dear Minister I wish to advise that the Authority has completed its investigation of the casino operator pursuant to s.3 1 of the Casino Control Act 1992.
New South Wales Casino Control Authority Official
- 1996 No 482 New South Wales Casino Control Amendment (Liquor Act Application) Regulation 1996 under the Casino Control 1992 Act His Excellency the Governor, with the advice of the Executive Council, has made the following Regulation under the Casino Control Act 1992. RICHARD FACE, M.P.
- The Casino Liquor and Gaming Control Authority exists within Communities NSW. The staff who undertake responsibilities under the Casino Control Act for the Casino Liquor and Gaming Control Authority are made available to the Authority by Communities NSW.
- The New South Wales Casino Control Authority was established on 23 September 1992, by the Casino Control Act 1992. AIMS AND OBJECTIVES The objects of the Authority, as set out in Section 140 of the Act, are to maintain and administer systems for the licensing, supervision and control of a casino, for the purpose of.
About the rules | Travel restrictions
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** Active cases are locally acquired COVID-19 cases with onset in the last four weeks. This is based on the date the person first developed symptoms. When no date of symptom onset is available (it is either under investigation by public health staff or the person tested positive without showing symptoms), the date of the positive test is used. Infections are not always acquired in the place of residence as people often travel outside their area for many reasons (e.g. work, school and shopping).
***The heatmap excludes 189 cases in crew members who tested positive while on board a ship docked in NSW at the time of diagnosis.
- View Legislative history button in Actions column—we have now added a View legislative history button in the Actions column on browse and search results pages as a shortcut to open the Legislative history page for the selected title.
- Saving PDF extracts for part of a title—now works correctly in most cases for provisions with alphanumeric numbering.
- Links in fragments to maps—hyperlinks to maps from the text of legislation are now working.
- Saving links from the whole view—links to specific provisions in a title can now be saved when viewing either the standard or whole view of the title.
- Public health orders, including current and historical versions
- Environmental planning orders
- Acts of Parliament
- Regulations.
Website tips
- Some terminology used on this website is different to the old website—see our FAQ for an easy-to-follow guide.
- You can now hide the Home page photo carousel.
- There are more RSS feed options for subscriber alerts.
- The 'This week' column on the Home page now has direct links to as made legislation.
- The creation history section at the bottom of the Legislative history co-locates all the initial documents and dates for a title.
- The table of versions in the Legislative history has a column that includes hyperlinks to the amendments consolidated in each version of the title.
- The timeline gives you quick access to historical versions of legislation and allows you to generate comparisons between versions. You can hide the timeline if you prefer—your selection will 'stick' until you change it.
- Search functionality has been enhanced to allow searching across legislative histories as well as the legislation collections. The results show search terms in context—see our FAQ on showing search hits.
- We now have separate Gazette and Notification pages—access to the gazette portal to lodge a notice is via the Gazette page.
- Clause headings used in schedules are now displayed in the Contents pane.
- We now have separate browse pages for in force and repealed legislation and a browse-by-year option for all the legislation landing pages.
- To help you find the legislation you want faster, the in force and repealed browse pages have more options then the old website for filtering, sorting and display.
- The key to abbreviations used in legislative histories is now linked to the key icon on the pale blue task bar.
PCO will observe the Christmas–New Year shutdown period from Friday, 25 December 2020 to Friday, 8 January 2021. The last standard gazette for 2020 will be published on Friday, 18 December 2020, though we will make arrangements to gazette genuinely urgent notices up to 24 December 2020.
The first standard gazette for next year will be published on Friday, 15 January 2021.
The weekly deadline for submission of notices before the shutdown period remains the same i.e. midday on Thursdays for standard gazettes. For urgent gazettals, we require as much notice as possible and the request should come from director or executive director level.
For details of how to arrange an urgent gazettal during the shutdown period, email nswgazette.help@pco.nsw.gov.au and see the auto-reply.
We are now providing access to consolidated versions of water sharing plans amended from 1 July 2020. The consolidations are unauthorised versions prepared by the Department of Planning, Industry and Environment.
We now have a special page for public consultation drafts of Bills and statutory instruments.
Please note that consultation drafts are published on this website for information only. All comments should be provided to the relevant government department—see the relevant department's website for more information.
From the week beginning Monday, 31 August we're introducing a new way to lodge and publish gazette notices and a new format for the gazette.
Our gazette notice lodgement portal is now ready to use on the Gazette page. You'll also find there everything you need to get started—links to how-to videos, FAQs, notice templates and an email ready to send to a dedicated Gazette Help box. Table a langer a roulette. If you get stuck, contact us at the NSW Parliamentary Counsel's Office and our gazette team will be happy to help.
The new gazette format will involve compiling individual subject category volumes to make it easier for gazette users to find relevant notices. Notices will appear in the volume for the category selected when a notice is lodged and the volumes will continue to be published on the Gazette page of the legislation website.
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